[He wonders, not for the first time what their son will think of him when he is grown, if he thinks of him at all.
He is weaker than his child and his master, lesser by far than most in this place in everything but the favour he is given which itself was always tenuous and likely to change. His "duties" are vile and of no esteem to anyone willing to look at them objectively and not just as someone happy to have a growing army.
Adar supposes that whatever amount of time he is given here will have to do and then there will be only hope, such a rare bird to find here.]
no subject
He is weaker than his child and his master, lesser by far than most in this place in everything but the favour he is given which itself was always tenuous and likely to change. His "duties" are vile and of no esteem to anyone willing to look at them objectively and not just as someone happy to have a growing army.
Adar supposes that whatever amount of time he is given here will have to do and then there will be only hope, such a rare bird to find here.]
They will not know what to make of him.