Giggle stared at the stone, and her heart dropped. Whatever she'd been thinking before, it was gone now, lost in a torrent of grief and disbelief that threatened to pitch her head-over-muck-soaked-paws back into gibbering, fragmented madness. She let out a short, choked sound, and then a single word, hoarsely-spoken.
"Yes." She waited a moment, hoping they would respect her wishes. Hoping they would turn away, and give her some distance as she did her best to view what would undoubtedly be horrible.
Slowly, Giggle lowered herself to lay before the stone--then pulled it closer with her paws, and settled her head to rest over it, dark eyes closing. She lay as if curled up to an old friend, as if seeking comfort--or offering it. Quietly, she spoke, her voice barely a whisper and deeply choked with feeling.
"I am sorry, Azazel. I am sorry I was not there for you. I am sorry I was lost in myself, when you needed me. I am sorry, Bone King. I will do my best to see your bones put to proper rest. A rest... that I hope you have found." Grief sent her already-masculine murmur into a quiet, deep rasp, near sobs. It required all her focus merely to say these few words, but Azazel-... He deserved that respect.
He deserved better.
"Show me what happened, if you think it important, Bone King. It is all I can do for you, now." Grief-stricken, she remained lying over the stone, trembling slightly as she focused on her own, and on his. On the connection between them; the connection between all things. As she felt her magic brimming quietly up, answering to her as easily as it ever did, she repeated, softly,
"Show me."
Giggle lapsed into a long silence, motionless, her eyes still closed.
The only sign of life was the sudden cry of the Hallowed Caller overhead.
For a long while she was silent; what she saw was... surprisingly anti-climactic. A flurry of white feathers. A single sharp cry of "Dad!"--Eythan's voice, she thought. There was no long gurgle of blood, no battle, no last words. Just a brief instant, the flurry, and nothing.
She let out a ragged sigh and stood. She had seen, at least, the place where he had fallen. Given what the others had said, his bones had been moved, but-... She had to look.
"Where was he buried?" she called to Azazel's son, quietly hoarse.
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ROLL THE BONES