"And has Lady Ralia changed her ways at all?" Pasha asked. She had been crazy. Probably still was; a person just didn't recover from being a sociopath, let alone in less than a year. As far as he could see, there was no benefit whatsoever to bringing her back. On a practical level, she was impulsive and knew very little about actually ruling a kingdom. On a personal level, many of her practices that he had found while reading through the ledgers and journals were distasteful and dredged up old, bad memories. Additionally, there was the fact she had killed her own people and fled the country rather than even try to accept responsibility for her actions as Queen. He had worked for a man who had killed his own people once and never wanted to be in that position again. Even further, he held a dislike for a monarchy, believing that no one person should hold all the power of an entire kingdom.
The current arrangement suited him better. So far, Kathos and Nikephoros had been a bit harsh, but not unfair, and even showing a willingness to have an advisory council was a step in the right direction. Not just for Ligoria, but for the world as a whole. One day the empires and kingdoms would fall, replaced by united countries; separate, but bonded together through common rule and decency. Despite his thoughts, his face was neutral - aided by the fact it was still slightly swollen and bruised from Matthew's attack the previous day, and expressions of any sort were difficult and painful to form. "Also, why does she want Ligoria back? Has she considered that she might be unpopular, and there could be another revolt should she assume power once more?"
Another neutral question that expressed no opinion of his own; just a simple statement of a possible outcome. "Does she have any contingency plans for that?"