My thirteenth reason is the fact robot Charlie in the trilogy always asked herself, āDoes it hurt?ā because her fatherās agony integrated it into her mind. Chances are he repeated that as a mantra to himself given that Henry desperately wanted to know if Charlie was at rest, if it didnāt hurt; being dead.
Because the story doesnāt use, did, but rather uses, does, I somewhat take this as how suicidal people mainly donāt usually focus on the pain of dying, but on the peacefulness of death. Though, I imagine both questions did rack his mind quite a bit, as he definitely made suicide bot, taking it into count that he wanted to share the same pain as his daughter.
And after Henry died, Charlie connected the phrase to Henry and suicide bot, carrying the burden of her dadās own guilt. But, as Charlie also pushed this onto her brother as well and clung to the idea of him being alive like a lifeline, she would imitate her dadās obsession of her life as well. Her life was really just stages of the grief her father went through, and it breaks my heart...
The reason robot Charlie dies to suicide bot at the end, is because that was Henryās moment of acceptance of his daughterās death, which is right after Charlie learned of her brother still being alive. After that, the woman at the end of the book is probably the stage of grief, Henry never madeāthe life after acceptance, the days when she would stop chasing after the memory of her brother and father.
And baby Charlie doodle cause I hate her!! /lh someone needa tell me that i donāt sound crazy saying all this, cause i certainly FEEL crazy











