Thus when Elizabeth returned to Rapture, she lost her ability to manipulate Tears and became effectively trapped there. All she would have left was her knowledge and fragments of memory of what she saw behind the doors - all that Elizabeth has to do is to rescue Sally and survive. Elizabeth awakens to witness Atlas and his Splicers capturing Sally.
Before they can kill Elizabeth, a vision of Booker appears, which no one else can see, and he tells her to claim she can get Atlas back to Rapture through the help of Suchong.
Claiming to be Suchong's lab assistant, Elizabeth convinces Atlas in her ability to carry this out. In exchange, for freedom, Atlas will give her Sally. Elizabeth is left alone with a radio to fulfill her end of the bargain, but finds herself experiencing amnesia. She remembered that she came to Rapture previously to make Comstock pay, but she doesn't recall coming back to Rapture, just that she was just in Paris.
Booker reveals that the Paris she remembers was just an illusion, as is Booker himself. Elizabeth stumbles upon her body and recalls her death at the hands of the Big Daddy.
Elizabeth realizes that Booker is simply a manifestation of her own subconscious memories of what she had seen through the doors.
Surviving against the Splicers, Elizabeth is aided by the voice of Booker. She begins to have visions, claiming that the doors are cracking open. Her memory of what she saw behind the doors is returning, and she sees flashes of the future. She does not know, however, whose future she is observing. By observing key objects, she has visions of a crashed plane near the lighthouse, the grand city of Rapture, a Little Sister in hand with a Big Daddy, Andrew Ryan, rescued Little Sisters in Dr.
Elizabeth ventures to Suchong's impromptu lab in the Silver Fin Restaurant and there discovers that Suchong has been observing the Tears in Rapture which lead to Columbia. Suchong's lab also has recreated a Lutece Device but it has been sabotaged.
Suchong contacts Elizabeth and threatens to eliminate her, but Elizabeth offers to help him fix the device. Elizabeth remembers that the Lutece Particle was a part of the Lutece Field, and is responsible for Columbia floating, as well as the flight of aircraft like The First Lady. By repairing the machine, she can open a Tear to Columbia, retrieve the Lutece Particle, return to Rapture, and, by applying the particle to Department Store's top floor ceiling, lift the Department Store back up to Rapture and return them to the city.
Elizabeth then looks to find the equipment necessary to repair the machine, and in doing so comes across Atlas' overall plan. Through telegrams and plans in the hideout, she discovers that Atlas is planning to attack Rapture upon his escape with the forces he's amassed.
Meanwhile, he is looking for his " Ace in the Hole " held by Suchong to help him achieve his goals. Elizabeth soon discovers that business tycoon Frank Fontaine had faked his death and created the Atlas identity. Knowing that either Atlas will kill her or she will kill Atlas in the end, Elizabeth then completes the device and opens the Tear to Columbia.
After obtaining the Lutece Particle, Suchong closes the Tear and agrees to open it in exchange for Elizabeth to bring him a sample of hair from a subject in Fink's laboratory. Elizabeth accepts and goes into the factory where she then discovers Daisy Fitzroy conversing with the Luteces. It's then revealed that Daisy, while wanting to kill Fink, had no intention of killing or even threatening his son: the child that Daisy attempted to kill before Elizabeth killed her.
The Luteces concur that while Daisy will die in the process, her threatening the boy and being killed by Elizabeth will further her cause — indicating that the Luteces had arranged the events in reality for Elizabeth to mature from killing Daisy and develop the mindset needed to kill Comstock. Elizabeth reaches the inside of the factory labs, after coming across past-Booker and Elizabeth prior to killing Daisy , and searches for the subject.
Elizabeth discovers that Rapture scientist Yi Suchong, through observing the Tears leading to Columbia, allowed him to see Jeremiah Fink stealing the production of Plasmids while also making them consumable.
Suchong then chose to collaborate with Fink on each other's products, working on Plasmid and Vigor enhancements as well as collaborating on Protectors. Fink acquired the construction plans of a Big Daddy to create the Songbird, but neither one could have their Protectors imprint on their charges. Elizabeth discovers though that she pair-bonded with Songbird by saving its life through reattaching its oxygen tube.
