Once they ask about their brethren who took the job of sinking the two women in water, the uninvolved guards in Deimar and Haiva's royal guard at first seem confused — then distinctly silent — until one of them, seeing Emilia, disgustedly remarks that Deimar's fixation with that girl was always ungodly and wrong, and it's no way to treat a woman. He'll even ask if Emilia's well and if the right bastard's done wrong by her.
He won't speak more of the matter, beyond confirming that the missing woman appeared nearly a year ago and seemed rather half-witted — unused to the basic running of a court, to sophisticated manners, even to speech. She might've had a sickness, because she couldn't walk well. Deimar never let her be out of reach. One of the other guards quietly contradicts that it was Haiva, actually — but that the two then-princes looked so alike, the court mistook one for the other.
no subject
He won't speak more of the matter, beyond confirming that the missing woman appeared nearly a year ago and seemed rather half-witted — unused to the basic running of a court, to sophisticated manners, even to speech. She might've had a sickness, because she couldn't walk well. Deimar never let her be out of reach. One of the other guards quietly contradicts that it was Haiva, actually — but that the two then-princes looked so alike, the court mistook one for the other.
That's all they've got for you.