Notably, Keylar also intended to raise her son in the Federation. I think there's a hint that she made a choice for Alexander that Worf never realized or was in denial of.CmdrKing wrote: ↑Sun Jun 12, 2022 1:30 pm Keylar is interesting in this context because she was the opposite of Torres in a lot of ways. She definitely had an affinity for Klingon culture overall, just no tolerance for whatever the Klingon equivalent of machismo is. Torres meanwhile has always seemed actively repulsed by Klingon culture generally, not just the parts that relate to her own experiences growing up.
But then maybe that means Keylar would be best positioned to help Torres find elements of it she does enjoy, and from there help her learn a more complete understanding of herself.
There's a bit more going on there as well with the fact what a colossal asshole Henry was. He was sleeping with her sister for much of their relationship and took to her again when Anne was pregnant. In addition to the son thing, it's very likely he just got bored of her.clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Jun 12, 2022 10:46 pmKind of depends which historian you believe: She was executed for not siring a male air, she was executed because Thomas Cromwell invented charges against her, or she actually was guilty of adultery, incest and/or treason.
Personally, I think all three may have truth in reality. By all accounts by Tudor standards she was a very opinionated and strong woman who certainly would have made her powerful enemies in the court, and given how sex with King Syphilis was the only thing securing her position, I wonder if she thought that trying to have sex with another man in order to try and produce a male heir for Henry may have seemed like a smart move. I somehow doubt that she was guilty of fornicating with her own brother though.
Henry certainly murdered her with false charges but Henry wasn't exactly unknown to do that to his male associates (often friends for decades bordering on family): Wolsey, Thomas Moore, Cromwell himself, and others. I think Cromwell even wrote down somewhere that Henry was bitter and angry about executing Wolsey a few months later, which made him realize that his life hung by a thread to the king's whims.