Deep down, he understood its charm. It was, before it had been tamed, a wild. These plants knew no master. They knew only that they had to grow, and how to continue that. They would never process the fact that man had long since tamed them. In a way, it was a reminder of Worth Woodsea. More than that, it was a reminder of those whom he had not seen in weeks. Jake, his mother and his father, even that weird old Guild Master had grabbed his friendship.
These plants were both a recognition that the wild could be reigned in, and that the wild could never be tamed. For it to have been completely conquered would insinuate that there would be no possible break away in the future. What would happen should the gardeners quit doing their jobs? Would the plants sit there, waiting to be tended to until they died?
Of course not. They would grow, expand, and eventually reclaim the entirety of what was theirs to begin with.
Laying upon one of the benches in the middle of the extravagant garden, Finn stared up at the moon and stars above. The entire world seemed to go through a metamorphosis when the sun retired for the evening, and yet it was the time with the least amount of people. Had so many truly fallen prey to cultural norms, without even the conscious acknowledgement that they had?
That went without saying. Society in all countries was a sort of mass hypnosis, and Fiore was no exception. People began to accept certain things as fact- Even things so basic as the day should be for being productive, the night is to recharge. For a young man who had dabbled in both the untamed and the conquered, Finn found himself unable to go fully to either side. Maybe that would change one day, but it was likely that there would always remain a rift.
After all, he was not a citizen of Fiore. He was not a child from Worth Woodsea. He was Finn- Nothing more, nothing less. There were honorifics, such as who his family was and who his guild may be. Those, however, were merely ways to describe the entirety that was Finn.
Such thoughts were not the things that raced through Finn's consciousness, but rather meddled in his subconscious mind for a later date. No, currently his mind was as blank as it could be. The subtle longing for his friends and family was present, but almost masked by the admiration both of his surroundings and of the stars above. He was for all intents and purposes merely lying on a bench, in a state of true peace.