So his guilt and memory tell us one story and then Eris tell another about a selfish woman who decided that after losing her adopted son who protected her from a Fallen raiding party, decides to send Zavala back to Saladin and then moves on to another man, has a daughter with him and lives a long, apparently happy life.
Meanwhile, Zavala buries his sadness in his work, thinking that he failed both Hakim and Safiyah and spends the next few centuries trying to make it up to a memory of a clearly ungrateful woman.
Man, the poor guy.
-
Wrong what the nightmare said to him is what he thought in reality it’s far from that his wife never blamed him for their son’s death their son was doing what he was taught Zavala felt like it was his fault when it really really wasn’t
-
I don't think you're emotionally intelligent enough to understand that plot point fully
-
Lol the world, traveller and universe is literally under threat from ending and we are all focusing on peoples feelings. This season and you people that like it are ridiculous.
-
Life is cruel to say it can take a loved one away just Like that to say the virus not to be mentioned by Name almost claimed my sister so it can happen To anyone.
-
Edited by Ghostfire239: 6/22/2022 11:02:07 PMI think might be confused about how these nightmares work. The nightmares are just manifestation of the a person’s regret or guilt. So the things Zavala’s wife says as a nightmare are just Zavala’s guilt given form and words. Pretty sure it’s even stated that his wife never even blamed him to begin with. He just felt too guilty to believe it.
-
Safiyah never blamed Zavala. What the nightmare says is what Zavala himself believes. He believes that he is responsible for failing to protect his family when in reality he did nothing wrong.