==============================================
CHAPTER TWELVE
==============================================
"What?"
"I...I said I'm pregnant," Adewyn repeated.
"Huh," I said, "How about that."
"Is that all you have to say?" Adewyn said dangerously.
"Oh gods Adewyn, relax," Raisa said. It sounded to me like she was having trouble containing her laughter. The brat.
"Don't you tell me to relax, I'm pregnant with his fucking child and he says 'Huh, how about that,'" Adewyn said. Her impression of me was not flattering. Raisa guffawed.
"Sir, uh...oh. Oh my," Kyrza had, naturally, walked right in my tent before she started speaking to me. I guess she didn't expect me to be there in the nude with both of my sisters.
"Yes?" I said, grateful for her distraction, unsure how to react to Adewyn's news.
"Uh, well, um. Someone is here to, uh, see you. Sir." Kyrza was letting her eyes wander over me most impudently.
"Why are you making me wait? I can hear him perfectly well from out here," an imperious voice said from outside. I recognized it immediately, of course. "I'm coming in," she said, "it isn't like I've never seen him naked before...oh. Oh my,"
For once, she had nothing more to say, also impudently staring at all three of us. I sighed.
"Hello, mother."
* * *
After mother and Kyrza left, we all three got dressed, mostly in silence. Adewyn was trying to glare at me but mostly she just looked afraid. Raisa was just looking very unsure, like a nervous little girl.
"Good," I said, "I want this."
"What?" Adewyn said.
"I want our child. I desperately want it. I want to be a father with you. I love you."
"Better late than never, I suppose," Adewyn said, but she was smiling. I kissed her, quickly but tenderly.
"Of course this means no more front-line command for you,"
"What?" she said, but I ignored her on purpose this time. I didn't have time for that argument.
"Raisa, what's wrong?" I asked. Her eyes darted to me, nervously.
"She saw us. You and me. She knows."
"Well, yes." I said, confused.
"She doesn't like me. She never wanted me to marry you," Raisa whispered.
"Really?" I said, surprised. I'd never seen or heard anything like that, and mother was never shy about telling me her opinions of others. "Why do you say that?"
"Um, its hard to explain. She's just always been really critical of everything I did. Always correcting and comparing me to Merwyd or Adewyn," Raisa said, ruefully. Adewyn looked surprised to be a positive role model.
"That does sound like her," I said, sighing, "but it doesn't mean she dislikes you. It means that she accepted that you would be my wife, and was trying to help you 'improve yourself'. I love her but she can be trying and overly critical, even of herself. And besides, it doesn't matter what she thinks, you'll be First Wife, just as she is. She'll be powerless to stop you from enacting your will and you'll belong only to me, forever. I wouldn't be able to leave you if I wanted to. Which I won't."
Raisa looked thoughtful. I was lacing up my shirt as I said that last bit. I paused, frozen. I had a sudden inspiration. Could I have been making this whole thing more complicated than it was? I had just assumed that I wasn't smart enough or didn't understand the complex politics of my betrayal.
But then, if I was right, why kill me first? Wouldn't it have made sense to use me as his tool, instead? Or...oh gods. That made sense too, from a certain perspective.
"Finn?" Adewyn said, concern in her voice, "Are you coming?"
She probably thought I needed rest. I probably did.
"Hm? Oh yes. Sorry, just had a thought. I need to speak about something with my mother."
* * *
We met in the new headquarters tent. Someone had thought to bring in four comfortable chairs, which I appreciated. Mother looked as though she needed a great deal of rest.
She was dressed in a plain white gown, modest and all-concealing, up to and including her neck. Naturally, it was also quite tight and showed off her full figure, which was thinner than I remember. Also troubling me greatly was the hint of a bruise that I could see peaking out of her high collar. Although she had tried to conceal it with cosmetics, I could see the circles under her eyes, which looked haunted.
It was clear to me, who probably knew her as well as even father did, that she had gone through something awful. I seethed but tried to stay calm. I did not have the luxury of rage at the moment. That would come later.