His hand spreads at Papryus intimate reaction and he allows the book to open once more, his other hand sliding across the pages until the book reaches its very conclusion. He understands his frustration, he gets the pain and suffering her feels, and the confusion that comes with a heavy weight of such a story.
He loved humans for their simplicity, their need to love and ultimately destroy. He looks away from Papryus to the book itself and reads over what is actually there in detailed depth. He has to be careful now. He's far too deep into the conversation and he cannot allow his own carefully crafted poker face to ever slip. "Humans give up fighting when they can no longer win. When they feel they are at a true loss." Like Suman Dark did, "There are those humans that do try beyond their own ability to do so. I will admit to that. But these humans, these beings bent on fighting, that have taken upon themselves 'God's gift' called Innocence... there is no going back for them. They will always fight."
He turns the page he's on until he reaches that point and then gently holds the book out towards Papyrus, "Just like Suman Dark did. Begging for his life, for mercy, for redemption. I gave him that choice, to betray everything he loved in order to go home. He took it without hesitation, giving up all the names of his comrades. You're right... he stopped fighting at the cost of killing everyone he cared about. Everything he worked for. Everyone he worked with." What the book doesn't tell Papyrus is that around 105 people died that day. "He wanted to go home so badly, that he gave me every name on my list and every one of their locations."
you also add in a lot of physical reaction so it's quite alright. I enjoy it!
He loved humans for their simplicity, their need to love and ultimately destroy. He looks away from Papryus to the book itself and reads over what is actually there in detailed depth. He has to be careful now. He's far too deep into the conversation and he cannot allow his own carefully crafted poker face to ever slip. "Humans give up fighting when they can no longer win. When they feel they are at a true loss." Like Suman Dark did, "There are those humans that do try beyond their own ability to do so. I will admit to that. But these humans, these beings bent on fighting, that have taken upon themselves 'God's gift' called Innocence... there is no going back for them. They will always fight."
He turns the page he's on until he reaches that point and then gently holds the book out towards Papyrus, "Just like Suman Dark did. Begging for his life, for mercy, for redemption. I gave him that choice, to betray everything he loved in order to go home. He took it without hesitation, giving up all the names of his comrades. You're right... he stopped fighting at the cost of killing everyone he cared about. Everything he worked for. Everyone he worked with." What the book doesn't tell Papyrus is that around 105 people died that day. "He wanted to go home so badly, that he gave me every name on my list and every one of their locations."