With this, she retrieves her own hair and returns back to Rapture. Elizabeth returns to Rapture and gives her hair sample to Suchong, so he can further his research on pair-bonding. Andrew Ryan, seeing Elizabeth assist Atlas, contacts her and offers her the choice to join his side or be with Atlas. His forces have already invaded the Department Store and are fighting Atlas' men. Elizabeth claims to be on no side, and only wishes to reunite with Sally. Displeased with her, Ryan sends his forces after Elizabeth as she heads to the office of Frank Fontaine with the Lutece Particle.
After applying the particle to the ceiling of the Department Store, the building begins to float up towards Rapture. Elizabeth is found by Atlas' men, who betray her and render her unconscious with chloroform. When Elizabeth reawakens the following day, she is interrogated by Atlas's henchmen Lonnie in an undisclosed room. He asks Elizabeth, since she claimed to be Suchong's lab assistant, for the location of the "ace in the hole", which Suchong never gave to Fontaine.
After injecting her with truth serum, she is rendered unconscious again. In her twilight state, Elizabeth sees herself in a mirror, as her form changes from who she was when Booker met her to who she is now, saying that " this world values children, not childhood, there is a profit to be made, and men who make it. After coming in and out of consciousness for two weeks, Elizabeth reawakens to a war-torn Rapture with Atlas forcefully asking for the whereabouts of the "ace in the hole;" threatening her with a trans-orbital lobotomy.
Elizabeth sardonically accepts, informing Atlas that the procedure would take away her memories and allow her to live without care or worry. Angered, Atlas has Sally brought in, and threatens to lobotomize the girl instead.
Before he can do so, Elizabeth, overcome with panic, sees Booker appear. He makes her remember a vision from behind the doors, and reminds her she didn't come back without a reason. Booker tells Elizabeth to make a leap of faith, that the answer is in Suchong's Clinic. Elizabeth tells Atlas of the location of the "ace in the hole", and agrees to retrieve it for him.
Atlas sends Elizabeth to Artemis Suites and Suchong's Clinic in turn, so that he can avoid the security systems. After entering Suchong's lab, Elizabeth soon finds a wounded Protector blocking her path, near two Little Sisters frightened of the behemoth. Attempting to find a way to move the Big Daddy, she looks through Suchong's notes and discovers that even with the hair sample he has been unable to pair-bond the Big Daddies with the Little Sisters; through further investigation, it is revealed that the Big Daddies need the ADAM of their Little Sister to survive.
Elizabeth comes across the quarters of one of Suchong's test subjects , and finally to Suchong himself. Elizabeth witnesses his death as the scientist strikes one of the Little Sisters, unaware of their recent successful bond, causing the Big Daddy to drill his body into a desk.
Elizabeth retrieves "the ace in the hole", another encoded message of chemical compounds, and pictures of the subject and his location at a farm. Elizabeth returns to Atlas — accepting her fate — and hands him the "ace in the hole". Atlas responds by bludgeoning Elizabeth with a wrench, causing her to be facing that mirror again, and once more in the bathroom of an airplane.
Making her way down the aisle of the plane, she sees the subject, Jack , take a gun and hijack the plane. Atlas reads the "ace in the hole", but doesn't understand the coded message, and demands a half-conscious Elizabeth explain what it says. As Elizabeth approaches, the letter given to Jack in the future and the encoded message by Suchong both read "Would you Kindly. Having what he was after, Atlas strikes Elizabeth with a fatal blow to the head, sealing both of their fates.
Elizabeth sees the future events to come in Rapture — Jack hijacking and crashing the plane, arriving in Rapture, the protector bond, the death of Andrew Ryan, the rescue of Little Sisters, and finally the fall of Fontaine. Elizabeth sees one last door, which reveals Jack after his journey in Rapture, returning to the surface at the Lighthouse with Sally and adopting her as his own. Elizabeth realizes that the flashes of the future she was having before were of Jack, and her return to Rapture was to set in motion events that lead to Sally's rescue — thereby ending her cycle of violence and saving Sally from this fate and death.
There are many versions of Elizabeth in alternate dimensions. Few of them are explored in detail in the game, but those involved were all abducted and in one case, a failed abduction from their respective fathers by a version of Comstock to become his heir.
At least eight of these alternate Elizabeth appear at the end of BioShock Infinite to help drown Booker before he makes the choice to either accept or reject his baptism. A number of these alternates appear similar to how Elizabeth appeared at earlier points in the game. Other alternates have physical differences from the main Elizabeth in the game.
