He hadn't intended to be terribly funny, but it seemed as though Dezzy had a good sense of humour, the type that thirsted for something, anything to laugh at. Anders was far from being similar in this way, though he did appreciate dark or dry humour privately. In response, though, because he was one to humour another, he clicked his tongue against his teeth.
"I was a spoiled child, then," He said, but no smile remained on his lips. He was, afterall, the pup his mother had chosen to save out of a litter of four when the wildfire had hit. It still weighed on him. Despite having been the only pup to be saved, he hadn't exactly been spoiled, so the words had been spoken with a somewhat sour tinge of regret. The noble beast in him, if it existed, wished he could have traded places with one of his siblings, from time to time. But at the same time- he couldn't remember them. He'd only been days old when the fire had taken place.
She came a bit closer but again he didn't react. His intentions were fairly clear- he had none. Once again she began to speak, and he gathered that she was somewhat taken by dancing around the point. He waited for her to finish speaking- and made a small mental note that she was obviously fishing for him to ask what her special skill was- before he responded.
"Looking for a pack to join." He said, though he thought he'd made it obvious enough when he'd spoken earlier, but after a moment's consideration he realized perhaps she thought he was looking for a pack he'd heard of, or knew that someone live in and he forgave her for asking what he'd once considered to be a redundant question.
She wasn't terribly well spoken, and seemed to speak with a bit of a twang, something that hinted perhaps that her parents had not been either very educated, or high in the heirarchy of their pack. Or perhaps she'd left the pack before she could be taught to speak formally when meeting someone, though he suspected that she simply didn't care how she was viewed by others. He imagined that this woman had a bit of a rebellious streak in her, perhaps a foolish streak too. She'd mentioned having a particular skill that packs didn't seem to like, which made him frown slightly. He did not like having wolves in a pack who were tricksters, or who did not contribute.
"Perhaps you ought to hone some more desirable skills if you want to join a pack," He prompted, deciding it was perhaps better not to encourage her to take pride in whatever folly it was she liked to indulge in.