[It's as close to blunt as Giovanni gets, at any rate, more inclined towards vagueness and side-stepping as he is. But still, it surprises him when the question comes, and if there'd been a delay in Jack's response, Giovanni's is longer. In truth, the answer isn't easy to discern, the two - whether it really doesn't matter to him or whether he only feels this way because it's what he's been conditioned to feel - isn't something that can be easily separated out.
That's the problem with having been abandoned to his fate whilst Heine was released from it. Things had been different, once. He hadn't wanted this, and what was done to them had only filled him with terror and misery, back then. But it's a part of him now, branded down into his bones.
He could answer the question in a whole host of ways, but the one he gives is likely to be disappointing. He doesn't want to discuss this with you.]
no subject
That's the problem with having been abandoned to his fate whilst Heine was released from it. Things had been different, once. He hadn't wanted this, and what was done to them had only filled him with terror and misery, back then. But it's a part of him now, branded down into his bones.
He could answer the question in a whole host of ways, but the one he gives is likely to be disappointing. He doesn't want to discuss this with you.]
I don't know what you mean.