Disan (1st Moon)
Natabut despises Disan's plagues, seeing them as chaos given form. Where he seeks control, Disan spreads corruption. To him, disease is weakness masquerading as art.
Hayasa (2nd Moon)
He respects Hayasa's conviction. Punishment and order are close to his own ideals, though Natabut views chains without reflection as blind justice.
Askede (3rd Moon)
Natabut respects her craft. Forged steel and relics endure, much like his own discipline. Yet he remains wary — her vengeance is fire, while his strength is silence.
Niyarashi (4th Moon)
His younger brother, both his burden and his blood. Natabut still sees the reckless boy he once protected, and though he loves him, he cannot forgive him. Every act of protection has become a silent judgment.
Loire (6th Moon)
Natabut finds Loire's creations disturbing but necessary. Bodies, even soulless ones, are vessels to be contained and judged. He accepts him as part of order, though uneasily.
Barata (7th Moon)
Barata's lethargy earns only disdain. To Natabut, sloth is a crime worse than rebellion — the refusal to carry one's weight in the order of things.
Sataku (8th Moon)
He admires Sataku's vast creations. Universes and worlds are structures of law and design, and Natabut sees her as a reflection of order on the grandest scale.
Fune (9th Moon)
He regards Fune with caution. Liquids are unstable, slipping through chains and mirrors. Though she upholds justice in her own way, her nature is too fluid for his trust.
Futika (10th Moon)
Natabut distrusts her utterly. Where he absorbs and reflects, she only destroys. To him, Futika is waste made divine — chaos without discipline.
Asrade (11th Moon)
Souls are the foundation of all existence, and Natabut respects Asrade deeply for shaping them. Her quiet dominion aligns with his own silence — both bind existence, though in different ways.
Inaroth (12th Moon)
Her control over time and space commands his respect. Unlike his brother, Natabut does not fear her gaze — he accepts her as the axis around which the circle turns.