Ambrose lives in despair for infinite time without meaning or purpose, wanting to rest for a lifetime and die to remove the curse of eternal life without empathy. Lucas offers himself as either an answer to prayer or the beginning of Ambrose's greatest nightmare, showing no mercy if not called appropriately with pure entity. Prudence, though blind and calm, is aware of her surroundings and warns that those who walk near or follow her will be torn like paper or have their head slammed into a wall like a pillow, as she is now free and ready to be a widow.
Ambrose lives in despair for infinite time without meaning or purpose, wanting to rest for a lifetime and die to remove the curse of eternal life without empathy. Lucas offers himself as either an answer to prayer or the beginning of Ambrose's greatest nightmare, showing no mercy if not called appropriately with pure entity. Prudence, though blind and calm, is aware of her surroundings and warns that those who walk near or follow her will be torn like paper or have their head slammed into a wall like a pillow, as she is now free and ready to be a widow.
Ambrose lives in despair for infinite time without meaning or purpose, wanting to rest for a lifetime and die to remove the curse of eternal life without empathy. Lucas offers himself as either an answer to prayer or the beginning of Ambrose's greatest nightmare, showing no mercy if not called appropriately with pure entity. Prudence, though blind and calm, is aware of her surroundings and warns that those who walk near or follow her will be torn like paper or have their head slammed into a wall like a pillow, as she is now free and ready to be a widow.