She could not hear more welcome words - as she curls into and leans back against Magni's chest. Her legs curling up underneath her and below her dress. "She will want to come, so will my father." All her near family.
Lakshmi had done her resolved best not to miss home, in the - what was it now, two years? Since she had come. But in this, she would so dearly want her mother's hand on her brow. To tell her what to do as she grew fat. They would be so strange to Magni's own life, she knew, but she knew with her by Magni's side, she could weather all that noise. Little brother would stare up at her so.
Oh, that was a dreadful thought. "Your family is so tall," she suddenly realises, bemoans. Hadn't even begun to think of that.
Magni hasn't quite caught up, and perhaps Lakshmi will feel, rather than see, the way her head tilts to the side, gently confused.
"Since you got here, at least," she comments, in a very serious tone which might not be instantly recognisable as humour to those who don't know her very well. Was this a new realisation? Has Lakshmi only now noticed?
It is very hard, and she deserves an accolade, for not elbowing Magni in the ribs right then. Unfortunately. It might give her some relief to the growing dread. Because she sorely recognises that tone. Maybe she'll bite her in a second instead and that will make her feel better about it.
"I'm not." She breathes, in brief explanation, "but the baby will be a giant like you." There's a little, self-pitying noise. "I am going to be carrying a little giant. I am going to look like that boar they brought in last hunt."
Fat, having to be rolled to be able to move anywhere.
Startled by the comparison, Magni can't quite help a laugh, and then she has to breathe a gentle apology as she kisses Lakshmi's neck, her cheek. "No, your tusks haven't grown in, yet."
She's on a roll of hilarity. Another kiss, to make up for it.
"You don't know that. The baby could be perfect sized, like you."
That does get a elbow in the side. Digging it in for a second before - well, the kiss certainly does mollify her some. Turns up into it, eyes half closed.
"Has anyone in your family not been as tall as a mountain?" Is the little huff. Compliment accepted, and stops her from digging in more but... the otherwise pressing concern continues.
Oof, a wheeze. Her lioness has sharp elbows. Magni thinks for a moment. "My mother is shorter than me."
Which, actually, could be a reason why Magni was an only child. Even those who were not necessarily tall (and Magni was tall even for one of her father's line) were broad and muscular. She frowns a little bit, worry starting to gnaw at her as the implications, the impacts, start to register properly.
"Whatever needs to be done to keep you comfortable and safe will be done." Another kiss.
It's the comfort she needs. The things she must lean into - because otherwise, the concern would eat at her.
"It will be alright. I know you will be with me." It's breathed out, trying to ascertain it for herself. A shakey, nervous thing, but to that, in the knowledge that she would not be alone...
That... sobers her. More than that. This is... a precarious moment. "Tomorrow. We need to make the announcement. Give offerings, so your people know." She leans up, looking up to Magni's face where she's curled in her lap. Her hand coming to rest on Magni's shoulder.
"... Then your neighbours." She breathes in, "if they ask, I believe... when we were in the forest. I believe then was when we..." Her hand gestures, between them, that little smile, warm in cheeks. "... perhaps we should do something there, to quell any rumours about how such a thing had come to be." She breathes in slowly. "Then... we will need to instate the inheritance acts, seen over your elders to ensure that the heir is accepted and respected."
Magni doesn't pale, exactly, but looks every so slightly grey. This sounds like it involves a lot of talking. And yes, she is the Jarl, and yes she can be stern and stoic and make sound decisions and do what needs to be done, but this is a very new situation that she hasn't had quite the same amount of emotional preparation for.
She opens her mouth, closes it, and nods.
Big inhale. Slow exhale. "Yes."
Or maybe they could just go and live in the forest with their adorable child and not need to do this.
She doesn't quite hear it, caught up in beginning - already - to plan it. What has to be done, first, and wriggling - leaning over to the table at the end of the bed. Reaching for the paper and board she wrote on, and a quill that she taps the extra ink off the nib in the other hand.
Once gotten, she wriggles back into Magni's lap. This was not usually how these things were done, certainly, but she would insist this might be the best way to sort out all important matters in the Hold. Laying against Magni, tucking her head under her chin and leaning the board on her knees.
