She smiled faintly when he laughed, and decided it was a good sound. She didn’t think he was being derisive, but that she had surprised him. People were strange. The pale Ethaefal listened, though, taking in his words and noting that bitterness. If she thought him selfish, she gave no indication of it. It was his life, after all, and only he should decide what he wanted to do with it. It was not her place to judge. She would do what she would with hers. She found her own joy in following her God, and furthering his goals and purposes here. Did she miss that previous existence? She felt that she did. But she could either miss it and cling to what remnants she could muster, or she could make a new life here and fulfill to the best of her ability what Leth had asked of her.
She was not forsaken.
Memories flitted here and there, vague and hard to grasp. Clad in silver and white, a many-stoned moonstone necklace...
“What is a dream but a wish your heart makes? When you light a lamp for others, it will also brighten your path,” Tamsin told him mildly. It wasn’t in rebuke, far from it, though her words may have seemed to have core of ice beneath the genial tone. Simple. Factual. “If you derive no enjoyment from that path, no satisfaction or sense of purpose, no lightening of the heart, then that path is not yours to tread right now. We are more like water than the rock that some wish to be,” she lightly nudged a pebble on the path with her foot, letting it clink in the silence. “We are always changing. If something is not happening for you, it does not mean that it will never happen... only that it is simply just not the time for it.”
Mercifully, she didn’t press him for details about the shadows. Nor did she find the statement that the shadows showed him something strange. She figured he was being metaphorical, perhaps, because shadows cloaked and concealed, only to part and reveal what they hid from time to time. But he changed the subject, and Tamsin did not blame him. There were things they all had to come to terms with in their lives, and how fast and how well one did so dictated their willingness to speak frankly, at times. Perhaps another day, if she saw him again, she would ask him what sort of things the shadows showed him of late.
“The changing of the seasons,” Tamsin inclined her head in a nod. “The night when Spring became Summer.” She turned her head slightly to look at him, smiling faintly, the moonlight catching on the glassy, but solid, horns. That had been the day, Dhatzu knew, that Lhavit had been turned more or less upside down in all of its entirety. “Is it that obvious?” She seemed amused by this, at any rate. She didn’t mind, truly told, if she stuck out like a sore thumb - she liked the place, and for the most part, no one seemed to mind her odd ways of looking at things.
She was not forsaken.
Memories flitted here and there, vague and hard to grasp. Clad in silver and white, a many-stoned moonstone necklace...
“What is a dream but a wish your heart makes? When you light a lamp for others, it will also brighten your path,” Tamsin told him mildly. It wasn’t in rebuke, far from it, though her words may have seemed to have core of ice beneath the genial tone. Simple. Factual. “If you derive no enjoyment from that path, no satisfaction or sense of purpose, no lightening of the heart, then that path is not yours to tread right now. We are more like water than the rock that some wish to be,” she lightly nudged a pebble on the path with her foot, letting it clink in the silence. “We are always changing. If something is not happening for you, it does not mean that it will never happen... only that it is simply just not the time for it.”
Mercifully, she didn’t press him for details about the shadows. Nor did she find the statement that the shadows showed him something strange. She figured he was being metaphorical, perhaps, because shadows cloaked and concealed, only to part and reveal what they hid from time to time. But he changed the subject, and Tamsin did not blame him. There were things they all had to come to terms with in their lives, and how fast and how well one did so dictated their willingness to speak frankly, at times. Perhaps another day, if she saw him again, she would ask him what sort of things the shadows showed him of late.
“The changing of the seasons,” Tamsin inclined her head in a nod. “The night when Spring became Summer.” She turned her head slightly to look at him, smiling faintly, the moonlight catching on the glassy, but solid, horns. That had been the day, Dhatzu knew, that Lhavit had been turned more or less upside down in all of its entirety. “Is it that obvious?” She seemed amused by this, at any rate. She didn’t mind, truly told, if she stuck out like a sore thumb - she liked the place, and for the most part, no one seemed to mind her odd ways of looking at things.