21.Feb.21, 07:36 AM
Hey, F’drel. So I made sure your sister wasn’t poisoned but I made her sad. Not sure which is worse.
A’tay frowned at Kalea’s reaction to his hesitance and then to his offer to help her learn more about what she was eating. Had he really upset her that much? He hadn’t been mean, at least he hadn’t meant to be. He was just worried and thought he came up with a helpful alternative. He almost laughed at how she defiantly ate the remainder of the shellfish but knew that wouldn’t go over well at all. But he was left with a completely different person staring at him and it made him a bit uncomfortable and unsure of what to do. A few cavern workers gave him the same kind of demure attitude when they saw his knots and A’tay always hated it and didn’t think he deserved any special treatment because Xyxyth was shiner than other dragons.
“I only brought two pieces with me and I always keep them in this pocket so I know they’re safe,” A’tay pointed to the pocket in question and then slid the piece inside it. His tool was slipped into a different one as he left the rock and slowly approached the pair. He didn’t want to spook Kalea who seemed like he had physically smacked her into submission. He felt horrible for apparently misspeaking and didn’t know how he would handle her flinching at him moving too quickly or unexpectedly.
He unhooked the bag from Xyxyth’s straps and pulled out the spare shirt, cloth, and small jar of oil for any itchy spot touch ups and then held the bag out to Kalea. “Please take it. I really do want to help you learn more about the creatures you’ve found and I don’t know anything about them to do so. I’m actually working on getting over a fear of water and never explored these little pools. I think it would be cool to learn about what lives in the water and if they’re okay for dragons. Did you know they have two stomachs?” Honestly, from what he had seen of dragonets and adults over the years, A’tay was confident a dragon could eat anything without much issue. But that was going off the logic that they were eating food safe for humans, not unknown animals.
“And, if you don’t hate me, I’d be happy to teach you about the plants I know some time.” Some were back in Katila and A’tay wasn’t sure if he should mention that just yet, knowing Kalea would want to go right away and he wanted to run the idea by F’drel first.
A’tay frowned at Kalea’s reaction to his hesitance and then to his offer to help her learn more about what she was eating. Had he really upset her that much? He hadn’t been mean, at least he hadn’t meant to be. He was just worried and thought he came up with a helpful alternative. He almost laughed at how she defiantly ate the remainder of the shellfish but knew that wouldn’t go over well at all. But he was left with a completely different person staring at him and it made him a bit uncomfortable and unsure of what to do. A few cavern workers gave him the same kind of demure attitude when they saw his knots and A’tay always hated it and didn’t think he deserved any special treatment because Xyxyth was shiner than other dragons.
“I only brought two pieces with me and I always keep them in this pocket so I know they’re safe,” A’tay pointed to the pocket in question and then slid the piece inside it. His tool was slipped into a different one as he left the rock and slowly approached the pair. He didn’t want to spook Kalea who seemed like he had physically smacked her into submission. He felt horrible for apparently misspeaking and didn’t know how he would handle her flinching at him moving too quickly or unexpectedly.
He unhooked the bag from Xyxyth’s straps and pulled out the spare shirt, cloth, and small jar of oil for any itchy spot touch ups and then held the bag out to Kalea. “Please take it. I really do want to help you learn more about the creatures you’ve found and I don’t know anything about them to do so. I’m actually working on getting over a fear of water and never explored these little pools. I think it would be cool to learn about what lives in the water and if they’re okay for dragons. Did you know they have two stomachs?” Honestly, from what he had seen of dragonets and adults over the years, A’tay was confident a dragon could eat anything without much issue. But that was going off the logic that they were eating food safe for humans, not unknown animals.
“And, if you don’t hate me, I’d be happy to teach you about the plants I know some time.” Some were back in Katila and A’tay wasn’t sure if he should mention that just yet, knowing Kalea would want to go right away and he wanted to run the idea by F’drel first.