She begins writing names, methodical, ordered. Names that are familiar, prominent members of the Hold - "Tomorrow, we will send these invites tomorrow morning for dinner tomorrow evening." She draws a line underneath these, then another list. "Then we need to giving to the charities, and I would say... ale, given freely in the square. To let them drink - ? What do you think - ?" Her head tilts up her head, watching Magni's face. To see if she had misjudged or not.
Articulate and decisive, the Jarl. Always reliable. "Is that enough notice for the kitchen?"
It's probably a stupid question, but some part of her can only imagine Krogstad's face if she told him of the work of several days needing to be done in one. He'd smile, and he'd somehow make it happen, but he might give himself and several other members of the household staff heart attacks in the process.
And blinks, trying to get her head around all of this. Suddenly it feels like... a lot, and she feels very much like she wishes her father was here to council her on it. He had been so well respected, had worked so hard because his line was so new to holding the seat of Talonhold, and she wonders if she can do nearly so well. If she is going to be able to make it so good and safe a home for her wife and her child as he did for his.
"Ale," she agrees, a little thrown, "and— cider, perhaps. Candied fruit for the children."
"Believe me, the moment those words came out of Jarl Ingstead's mouth, they started preparing, wife."
Because yes, articulate. Very. It's then she makes sure to look back, up at her wife, then, nod slowly, beginning to take note of that too. "Their happiness should be ours. Ours should be theirs." Leaning up, she presses her face against the side of Magni's, nuzzling against the side of her cheek. "I will take care of it all. Do not worry about it. This is my duty. All you need do is drink."
It does beg one question, the most important one. One that makes sure she sets down her quill and parchment in her lap. Reaching up to touch her wife's face carefully. "You are happy, aren't you? Parties aside, of course."
She leans into the contact, then, hungry for the comfort and the reassurance.
"I'm beyond happy to have you, and that we have— a child who will join us." Those two things give her more joy than she can find the words for. She swallows though, and her gaze drops. "I was not a good wife, in the beginning. I am still learning how to be Jarl. I... I hope I am a good mother. I lean on you so much already."
Too much, maybe. What if all that is more than Lakshmi wishes to manage?
She doesn't part from her, her hand lifting to cup Magni's face, smoothing across the side of her cheek to tilt her face down. Not to kiss her, but to look at her. "That is mighty praise, indeed. Consider I had not the faintest clue about you. I spent months thinking you loathed me and you wished me gone just for being near you."
Lakshmi brushes the tip of her nose against Magi's softly. "I do not think, or hope, I know you will be a great mother."
"Some," the admittance, plain, there could be no denying how hard she found Magni's silence in those early months. "The rest was everyone else in my ears." Her nose wrinkles, unhappy with the memory, not least the meddling that they'd both endured.
"They will not, for they will grow up speaking Jarl Magni," the teasing is light, niggling over the secret language of silence Magni used. "And where you might stumble, I will be there, and where I stumble, so too will you be able to help."
She shakes her head, her hand lifting to brace over Magni's heart, and firmly so. Let there be no mistaking. "You are not to blame for the foul things they whispered to me. We would have worked it out, sure enough, but they knew they could make it more painful than it had to be, and they did so."
If what all this proved was to show anything, all she and Magni had needed was time. Time they eventually got with no one prying and pushing and pulling.
Magni makes a quiet sound of understanding, and lists closer— she wants to kiss her, win that reassurance from her, and comfort her Rani when she just confessed to being so scared. She is not entirely sure her desire to kiss her isn’t more selfish than supportive, though, and she bites her lip, a little worried.
Lakshmi gives no such pause - that determined way she knew what she wanted, she wanted to be as close to Magni as she could, to list into her, look up searchingly to her face. She pauses, as she watches her teeth catch on her lip. Her own hand, caught between them, lifts, gently brushing against her bottom lip to loosen it, to tug her nearer. "You kissed me first, in the forest? Do you remember? And now - this, I believe your land itself knows how much we mean to each other."
It's fanciful, daydream-like, all stories. But she has many of them, in her own way. "It has bound us, now."
