(no subject)
Mar. 18th, 2013 10:14 pmIt's come to my attention that there are still far too many people out there with absolutely the wrong idea about me and my intentions, so please, allow me to set all the rumours to rest. Why hide all of this behind filters? When my own family can't seem to fathom just how serious I am, well, it's dire straits, indeed!
So, allow me to just declare this here so that everyone might understand.
In the long months since departing Emeron, I have thought often and fondly of the Lady Canti, who has been so kind to dutifully continue correspondence with me through these very same journals -- which I am eternally grateful for, of course. In those same months and through the letters we have exchanged I have come to realize that I have been utterly enchanted by Lady Canti's gentle nature; her kindness, beauty, and that enduring quiet strength she has that is such a hallmark of the Ladies of the North. If I think often of home, it is not half so often as I think of her, waiting so patiently for me to return to her and make good on what promises I have made.
And I hope she won't be terribly cross with me for saying this so publicly, but I cannot imagine a future for me without her in it, nor am I interested in one. I intend to return to Emeron and fill her days with the same joy she has brought to mine, because I love her dearly, and I intend to work every day to charm her until she can say the same of me.
So, allow me to just declare this here so that everyone might understand.
In the long months since departing Emeron, I have thought often and fondly of the Lady Canti, who has been so kind to dutifully continue correspondence with me through these very same journals -- which I am eternally grateful for, of course. In those same months and through the letters we have exchanged I have come to realize that I have been utterly enchanted by Lady Canti's gentle nature; her kindness, beauty, and that enduring quiet strength she has that is such a hallmark of the Ladies of the North. If I think often of home, it is not half so often as I think of her, waiting so patiently for me to return to her and make good on what promises I have made.
And I hope she won't be terribly cross with me for saying this so publicly, but I cannot imagine a future for me without her in it, nor am I interested in one. I intend to return to Emeron and fill her days with the same joy she has brought to mine, because I love her dearly, and I intend to work every day to charm her until she can say the same of me.