He gave her his full attention, taking each and every word as seriously as the conversation warranted it all to be. His glacial gaze was unwavering and unabashed, locked upon her dial. The first name off her tongue was Tokino's, and he found himself wishing he'd known more of the man so that he could better weigh the veracity of what was being told to him. Yet he could acknowledge that Black Thorn Downs had been settled unreasonably close to not just an unallied pack, but one with such strong ties to the enemy they had fled from. He also knew first hand the winter of which she spoke. Even with the distance between the Keep and the Woodlands there had been near clashes once the prey had gotten scarce enough for it to truly matter down to the wire. He had to wonder also if Tokino had ever brought back such a warning to Minka's ears. Vividly, the leviathan recalled the meeting in which the Blackberry Queen had announced to them all that they were at war. How Tokino had been just as shocked as them, how quick she had been to act. It helped him to see that as high in esteem as he had held Minka, she hadn't always made the best decisions under pressure.
@Raela's voice played through his head, the opinion he knew she would hold on the matter carrying heavy weight within his thoughts. Regardless of the culminating circumstances, Lugh hadn't deserved what had happened to him. Gent fully agreed with this sentiment, and yet he also couldn't deny the truth; if he had been in Iopah's place, with the same stress pressing down his spine and no one to intervene, Lugh might not have made it out alive at all. He couldn't forget though, Iopah hadn't been alone.
As she regarded him, he merely stared back, unwilling still to shed any light on the goings-on within his head. When she parted her jaws again, the rhetorical question gripped him, and he was surprised to find that this was perhaps the story he had wanted most to hear from her. Despite the shakiness of her past with those he had grown close to, @Nina was becoming a respected equal to the man. It was necessary to know this fragment of history, this additional piece to the jigsaw portrait of the Thicket Queen, for thanks to the transgressions of others, the ground between them still had its cracks, and he refused to trust before he knew that such extension would not endanger his pack.
As she continued, it fell together into a reasonable enough picture, with just a few subtle questions resting within him still. Her mention of @Danica caused his ears to stand taller, and he could only imagine how Koda's dedication to Iopah would have only heightened the sense of betrayal felt by the young girl. After all, hadn't he left her, only to return and instead of placing himself back into the hole he had made, giving himself to someone else entirely? Especially from a yearling's perspective, it would have been utterly unfair. Yet none of that was Iopah's onus, and he had to wonder if perhaps he wasn't being told the whole story. What with Mirren's vicious disposition toward these traitors, the desire the Woodlands had for revenge, Gent had thought that perhaps violence had been committed. To breed without permission, to break law and then announce their departure rather than pursuing their desires in a legal, respectful way was certainly deserving of banishment, but not vengeance. Were there emotions and jealousy still over this Koda? Or was it the same grave sense of betrayal that had caused Minka to attack and outcast her closest friend?
There were too many intricacies, all emotional, and none truly concerning him nor worth his time, much less worth hindering the Crest. A deep sigh was expelled from his jaws as at last he closed his eyes, slowly shaking his head. With the carbon he shed the tension that had been wracking his muscles, the suspicion and the anger. He had further questions, more he wanted to know and more he wanted to pursue, but no more did he want to separate himself from the woman before him with grudges.
When again his opened his eyes, the intensity behind them had diminished ever so slightly, though still there was nothing but gravity within his gaze.
"We aren't sure what happened to him," he answered her quietly. Perhaps he would never know if he could blame Iopah for Lugh's demise or not, but even the man in question would not desire such harbored negativity, and he found the point effectively rendered moot. "One day he was just gone. We couldn't find him." No, in the end, Gent could only blame himself for what had happened to the herbalist, and it would not be brought up again by the king himself.
"What do you know of the Crest?" he asked then, his voice strong once more as he looked to her again.