In the end, she doesn't say that, but she doesn't offer much else about the what and the whys and the wheres - but that's alright. She paints the picture of heaven, and he has to shove his entire muzzle into the water to keep the stupid smirk off his face. That went exactly as he wanted, and he hadn't even been trying - but his heart and soul do that weird, tumbling lurch again. That's.. that's the only downside to this, if you can call it that. She's magnetic, and he's unbound.
"I'd like that a lot," he says honestly, getting his dripping muzzle out of the water and realizing his tail is wagging solemnly behind him, disturbing and rippling the waters. "Where is it?"