Oliver's first reaction is to hide that he, too, feels as if everything he knows is wrong. But...is his first reaction necessarily the best?
"I do understand that." His words are sincere, tinged with sympathy - but he doesn't add why or how deeply he understands.
"You doubt how to be a good person in a world so random, so cruel," he states, for the sake of clarification. Killing people, Sokka, cannibals, the trip - he has suspicions, but he's reluctant to push further.
Barty would know how to deal with this. Anyone from the abbey would. But not Oliver, who only knows beasts and trees and lies....
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"I do understand that." His words are sincere, tinged with sympathy - but he doesn't add why or how deeply he understands.
"You doubt how to be a good person in a world so random, so cruel," he states, for the sake of clarification. Killing people, Sokka, cannibals, the trip - he has suspicions, but he's reluctant to push further.
Barty would know how to deal with this. Anyone from the abbey would. But not Oliver, who only knows beasts and trees and lies....