Lark offered her a crooked smirk,
"Family tradition. We all were named after flowers or trees or plants of some sort," he had kept up the tradition with his own children, and they had kept it up with
their children. He had liked it, and after heading north to Relic Lore, it was odd to find more wolves without names like
Hibiscus or
Ivy, named that even like Kuwindwa's, flowed a little differently off the tongue. Not to say that he didn't like it, but it hadn't been what he'd spent most of his life around. He still missed it all, even if he often insisted that he didn't. Lark didn't speak of them often, but when he did, it was always fondly. Which was very different than what he
actually thought of his birthpack.
Something was suddenly off about the woman, but he wasn't entirely sure what. It was like @
Kuwindwa suddenly wasn't there, but then quickly forced herself back. Knowing full well that wasn't a thing you didn't typically bring attention to, he went on as if nothing had happened and as if he hadn't noticed a thing. They were just two wolves having a conversation, he trying to be helpful to a weary traveler.
Lark stayed put as she moved, going so far as to make himself comfortable and sit down for a moment.
"I think today the fog is particularly thick. I didn't like it much either when we first arrived, but there's... patches, I guess, of sun," he had yet to find his own sunny spot to lie his head down. He had intended to do something like that today, but ended up finding this woman instead. Which could have been fate, or maybe the work of some of the gods that he chose not to believe in.
Larkspur noticed her hesitation. He may not have seemed it, but he was paying the woman
very close attention.
He offered her a sympathetic look and nodded.
"I know, it's hard being a loner" he had been in her place. After months of treading carefully, and of stepping correctly, he'd ended up with secure footing. He'd even managed to gain Alastor's trust, which had been slow, uphill battle.
"I've been in your place. Lived my whole life out of Relic Lore, had to leave home and find someplace new. Hard to trust new faces when you don't know who's good or bad, or who's a liar and who's not," or when you felt like your dead brother was after you.
"I still have a hard time with it," talking as if they were good friends and offering Kuwindwa some of his own perspective could get her to open up, but at this point who knew where it all could go.
"My own pack's just a bunch of kids. Well, kids to me, I guess," he had grandchildren older than all of them by now.
"But they're good. And as for other wolves around here, I haven't met anyone too rough around the edges.
I know it doesn't help much, but all I've got to give you is my word."