[He shrugs and glances down, his cheeks coloring a little.]
It's nice to . . . to have somewhere to belong. To know that I'm part of something, that I can rely on them for things that my other friends-- though I love them dearly-- can't understand. I've never known any other werewolves before, let alone ones who enjoyed their lycanthropy.
[He rubs his face.]
And Derek . . . he protects us. Tries to keep us safe.
Mm, well, even werewolves are rare. Most shifters are werewolves, then it goes down the line - rats, birds, cats - big ones and little ones - and it's genetic. We can't spread it by bite.
You know I thought that was pretty standard, but the more wolves I meet here, the more it occurs to me that it's kind of unusual.
[She takes another sip.]
My father was a Khan - that's a tiger - and so was my grandfather, and my great-grandmother - and so on, and so forth.
no subject
Er-- so is it common, then? Your changing?
no subject
[She takes a sip of her tea]
Are you part of Derek Hale's little get together?
no subject
no subject
[She is not really impressed by Derek Hale, to be honest here]
Sorry, I'm just not sure what's so appealing.
no subject
It's nice to . . . to have somewhere to belong. To know that I'm part of something, that I can rely on them for things that my other friends-- though I love them dearly-- can't understand. I've never known any other werewolves before, let alone ones who enjoyed their lycanthropy.
[He rubs his face.]
And Derek . . . he protects us. Tries to keep us safe.
no subject
Sorry, I don't really get the pack thing. We don't...really do that. Well, the Simba do, but whatever, they're their own thing.
But if it makes you more secure, who am I to judge?
no subject
It's just something to have. Like a family.
no subject
[The question is very gentle, very soft.]
no subject
It is what it is. You should tell me more about your world.
no subject
[Her world and her life are different matters, and she's comfortable enough with one of them]
no subject
[Thank god. They can move on and he can forget his embarrassment.]
Is it all tigers, or any animal? What determines what kind of animal you are?
no subject
You know I thought that was pretty standard, but the more wolves I meet here, the more it occurs to me that it's kind of unusual.
[She takes another sip.]
My father was a Khan - that's a tiger - and so was my grandfather, and my great-grandmother - and so on, and so forth.
no subject
no subject
We're a species. Like humans, only different.
Animaguses. Would they be...mages? Magicians?