Very unhappy now, the Nuit folded her arms across her chest as if chilly, hunkering down. She gnawed at her lower lip, staring at the table for a long couple of ticks, thinking, thinking... but she had to answer his questions now, right? She couldn't think what else to do; she was having a hard time thinking at all. His words had muddled her mind. Send them to Lhex? Exorcise them? If that was the way to help them, then why did it feel cruel to her? Even-- even hypocritical?
She knew why she felt like the latter. Because the Nuit herself was undead, trapped in this life long after she should have died and moved on. Wynry leapt through Isolde's mind, a couple of contrasting images clashing before her eyes in a sickening way: Wynry, smiling and laughing, eyes bright blue, and she turned and raced away with her arms outstretched like a bird's wings, hair flowing... Wynry, lying still and dead on the cold stone floor, a dirty cloth covering her face, arms awkward and unmoving tucked to her sides, and purple bruises standing clear and horrifying against the waxy skin of her pale throat.
The Nuit herself was not going to give up her life and move on. There were things she still had to do to make up for her sins. How could she expect those girls to go...?
But what if it was the only way that they could be happy? For them to be at peace?
But who was she to force it upon them?
The questions swirled in her mind; she put a hand to her face, suddenly tired. This conversation --so short-- was already not conforming to her expectations. She had thought there could be something she could do for them... other than sending them away. How could there be no other alternative?
Still uncertain whether or not she should be telling him, but thinking she needed to to continue the conversation, Isolde sighed out, "Th-They attack people. Well. Th-The older one does. Sh-She attacked me for being-- being what I am." The chakrams whirred and buzzed through Isolde's mind, and in her head they didn't stop inches from her throat but kept going, slicing and dicing her body into a messy pulp. She shuddered, huddling even further in on herself, obviously miserable. "She th-thinks that it's o-okay to hurt p-people who she th-thinks are bad-- like slavers or murderers. I d-don't really kn-know if she's actually-- actually killed anyone--" It was hard for her to force out the word. "--B-But I th-think... it's pretty l-likely she has. A-And her l-little sister... she really looks up to her. Soon enough, she'll be like-- like the older one. Remorseless when it comes to her twisted sense of j-justice."
Gods, Isolde felt like crap, saying that. But it was true. She had already seen the beginnings of it. Kouri convincing Rena that what she was doing was right. And the Nuit had said nothing, keeping her thoughts to herself. Perhaps she should have handled it differently, challenged Kouri-- but she had just been so afraid of displeasing her, and bringing down the girl's wrath.