Talk:Keefe Sencen/@comment-96.42.216.28-20190605154014/@comment-98.196.239.81-20190605185515

Well, people comment on this page every day so you might have to scroll farther than just a few pages. But I'll write you an argument anyway.

1. You say Keefe is never serious except in Neverseen, which isn't true. He has his serious moments in every book,  just like Fitz has his moments of humour. One thing Keefe is always serious about is Sophie. He does his very best to protect her, even if it seems dangerous and stupid. He's there for her when she's upset and vise versa. He loves her extremely and only wishes her to be happy. In Flashback he selflessly says that he is happy for Sophie and Fitz, even though that is the last thing he wants.

2. Keefe never wonders "who am I"; he wonders "who am I supposed to be?" When he finds out about his mom he is devastated and does everything he can to help the Black Swan uncover the Neverseen's secrets. He doesn't want any part of his "legacy". Sure, Keefe joins the Neverseen to try and learn about them, and it doesn't work, but he did that to try to protect everyone. While he was trying to learn about himself he was also working on trying to figure out the Neverseen. He didn't know that they were one step ahead (as always). So Keefe didn't just John the Neverseen for himself, he really tried to learn important secrets that would save everyone.

3. Now I'm gonna put this here even though it wasn't in your argument, but as I said earlier, Keefe only wants to make Sophie happy and tries to PROTECT her relationship with Fitz! I would like you to please read pages 768-770 of Flashback. You'll see what I mean. Keefe not only saved Sophitz from another disaster, he takes charge and tries to find a solution. There's another proof of his seriousness.

Thanks for reading my argument! And if any of you Team Keefe/Foster-Keefe fans out there want to back me up, I would really appreciate it!😊

~MKR