Raafi awakes to some curious forest creature snuffling at his ear, where he's curled up beneath a tree; he startles, teleporting away, and only when he goes back for his bedroll and finds it missing does he remember that he'd gone to sleep in a farmer's hayloft the night before, and not a forest at all.
"-oh. Ah - I don't know anything about Jian Cheng, but -" does anyone else want to field this - "Wei Wuxian is dead, I'm sorry. And his body was lost, without that I won't be able to resurrect him yet."
Her hand comes up to where the wound that killed her was.
She looks around at everyone who isn't meeting her gaze.
She wraps her arms around her husband and buries her face in his neck and cries.
He sits on the floor on the other side of Jin Zixuan - this is a risk, she's likely to wake him and he has no idea how he'll react, but probably worth it - and rubs her back, gently, and speaks quietly. "I don't know what happened after you died, but I think you did the right thing - he was doing important work, and you gave him the chance to do more of it. And - I can't bring him back yet, but I will be able to. You're not the only one who wants it."
"Good." She won't ask who; that's just likely to make things more difficult for them. She gently shakes her husband awake and they tearfully embrace.
He backs off, going to stand by Lan Xichen. "You think she'll be safe here?" he asks, half under his breath.
"Yes. Madam Jin was best friends with her mother, and...Jin Guangyao has strong incentives to ensure she comes to no harm."
He nods. "I want to know more about the political situation here. But, later."
The Jins would like to know what exactly are the circumstances he's able and willing to bring people back to life in.
He can do at most three resurrections a day, given notice by the evening before that he should prepare the spell for it, of anyone with remains available who died within the last hundred and fifty years, unless they died of old age. It's also possible that someone will decline to return; he's never had it happen but there is a risk of it. (He'll refund his portion of the cost of the spell if that happens, unless he's warned them ahead of time that he thinks it's likely and they've asked him to try anyway; the offering will still be used in any case.) Payment and offering are as he's already discussed; the offering doesn't strictly have to be diamonds, but it does have to have the same value, and there's a chance of anything else being rejected; he can check with another spell whether it will be, if needed.
He doesn't want to bring anyone back who might restart the war, or start another one, or generally make significant trouble like that; he may be willing to bring people back in spite of that kind of risk if they'll accept him using additional magic to reduce it. He'll want enough information about the people he's bringing back to judge the risk of that. If he gets a request to not bring a particular person or group of people back he'll also take that into account. And this is a relatively time-limited offer: as a cleric of the god of travel he doesn't stay in one place very long as a rule; he expects to be comfortable here for a month, perhaps two if it ends up being convenient to make lots of day trips to interesting places, but he's eventually going to want to go - though of course he can come back later, if there's unfinished business here.