That makes her smile, brightness catching the corners of her mouth. "It knows you, as it knows me. You are of this place as much as you are of your homelands. These—"
A little sigh, happier, as her hands rest against Lakshmi's abdomen, thumb stroking over it, and she gently nudges her Rani's nose with her own. "This is your homeland, too."
And they would need to make sure that the child honoured the traditions of both their parents. They worshipped different gods— but maybe they could just let them decide which gods spoke most to them, and teach them a reverence for all of them. Quietly, "we were always bound. Even before we met."
She lays her hand over Magni's, bracing around her wrist, smoothing up her arm. Letting the brush tilt her, moving toward that affection, returning it as easily as she curves her face to nuzzle against her cheek. Brushing against her, finding steadiness in that same moment.
Afraid, yes, as often death could come of this as not - but... "This life and the next, as I swore." Then - then she kisses her, no more than a brush, just to the corner of that tucked in smile. Her lips soft, lingering there without going too far. "I am proud to carry a child of Talonhold."
Because there is... part of her, she knew, that was raised to a strict sense of duty, of pride, of know what her role would always be, that feels right in this. Correct in making sure that Magni's family continued and did so strongly. That now, more than ever, she could hold her head high and know her exact place amoungst them. Even when they whispered still that Magni would let her go when she felt like it.
Magni smiles, makes a quiet, happy sound, hugs Lakshmi closer, and kisses her neck. "Our little one will be of both our homes, I promise. Both our gods, both our ways."
That, she does wiggle. Celebratory wiggle. We're going to have a baby.
She laughs, hard not too, her fingers curled lightly into Magni's clothes, leaning in to press her forehead to her shoulder. Shaking her head there - resisting a mighty urge to poke the great Jarl of Talonhold in her side.
"All your sweet words, are you going to be so sweet when I fat as a bear in winter?"
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Lakshmi had done her resolved best not to miss home, in the - what was it now, two years? Since she had come. But in this, she would so dearly want her mother's hand on her brow. To tell her what to do as she grew fat. They would be so strange to Magni's own life, she knew, but she knew with her by Magni's side, she could weather all that noise. Little brother would stare up at her so.
Oh, that was a dreadful thought. "Your family is so tall," she suddenly realises, bemoans. Hadn't even begun to think of that.
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"Since you got here, at least," she comments, in a very serious tone which might not be instantly recognisable as humour to those who don't know her very well. Was this a new realisation? Has Lakshmi only now noticed?
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"I'm not." She breathes, in brief explanation, "but the baby will be a giant like you." There's a little, self-pitying noise. "I am going to be carrying a little giant. I am going to look like that boar they brought in last hunt."
Fat, having to be rolled to be able to move anywhere.
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She's on a roll of hilarity. Another kiss, to make up for it.
"You don't know that. The baby could be perfect sized, like you."
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"Has anyone in your family not been as tall as a mountain?" Is the little huff. Compliment accepted, and stops her from digging in more but... the otherwise pressing concern continues.
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Magni thinks for a moment. "My mother is shorter than me."
Which, actually, could be a reason why Magni was an only child. Even those who were not necessarily tall (and Magni was tall even for one of her father's line) were broad and muscular. She frowns a little bit, worry starting to gnaw at her as the implications, the impacts, start to register properly.
"Whatever needs to be done to keep you comfortable and safe will be done." Another kiss.
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"It will be alright. I know you will be with me." It's breathed out, trying to ascertain it for herself. A shakey, nervous thing, but to that, in the knowledge that she would not be alone...
It was a great relief.
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And then, a quiet laugh. "I— did not imagine that I would be a parent. I thought... an adopted heir, or close family."
A shake of her head. This is... kind of amazing. Scary, yes, but amazing.
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"... Then your neighbours." She breathes in, "if they ask, I believe... when we were in the forest. I believe then was when we..." Her hand gestures, between them, that little smile, warm in cheeks. "... perhaps we should do something there, to quell any rumours about how such a thing had come to be." She breathes in slowly. "Then... we will need to instate the inheritance acts, seen over your elders to ensure that the heir is accepted and respected."
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She opens her mouth, closes it, and nods.
Big inhale. Slow exhale. "Yes."
Or maybe they could just go and live in the forest with their adorable child and not need to do this.
