It was a cave. No matter how much they'd prettied it up or big of a cave it was, the place was under ground. It was hidden out of Azeyma's day like lair of a primal that couldn't bear her gaze. That this deeply unsettled K'ile Tia should not have come as a surprise, and would've been fairly obvious to his companions. He agitation was visible in how his ears sat low on the back of his head, just bearly lifting to listen to the voices around him, and in the occasional shiver of his tail.
When K'luha snapped at K'ailia, K'ile muttered quietly, beneath the conversation, "It's fine. She can be mad at me if she wants." The statement took almost no thought; primarily, he was listening to K'luha's torrent of questions. They were each well-put and straight, just as he'd expect from the woman, though he thought she was being too nice about it.
As she finished her questions, the firey-haired Tia stepped up beside K'luha, considering the Hyur. Leave it to Hyur to have such an insulting idea, and leave it K'ailia to get caught up in it. To add his own tone to the conversation, he said pointedly to the Hyur, "Keep in mind that your offer did carry a certain tone of insult." He spoke meanly, but it was intended as mercy. No Hyur could be expected to understand the implications of this idea. K'ailia should have, but apparently she didn't express that to the Hyur. So K'ile Tia gave him the overdue warning so that the Hyur could speak with the necessary deference, if he had the capacity to do so.
When K'luha snapped at K'ailia, K'ile muttered quietly, beneath the conversation, "It's fine. She can be mad at me if she wants." The statement took almost no thought; primarily, he was listening to K'luha's torrent of questions. They were each well-put and straight, just as he'd expect from the woman, though he thought she was being too nice about it.
As she finished her questions, the firey-haired Tia stepped up beside K'luha, considering the Hyur. Leave it to Hyur to have such an insulting idea, and leave it K'ailia to get caught up in it. To add his own tone to the conversation, he said pointedly to the Hyur, "Keep in mind that your offer did carry a certain tone of insult." He spoke meanly, but it was intended as mercy. No Hyur could be expected to understand the implications of this idea. K'ailia should have, but apparently she didn't express that to the Hyur. So K'ile Tia gave him the overdue warning so that the Hyur could speak with the necessary deference, if he had the capacity to do so.