"So I'll take that to mean something good rather than the other way around. We Akalak don't like being judged and will bring our fist to those that try it." He chuckled after the short retort, but he was mostly joking. Riaris hoped that things would go well, and so far her family had been nothing but polite. He was already sure that his family would like Kavala. Konti were no strangers of theirs. "I trust you'll tell me if I'm over stepping my grounds?" Riaris chuckled at her comment. He did worry too much, Jonah had told him as much. It seemed that for a race that lived well beyond the years of others that the Akalak did a good amount of worrying over life and it's struggles. "If you keep talking like that I'll send her here to live with you instead. She has her konti flair, but sometimes she eats as much as I do." He thought for a moment, about how Johan seemed to eat more than her sister. It was strange to think one soul was more konti and the other Akalak, but at times it seemed to be true. "And this brother of yours. I take it he comes and leaves the city often?" To Riaris it sounded like a very Drykas thing to do. And going by what Kavala told him, it seemed that he was close to the right mind set. "I believe that my sisters wish to travel, but not much or even far away. I think they would miss the city too much and all of their friends." He frowned slightly after the comment thinking of all the young Akalak pining away over them. He wanted his sisters to be happy and get a family of their own, but as he saw it they were still too young for now. Riaris jogged on, keeping his pace the same and his breathing steady. It wasn't a race, and talking would surely be more difficult if he was. Judging by the way she moved and breathed, he could tell that she was a better runner, and could probably do both while he couldn't. "And they will be. In Riverfall we have care of each other, Akalak or not. For any of us, I would think my kind understand the need for brighter futures better than many." The Akalak ran, he jogged and whipped across the sands. He could feel it more now, the burning and aches that came from running. But to him it wasn't as much pain of ache as it was a familiar tightening of his body. Kavala looked amazing as she always did, so full of life and radiating it upon others the way Syna spread her light. She was the one for him, though he didn't know it yet. It was complicated given that he wasn't used to having such feelings are going about expressing them. "I have no children of my own, but for my sisters I intend to do the same." Suddenly, the conversation took a very different and dark turn, something the Akalak knew all about. She didn't want to talk about it much, and he wouldn't push her but there was something that he could do. "If you feel up to it at another time, feel free to speak of it. If there is any way that I could help, you know I don't mind." He gave her a knowing look then, one that spoke of doing for her something much bigger than a simple favor. They talked more about travel, Mura, and the safety that Kavala found boring. He could see it that way, but he could also see the better side of it. What better place for his young to be than away from danger. What better place to keep his sister's out of trouble than somewhere so structured? "I don't plan on staying for long, just to visit at some time in the future." He smirked suddenly and sped up his pace as he jumped over the same washed up seaweed clutter. "Where too?" |