jsburbidge wrote:The snippet leans pretty heavily on how mature Leeana's affect is compared to her appearance (and there's that rank as well, which she presumably achieved before Gwynna was born); Occam's Razor as applied to indications of authorial intent would suggest that the most likely answer is that she's been given an extended lifespan to match Bahzell's (foreseen by the gods, not necessarily full-length for a Hradani dying in bed) life.
Wencit, lonely, yet-haunted Wencit, pretty much promised to kill himself over magical attacks on Leeana.
The more I think about that, the odder it seems. It marks Leeana as ridiculously important. It tells the minions of the Dark Gods that Wencit (at least) knows Leeana is ridiculously important.
Istvaria is in charge of mortality.
Bahzell is, not disposable, but a stalking horse; keeping Bahzell alive has never been an especially major priority on the part of the Gods of Light. They're not trying to get him killed, but it's clear their plans can function if Bahzell does get killed.
It looks like Their plans don't function (or not nearly so well) if Leeana gets killed.
So perhaps the important thing about Gwynna is that Leeana's her mother, in the line-of-descent sense; Bahzell's useful, handy, this might be the optimal outcome, but if the essential thing is one of Leeana's kids Istvaria may have Leeana's mortality in abeyance, because, hey, Gwynna might not make it; we might need another one.