The most obvious one of these is the Elizabeth on the far left who sports a different haircut, possesses a more curvaceous figure, and appears very similar to the one seen in the BioShock Infinite Premiere Trailer and BioShock Infinite Early Gameplay Demonstration. Two other Elizabeths are seen wearing a white dress with dark brown trim. These two Elizabeths are not missing a little finger as all the others are.
The last two Elizabeths that appear on each side of Booker just before drowning him are noticeably taller than the others. The attitude of some of the Elizabeths indicates that they had not met Booker before and only think of him as Comstock.
Anna DeWitt was Elizabeth's previous identity, before she was sold to Comstock as an infant. The events of BioShock Infinite erased Columbia from existence, which means that Anna was never abducted and so there exist several universes where Anna never became Elizabeth and she lived her life in the same universe as her father, Booker DeWitt. One of these universes is possibly explored in the after credits scene of Infinite.
Booker DeWitt enters the nursery in his office, calling his daughter's name, but before he reaches the crib, the screen fades to black, leaving the content of the crib, whether Anna is in it or not, ambiguous. Another alternate Elizabeth, or rather an alternate Anna is seen in a flashback in Burial at Sea - Episode 1. Instead of pulling her through as in the main game, Booker does not lose his grip and pulls Anna back through the Tear as it closes. Unfortunately the Tear closes before she is all the way through and she is decapitated when it closes.
One last alternate Elizabeth is mentioned in the Voxophone Drawing Dead. When Elizabeth opens the Tear in the Bull House and merges the two realities together, she is merged with this Elizabeth as well. However, she remained in existence because of her quantum-superposition, but couldn't return to that Rapture without consequences. Elizabeth did choose to return to Rapture to save Sally and thus giving up her Tear powers in the process.
After returning, she finds her own body impaled through the heart by a piece of rebar and remembers the events that led to it. With at least one version of Elizabeth, Comstock succeeded in his plans, and Booker was unable to save her. Worn down by months of brainwashing and Booker's failure to come to her rescue, Elizabeth succumbed and became the heir Comstock wanted her to be. Elizabeth eventually sounded the assault on the surface world below in fulfillment of his prophecy, culminating in a blitzkrieg on New York in when Elizabeth was in her early 90s.
However, the aged Elizabeth began to regret her actions and resist her brainwashing. She broke the Siphon and used its power to bring Booker from the past just before he began his assault on Comstock House. Whilst the city is bombed, she explains that Booker could not defeat Songbird, not on his own, and she gives him a message for her alternate younger self, so they could control the creature, before sending him back through a Tear inside the house.
This version of Elizabeth assures him it was too late to save her, but he might still save his Elizabeth and himself in the process. Despite years of isolation, Elizabeth has a free-willed, almost childlike spirit, demonstrated by her dancing on the beach in Battleship Bay and in her interactions with her surroundings. She is also somewhat mischievous, helping Booker to pick locks and liberate goods if the proper resources are available. She has a biting wit and sarcastic humor, calling Booker out on his missteps without hesitation.
At the same time, she possesses an immense amount of reserve and determination, as she is able to focus on her goals and move past stressful situations relatively quickly, though they are still shown to affect her deeply. As the story progresses, however, she matures and starts to become more serious and determined to stop Comstock. Because the only thing to keep her company in her prison were books, Elizabeth is a fountain of information, ranging from lock-picking to medical treatment.
She quotes the King James Bible in Soldier's Field in reference to the area's true purpose "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it" , and also references the works of Victor Hugo. Despite her immense intellect, her determination and lack of life experience have made her somewhat reckless, and she does not always think her plans through.
For instance, she opens up a Tear to avoid a bee, which nearly results in her and Booker being attacked by Songbird. Furthermore, her frantic and obvious flight from Booker's company in Finkton causes her to be captured by Founder forces, which a more stealthy escape could have avoided. She is also very naive, once she sees the consequences of her actions, however, she matures and regrets her intervention in the Vox's revolution.
Elizabeth greatly dislikes violence, especially killing. Being sequestered in her tower for so long, she has no precedent regarding such real-world ordeals. She runs away from Booker calling him a monster when he kills the Founder agents that ambush them in Battleship Bay. Throughout the narrative, Elizabeth will flinch when Booker fires a weapon whilst standing next to her. If he executes an enemy near Elizabeth she may groan or exclaim "Oh my God" at the sight of Booker's gruesome Sky-Hook kills.
