89th of Ash, Year 4622
"It only took her one time, Hilden," he whispered, coolly, the man's amber eyes glowing dimly from the reflection of the lantern. He wore a white dress shirt and some brown slacks, his arms lazing over the rests of his chair. "It only took that one mistake -- it wasn't even her fault, really; it was a muddy day, and she slipped. Didn't even hit the floor before a hand was gripping her neck, and before any of us knew it, she was dead. That was how easy it was," Taelian muttered.
The blond-haired woman sat in front of him, one leg crossed over the other. Her fair blond hair was done in a high bun, her dark blue outfit complimenting her light blue eyes. Always, Hilden looked presentable, and formal. It was something she was known for.
"Did that make you afraid -- knowing how easy it might be for the same fate to fall upon you?"
"No... I don't think afraid is the right word," he said, slowly nodding his head. "It was... puzzling, I guess: the bounty of this life, all of its pains and beauties; the way in which wealth and splendor seem to have the same regenerative qualities as death and bile. I reflected on my life, and I thought: wow, if I died the same way she did, would I feel content in the end? Would I feel like I lived a real, full life? Would I even have any sense of what I did or how far I went at all? Is there anything beyond this world?"
Hilden pressed her lips together. "You doubted what Aldrin taught you -- about Malek, about Muid, the Living Gods?"
"I suppose I did," he replied. "It was hard to imagine this... warm, vibrant, beautiful realm when all I'd ever had before was just... muck. Muck, and sorrow. I wanted things to be better, but -- they weren't, and somehow looking towards some unimaginable world where I end up living out eternity on a fair-weathered island just felt so... escapist. I wouldn't have worded it that way back then, but that was how I felt. And I just... didn't believe, for that reason. I didn't believe in many of the things he told me. Because of that, I was left pensive, and isolated, and with this brimming feeling of loneliness. I thought he broke me with the Black Sigil -- made me Famished -- but now, I don't think that's what it was. I think. more than anything else, I was just deeply alone."
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