The stranger's expression grew still, hard, which made an entertaining contrast to Craw's more light-hearted features, for this brief moment their outward auras reversed. The questions which came in deliberately obtuse refusal to give a straight answer were of a similarly personal nature, half-jesting attacks which Craw replied to with a slow, dark smile.
"No, and yes," he wheezed in literal reply to the two questions, inhaling a little deeper to hear the rattle in his throat more clearly, a subconscious response to someone drawing attention to his affliction. If it made the stranger uncomfortable, then all the better. His gaze flitted back over the horizon, his posture calm in its dismissal of this packwolf's importance. Idly, he twisted a hind leg around to scratch at that biting itch behind his ear, offering a sweet relief to its torment. If the man didn't want to answer, or engage in any kind of fruitful interaction, then so be it. Craw did not indulge childishness, much less in a wolf older than himself. The wolf knew what he wanted, and if he wanted to play time-wasting games, could play them alone. This was not going to turn into a tit-for-tat of pointless questions in the hopes that, eventually, the brown wolf would give in.