He listened, but the first thing he picked up on was she was doing that thing again. That same old thing she used to do when she was trying to admit to something she didn't want to get in trouble for, as if by not admitting it even to herself it would all go away, or as if it would tarnish how she looked in his eyes. As if that would happen anyway. He recognized the talking around and around it all to avoid coming straight out with it.
After her explanation, he was forced to do that same old thing he used to do, too, not that he liked it. She went where she went out of insecurity, he knew that, but to keep up with it, he had to slow down all her racing thoughts when they entered his head. He had to re-process it all at a normal speed to get to the point where he'd filtered out all the extraneous stuff to reword it into whatever the bottom line was.
That meant he needed a long moment to replay it all, fragment by fragment, and boil it into whatever it was she was trying not to say. He walked over to a chair, and lighting a cigarette, he sat down casually, still thinking. Then he realized it, the cigarette was as much a part of this periodic deja vu as anything else. Lord, how much certain things just stayed the same, no matter how the years had separated them at times. He inhaled the first puff of the cigarette deeply, trying to find her bottom line.
Marriage law. Codswallop. But he wasn't going to debate her right to still put stock into some flawed science. This wasn't the time. What did disturb him now was how deeply Gideon Pierce had evidently woven some convoluted idea of the greater good into Ana's head and how she had been willing to go to every length to make it happen. Every time he saw Pierce's hand indirectly screwing with someone, it made Marcus hate the man even more. Pierce had used his charisma to blind a lot of people to do all sorts of things they wouldn't normally do, and Ana had apparently been just as blinded to follow his philosophies, no matter the cost.
Including ordering the murder of Aiden Hayes, complicated by a little bit of blackmail, and now it had all seemed to blow up in her face. She was in trouble, and since it was already in the hands of ministry attorneys, it seemed like it would only be a matter of time before Ana would be brought up on charges.
"Ana," he said quietly, thoughtfully, offering the only critique he would give, "sometimes in promoting or protecting the greater good, people will die. Its just a given. If, though, you have to work to cover your tracks, there's just the slightest chance that perhaps there was a misstep in it. Next time, come to me before you do this sort of big leap by yourself, would you? Still, you're not without a defense, but you certainly will need someone knowledgeable in doing it."
He hadn't flinched at the fact that she'd killed a man. He wasn't going to actually come out and say that it wasn't what bothered him. Not really. He'd been responsible for more than one death himself but he had always been the government's hired gun to do the task. What bothered him was the thought process that appeared to be behind it, the desperate situation she had apparently felt she had been all alone in, the need to make a choice that was brought about by being almost brainwashed into someone else's political goals. Much as he had hoped to hear that there was a direct order from Pierce to eliminate Hayes, he wasn't hearing that Pierce had actually asked her to kill anybody. It sounded very much like she had chosen to do this of her own accord, but believing it was indeed in the protection of the greater good. That was certainly trouble that she couldn't just walk away from, and, he couldn't just walk away from her. No wonder she was talking about custody of her children--his daughter and her son that he was already so fond of. Without an impeccable defense, Azkaban certainly could become a part of her future.
"Alright," he said, moving into contingency planning, "so let's get our steps in the right order, shall we? You'll need a good defense representative. I can arrange that and do it quickly. As for the children, let's prepare for the worst and pray we don't ever need to use it. It certainly wouldn't be hard to discredit Pavel as a fit parent. At that point, you'd be the sole custodian of the children. Unless I file for paternity of Poppy, which I certainly am not opposed to doing. I want her to be mine. I believe you also might have the option of naming me Anton's guardian in the event something hinders you from parenting. At least, then, we can focus solely on you. And, I think I could get the issues about the children pushed ahead sooner--if that's what you want to do."