That’s something I think peasants understand better than nobles.
If The Empress of Salt and Fortune were a movie, this scene would be the climax (at least, it would be if the budget didn't allow me to have actual mammoths marching on the capital). It's In-yo finally emerging from the shadows to show her abusers her strength and the power of the north. For Rabbit, it's an awkward moment and a decision she doesn't care about. For her, dead is dead, and a dead minister doesn't give her living fortune-teller. She's got more important things to think about.
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