Chapter One Hundred Ninety-Six: *Uncertain Times
With Fiona's identity confirmed to the best of my ability, I felt much better about having her at the Peak. I was nervous about how Alistair would react, but I couldn't help the bubble of hope that kept rising -- that maybe at least one of us could have a parent in our lives, for the first time.
I got up, going over and picking up one of the framed drawings Alistair had given me -- the one of us getting married -- and handed it to...my mother-in-law.
"It's not as good a likeness of him as it is of me, but it isn't bad," I commented, watching her face as I sat back down.
She gasped softly, running her fingertips over her lips as she examined the image. "He looks...he looks so much like Maric. You can't even tell..."
She trailed off, looking up at me curiously. "Why isn't it as good a likeness of him?"
I grinned. "Because he drew it. And he doesn't see himself the way everyone else does. Still, it's pretty close."
"He drew this?" She traced his face tenderly.
"He drew all of these." I gestured around myself. It was true; at my insistence, our sitting room was full of my husband's artwork -- pictures of friends and loves ones, but also scenery, weapons...whatever caught his fancy.
I didn't display most of the ones he'd done of me, for obvious reasons.
Fiona stood and walked around the room, examining the drawings with something that looked like awe. "Will you tell me about him?"
I laughed. "I'm probably biased." She shot me an amused glance, and I continued, "He's...everything. Kind and funny and generous and snarky. He's a good man, despite everything he's been through. When he cares about someone, he would do anything for them." I smiled longingly. "I'm a lucky girl."
Fiona turned back to me. "What do you mean, what he's been through?"
I raised an eyebrow. "Surely Duncan told you?"
She raised her hand to tilt it side to side. "Sort of. He wouldn't give me a lot of detail -- we both thought it was probably better that way. The only part I knew much about was when Duncan recruited him to the Wardens." She shook her head. "I was furious."
I sighed. "Honestly...I think that should be his story to tell. Suffice it to say, Maric wasn't always the best judge of character. And the Wardens were the best thing that could have happened to him."
That made her frown, but she seemed to reluctantly let it go. "So...you know an awful lot about me. And other secrets you shouldn't be privy to."
I chuckled. "You have no idea."
Her brows lowered, her expression worried. "I suppose Duncan could have told you..."
I shook my head. "No. He wouldn't do that -- you may not have seen him much in recent years, but you must know he would never betray Grey Warden secrets, never mind personal secrets of people he cared about."
She nodded, abashed. "You're right. But then...how?"
I sighed. "That's a really long story -- and one that risks breaking more than a few confidences of my own." I bit my lip as I thought. "I'm not opposed to telling you, but I'd like to speak with Alistair first. I think he should be involved in that decision."
Again, she looked unsatisfied with that response, but again she let it go. "Very well."
"He's due back tomorrow. Besides," I grinned, "it's supper time. And I know how important it is to feed Grey Wardens on a schedule."
She startled, turning dark eyes on me again. "I'm not a Warden, not anymore."
I suppressed the smile and the urge to tell her about my own odd taint issue. "Nevertheless, I'd be very surprised if you lost the appetite."
*****
I took Fiona to the main hall with me for supper. She seemed anxious at first, but when no one questioned why she was there, she relaxed and seemed to enjoy the rowdy, noisy affair that was supper at Soldier's Peak. With a surreptitious look around, she did take seconds and then thirds, and I laughed knowing she probably didn't notice that I did too.
She went to bed afterwards, fatigued from her travel from Cumberland, and I went to my room to call Alistair on the sending stone.
I couldn't tell him his mother was visiting; he had little, if any, privacy down in the Deep Roads, surrounded by potential recruits, soldiers, bodyguards, and Wardens, but I still felt guilty for keeping it from him. I was pleasantly surprised to learn they were already on their way back, and would probably be home in the early afternoon the next day. We didn't talk long; he sounded exhausted, and I wanted him to get as much sleep as he could down there.
Trudging through the Deep Roads while half asleep is never a good idea.
I didn't think I'd be able to keep the news completely to myself; since I couldn't tell my husband, instead I told my brother.
Alistair will forgive me...I hope?
Aedan was as excited as I was when I told him about Fiona -- and as apprehensive. He still refused to tell me where he and Zevran were and what they were doing, but I could tell from his tone they weren't even close to getting ready to come home. I could also tell he was having much more fun than I would have expected, and I wondered if he finally felt free of all the obligations and duties that had followed him for so much of his life. I didn't envy him -- a mission of vengeance against the leadership of the Antivan Crows certainly didn't appeal to me -- but when I thought about the endless amount of paperwork I did every day, I wouldn't have minded a little less duty in my life.