Oh, so she wasn’t completely ignorant to how the situation looked like from Tsuki’s perspective? How about that, a member of the clergy that wasn’t blind to everyone else’s opinions. No, it certainly did not look like they had a lot in common, but at this point she was very curious what the woman thought they did have in common. It seemed doubtful there’d be anything connecting them, but here she was claiming they had a lot in common. She’d kind of assumed that the paper had been a test after the woman’s initial reaction to Tsuki setting it on fire, but as far as she knew there was no proof that it didn’t work on just about everyone. From what she’d seen, it worked 100% of the time it was used. If the woman wanted her to believe this was a real test she should have brought a person it didn’t work on, or documented evidence. All she had to go on now was her word. Tsuki was well aware of how some families could relate their linage to the gods. She’d actually worked on a case some years ago with a family that had stated they had a divine heritage, but the details of that case was irrelevant to the current situation. She nodded in response to the question though. As much as the other woman believed her own words, Tsuki couldn’t help but feel that they sounded as if she was working up to a point where she tried to sell her some kind of product. Presumably the paper she’d already been given a sample of. Either that, or she was trying to scam her. She’d most definitely shoot her if one of those possibilities turned out to be the case. However, it didn’t make sense that she would have stayed after Tsuki had given her a chance to leave if that was all it was. Why risk getting shot over it? The symbols she could see floating around the woman’s head made her think that maybe there was a tiny chance there was some truth to what she was being told. She’d denied most of her life that her curse had anything to do with the gods, because what were the chances of that? Her family didn’t have any divine heritage. It was likelier her abilities had come from some other source than the divine, not that she’d been able to identify what that source would have been. “Can’t say that I remember seeing you before, lady.” Tsuki responded when the woman stopped talking. “I’m not interested in the religious channels or shows, so unless you were on the news or in a movie I doubt I’ve seen you on TV.” ¨ She wasn’t all that interested in remembering celebrities to begin with, no matter what had made them famous. Besides, she doubted the woman had ever appeared on TV looking like she did in that moment, which would make her a lot less recognizable to pretty much everyone, even fans. The name was the one clue she had to go on then, but other than the obvious connection to the sun she was drawing a blank there as well. “Let’s get to the point, shall we?” Tsuki said. “You’re trying to tell me what? That I’m related to the gods? My family don’t have any divine heritage to brag about, I would know. Your paper don’t prove much to me either as the two times I’ve seen it used it worked flawlessly.”