Kalars writes back; she has his utmost sympathy, but if she doesn't want a visit he doesn't need to be there for his own sake.
Raney doesn't write back; she just turns up the next day, dwarf caiman familiar tucked under her arm.
She wants to meet her son-in-law.
"Unfortunate in most cases about this subject, but not so much in this particular one."
"I mean, I can also understand people not choosing to add the risk of unmaking when they can just skip it. If they have no head for spells, don't like the animal's company, and don't feel like laying their - self, if not quite their life, on the line to allow another entity that will be unavoidably somewhat dependent. But it would be nice if there were fewer lost opportunities that could have worked out nicely."
"On the bright side," says Zevros, "you two seem to agree with each other on most subjects. So, yay that."
"And I'm sure drawing attention to that won't at all cause it to pop like a soap bubble," sighs Iobel.
"Hey, one of us has to be the bright cheery twin, and it sure as hell isn't Edarial right now. Sometimes I have to take the bright side of the situation and rub it in his face."
Edarial shrugs a little. "Has it all popped like a soap bubble? Is our marriage now doomed?" he deadpans.
"Well, if it has not popped like a soap bubble, that would be a pleasant surprise. I dislike lost progress. In full generality."
But Iobel has not been made optimistic enough to say what she's now thinking. She catches Cricket up on the conversation instead.
Cricket listens - then crosses the table to peer at Edarial up close. Judgmentally, because he is Cricket.
(He wonders what happens if he fails. Or, even, if he passes.)
Iobel facepalms. "I taught him to say 'or else' when I was eleven and have regretted it since."
Edarial tries very hard not to giggle. "I'm not offended. Yes, I will not mistreat Iobel."