"Of course! That is why I follow him to places and live with him sometimes. While I have no clan, he is my clan. You say before, how I dislike but spend time in Kalzasi, it is for love of the friends who are fonder of the place. Maybe he will wish to move here and you will be happier, because you go where he goes and are at ease here more than there. I understand this, for Sol'Valen smells better and it is, uhhh... rigged? No, rigid! It is rigid, as you are." Destyn might have missed some of the nuance in Laurevere's question, but perhaps he'd just sidestepped the second part with classic Fae trickery.
"Fallen elfs? Ah, it is easy, I think, to fall in the desert. It is difficult to walk in sand, I think. That is why I pity you for lacking wings, as you pity Sivan so you care for him. I will help you if you must walk on sand so you are not, you know, also a fallen elf. It sounds dangerous there, because if there is also a volcano, then you might fall in the lava. I will not go there if you say so. Thank you for the advising." Destyn considered the question for longer than a blink, which was a pregnant pause for him. He drew his knees up to his chest and rested his chin upon them, only his toes now submerged in the muddy water just at the edge of the bank.
"Partly so, yes. I think you can teach me things that the others cannot. Sivan treats you as an elder. You teach and train and chide and, rarely, reward. I like your rewards, but I do not think I know how to earn them. That is something I would like to learn, but I do not know that it is something you would like to teach to me." He let his cheek fall to one knee so his half-smushed face was tilted toward the elf at his side and he looked up at him.
"Anyway, I already told you why I want to be where you are, Laurevere. Because I like you. This is also why I wanted to show you this glade. I like it also. And thought you might enjoy a piece of your homeland that you did not know before."