<blockquote><font style='margin-left:20px;'>So it seemed like it would be a bit of both, in the end. If the water came back, then Ruiko expected his family. If they didn't come back, well, there wasn't anything some wayward strangers in need of a home couldn't fix. Either way he wasn't about to totally go off to fairer lands, at least not until everything was proven to be a total loss right where they were. Damascus could admire that. He could empathize with it to a degree, anyway. But then the tables were turned and the question was extended to him. What exactly would he do?</font>
<font style='margin-left:20px;'><b>"Hard to say. I wouldn't mind finding somewhere to settle down for the winter. I know that's just around the corner nowadays, if it won't be upon us soon."</b> He rolled his furry, dark-haired shoulders in a shrug. <b>"My plans have always been the same from the start, though. I'm looking for somewhere with meaning, somewhere I can call home to plant my own roots."</b> Maybe a place where he would one day extend a branch of his family tree. He smiled thinly at River's leader, not quite perturbed by his gaze.</font>
<font style='margin-left:20px;'>But Ruiko was quite right to think that there was a bit of an ulterior motive at hand. <b>"It might be bold of me, but given our current situations, perhaps I could join you? The more eyes and ears about, the more likely the chances of us coming across some water, wouldn't you think?"</b> He wasn't a greedy fellow at least, but he was reaching out to someone he didn't know so well. This had yet to really backfire on him, but there was a first time for everything. Damascus had been turned away before, but the stakes were much more dire this go around.</font></blockquote>