Dangerous. The deference she strained herself to show mattered, but nothing could erase the crimes of her past, and the venom that seeped from her only continued to prove how ruinous it would be for Silent Moon Plateau if she were allowed to return and continue her debaucherous life here. When she upheld her lies, Erebos needed to hold back a bitter laugh. Personal business. As if anything could justify leaving a daughter so young behind. He recalled what Phineas had told him, that Aponi had left to chase after an old grudge; to find her father's killer. Selfishly pursuing a crime that had long since gone cold rather than being present for her daughter's formative months. He would have attested as much, if his brother had not entered the scene.
It was his scent that he noted first, and his chin lifted with a sneer as he felt a brittle sense of confidence that Phineas would uphold his side of it all and support him. Then the other Argyris' words fell softly unto the air, and Erebos could not hide the flash of incredulity that swept over his face. His muscles tensed further as his mind began to spin faster, scrambling for purchase. Had he not heard their words, noticed their tense and angry statures? Or did he not care? Phineas had never seemed to make the right choices when it came to woman, and Erebos' blood ran cold to think that once again, the paler brother might walk blindly, or perhaps even uncaringly with eyes wide open, into this female's waiting jaws.
"This ain't her home, Phineas, and she sure as hell ain't welcome," he snapped, words growling their way past his grinding fangs. At this moment, he regretted the conversations he did not have with Phineas, that which he had been too fearful of what he might discover to pursue. He wanted to trust that Phineas did not know what Aponi had done to Aesire, that he was naive enough to believe it had all been an accident. Yet the possibility that his predecessor was both aware of and unaffected by the knowledge had held Erebos back from approaching the topic at all after Wren had come to him to tell him of what he had witnessed. Now, he was left grasping at straws at the most inopportune moment of all.
"She murdered Aesire, Phineas. It wasn't an accident, Wren saw it. Then right after that, she leaves your daughter without a mother for months so she can play detective over something that has nothing to do with the pack or Kyna? Wake up, brother. She can't be trusted."
Perhaps many would find it inappropriate to air such grievances in front of Kyna, but even if she was just a child, she needed to know. Aponi was a danger to his niece, and the truth could not, should not, be hidden from her whole life. The sooner she was able to accept the reality of her mother, the better protected she would be against her. Anyways, Aponi did not deserve the affection doted unto her by the fawn girl.