Something about the faint amusement disappears, but it doesn't change into any other emotion yet either. There's no true annoyance - it more seems like Bigby gets a little bit more serious again at that question. And not just because of the assumption, really. He can get how Raylan may think he doesn't have a father, given his nature. Easy to assume Fables just exist out of nowhere.
"That's why I am the way I am. My mother was a regular wolf, my father the North Wind." He shakes his head, perhaps sounding a bit shorter when he adds: "We're not close."
It does sound like there's something there. Maybe Raylan wasn't far off with his whole complexities line.
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Something about the faint amusement disappears, but it doesn't change into any other emotion yet either. There's no true annoyance - it more seems like Bigby gets a little bit more serious again at that question. And not just because of the assumption, really. He can get how Raylan may think he doesn't have a father, given his nature. Easy to assume Fables just exist out of nowhere.
"That's why I am the way I am. My mother was a regular wolf, my father the North Wind." He shakes his head, perhaps sounding a bit shorter when he adds: "We're not close."
It does sound like there's something there. Maybe Raylan wasn't far off with his whole complexities line.