She may also voice similar revulsion if Booker happens to shoot or melee an enemy in the head although only if it is a critical hit and their head explodes. When she kills Daisy Fitzroy, she reacts in stunned horror at what she has done before fleeing and locking herself in a room on The First Lady. However, when released from torture in Comstock House, Elizabeth summons a tornado to kill her captors and shows no guilt or regret for their deaths.
She subsequently decides that she will kill Comstock for what he has done to her, suggesting the harm visited upon her has drastically changed this predisposition. Once Elizabeth gains full access of her powers she fully matures, as she finally knows the truth behind her origins and Booker's actions.
Though deeply saddened by these events, she is driven by the necessity to show Booker the truth for the greater good. Once Booker realizes the true results of his actions, she and other versions of her muster the courage to drown him, ending the existence of Zachary Comstock across time. In an alternate timeline, one in which Elizabeth succumbed to torture, she is in almost every way identical in personality to Comstock: ruthless, fanatical and jingoistic, she has no qualms with brainwashing people into servitude and using her powers to turn them into monsters, as is the case with the Boys of Silence.
True to Comstock's prophecy, she leads the Founders' attack on New York City, bringing down upon it the entirety of Columbia's massive firepower. However, during this time she also repents her actions, regretting her obedience to Comstock when she realizes it is too late to stop the destruction of the world below.
Elizabeth's relationship with Booker is complex. Initially suspicious of his motives, Elizabeth grows to trust him, although this trust is shaken several times, such as after seeing Booker kill for the first time, and later when she realizes his promise of taking her to Paris was a lie. In Burial at Sea - Episode 1 , Elizabeth's personality has matured greatly. Her attitude has grown much colder with little regard for being very polite, and she is motivated solely on executing revenge against Comstock.
Unlike in Infinite , where she can be heard reacting with horror to Booker's executions with the Sky-Hook, she remains silent at her partner's killings, as if acknowledging them despite their brutality.
She is also bitter towards the world of Rapture, judging it no different than Columbia in its violence and abuse of innocent people. Elizabeth is noticeably more ruthless; helping Comstock remember his past while also leading him to his death and bearing little remorse for doing so. The cliffhangers left in BioShock Infinite make a sequel game necessary.
For the story of BioShock Infinite to make sense, Elizabeth should have disappeared at the end of the game. Since Elizabeth drowned Booker DeWitt her father , this means that Columbia would never be created and Anna instead of Elizabeth would exist. It is possible that Booker DeWitt survived the drowning, was reborn again, and made different choices in his life.
Much of the story is not explained. Since Columbia disappeared, it would only make sense that Elizabeth does as well. Based on the events that occurred in BioShock Infinite , it can be deduced that Zachary Comstock wasn't that bad of a guy in comparison to Booker DeWitt. Also, after the scene, Booker lies to Elizabeth to cover his tracks, saying he doesn't know what Comstock is talking about. From Zachary Comstock's perspective, he may have been trying to save Anna from living with Booker DeWitt, who is a gambling addict and poor role-model.
Zachary Comstock gave her a pleasant place to live and planned to give the city to Elizabeth when he passes away. It's possible that you play as the villain in BioShock Infinite. The fictional city of Rapture could be a different place in all games.
While many people assume that people are returning to the city of Rapture over and over, we have to remember that manipulating time can have grave consequences. The city of Rapture could be from any universe since characters like Elizabeth and the twins are capable of interdimensional travel. Rapture from all three games may not be the same place.
It's probable that we see the same city in different universes. In line with the theory about Rapture being part of a parallel universe to Columbia, the enemies in BioShock, BioShock 2 , and BioShock Infinite may be the same people you kill over and over.
Since they are part of a parallel universe, the enemies still exist, but they take on a different appearance. Booker, reluctant and anxious, asks Elizabeth to leave with him, telling her to open a Tear to Paris for them.
Elizabeth, however, is intent on revealing the truth to him. The truth was, in , Booker met Robert Lutece , who offered him a deal on behalf of Zachary Hale Comstock — Comstock would wipe all of Booker's debts away in exchange for Anna.
