Gent's cold retort cast the woman's eyes down once again. She agreed with the man of course, offering a simple sentence to assure him she was not allowing such a thing. “No, it isn't.” Her voice was serious as the subordinate's thoughts strolled on, collecting memories she'd rather forget. Her heart jumped a little at the thought of Gent experiencing something like she had. In the brief silence she came to realize that she could offer her friend some more explanation in regards to his somewhat rhetorical question. “Mine all hated me, well, almost all of them.” Her mind drifted sorrowfully to the image of Tolas, eyes hardening with conviction. “But I decided never to let myself act that way.” She looked out into the sheeting rain. “Gabriel obviously did not.” She was still feeling mournful, but only for the fact that the wolf that had left them just now was hurt in the first place, and that he had not seen the reason for changing his ways. Did Gabriel ever have a “Tolas” in his life? Was that why he was lost? Raela's attention shifted back inside the little shelter, ears waiting patiently for the dark man's deep, stern voice to find them. His words were as decisive as ever, betraying how little he thought of the agouti male right about now.
Her orange ears stayed angled back as she listened; voice silent for the time being. There was nothing to disagree with in Gent's decision. There was always at least a small debt owed to the leader of a pack for accepting a stranger into their midst, and far dirtier, more savage wolves roamed the world than Minka and Gent. In light of how little she'd observed Gabriel actually providing for his pack, it certainly felt like something akin to a betrayal; or at least an unceremonious and disrespectful abandonment. Her swarthy companion's last statement relayed the additional punishment that came with being dubbed a deserter. Gabriel was on the enemy list. The pack he was leaving behind as he moved through the pouring rain was now effectively hostile with relation to their former member. While she couldn't bring herself to disagree with the choice, the Crest wolf wasn't entirely pleased with it either. Still, they had no business trifling with a deserter; she supposed chasing him from the border was much the same reaction the male would garner any way about it. It was her own personal prejudices against violence and aggression that made the russet-coated lady even the slightest bit uncomfortable with it.
The pause left in the wake of her leader's words was filled with the relentless pelting of rain on their shelter and the foliage surrounding it. Raela's sunshine eyes stared unfocused into the dreary distance; her mind consumed with tossing this situation around and around, just in case there was a perspective that needed addressing. It was what Gent had called upon her to do, after all; to offer that other perspective he needed. The silence ended with the soft introduction of the girl's voice. “I see nothing wrong with that,” she offered in a manner-of-fact way. “We've certainly no business helping him from here on out.” The thought was mostly spoken aloud to herself, but served as reassurance that she was indeed with Gent on the issue. The woman's pools flickered upward, finding the larger wolf's face with a questioning air. “Do you think there ought to be a little extra patrolling tonight? Just in case?” She was thinking of the safety of Minka and her children, but more likely than the others to be targeted was Gent. The worry was obvious in the twinkle of her eyes; Gabriel, though bested by the dark man, could easily get the jump on him, especially at night if he was revenge inclined. Another might not have been so worried about the man's disposition, or might even have considered the idea to be grounded in unreality but Raela had seen her share of filthy sneaks. Either way, there was no harm at all in extra security.
Image © Chris Smith PhotographyManipulation © Jenandra