Elann’s laugh drew his attention back to her. He didn’t share her humor, it was a seriously asked question. She said she didn’t think of him as impure and unfaithful, listing reasons found in his friends, family, and herself. He maintained his gaze on her until she asked her own question, to which he turned to face her entirely. “Yes, sometimes,” he said truthfully. “Can you explain what you mean by ‘pure’? I do not understand, I don’t think the same as you do, both of you confuse me still.” Noah stuck by Aimee’s own argument regarding both Yahal and Zulrav made from an outside perspective; the two gods were incompatible, so to speak. Where Yahal cared about the faithfulness and purity of mortals and nature, Zulrav did not. It wasn’t beyond the world for the gods to have their own disagreements as well, as they both witnessed in the momentary clash between Oriana and Yahal pertaining to the bear Elann downed. Therefore, Noah did not think it impossible for Zulrav to not care about Yahal or Yahal’s view on mortals and nature.