Ilde will be the first to admit she's not exactly the most faithful anything, but there's something a bit disconcerting about so explicitly commercializing something ostensibly sacred. Maybe Catholicism lingers more than she thought, which seems unfair when she's not even human and was only baptised because her father thought it would impress a girl.
no subject
Ilde will be the first to admit she's not exactly the most faithful anything, but there's something a bit disconcerting about so explicitly commercializing something ostensibly sacred. Maybe Catholicism lingers more than she thought, which seems unfair when she's not even human and was only baptised because her father thought it would impress a girl.