Reverend Father Hart
spent the evening preparing for Mass, as he always did, but his thoughts kept drifting back to Cersei. Their meeti
d the walls she had built around herself. The darkness of her past-the abuse, the betrayals, the years spent on the streets-hung over her like a storm cloud, but Father Hart had
vely. She had begun to trust him, little by little, and for that, he was gr
nerability, her beauty. He had always maintained the barrier between himself and those
ldhood, the memories of her mother, the way she had been abandoned by those who should have cared for her. It had been a painful admission, one that
talked about the loneliness that had driven her to prostitution, his heart ached for her. There
ommitment to the Church, but now, as he sat alone in his office, a t
nzo stepped inside, his usual warm smile replaced by
artled out of his thought
en watching you. For the last few weeks, you've seemed... distracted. More than usua
e. He had been hoping that his growing attachment to her would
Father Hart replied, his voice
. You're a good man, but something's off. I've seen the way you look at her-Ce
"I'm just trying to help her," he said quietly. "She's been through so much. She need
guidance and... well, whatever this is. You're walking a dangerous path, Hart. You're a priest. You'
dn't be ignored. "I'm not blind, either, Lorenzo. I know what I'm feeling. But this is different. She's different. I've never had so
u can't deny it. I've seen you with her-how you care for her, how you listen to her. You're too
uldn't escape. He had crossed a line-one he couldn't uncross. And every day,
plan for this to happen. But I can't just turn my back on her. She's... she's been throu
't help her like this. This... attachment you're forming isn't healthy. It's dangerous. The Chu
enying the consequences if anyone found out about his growing affection for Cersei. It would destr
. Not yet. Not when he could still see the hope in her eyes, not when he kn
ly, his voice low. "But I can't just walk
't lose yourself in this, Hart. You've worked too hard to get w
g in the air long after he had left. He sat there, alone in his off
he reconcile them all? How could he continue to serv
r, but one thing was cert