That makes two of them for now. Caspian can't fathom Peter being dead or Peter allowing himself to be killed in some ridiculous fashion. He has seen this man fight, he has seen him talk of death only to fight harder and win. After 'encouraging' words from the Just, of course. Oh but what the Just says now, that is not encouraging at all. It actually gives Caspian cause to turn and glare at Edmund. The other man doesn't know about their friendship or about how he has had to see Peter depart before, all of them if one counts that day in the square. Edmund has departed the most so there's irony in what he says too, except Caspian is in no mood to recognize it.
"I checked the Hall, he is not there," Caspian says as steadily as possible.
Leave it all to me I will do the right thing;
Date: 2010-07-21 07:11 am (UTC)"I checked the Hall, he is not there," Caspian says as steadily as possible.