OOC: No problem! I have a pretty good schedule right now that allows me some down time almost every day.
When the man spoke, Akasja had to pause a moment to let the word unfurl in her mind. It was his accent, too, very unusual. Finally, she recognized the word: Drykas. It was not his name, but the name of his people. It confirmed Akasja's earlier suspicions. She wondered what he was doing out here, so far from any others. Perhaps he was hunting for something, same as she.
Akasja waited for the man to continue speaking, but when he did not, she wondered if he either wasn't prone to it, or perhaps if the lack of speech, plus his heavy accent, signified that Common was not his first language, either. Well, this was an interesting situation. Even if the man spoke Arumenic, it would be more helpful to them both. But what were the odds of that? The fact that Akasja spoke it better than Common would probably be a strange enough fact to anyone who didn't know her. She decided to continue with Common, in the hopes of making some leeway with the Drykas before her.
"Why you...here?"
Akasja paused, thinking about what would be most important to communicate to this man. She suddenly felt the goat shift under her grip and looked down at it. It was still alive and well, taking the lack of action as a sign that it could be freed from the Chaktawe's grasp. But Akasja held on, and the goat settled back down into the dust again. It could be killed, as Akasja was planning to do, or it could be traded... Akasja didn't know anyone in her tribe who kept goats for their milk. It just wasn't something that her people usually did -plus, animal milk made many of them sick. Nevertheless, Akasja knew that the Benshira coveted goats and cows, and that many people herded them and didn't necessarily eat them. They would pay a lot of money for a goat and all that it provided. Benshiras had even gotten into small altercations with Chaktawes over who they thought owned these animals, even when the animals had run away from their herds.
Not to mention, spilling blood out here would surely attract carnivorous animals. Akasja would need to make a fire first before she would even attempt butchering this size of an animal by herself.
As Akasja studied the Drykas again, she began to form a more concrete plan. He looked able-bodied, healthy, and carried multiple weapons. Being a Drykas, it was more than likely that he had at least one horse with him...somewhere. Akasja had her horse as well, and she could call to it to come to her. And, of course, there was the high probability that this man knew exactly where Endrykas was. That is what Akasja had come here for, anyway. Above all, she needed to travel on, to find knowledge, to hone her craft.
Akasja looked decisively at the man before her. "You want...Endrykas...with me?" Akasja pointed to herself, then northward. "Endrykas," she emphasized, trying to say it as best as she could, blending her learned accents as she attempted to recollect the Common one. Since she had learned Common mostly from Eypharians or scattered Benshiras, her accent had an almost Arumenic sound to it.
She gestured to the animal beneath her, struggling to find the word, but managing it: "Goat here, I give you."
Akasja looked intently at the Drykas, watching for any recollection in his features. Once more, she repeated, her phrasing more steady,"Goat here, I give you. You and me, Endrykas." Akasja took another glance at the man's weapons, and quickly added, "Please."