Franky watched her face closely, but if she were showing any outward signs, they were beyond him. He watched her toy with the feather of a god, a god that he played a role in helping to contain. He listened to her words, words that resonated with him, for it seemed they had lived similar lives, at least in childhood. As a child, Franky remembered an Imperium far more different than that he'd recently left. Maybe it was just his village that was the good of his memories.
Maybe it was just his family.
He walked with her, the pace of elders enjoying the flow of wind rather than racing against it. Franky had never seen dragons before, and yet now they may as well be cats back home. It was absurdly beautiful, he'd been taught that they were great, terrible beasts. And while Franky was sure that they could kill him with ease if so desired, there were many more people in this world capable of such a simple feat. At least these dragons didn't seem to hate him for his mere existence.
And then She looked at him. Truly at him. And she Spoke, and Franky knew her words to be beyond simple facets of truth or lies. Her words Were. Are. Always would be. She told a story of gods, but those were not the words that truly resonated Franky's core. No, Franky cared not for the affairs of gods.
Except when they brought ruination on normal people, people he cared about.
The breeze bristled through him, and Franky saw her unreadable face show obvious worry. It was so strange to think that gods were people, capable of the emotions of people, but this here was an absolute example of such. Worry. Franky knew that mistress well. He heard the shudder in her voice, one that he'd had to hide so many times as a soldier and commander in the Imperium.
His hand was in hers and she asked him, laying herself bare before him.
It was an impossible ask. She was asking him to risk his life, and the life of every member of his family, of every person in his employ. She was asking him to potentially put all of them in harm's way for a man, a god he did not know nor worship. She was asking him to stop an uncertain future, asking him out of fear and worry. She was asking a man well past his prime, a man more interested in retiring with a whiskey, a pack of smokes, watching his grandchildren play, to give all of that up for an impossibility. An impossibility that he'd helped make impossible.
Who was she to ask this of him? He was not one of her followers, he never worshiped her. He was not one of her many Orkhan who believed she was the greatest of their gods, having helped guide them from savagery. Why should he risk so much to help her? What Victoria had asked of him was easy. And she had come bearing honey and followed through on her promises. She was a contact he could rely upon, if not trust.
But Galetira? Franky knew nothing about her and trusted her none.
Franky didn't look to the dark forest, one so foreboding, one that the winds themselves seem determined to drive him to focus on. No. He looked at the dragons on the lake. He remembered when his father told him about dragons, flying through the skies, majestic. He remembered this time he and Dalma shared a few days by a lake between his campaigns. He remembered the worry he bore when his first grandchild was born, thinking that they would have to follow in his footsteps, in the footsteps of his children, and become soldiers, baptized in the blood and shadow of war.
He remembered Her.
He remembered how she fought against everything the Imperium stood for, claiming back her ancestral lands, how she rallied her people. And he remembered how thousands had died while she did the right thing. He remembered the feeling of her blood on his hands as he too did the right thing and stopped her. He shook his head a bit, letting go of Galetira's hand, letting it fall back to her. Good, evil, none of that was real, none of it mattered, both allowed war to happen, allowed people to die, guilty or innocent.
His eyes cast a severe sidelong glance at her, the same look she would recognize from his days as Major Frankorg if she had ever cared to walk his past. "Allow my wife, Dalma, to carry your Emblem and I will do this for you." Franky turned and faced Galetira properly, and there was that glean in his eye, and in this world that was a dream, yet not, Franky stood before her in his youthful glory. His skin was deep green, his hair long and starkly crimson, his gaze harsh, his body strong. But just as quickly as it had appeared, the withered elder of a man was back.
"I can and will do this if you grant me this tool. I do not wish to carry your burden, nor do I wish it upon Dalma. I know how much your Seers suffer in this world. I'm sure you've suffered as well." In his mind, 'We all have.' "Curse her with your Emblem, and I will see to it that Arcas is freed."