(Sorry on my part too e.e much vacation.)
Namid took in his reaction as she did before, always watchful and calculating however still managing to keep a happy and gentle stance. Deep in his blazing amber gaze she could see knowledge, knowledge of what she felt which could only come with experience. There flashed recognition and, in a way, she felt a mix of sadness and comfort. Comfort that she was not alone in the separation, the memories of yelling and pleading. But, at the same time, that was her cause of sadness as well. To know that others had to leave what they knew, to leave the ones that knew them best and whom they’d come to love so deeply whether it was by choice or not. She didn’t wish that on anyone, and suddenly she felt a sense of familiarity toward the younger male which could only come from one who shared a kin of past.
A smile curled onto her maw, stretching to her heterochromatic gaze as she shook her head. “Do not worry about my suffering. Everyone suffers in their lifetime, some more and some less. It is what builds us and makes us what we are, though we must be careful to not use the past as a guide book. True?” She laughed, a kind of merry laugh that insisted upon her statement.
Pausing to think of his most recent question it was her turn to become confused. It hadn’t occurred to her that others wouldn’t know what a human was, that some of them may never see them in their lifetime and here, they may even be revered as a threat or something to be afraid of. Her mother and father had told her of stories of wolves beyond them, which lived in places they would never go or ever see not because they were bad places, but because their home was on the reservation. She had been told that there were bad humans in the world, ones that wanted to kill, maim, and capture them simply out of prize or study. To take away their freedom, which made them the wolves they were.
Even then, with those stories, it was almost unfathomable for her to think that some would not know of these wonderful beings. But she kept her smile straight because this fact didn’t bother her. It was just something to help further the knowledge of another, and she herself had been told many a new information during their meeting. “Humans are beings that walk up on two legs. They are furless except for their heads and little bits above their eyes. They do not speak as we do, but you can understand what they say sometimes. They are almost like us, in a way. They love family deeply and they crave freedom.” She explained, tilting her head as she thought of a proper way to explain. She felt she did well enough in that, and left it for that.
“Is your pack kind?” The Star Dancer inquired curiously, brows rising in curiosity. Rowan himself seemed to be very nice, but she knew from those same stories that some packs were ruthless and would sooner kill a wolf for being near their home and on lands they claimed as their own than allow them to continue on any journey they may have. She hoped that his pack would not be one of those.
(This post was last modified: Jun 30, 2014, 07:40 PM by Namid.)