“Does it?” Hilana was interested at the idea that the Old City sounded a bit like somewhere else. It did help bring to mind pictures of faraway lands, and fill in some details about them. Knowing the world outside her own was now positively infested and crawling with Orks had assured her there was no reason to ever go anywhere else, so stories about such places would just have to remain stories. “This is good to know. I always wondered about such places.”
“Close, Dominus,” she nodded approvingly as he tried to sound out the strange word. “Hayima’el,” she said it again, slower, so that he could piece through the pronunciation. “He is my camel,” she explained. “His name comes from one of the nomadic dialects, a play on their word for ‘wanderer’.” Hilana added for further clarification as to why the word may have been a hair annoying for him. “I took his mother out to that tribe to meet his father, and so I wanted to honour them with his name.”
She wasn’t remotely surprised at that little bit of hesitation with regards to visiting the Antiquine District, but Hilana was not put out by it. She understood. She was not welcome in the neighbourhoods beyond her own, and was hardly keen to poke around them too much. She figured he likely lived in the Aurecine, or perhaps even the Palatine District, but it wasn’t polite for her to ask that. She wouldn’t put him in the position of saying one way or another in a place like this, lest someone with worse intentions be keeping an ear out. She knew she would find out when the courier came by, so why rush things?
At the topic of theatre, Hilana nodded in agreement. “Ah, so that is part of how you are so accomplished at linguistics? The theatre? I think you will find that art, especially the stage, is taken to another level here,” she agreed. “With how highly held the disciplines of Arcana are in in this Kingdom… you are in for a very big treat, Dominus. They are spectacular. Is magic that much more restricted beyond the sea?” she asked, curious, as she sipped her tea.