The implications of being able to send in the daughter to do that, speaks to all sorts of associations with things like Pol Pot sending children in to kill their parents, or other unpleasantness. I don't see how you could see that story as a positive one for the Sansha.
In the end, who did the killing?
"Murderer," Terden croaked.
"Yes," Fermar replied calmly. Terden's expression showed that this hadn't been the expected reaction. "After my team has gone, everyone left here will die," Fermar said.
"Including me," Terden said, clearing his throat and taking deep, hissing breaths.
When you have nothing left to lose, you have everything to gain.
Fermar understood the Sansha, from his perspective. He understood Terden. He allowed Terden to be there, to answer what questions he had left as to the success of his plan. Perhaps he even wanted to assuage whatever fears or guilt he had lingering in regards to his plan. But in the end, he had what he wanted.
He wanted to put his daughter out of her misery. What he was doing was
necessary, from his perspective. An act of kindness, an act of love, the last duty of a father. A man possessed of a singular goal, a final goal, an end.
Terden? He's a scout. He has an objective; to find a target, and to make sure that there is as little collateral damage as possible. Maybe he got a little sloppy. Maybe he came to the wrong house at the wrong time. Maybe in the back of his mind he knew there was something wrong. Then again, he tried to take the suicide pill, and Fermar stopped him.
Why?Because he wanted to know that his daughter would be there. He wanted to to perform one final act as a father. He wanted to end his daughter's suffering. Is he right? Is Nation all that he said? To Fermar it is the truth, the only truth that matters;
his.
I would wager that Nation is far more
kind than even it's loyalists believe, but that does not mean there is no toll taken on those it "uplifts".
But, in the end, the latest chronicle isn't about Nation or Terden, it's about a father. Perhaps in looking for the black and white of a situation we miss the true pallet of color the artist is using. After all, if the whole world were painted in shades of gray it would make for a rather dull world.