There’s a mark on my neck and I want it to stay there forever. That’s hardly an appropriate thought to open this with, but it’s like a scent I can’t shake. Even when I’m deep inside my head I catch it sometimes and it pulls me right out again. Just focus, Saaferah. Many things have happened in the last few days which have kept me away from writing, and they need to be set down.
I still don’t know whether I imagined Dia’s initial feelings toward me and if I took him totally by surprise. What I know for sure is that there was a moment when I knew that I was going to lose it all—my home, my guild, my friends, and Dia himself—but to never have kissed him was the higher price. My plan was to get away as quickly as possible, to take what I could get and steal off to the Citadel, but — I couldn’t. I didn’t have the willpower. I couldn’t walk away from him and I hated myself for it. I don’t mean I cursed myself. I had never wanted to kill myself out of sheer anger until that moment.
I guess that says enough about me, doesn’t it? I didn’t hate myself for kissing him and betraying Ashling. I hated myself for lacking the strength to flee the scene like a thief with a two pound diamond. But I would’ve kept that diamond even if I had run. I might’ve been a beggar in the Black Citadel, but I would always have kissed Diathice Diathys. That would’ve been all the wealth I would ever have asked for.
What an impossibly stupid fucking thing to write.
When Dia said Ash might be okay with it, that she’d talked previously about having an open relationship, I felt the most terrible grip of hope I’ve ever known. I knew I was setting myself up to fail, but I dismissed that as baseless. I couldn’t help hoping. And at first, I was rewarded. Ash agreed.
I’d never been in such a situation. I had a bond with Dia, and to be sure I liked Ashling very much, but I felt as though I had catching up to do with her. And I fully, fully intended to. I wanted to hold her hands, to feel her fingers in mine. I wanted to share everything with her. I thought I was going to get to and I was excited. Optimistic, even. I hadn’t felt optimism since before I saw Lion’s Arch for the first time. That’s been years now.
We all went off to Hoelbrak. It was Ash’s thought, and I never once felt as though I was butting in, though perhaps that was my own myopia. (I never know my imagination from reality, do I?) In hindsight I should’ve realized I didn’t belong there when she tried to run, but the optimism reduced it to a fear I shoved into the back of my mind. I didn’t want to think about it. I should have known. She barely looked at me. More evidence for my suspicion that I’m an idiot.
Most of my time there I spent with Dia. I thought it was only fair. Ash had him first, so it was my turn. There were times when I came up for air and realized that, although through largely different means, I was connecting with him in a way I’ve done only once before, with Goldane, who still to this day I hold in unconditional love and solemn reverence. Now and then I tried to retreat into my old armor, telling myself he doesn’t even know me, but...he does. I can’t explain it, but Dia sees me the way I ought to be seen. He doesn’t look at me through a layer of assumptions or questions or concerns I didn’t ask for. Dia simply sees me. No one sees me the way Dia sees me. He knows me. I can’t hide from him in my head.
He’s like you, Goldy, in a way I can’t quite pin down. You always knew. Dia knows, too. I’ve never met anyone else but the two of you who knew.
Please, please, Dia. Stay with me. I don’t know if I can go through that again.
I’m digressing. Ashling left. Or—no, that isn’t exactly right. Ashling asked Dia choose.
That hurts me. Sharply, that hurts me. It hurts me mostly that Dia should be put in that situation. I can only imagine his pain. It hurts me that Ashling, who came before I did, should be the one to walk away. I feel as though I’m the one at fault here. If I had just picked up and left after kissing Dia this wouldn’t have happened. And it hurts me that I was led to believe all would be well, only to have this spring up not a week later.
He chose me. I won’t forget that. Not for a second. Not ever. It wasn’t happenstance or coincidence or an accident or convenience. Dia was given the choice and he chose me. I’ll carry that forward.
I dread the looks the others will give us and the prodding which is sure to come when they find out. I’ll be painted the villain, and I know in my gut that I’ve earned it. The mark on my neck won’t help, but I’m not going to hide it. If they want to think I’m a homewrecker, let it be. It’s true. But Dia makes it go away.
This has all happened with such blinding speed.
I have made a royal mess of things, but—if my pen could turn to fire this page would be cinders—this is my mess. I’m going to see this through. I can’t run. I don’t want to anymore. I have roots now.