On October 8, , Booker sold Anna, but regretted his choice immediately, and pursued Robert. Booker finds him with Comstock and Anna in an alleyway, near a strange portal with a woman inside. Booker grabbed Comstock as the latter stepped through the portal and tried to wrestle Anna from his grasp as Comstock ordered the portal shut. Comstock was able to shake Booker off, and the portal closed just as Anna reached out to Booker, severing her pinkie finger in the process. Overcome with regret, Booker fell even further into alcoholism and his gambling habits worsened.
He closed the door in his rotting apartment to Anna's room and eventually branded his right hand with Anna's initials, "AD. Nearly twenty years later, Booker re-encountered Robert Lutece, who offers him an opportunity to get Anna back; all he must do, he says, is simply step through a portal Robert summons in his office. Traveling through the portal leaves Booker dazed and unable to consolidate his memories a side-effect of traveling between realities , and he begins creating new, different memories from the old.
When he has stabilized, Booker believes that he has been tasked with entering the floating city of Columbia to retrieve a girl named Elizabeth , thereby paying off his debts. With the demand, "Bring us the girl, and wipe away the debt," still in his mind from twenty years ago, Booker remembers this phrase as the job description, rather than the deal he already made with Comstock. Robert and the woman from the portal, Rosalind, then take Booker to a rowboat and discuss how Booker's altered memories confirm the man's theory about memory loss as related to trans-dimensional travel.
Booker awakens just as the boat arrives on a small island off the coast of Maine. Now, with his memories returning, Booker realizes that Elizabeth is actually Anna. Blaming Comstock for everything that happened, Booker tells Elizabeth that they need to go back to when Comstock was an infant, and smother him in the crib. It isn't until she brings Booker back to his baptism that he realizes what has occurred: while he rejected the baptism in his world, he accepted it in another — in that universe, Booker DeWitt became a deeply religious man and changed his name to Zachary Hale Comstock.
Multiple alternate versions of Elizabeth and Anna appear to reveal this truth to Booker. Booker then realizes that the only way to erase the atrocities committed by Comstock himself , and the harm visited upon Elizabeth, is for him to die before he can accept or reject his baptism, thus canceling out either outcome.
Several Elizabeths drown Booker, and all realities in which Comstock exists are erased. One by one, the different versions of Elizabeth fade away, due to the fact that since Comstock never existed. The original Elizabeth from Booker's universe, however, does not disappear, and her story is continued in Burial at Sea - Episode 1. Booker awakens in his residence on October 8, —the same day on which he lost Anna—and opens the door to her room, where he sees her crib and calls out her name before it cuts to black.
This reveals the possibility that Booker and Anna are still alive together in a universe in which Booker never sold her to Comstock, as he did not exist or one where Booker never went to the baptism. It is possible that Booker remembers some or all of what happened in Columbia as indicated by his apparent fear of Anna not being in her crib, but there is no conclusive proof. If Anna is not in the crib this points to Booker "waking up" after he sold Anna and allows for the possibility of Booker rescuing his daughter from Comstock.
Elizabeth, waking up following the events of the first episode, sees Booker sitting in a chair with his guitar instructing her on what to say to Atlas to ensure her survival. His presence goes unnoticed by Atlas and his Splicers, but he shows knowledge of Yi Suchong and Atlas' plan to invade Rapture. This Booker is revealed to be just a hallucination created by the trans-dimensional trauma Elizabeth experienced as well as the parts of her memories she cannot access due to losing her ability to see all outcomes and probabilities.
They are distracted while talking with Daisy over the phone and don't notice Elizabeth. She tells " Booker " that she misses him and that he was her only friend. In an alternate version of Columbia, Elizabeth was already gone when Booker arrived at Monument Island. He joined forces with Daisy Fitzroy in an attempt to find her and became a notable leader of the Vox Populi. He eventually encountered and joined forces with Cornelius Slate in the Hall of Heroes.
There he also encountered Preston E. Downs , who had been hired to kill DeWitt as well as Fitzroy. Speaking the Sioux language, he was able to help Preston communicate with a maimed Lakota child that Preston had been caring for.
The boy related details of his oppressed existence, prompting Downs to join the Vox Populi. Booker's martyrdom became a rallying call for the revolution of the Vox. While one version of Booker refused baptism after the Battle of Wounded Knee, another chose differently and took the name, Zachary Hale Comstock. Believing the baptism absolved him of all his past sins, Comstock became a xenophobic and charismatic political figure.
