It is the old story: boy gets girl, boy comes under the control of a god and tries to end the world, boy and girl clash, boy and girl get piped through time, boy gets girl back only to lose her during the zombie uprising to the Forrest, and must get her bac again. A tale as old as time. 🙂
More than that, you’re not supposed to. Living things grow, and that growth very rarely involves regression.
The more I think about it, the more I realize what’s really happening is that Thunderhead isn’t wanting to accept that she’s grown out of being a ‘simple deer,’ as she’s fond of describing herself. She hasn’t been simple for quite some time now, nor is she culturally a deer any longer, whatever her physiology.
Jon, too, needs to accept that he’s changed. Whether that chance means the end of his marriage, however, is another matter. I don’t think, however, that either of their futures involves running an inn. That, I suspect, was a mistake.
Does this mean, that Deer Divorce requires far less paperwork?
Haha. Yes, actually. 🙂
I don’t like where this is going…
It’s probably heading for Deer-vorce, my friend.
🙂
Doe-n’t you dare!
Sorry. I’m very fawn-ed of puns. 🙂
It is the old story: boy gets girl, boy comes under the control of a god and tries to end the world, boy and girl clash, boy and girl get piped through time, boy gets girl back only to lose her during the zombie uprising to the Forrest, and must get her bac again. A tale as old as time. 🙂
Hahahaha. My stories are so cliche!
“The Allegheny”? Did I forgot some old information, or is this something new?
Actually Kyri is from the Allegheny Forest in Pennsylvania. Issue 4, I believe. 🙂
Did… did Jon just manage to spell her name right?
Yes he did. Good catch! 🙂
Somehow I keep reading Kyrius Waifu.
Poor Thunderhead. She may try to go back, but she’s too much of the human world now to live that life, either, as we saw.
I don’t like where I suspect this is going to lead her, much less what it means for her and Jon as a couple.
I think that sums it up nicely. You can never truly go back, can you?
More than that, you’re not supposed to. Living things grow, and that growth very rarely involves regression.
The more I think about it, the more I realize what’s really happening is that Thunderhead isn’t wanting to accept that she’s grown out of being a ‘simple deer,’ as she’s fond of describing herself. She hasn’t been simple for quite some time now, nor is she culturally a deer any longer, whatever her physiology.
Jon, too, needs to accept that he’s changed. Whether that chance means the end of his marriage, however, is another matter. I don’t think, however, that either of their futures involves running an inn. That, I suspect, was a mistake.
Yes exactly! 🙂 And they need to figure out what this change means while the Queen of the Dead looms in the background…