As you like. I will coordinate with your [fiance is wrong, under the circumstances, but its only the briefest pause suggesting he didn't always meant to say:] fellow propagandist. In the meantime, I'll begin drafting a few letters of my own.
[A pause, then:]
It's a shame your grandmother doesn't have a chance to see. I think she'd have found the entire thing very much to her taste.
[A rare offering of something almost personal on his part. It's not done by accident.]
( it's immensely difficult—visibly, even, particularly to someone who knows her so well—not to immediately ask which one he means, considering his relationship to both of her human grandmothers and what she remembers of them as women. it's right there and she deserves a medal for managing to keep her mouth shut long enough for the impulse to pass.
what she says, instead, )
Well, Lady Morrigan will be standing in for my mother,
no subject
[A pause, then:]
It's a shame your grandmother doesn't have a chance to see. I think she'd have found the entire thing very much to her taste.
[A rare offering of something almost personal on his part. It's not done by accident.]
no subject
what she says, instead, )
Well, Lady Morrigan will be standing in for my mother,
( begs the question of which she means. )
no subject
It's going to be a complicated day, inevitably. You may as well have someone you trust at your side for it, if you've the option.
[He doesn't know Morrigan, other than by reputation, but he can read his granddaughter's tone.]