@containyourmainposure continued from here [x]
Leonora listened quietly and attentively to all that Sceada spoke. She neither smiled nor frowned. Only her eyes held in them a glow of warmth, knowing full well the words that would follow.
“My dear,” she said softly, “you need not worry about insulting me. I am not a woman who places limits on love, but rather would see it grow in all directions. No, I have other concerns…”
Here, she let out a deep sigh and gazed upon him wearily. It was not a look of sheer unhappiness; it was an old resignation to the truth. This moment had been building for months.
“Though you profess such a grand love for me,” she said, “how can you claim to know me? Sceada, you are a good man with a kind heart, but long have you seen me as a woman of pure and whole goodness–a woman of kindness, of love, and nothing else. We know each other emotionally, but what do you know about me intellectually? About my thoughts, and the details of my life?”
She shook hear head, drawing her hands behind her back. Where she could not articulate her concerns, they were written in creases upon her brow.
“I have felt that you fell in love with me too quickly. That you fell in love with me before you knew who I am within, past the smiles and flowers and laughs. I have never revealed to you the great sadness welling in my heart, nor intimated to you certain details of my life–because I wanted you to know me first. I wanted your love of me to be true and whole, rather than premature.”
She twitched her shoulders.
“My love of you will never change. I am a free loving woman, a poly-amorous woman when I am not asked for exclusivity. It is rare when I consent to it, or desire it, because of such cases as this. But I must implore you to question why you fell so passionately in love with me before you knew very much about who I am. I implore you to consider that maybe you fell in love with an idea of me, and I should like for you to consider if that isn’t what you have done to other lovers in your life.”
Another sigh. She leaned against the wall, cradling herself in her arms. The weight of her feelings spread silently over her mind, crushing the echoes of her thoughts slowly, steadily before they could assume the expression of words. For a moment, she stood there with them, her eyes searching the ceiling beams for the right thing to say. Something that wasn’t so hopeless or painful.
“If you and Maria know each other in a capacity that is unique to any other relationship,” she whispered, “then you may be in love with Maria the person. And if that is the case, I would suggest that you cast away Leonora the ideal, and went to Maria’s side. I should like to meet her, too, eventually.”
Her reaction, though entirely understandable and probably even to an extent expected, frightens him.
Her words, clear and true as they were, stir up a fear in him, the very same fear he had felt before. The fear he felt when he first learned of her leaving, the fear he felt too when a friendship precious to him was on the verge of breaking apart:
And it shows on his countenance. His breathing is heavier than usual, and his sapphire eyes opened wider than ordinarily, not to mention his fingers, which have clenched to fists grasping fiercely at his robe. He wants desperately to say something, wants to defend himself - but he stays silent. He... he had to listen her, had to let her speak. For he knows... this conversation was inevitable.
But that does not change how much her words hurt.
“how can you claim to know me?”
“We know each other emotionally, but what do you know about me intellectually? About my thoughts, and the details of my life?”
He cannot deny the truth behind these words, cannot deny that he did not know Leonora as well as he’d wish to. He had often wanted to change that, but never dared to ask. ‘I will wait until she is ready to tell me’, he had always thought, but what was intended as understanding and respect had been naught but passiveness and perceived indifference. Truly, he was a fool...
“I implore you to consider that maybe you fell in love with an idea of me, and I should like for you to consider if that isn’t what you have done to other lovers in your life.”
Was this what the goddess had spoken of, what she had meant when she questioned the honesty of his feelings, when she spoke of how easily he seemed to love? Did he truly only feel love for others because they made him feel as if he held a worth after all?
He does not want to believe this, does not want to consider it true. And yet still, it seemed ever so logical, and the rational side of him knew this. Whether it was true or not, that did not matter right now; it had appeared thus either way. Perhaps it was truly as the deity had told him: Until he understood himself, until he valued himself, how could he truly love another...?
“I would suggest that you cast away Leonora the ideal, and went to Maria’s side.“
It is with these final words she offers him that the Burmecian finally snaps out of his melancholy, and loosens the grip of his hands just like the icy grip of fear had lessened. Yes... rationally speaking, that would likely be for the best, would spare him this predicament he believed himself stuck in. If he stayed with Maria and forgot about Leonora, then he would not have to feel guilty for loving another, for there’d no longer be another. It would be simple, logical, rational.
Once upon a time, many weeks and months now, more than a year even, someone had told him to live true to what he felt. That he should not deny his own feelings, that he had the right to speak upon them, to act according to them. A certain someone that had shown him that he too deserved to be loved - and he has not forgotten that. No, he had never forgotten these words Leonora herself offered him.
And now, he would hold true to them. Even if it might cause him and Leonora further hardship, further pain.
Because sometimes... pain was neccessary.
“Leonora...” His voice is calm and soft as he speaks, much like it had been in days past when things had seemed easier between the two of them. “I... I cannot deny the truth in your words, and I will not insult you by trying.”
“You are right... I do not know much of you, not as much as I would want too, nor as much as I ought to. I know precious little of your life, of the challenges you face, of the worries you hold nor of your hopes. And if you look at how little I know... it is only logical that one’d conclude that all I loved... was but an image, an ideal. I... I understand that.”
A heavy sigh passed his lips, as he paused for a moment. Turning around so that he could divert his gaze to the window, he hesitated a moment, trying to summon the strength he’d need to speak the words that laid on his heart, that defied what logic and reason dictated.
“Before you left... I was not certain of my feelings, wasn’t certain if what I felt was truly honest - and so I hesitated, did not say the words I wanted to say that day, shortly before you left without a word. And when I finally felt capable of speaking true to my heart, you had already left.”
“When you were gone... the ideal, the image of you was all I had left to remember, all I had to hold onto. I did not have the luxury of getting to know the real you before you left... and while I know that I have to blame my own passivity in never asking you about all these facets of you, can you honestly say that you ever tried to tell me either?”
Turning around once more, he now looked at her once more, his eyes no longer misted by fear but instead open and clear - and filled with a silent determination.”
“It is true I do not know much about you, and that I was too comfortable in our shared emotion to change that, but I ask you... What do you know of me, of my life? There is so much I never managed to tell you, so much you never asked... - can you truly claim that you did not love naught but the image of me? That you saw me for who I am?”
The words that now were on his tongue were heavy and he could practically feel himself choking on them. He tried to swallow, to gulp it down, but both the words and the heavy feeling remained - and so there was only one thing he could do about them: He had to speak them.
Even if he might come to regret them later.
“Didn’t you love an ideal of me just as I loved one of you? Was your affection not towards what you thought me to be, what you thought I could be? Or did... did that love... did it...”
“Did the love you held for me never run that deep, as deep as mine for you...?”