Hobbes said "see, you see" to the caller, that is, to Hannibal. Will mistook it for himself. Mistakenly believed that the perverted murderer saw his suppressed madness, forcing him to recall the pleasure and power of the moment he shot him. Hobbes seemed to be mocking that they were the same person, but one disguised. This incident became the fuse that ignited Will's deep-seated fear—the confusion about himself. Will has a personality disorder that allows him to think like a murderer, and he understands the perverts. At the crime scene, Will pretended that he was the murderer, replaying the crime process again and again, and savoring the pleasure and meaning of murder again and again. The hallucinations became more frequent and real, and Hobbes began to appear, mockingly. Will's subconscious is even chasing the details of the violence, the details that are not helpful for the detection of the case but greatly please the perverts. Will realizes that he is lost in the perspective of the murderers and is gradually becoming a murderer, and he can't tell the difference. difference between themselves and them. Under the temptation of Hannibal and the persecution of Jack, Will lost his memory, suffered epilepsy intermittently, kept seeing hallucinations and woke up painfully from the hallucinations. . Will was going crazy. So Will sees catching the Chesapeake Ripper as a life-saving straw, and only ending it himself can defeat the nightmare of that day.
At the end, Will fell in the corner where Hobbs fell, and when he repeated Hobbes' words to Hannibal, Will really peeled off the fog in front of him, understood everything, and was no longer confused about himself.
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