“So what were you doing there?” Here’s the frustrating thing about Nate, one of those things that happy memories conveniently glossed over. A lot of times, you had to ask him a question more than once to get a straight answer. He loved to answer questions you’d never asked, or to answer a question with another question. “Do I really have to answer that, Kyrie?” See? “Don’t you trust me?” See?!”
“It is one thing to ask questions; what do you do with the answers?”
“He was an Angel. He walked in Grace. When you meet one—and I’m sure someday you will—you’ll know it, too. When he told me, it was, just, well, giving voice to something I already knew on a level.” “And how did you know for sure?” I asked. “Did you see his halo?” “Do you want to cut down on the snark? I’m your mother. Given the events of the last two days, I’d think you’d be more inclined to take my word for it.” She had me there. “Besides, he did show me his—ah—true self.” “Is that a euphemism for penis? Please let it not be a euphemism for penis. You are talking about my dad.” “No, it’s not a euphemism. I mean he showed me his Angel form.”
“There are fewer answers in the world than questions, and if you ask me now why that is so, I must tell you that there is no answer to that question.”
“The older you get, the more questions you get asked, and the more weary you become of answering the questions and the more elusive the answers--any answer, every answer--seem. --Maureen O'Toople in the short story "Your Question for Author Here”
“Do you always ask me the same questions you ask him?""It depends on whether or not I get an answer.”
“Possibly, she thought, the pool of answers was limited. There are fewer answers in the world than questions, and if you ask me now why that is so, I must tell you that there is no answer to that question.”