He was responsible for funding Rosalind Lutece's research which he utilized to view future events and make a prophet of himself and convincing the U. Congress to fund the construction of Columbia. Owing to the sterility and premature aging caused by exposure to the Luteces' technology, Comstock used their Tears to retrieve the daughter of an alternate version of himself to raise as a messiah in Columbia.
In one reality, a version of Booker lived in Rapture, where he worked as a private investigator and eventually came to look after an orphaned girl named Sally. One day Sally disappeared while Booker was gambling at Sir Prize and he desperately searched for her, going so far as to interrogate Dr. Yi Suchong for fifteen hours. His investigation proved fruitless and he gave up when Sullivan told him she had been found dead.
On New Year's Eve , he was contacted by a woman named Elizabeth that hired him to find Sally and insisted that she was missing, not dead. Upon finding Sally in Fontaine's sunken department store, Booker's attempts to pull her from a vent and discovers that she had been turned into a Little Sister , triggering the return of his memories before Rapture. He discovers he was actually a version of Booker that chose to accept Preacher Witting's baptism and became Comstock. Like so many versions of Comstock in different realities, he had attempted to steal Anna away from her father and ended up.
His path diverged dramatically when Booker proved stronger in the struggle over Anna, and she was not securely on Comstock's side of the portal when the Tear closed. Instead of severing the baby's pinkie finger, it closed upon her neck, decapitating the infant.
To escape his guilt, Comstock had the Luteces open a Tear to Rapture. He lost his memory of all that had occurred and began a new life as private investigator Booker DeWitt. Horrified by his recovered memories, Comstock attempted to apologize to Elizabeth.
The Luteces appeared and remark that Comstock always ran away from his problems and stole the lives of others instead of facing his own past. Elizabeth told him that he wasn't sorry, but he soon would be, after which he was impaled and killed by a Bouncer Big Daddy. The Booker encountered by Elizabeth in Burial at Sea Episode 2 reveals himself to be just a hallucination created from memories as well as the trauma of her inter-universal jump into Rapture.
Every time Elizabeth tries to say he is Booker he is quick to remind her that he is not. After their first encounter, his voice is mostly heard over Atlas's radio. No other characters can hear or see him, with them usually commenting on Elizabeth seemingly talking to herself.
He helps her by giving her ideas to guide her along her path, like the idea to pose as Suchong's lab assistant in order to prevent Atlas from killing her. Once she said that she misses him Booker , to which he replied "I think… Booker would miss you.
He is last seen guiding Elizabeth toward the memory of the location of the " Ace in the Hole " which she had once seen when she had the ability to see all probabilities and outcomes. He disappears, leaving Elizabeth crying and screaming for him to come back and not leave her alone before he is replaced by Sally, who guides her the rest of the way.
While this Booker exists only as a figment of Elizabeth's imagination, the real one from Infinite's main campaign is briefly seen in the Factory level, at the moment when Daisy Fitzroy phones him in the elevator he and Elizabeth are taking towards The First Lady. Booker is a taciturn and serious man who feels deep regret for the atrocities and wrongdoings he committed in his past.
In conversation with others, he expresses deep-seated self-loathing, remarking that there needs to be "more Daisy Fitzroys" because of men like him, and telling Elizabeth that she shouldn't get mixed up with him for her own sake.
It is possible this attitude spawns from even earlier bouts of self-consciousness: Comstock claims in a Voxophone recording that a commanding officer once suggested that he had Native American ancestry, and the comment led him to brutal acts against Native Americans to reclaim the respect of his comrades.
While Booker is often surprised and sometimes frightened by objects and situations encountered in Columbia, he is quick to adapt — he speedily takes to Vigors , and utilizes Elizabeth's Tears in combat. He is also perceptive in regard to dangerous situations, though whether he responds to them with violence is partially up to the player particularly in the game's early stages. Initially indifferent to Elizabeth, Booker becomes curious about her after entering the tower on Monument Island, and more protective of her as the story proceeds.
He is noticeably disturbed when she asks him to kill her, and desperately pursues her when she is captured by Songbird. While he cares about Elizabeth, he is also afraid of her and what she has the potential to become. This fear is possibly a part of the reason he volunteers to kill Comstock on her behalf. Booker DeWitt is an experienced detective and former U. Army Cavalry soldier.
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