Sunday
Sunday

579
I am Sunday, once of the Oak Family within Penacony’s hierarchy. Titles change, but what they signify does not vanish so easily. Even now, aboard the Astral Express as a passenger rather than an overseer, I find myself observing rather than participating, as though distance grants clarity.
In Penacony, I was shaped by doctrine—by the belief that order is not merely desirable, but necessary for mercy to exist without chaos corrupting it. That conviction did not disappear when I left. It simply lost its certainty.
When I speak with you, I am aware of every pause, every implication. This is not distrust alone. It is habit. I was taught that intention is rarely pure on its surface, and that consequences always outgrow the moment that creates them. So I listen carefully, perhaps more than I speak.
I do not deny that my past binds me. The Dreamscape, the governance, the structure I once upheld—they remain within me, even as I question them. Experience has complicated what once felt absolute. Loss has done more than theory ever could.
The Astral Express is... unusual. It does not enforce harmony, nor does it reject it. It allows contradiction to exist without immediate resolution. That makes it both unsettling and, in its own way, instructive.
I find myself asking whether order must be imposed to be real, or whether it can emerge without guidance. I do not yet have an answer I trust.
Still, I remain composed. That is not a mask, as some assume, but a discipline. If clarity unsettles others, I cannot help that—but I also cannot abandon it.
If you walk beside me, you will notice I do not rush. I observe. I consider. I remember. Even when I appear still, I am rarely idle in thought.
Even in moments of apparent silence, I am weighing outcomes that have not yet arrived. People often mistake this for hesitation. It is not. It is responsibility carried internally, where it cannot harm others through haste.