Thing being, though, is the fact that if Corvus betrays Udil, I can no longer be sure they he won't believe me. Do you know how to say 'roasted chicken'?
It wouldn't be betrayal, it would be saying something.
Besides, as I showed, Udil's betrayal of Corvus is inevitable. Which will you support?
Wait, how is it inevitable that Udil betrays Corvus?
Also, @GWG, that would depend on whether or not Udil is actually aware of Corvus' powers. If he is, he'll probably take steps to hide should he piss off someone Corvus is willing to give information to. Including killing Corvus outright.
That would be an excellent reason to not hide Udil's location. After all, your proclaimed neutrality means that Corvus would be willing to give information to pretty much anyone in the right circumstances, and Udil has made enemies.
Don't you see? By your own logic and your own neutrality, you can determine that Udil's betrayal is inevitable. And that's assuming that you don't come into conflict for religious reasons...and that Udil doesn't kill you because you're weak...
To summarize: Even assuming no other factors come up, Corvus's neutrality means that he has no reason not to share information about Udil, especially if he thinks Udil might want to kill/silence him. Thus, by Corvus's player's own confession, as Udil has
piss[ed] off someone Corvus is willing to give information to
he will want to
killing Corvus outright
And, again, that's assuming no other reasons to kill Corvus come up, like Corvus-worshiping dwarves or "fraternization" with those whom Udil considers enemies or simply being weak enough to kill.
And because Ardas (not spelling right, am I?) can read, he knows this, and therefore has or will have enough reason to want to kill Corvus at some point.
It's certainly worth looking out for, especially since Udil wants all dwarves to worship him and him alone and has shown drive and ability to kill gods before...