With Karina's homecoming, I want to make an important note: there is no reason that anyone would really know (as in, beyond faint conjectures or suspicions) the identity of Karina's mate. No one has been told, Karina has been gone for months, and Kjors has not had any lengthy absence from the packlands.
So it seemed that as Karina traveled farther from Dragonveil, she felt the All-Mother’s presence less and less and the heavy weight of her Earth-mother’s disappointment more and more. The shift had been a subtle thing, as she was travelling very slowly due to her steadily progressing pregnancy. The doe was trudging along beside her, the faintest wisp of her usual luminous glow. Karina knew that by the time she reached Kisla’s border, the daemon would have faded to a bare suggestion of a shadow. As the evidence of the Mother’s blessing ebbed away, Karina’s old anxieties settled back into that familiar place in the pit of her chest. She could not help but wonder if she was setting herself up for heartbreak, returning to the land of her youth no longer a girl, but an iniquitous woman with the product of her transgression so conspicuously in tow.
It had not been part of the plan for Karina to return to Kingsfall at all. She had meant to stay in Dragonveil, give birth and raise the dragon hatchlings herself, with Kjors to join her once he tied up loose ends in Hearthwood River. Once her belly began to distend and the reality of her situation truly set in Karina had grown uncertain, and this was only augmented by the amplifying, oppressive loneliness that constricted her heart a little more with every passing day. She had grown wild with panic at the thought of having to do it all alone, and so she did what any girl in trouble would do.
She ran to her mother.
Goddess above, what she wouldn’t give for Kisla’s embrace right now, her soft and comforting words, the reassurance that everything was going to be okay. Karina hated herself for not realizing what she’d had when Kisla had been within her reach every day. Her own mother, such a treasure chest of knowledge, of important family history, of love and support… the value of a mother’s wisdom should have been obvious to her, she the All-Mother’s priestess, and yet she had spurned Kisla’s every command of her. It would be difficult to repair what had never been sturdily built to begin with, but was it too late to try?