At the mention of the Warrens, the girl nodded. That, she remembered. “One of my friends told me a bit about them. He said that Kalzasi is duty-bound to keep them at bay, and that there is something called the Dead Legion, made up of convicted criminals... that they are sent in there to fight against the monsters within until they themselves die.” She had no reason to doubt what Arvaelyn had told her, and she had fully accepted it as fact. But she was listening with rapt attention. The city required magic to survive, which made sense. That his people trained to fight against the Warrens from a young age also made sense. It was never too early to begin one’s education in that regard, though she might have been better off waiting a few years more to practice with maces and clubs than when she had started...
Family expectations and responsibilities she knew all too well. But while it seemed that Daemon had stepped into them and shouldered them, Hilana had done the opposite. She’d fought against her father’s desires and wishes for her until she had had to give in in order to really start her training in herbalism under the tutelage of her great-aunt. While she had known marriage would be part and parcel of it, the girl was lucky enough that it had fallen through. Still, as she had learned from her talk with Deus and Domina, her struggles with her family and their beliefs on who she should be were not even a ripple in the grand scheme of things, and that she simply just needed a work around. Which she had, if she chose to act on it. Still, she was the black sheep of her immediate family, but it did not bother her.
As he clarified that it was Kinetics that allowed him to sense the creatures’ presence, the Vastiana’s eyes were wide with wonder, realization dawning. She hadn’t considered that Kinetics could be used that way, and the possibilities of using it to help accentuate experience and skill in tracking could be an asset. “How would someone hide from a Kineticist, then? Can a Sembler do it?” she knew from her discussions with another one of her friends that they could make themselves essentially unnoticeable, but that didn’t seem likely judging by the way Daemon had just described the Aether Flux. Maybe it took another Kineticist to hide themselves... or something like the Mask of Midnight’s Mother. She was going to have to test that theory out with Raithen at some point, too. And perhaps... acquire that Rune for herself from him, if he was willing to teach her.
When she was able to see the amusement on him at her puzzlement, the girl accepted it with cheer and good grace. He didn’t seem to be the type to laugh at her, and even if he was, Hilana had earned it with her floundering about. She had said something that amused him, and her brow furrowed at his words. That was one way of putting it. He had a special connection to the Plane of Light, he had been there many times, that halo with the symbols that appeared when he used the silver-white fire, fire that wasn’t Elementalism... he had many names. She blinked, and her head tilted. “Ohhh,” she breathed the sound out in realization. “You are the Prince of Dragons.”
The one who had sealed away the Founders all those centuries ago at Kaladon. Reviled and despised for thousands of years in the reclusive desert kingdom. The greatest enemy of all. And yet... They were free now, and the Zalkyrians had been involved in it, and so had the Avialae beside her. Others might have fled or turned away. And yet, while Hilana knew the stories of her people, her trust in the judgement of Deus Avaerys and Domina Varvara was absolute. They had returned, and since They had, and Daemon was still here within Solunarium, not at all really hiding, They allowed it. And if They allowed it, then it was perfectly fine for Hilana to be here and talking with him. He was not as much of an Agent of Chaos as Florian was, surely, or else it would have been dealt with. Things could change, and Hilana accepted that.
Besides that, he had saved her and her companions, not once now, but twice, and he had plenty of fascinating information that she could learn and he was interested in the plants of her homeland. They both had things that they could learn from each other, and the girl smiled back at him. It was a strange sort of happenstance for her to have a deity beside her, and she wondered if he was a bit like her Avialae friend in that he preferred to be treated as he was, not for the ranks and titles. Time would tell. They could collect a few more of the white sage, and then they could move on to the next plant not far off. “What sort of tea do you like?” she wanted to know as her fingers brushed away dirt while she entreated the spirits of the earth to move away from the roots as they had for Daemon.