Reading Kaja's look, she turned away from the silent woman, giving her a little space. She knew returning home was overwhelming, her mother occasionally just sat in a corner, watching everyone, whenever she had been away for long.
Listening to her explanation, Akilah blinked for a moment, taking it all in. Putting the words together, their meaning became clear.
So she could only talk to dogs? Thinking, she nodded to herself. That made sense, she was only one animal and so she could only speak one language.
Though, that did ruin her theory that all animals could understand each other.
Glancing at Kaja's hair colour, with its mix of browns and gold, she wondered what else she could do as a human beside understanding dog. Her colouring, Akilah knew, came from her animal form. But she wondered, did it go beyond appearances?
Laughing at the joke, Akilah added, "And you can't even do that all of the time. Some ability." It was kind of funny that their entire conversation was about speaking dog. "Say, can you hear and smell very well too?" Pausing, she realized something. "Is it hard going from human to dog? And back again? Not just changing form, but also...thinking, I guess?" She tried to think of a better way to put it. Dog society was probably a lot different than human society. There probably was less rules, for one. So was it hard, changing thoughts like that, thinking from the view of a dog and then to the view of a human?
Listening to Kaja's story, Akilah's eyes widened. This was probably one of those times she should have thought before speaking. Not everyone was like her, with a relatively good past. Most people, in fact, were not like her, with some tragic event occurring due to the dangerous nature of their world.
And here she went again, without even a little of the tact others possessed.
Grabbing Kaja's hands, she squeezed her fingers as she apologized. "I'm sorry! For what happened to you and for making you recount that too. It must have been bad enough to go through it once."
Unfortunately, she knew the remorse she had right now probably wouldn't stop her from making this mistake again. She was raised to speak her mind, after all, no matter what the consequences were.