"A revelation of the most incredible sort," Signy was only growing more enthusiastic, finding in Bethen not only someone who had known her Paragon, but someone who spoke of her in glowing terms. Someone who admired her. (Well, at least, Signy thought that Bethe would have admired Dagna, but Signy could not imagine someone who didn't admire Dagna. Certainly not anyone who'd actually met her. Frankly, Signy couldn't imagine people who'd never met Dagna not admiring her.) "And she did come back to Orzammar," she affirmed. It was on her now to be unsure whether she had to explain why Dagna would not have been allowed back, under normal circumstances or not, or if Dagna had explained it herself. After all, she'd been on the surface for ten years. Wouldn't she have mentioned something about why she couldn't go home?
She found a way to move past it, though: "She came home, and they made her a Paragon, and—well, since I left, when I left, well, the situation has to be getting better, now," she said, her other hand going back to wrap around the cup of water. She'd wanted to talk about Dagna, not about what had happened in Orzammar or why she was here or what Dagna was doing now. What troubled her was that she had no way of knowing if things actually had improved for Dagna or anyone in her family. If she wrote a letter, would they even get it? Would they care to reply to someone casteless, someone on the surface?
It hurt to consider, and her tired mind was drifting off again. So she shifted the topic, hoping that she'd come close enough to answering Bethen's question. "But… I guess she never told anyone in the Circle what she discovered, did she? I could see why she wouldn't have." Based on what I've seen today and before, from those Templars. She almost opened her mouth to add it, but stopped herself.