Ash 27, Year 124
It was difficult to see it all again. The more he ruminated on everything... the more it clung to him. Spiraling, spiraling... into his sight, into his mind. It worked its way through the channels of his thought, but it was like a stench that seeped into his skin. It lingered on his body. It was a disease... this memory. This longing. He'd always been so, so loyal and so peerless: he'd always believed the Imperium's dogma like nothing else was left, but once he'd had his first taste of meaning... that was all gone. Family, he learned, meant everything to him. He'd never really had one, but maybe that was why he craved one above all else. The little glimpse he was given... it was meant to be merely a duty, given that the Imperium knew Talon would become endeared to him; that he would desire him.
But it became so much more than that. A poison. The seedling of disloyalty—the beginning of the man questioning everything he had lived so far, and everything he could have been. Those days he spent alongside Talon, with wind drifting through his hair as they peered over the coast... or even merely in the shadowy foyer of their shared prison, he remembered those moments fonder than all the rest. He longed for him now: he still dreamed of him, of his shape, of the touch of his skin and the feel of his breath. He longed for him... and he mourned. He mourned every moment away from him, every opportunity lost to raise his son, a boy he heard was—in some ways—so much like him.
Seated on the edge of a cliff, something he did often while engaged in his solo patrols, he peered over the great vastness and into the endless array of pines below. "Talon," he whispered, beneath words. Quiet, yet his heart poured out into every escaped breath from his lips. His lungs tightened, and his eyes filled with the gloss of what would have become tears. "I know it's been too long. Too long of absence for you to forgive... but I really wish I could go back. Really wish I could return to that last moment I had with you... that last goodbye. Wish I could escape these chains. Wish I could see our son. Wish I could be a man, and not the statue of one."
His eyes glowered downwards, and he bit his lower lip, shaking his head bitterly. "How is it that this is all my life has come to be? Sequestered away from the world, lamenting promise I never had. I don't know what to do anymore—it's like there's a gaping anguish growing in me, spreading. It's become its own organ: a vessel of sorrow, and loss, and pain. A drought of the soul. Why is that? Why was experiencing love enough to do that to me? I don't understand."
Burying his face within his large hands, the Kathar whimpered. He begged for understanding, and for meaning... for purpose within the pain. Within the decades of futility he'd toiled through, all to achieve something that brought him no satisfaction: strength. He didn't care for power, for influence, for the Empire's might. He didn't long for any of those things. He longed for something else—for a man that wasn't there, for a family that never was, for a version of himself that wasn't aligned or suited for this world. For happiness. That mattered so much more to him than respect, or admiration. And yet he had none at all.
"Help me understand," he whispered, voice becoming quiet from futility. "Help me, Talon. Please."
It was difficult to see it all again. The more he ruminated on everything... the more it clung to him. Spiraling, spiraling... into his sight, into his mind. It worked its way through the channels of his thought, but it was like a stench that seeped into his skin. It lingered on his body. It was a disease... this memory. This longing. He'd always been so, so loyal and so peerless: he'd always believed the Imperium's dogma like nothing else was left, but once he'd had his first taste of meaning... that was all gone. Family, he learned, meant everything to him. He'd never really had one, but maybe that was why he craved one above all else. The little glimpse he was given... it was meant to be merely a duty, given that the Imperium knew Talon would become endeared to him; that he would desire him.
But it became so much more than that. A poison. The seedling of disloyalty—the beginning of the man questioning everything he had lived so far, and everything he could have been. Those days he spent alongside Talon, with wind drifting through his hair as they peered over the coast... or even merely in the shadowy foyer of their shared prison, he remembered those moments fonder than all the rest. He longed for him now: he still dreamed of him, of his shape, of the touch of his skin and the feel of his breath. He longed for him... and he mourned. He mourned every moment away from him, every opportunity lost to raise his son, a boy he heard was—in some ways—so much like him.
Seated on the edge of a cliff, something he did often while engaged in his solo patrols, he peered over the great vastness and into the endless array of pines below. "Talon," he whispered, beneath words. Quiet, yet his heart poured out into every escaped breath from his lips. His lungs tightened, and his eyes filled with the gloss of what would have become tears. "I know it's been too long. Too long of absence for you to forgive... but I really wish I could go back. Really wish I could return to that last moment I had with you... that last goodbye. Wish I could escape these chains. Wish I could see our son. Wish I could be a man, and not the statue of one."
His eyes glowered downwards, and he bit his lower lip, shaking his head bitterly. "How is it that this is all my life has come to be? Sequestered away from the world, lamenting promise I never had. I don't know what to do anymore—it's like there's a gaping anguish growing in me, spreading. It's become its own organ: a vessel of sorrow, and loss, and pain. A drought of the soul. Why is that? Why was experiencing love enough to do that to me? I don't understand."
Burying his face within his large hands, the Kathar whimpered. He begged for understanding, and for meaning... for purpose within the pain. Within the decades of futility he'd toiled through, all to achieve something that brought him no satisfaction: strength. He didn't care for power, for influence, for the Empire's might. He didn't long for any of those things. He longed for something else—for a man that wasn't there, for a family that never was, for a version of himself that wasn't aligned or suited for this world. For happiness. That mattered so much more to him than respect, or admiration. And yet he had none at all.
"Help me understand," he whispered, voice becoming quiet from futility. "Help me, Talon. Please."