Back at their home, Meri Amory is struggling to write an article for her job, her mind completely absorbed by thoughts of her husband, Sirius. She cannot help but think that she was clearly not a priority in his life. After all, he chose this apparent suicide mission over the supposed love of his life, and, adding insult to injury, named his ship -- the Meriwell -- after her, as if to serve as a cheap replacement while he was gone.
Unable to concentrate, she sits at her computer and reads the news. Anything to distract her from her thoughts. But then, she sees a headline that makes her heart sink. An explosion in the sky. Falling debris identified as parts from Sirius Amory's ship. Possible system failure. No chance of survival.
Devastated, she closes herself off from the world. As reporters flood the scene and attempt to interview her about the accident, she simply ignores all of them. She cannot function under the assumption that Sirius is dead, so she decides that as long as she continues to close herself off, she cannot hear any further information about the accident and can hold on to the belief that Sirius has somehow survived.
Right on. I think a lot of people can relate to being told one thing, then being shown through action it's not as it appears. There's no doubt that Sirius loves his wife, but his heart is clearly elsewhere..literally.
Right on. I think a lot of people can relate to being told one thing, then being shown through action it's not as it appears. There's no doubt that Sirius loves his wife, but his heart is clearly elsewhere..literally.
It's heartbreaking in the sense that the tragedy is that it didn't have to be this way, yet if it wasn't then the "magic" behind Keywork may not have been discovered.
It's heartbreaking in the sense that the tragedy is that it didn't have to be this way, yet if it wasn't then the "magic" behind Keywork may not have been discovered.
Back at their home, Meri Amory is struggling to write an article for her job, her mind completely absorbed by thoughts of her husband, Sirius. She cannot help but think that she was clearly not a priority in his life. After all, he chose this apparent suicide mission over the supposed love of his life, and, adding insult to injury, named his ship -- the Meriwell -- after her, as if to serve as a cheap replacement while he was gone.
Unable to concentrate, she sits at her computer and reads the news. Anything to distract her from her thoughts. But then, she sees a headline that makes her heart sink. An explosion in the sky. Falling debris identified as parts from Sirius Amory's ship. Possible system failure. No chance of survival.
Devastated, she closes herself off from the world. As reporters flood the scene and attempt to interview her about the accident, she simply ignores all of them. She cannot function under the assumption that Sirius is dead, so she decides that as long as she continues to close herself off, she cannot hear any further information about the accident and can hold on to the belief that Sirius has somehow survived.
Right on. I think a lot of people can relate to being told one thing, then being shown through action it's not as it appears. There's no doubt that Sirius loves his wife, but his heart is clearly elsewhere..literally.
Right on. I think a lot of people can relate to being told one thing, then being shown through action it's not as it appears. There's no doubt that Sirius loves his wife, but his heart is clearly elsewhere..literally.
It's heartbreaking in the sense that the tragedy is that it didn't have to be this way, yet if it wasn't then the "magic" behind Keywork may not have been discovered.
It's heartbreaking in the sense that the tragedy is that it didn't have to be this way, yet if it wasn't then the "magic" behind Keywork may not have been discovered.