Despite herself, having often refused to find in another’s misfortune, a playful smile formed a crooked line on her muzzle as she frustrated the dragon. It did not compute, what she had said of debts, and it did not surprise her - that was the nature of, well, nature. But Ami stood firm about it, refusing to create chains of her own word. At the very least she could argue that they were self inflicted, if she wanted.
Luckily it turned out to be unnecessary. His nod was curt as she would expect from him, but her tawny tail gave a few sweeps across the grey forest floor in response. Kjors stepped closer and she tilted her cheek toward him in response, meeting his one-eyed gaze with a comfort she would’ve never expected even a short while ago. Flower, he called her, and a curious smile grew as she wondered why - perhaps because she often was stickin’ her nose in them to find an ailment’s cure?
“I’ll be around,” she said with a coy shrug, unable to help her humor. The matter of fact was that her appearance around these dim woods again was likely enough. Plants grew wherever they wanted, and it so happened that there were species of her liking lining the path to his den. That was fate, she decided, but she wasn’t calling on intervention. Of course, there was always the matter of her den, and the packland that surrounded it. What would happen if Kjors found her was a bigger question, but Ami wouldn’t stop him if he wanted to tempt the answer.
“We live in the Cedarwood,” she said, referring to herself and those unknown packmates she trusted herself to close her eyes around. ”Come by some time. You might like it.” The she-wolf accompanied her suggestion with an idle smile, though it was betrayed by the slightest twitch of her brow. Dragons were an authority of her own, she realized, but her home was as good as any, even if it was only temporary. Would she deny that the tension hung in the air like electricity before the lightning strike? Certainly not. But it was easy to ignore, and nothing had happened yet, and she could make nearly any excuse to find herself in his magnetic company again.
But she couldn’t make an excuse for her prolonged absence. Especially if she turned up empty handed. She was still too new, still a flight risk, still a beacon of possible betrayal if she didn’t pull her weight and remain present. At least, that was the guilt that had found its anchor in her heart finally, one that prompted her to shift her weight uneasily. A reluctant silence preluded the next words she murmured. ”I should return head back that way.”