47th of Searing, Year 122
"It is not the same for you and I, fraulein. Where you feel disquiet, I am encompassed by the wholeness of a void: it reaches to grasp, and I do not even move to escape; my survival is allowed only by my skepticism of my own reality, which I question enough that it becomes unreal."
"Has it always been this way, Ser Barrows?"
"No. But -- it is now. And, perhaps it will always be, until the maw of the deep places I explore comes to drag me below. I... ache, to know what that feeling might be like. The sensation of being senseless, or without senses; the void in its purest form, beyond the obscuring fog it inflicts upon my mind. Don't you long to know too?"
"I do not, Doctor. I think it might be... too much to bear. This darkness in your heart . . . does it not gnaw at your very soul? I wonder how you might live like this for any longer."
"I won't," he muttered. "That is the simple answer, fraulein. These conversations are the last vestiges of my life. Now, come, tell me about the loss of your first son, and the way it moved you. The way it moved the world."
He closed the book, his eyes narrowed until his brows loosened, a stiff sigh escaping his nostrils. It had been a while since he'd really read anything, and he rarely had the chance to explore fiction, or other things that stirred the mind. A Kathar's purpose in life was to be functional and strong, rather than to be tainted with the feelings and philosophies of authors, who were so often corrupted by intellectual deviance. A sin of imperfect moral virtue, even if it was one that created dynamism, and beauty.
It had been a while since he had been allowed to see Talon. After their night together in the cathedral, he had only been allowed one short visit, during which time he was expected merely to relay that the process of incubation had begun. Afterwards, he was sent away to his barracks, and forced east to partake in drills for what the Empire imagined might be an upcoming conflict. There was always the potentiality for conflict, and it was best -- or so he was made to believe -- that soldiers be instilled with war as a matter of function and instinct, instilling battle readiness into their very bones.
He returned on the forty third, but was not allowed to see Talon again, and was not informed as to why. Darkness encompassed his mind, much as it did the man from the book he'd been pleasured enough to read. He had been left feeling... hollow, with intrusive thoughts; the idea that he might not be allowed to see Talon again now that his purpose had been fulfilled, or that he would only be brought to do so when there was need, to satisfy the Emperor's will.
It was loathsome, feeling the way he did. He had never known it before, just like so many other things he'd been introduced to of late. Like affection, the loneliness of being separated from one's heart was an encompassing thing, and while the former made life appear to shimmer -- vibrant -- the latter gouged out his veins. He felt little but anticipation for a moment he did not know would come.
Asher eyed over his own passage, something he'd written in the lines near the end of his book. He wasn't allowed to keep a journal, really, but he could write and scribble over pages he'd already read, if only he remembered to burn the books.
"These days have inflicted a strange thing upon me -- a sensation I'd not encountered before. A feeling of emptiness. I've missed him, only it is beyond missing him. I feel a sleep-like delirium, my eyes wandering towards the empty spaces of every room, my thoughts lingering on his recollection. It's like I've lost my ability to be content with loneliness -- even with time's passage, I do not feel better. I feel worse. I feel a fear that that time in the light was the last time -- that it has come to an end."
He sighed.
"Asher," a familiar voice physically shook him from his melancholy. A black Knight, his dreadful, amber eyes peering through the visor of his onyx helm.
"Y--yes, Calus," the Kathar cleared his throat.
"You'll be seeing Talon again today. Get your bearings ready; we're going now."
He held in a long breath, peering with his eyes half-lidded, before swallowing the moisture in his throat and nodding. "Okay," Asher whispered. "Let me prepare."
"Has it always been this way, Ser Barrows?"
"No. But -- it is now. And, perhaps it will always be, until the maw of the deep places I explore comes to drag me below. I... ache, to know what that feeling might be like. The sensation of being senseless, or without senses; the void in its purest form, beyond the obscuring fog it inflicts upon my mind. Don't you long to know too?"
"I do not, Doctor. I think it might be... too much to bear. This darkness in your heart . . . does it not gnaw at your very soul? I wonder how you might live like this for any longer."
"I won't," he muttered. "That is the simple answer, fraulein. These conversations are the last vestiges of my life. Now, come, tell me about the loss of your first son, and the way it moved you. The way it moved the world."
He closed the book, his eyes narrowed until his brows loosened, a stiff sigh escaping his nostrils. It had been a while since he'd really read anything, and he rarely had the chance to explore fiction, or other things that stirred the mind. A Kathar's purpose in life was to be functional and strong, rather than to be tainted with the feelings and philosophies of authors, who were so often corrupted by intellectual deviance. A sin of imperfect moral virtue, even if it was one that created dynamism, and beauty.
It had been a while since he had been allowed to see Talon. After their night together in the cathedral, he had only been allowed one short visit, during which time he was expected merely to relay that the process of incubation had begun. Afterwards, he was sent away to his barracks, and forced east to partake in drills for what the Empire imagined might be an upcoming conflict. There was always the potentiality for conflict, and it was best -- or so he was made to believe -- that soldiers be instilled with war as a matter of function and instinct, instilling battle readiness into their very bones.
He returned on the forty third, but was not allowed to see Talon again, and was not informed as to why. Darkness encompassed his mind, much as it did the man from the book he'd been pleasured enough to read. He had been left feeling... hollow, with intrusive thoughts; the idea that he might not be allowed to see Talon again now that his purpose had been fulfilled, or that he would only be brought to do so when there was need, to satisfy the Emperor's will.
It was loathsome, feeling the way he did. He had never known it before, just like so many other things he'd been introduced to of late. Like affection, the loneliness of being separated from one's heart was an encompassing thing, and while the former made life appear to shimmer -- vibrant -- the latter gouged out his veins. He felt little but anticipation for a moment he did not know would come.
Asher eyed over his own passage, something he'd written in the lines near the end of his book. He wasn't allowed to keep a journal, really, but he could write and scribble over pages he'd already read, if only he remembered to burn the books.
"These days have inflicted a strange thing upon me -- a sensation I'd not encountered before. A feeling of emptiness. I've missed him, only it is beyond missing him. I feel a sleep-like delirium, my eyes wandering towards the empty spaces of every room, my thoughts lingering on his recollection. It's like I've lost my ability to be content with loneliness -- even with time's passage, I do not feel better. I feel worse. I feel a fear that that time in the light was the last time -- that it has come to an end."
He sighed.
"Asher," a familiar voice physically shook him from his melancholy. A black Knight, his dreadful, amber eyes peering through the visor of his onyx helm.
"Y--yes, Calus," the Kathar cleared his throat.
"You'll be seeing Talon again today. Get your bearings ready; we're going now."
He held in a long breath, peering with his eyes half-lidded, before swallowing the moisture in his throat and nodding. "Okay," Asher whispered. "Let me prepare."