What she's just told him is outright impossible, but she doesn't seem to be lying. And why would she lie to him about something like this, anyway? It doesn't make any sense at all.
Homunculi don't have souls, anyway. Left over bits and pieces from humanity, but that doesn't count as a soul. It's enough to have an identity. That, and the fact that when it came to spirit attachment, Greed didn't want his spirit attached to someone else's body. That was what Dante did and it was horrifying.
But a homunculus in a human's body implied something else, something that unsettled him more than he wanted to let on. It implied that whatever Greed she had met didn't truly have a body of his own.
Greed couldn't remember what he originally looked like, not really. He remembered enough to know he hadn't completely changed shape or form. Eyes, teeth, skin tone, maybe the hair, but he would have been recognizable to anyone who had known him when he was alive if he hadn't died centuries ago.
And again, all of this was impossible because he was about five minutes away from Dante killing him and he had walked into her mansion knowing fully well that he was going to die.
He's pretty sure that Envy knew it, too. And even if Dante hadn't killed him, Kimbley would have gotten bored of playing keep away eventually and blown up Greed's skull and he would have died that way instead.
There's something else going on. It's almost like she's talking about an entirely different set of events.]
I'm not saying you're a liar because I don't believe you are, but trust me when I say this: what you're telling me is impossible in the world as I know it.
You can't go shoving a homunculus' spirit into a human body. It would kill both of them.
private;
What she's just told him is outright impossible, but she doesn't seem to be lying. And why would she lie to him about something like this, anyway? It doesn't make any sense at all.
Homunculi don't have souls, anyway. Left over bits and pieces from humanity, but that doesn't count as a soul. It's enough to have an identity. That, and the fact that when it came to spirit attachment, Greed didn't want his spirit attached to someone else's body. That was what Dante did and it was horrifying.
But a homunculus in a human's body implied something else, something that unsettled him more than he wanted to let on. It implied that whatever Greed she had met didn't truly have a body of his own.
Greed couldn't remember what he originally looked like, not really. He remembered enough to know he hadn't completely changed shape or form. Eyes, teeth, skin tone, maybe the hair, but he would have been recognizable to anyone who had known him when he was alive if he hadn't died centuries ago.
And again, all of this was impossible because he was about five minutes away from Dante killing him and he had walked into her mansion knowing fully well that he was going to die.
He's pretty sure that Envy knew it, too. And even if Dante hadn't killed him, Kimbley would have gotten bored of playing keep away eventually and blown up Greed's skull and he would have died that way instead.
There's something else going on. It's almost like she's talking about an entirely different set of events.]
I'm not saying you're a liar because I don't believe you are, but trust me when I say this: what you're telling me is impossible in the world as I know it.
You can't go shoving a homunculus' spirit into a human body. It would kill both of them.