The scene with Vin and the Inquisitor is the place where, finally, I got to bring some closure to the Reen plotline. What the Inquisitor says is true. When it came down to the end, Reen didn’t betray Vin. He died before he let that happen.
Reen was not a good person. He beat Vin, he was selfish, and he was conniving. However, he did love his sister. Most of his beatings happened because he was worried that she would expose them somehow and get herself killed. He knew that the Inquisitors were chasing her because of her half-breed nature, and so he uprooted them constantly, moving from city to city. He kept her alive, teaching her to be harsh, but teaching her to survive.
And, in the end—after the Inquisitors got him—he didn’t betray her. That says a lot about him.
The Inquisitor does a little bit of standard villain fair in this chapter, I’m afraid. He monologues for just a bit, then leaves Vin alone with Sazed. There was no getting around this, I’m afraid. At least I think I have a good explanation for why he does what he does. He’s the one who is going to get named head of the Steel Ministry in just a few minutes—so he can’t exactly hang around. In fact, the Inquisitors all really need to be there. The Lord Ruler wouldn’t excuse them to go stand watch on a single half-breed girl.
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