Ah. So Rowan was looking for a runaway daughter, was he? At least, that was what Aleksei presumed. He didn't know the full story and could only make assumptions. He wasn't about to pry for details, either. It wasn't really his place. Sure, their parents had been good friends, and Maksim certainly thought of the Attayas as family, but that didn't mean a magical bond struck up between their children the moment they laid eyes on each other.
“I'll keep an eye out,” he said. Not that he'd be able to easily track down the dark wolf if he found the missing yearling, or even find him again at all. There was every chance that Iyes had walked through Relic Lore, just another nameless place in her journey, and that Rowan would follow her path, leave his past behind. Aleksei couldn't judge anyone for running away from such things—he'd done it twice himself, after all. “If I see her, I'll let her know you're looking for her.” That seemed like the reasonable thing to do, because the agouti River wolf wasn't about to abandon his post and family to disappear for another month. No way.
Aleksei hoped that the conversation would end on that topic, that they'd go their separate ways and Rowan would be none the wiser about the passing of Maksim, but that was obviously wishful thinking. He asked about the Baranski's deceased patriarch, and Aleksei's mouth went dry for a second time. He struggled to find an immediate response—a vague reply, or a clipped remark—but all he could do was stumble over the truth on his tongue. His head dropped and his shoulders slouched. “He … I'm sorry. My father, he passed away last year.”
Let the roots & soil drink of me
Whispering leaves & pointing branches will tell them where I'm lying
Whispering leaves & pointing branches will tell them where I'm lying