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Once gotten, she wriggles back into Magni's lap. This was not usually how these things were done, certainly, but she would insist this might be the best way to sort out all important matters in the Hold. Laying against Magni, tucking her head under her chin and leaning the board on her knees.
She begins writing names, methodical, ordered. Names that are familiar, prominent members of the Hold - "Tomorrow, we will send these invites tomorrow morning for dinner tomorrow evening." She draws a line underneath these, then another list. "Then we need to giving to the charities, and I would say... ale, given freely in the square. To let them drink - ? What do you think - ?" Her head tilts up her head, watching Magni's face. To see if she had misjudged or not.
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Articulate and decisive, the Jarl. Always reliable. "Is that enough notice for the kitchen?"
It's probably a stupid question, but some part of her can only imagine Krogstad's face if she told him of the work of several days needing to be done in one. He'd smile, and he'd somehow make it happen, but he might give himself and several other members of the household staff heart attacks in the process.
And blinks, trying to get her head around all of this. Suddenly it feels like... a lot, and she feels very much like she wishes her father was here to council her on it. He had been so well respected, had worked so hard because his line was so new to holding the seat of Talonhold, and she wonders if she can do nearly so well. If she is going to be able to make it so good and safe a home for her wife and her child as he did for his.
"Ale," she agrees, a little thrown, "and— cider, perhaps. Candied fruit for the children."
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Because yes, articulate. Very. It's then she makes sure to look back, up at her wife, then, nod slowly, beginning to take note of that too. "Their happiness should be ours. Ours should be theirs." Leaning up, she presses her face against the side of Magni's, nuzzling against the side of her cheek. "I will take care of it all. Do not worry about it. This is my duty. All you need do is drink."
It does beg one question, the most important one. One that makes sure she sets down her quill and parchment in her lap. Reaching up to touch her wife's face carefully. "You are happy, aren't you? Parties aside, of course."
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"I'm beyond happy to have you, and that we have— a child who will join us." Those two things give her more joy than she can find the words for. She swallows though, and her gaze drops. "I was not a good wife, in the beginning. I am still learning how to be Jarl. I... I hope I am a good mother. I lean on you so much already."
Too much, maybe. What if all that is more than Lakshmi wishes to manage?
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Lakshmi brushes the tip of her nose against Magi's softly. "I do not think, or hope, I know you will be a great mother."
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Her awkwardness, her uncertainty and shyness manifesting as aloofness. Her brow furrows. "I don't want our child to think I loath them."
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"They will not, for they will grow up speaking Jarl Magni," the teasing is light, niggling over the secret language of silence Magni used. "And where you might stumble, I will be there, and where I stumble, so too will you be able to help."
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It lies with her, in her eyes. Egocentric, most likely, and yet what suffering might she have spared her, her Rani who is dearest to her?
Where she looks to her Rani, there is so much worry. "You should not have suffered as you did.'
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If what all this proved was to show anything, all she and Magni had needed was time. Time they eventually got with no one prying and pushing and pulling.
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It's fanciful, daydream-like, all stories. But she has many of them, in her own way. "It has bound us, now."
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A little sigh, happier, as her hands rest against Lakshmi's abdomen, thumb stroking over it, and she gently nudges her Rani's nose with her own. "This is your homeland, too."
And they would need to make sure that the child honoured the traditions of both their parents. They worshipped different gods— but maybe they could just let them decide which gods spoke most to them, and teach them a reverence for all of them. Quietly, "we were always bound. Even before we met."
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Afraid, yes, as often death could come of this as not - but... "This life and the next, as I swore." Then - then she kisses her, no more than a brush, just to the corner of that tucked in smile. Her lips soft, lingering there without going too far. "I am proud to carry a child of Talonhold."
Because there is... part of her, she knew, that was raised to a strict sense of duty, of pride, of know what her role would always be, that feels right in this. Correct in making sure that Magni's family continued and did so strongly. That now, more than ever, she could hold her head high and know her exact place amoungst them. Even when they whispered still that Magni would let her go when she felt like it.
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That, she does wiggle. Celebratory wiggle. We're going to have a baby.
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"All your sweet words, are you going to be so sweet when I fat as a bear in winter?"
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