Lusa filed away the information that Zandelia gave her. It was a home or a camp, not a den, among humans. But she was sure that she had heard that thieves lived in dens... She set aside that thought for later, since now didn't seem like a good time to ask Zandelia the difference. Grinning happily at Zandelia's affection, Lusa took the vegetables and situated them at the top of her pack, where they wouldn't be squished. She would analyze them later, to learn how they were cooked and seasoned.
Lusa was happy that she'd found a human to follow. It was in her nature, after all, though she didn't know it. Zandelia had been looking at Lusa the way Lusa had looked at a small puzzle box she'd had as a baby, and Lusa was quite glad to be a fun puzzle for her new friend. Of course, Lusa knew that she was different from the humans and other species around her in Sunberth, but had no idea that it might have caused her trouble.
Lusa did, however, have enough smarts to wonder why Zandelia was being so nice to her, when all of Sunberth's other citizens had been quite content to sneer at her, shove her, or preferably ignore her. She wasn't about to look a gift horse in the mouth, though (an expression she'd picked up in her time here.)
"I'm sure I'll like it, if it smells any better than the tavern." She commented. "And an uncomfortable safe place is always better than a dangerous, comfy one!"
Still unused to the hustle and bustle of the city, Lusa had not yet learned to distinguish the sound of unfriendly footsteps from those of the average passerby. And so, she had only a moment to cry out before the slaver struck the back of Zandelia's head with the pommel of his sword.