Anyway, Arianna and I left the castle very late one evening. I knew the knight on guard at the drawbridge so I hit hit him over the head because I didn't want to hurt him.Garion blinked.'I knew he'd be honor-bound to try to stop us,' Lelldorin explained. 'I didn't want to have to kill him, so I hit him over the head.'I suppose that makes sense,' Garion said dubiously.'Arianna's almost positive he won't die.'DIE?'I hit him just a little too hard, I think.
— David EddingsWell--to put it briefly--Arianna and I had become--well--friends.'I see.'Nothing improper, you understand,' Lelldorin said quickly. 'But our friendship was such that--well--we didn't want to be separated.' The young Asturian's face appealed to his friend for understanding. 'Actually,' he went on, 'it was a little more than 'didn't want to.' Arianna told me she'd die if I left her behind.'Possibly she was exaggerating,' Garion suggested.'How could I risk it, though?' Lelldorin protested. 'Women are much more delicate than we are-- besides, Arianna's a physician. She'd know if she'd die, wouldn't she?
— David EddingsThe priest DID have it coming, though,' Lelldorin declared hotly.'What priest?'The priest of Chaldan at that little chapel who wouldn't marry us because Arianna couldn't give him a document proving she had her family's consent. He was very insulting.'Did you break anything?'A few of his teeth is about all-- and I stopped hitting him as soon as he agreed to perform the ceremony.
— David EddingsYour--ah--intervention, shall we say, has simplified things in the palace enormously. We no longer have to worry about Salmissra's whims and peculiar appetites. We rule by committee, and we hardly ever find it necessary to poison each other anymore. No one's tried to poison me for months.
— David Eddings