Skjo

Kazul

"What do you hope to learn today? Or are you just here to have your a** handed to you again?" Whenever she fought, Kazul went all out, holding back only enough that she wouldn't maim a careless partner. All of her offspring were larger than she, but she was used to that and still tended to win more often than not. Part of the reason for that was she held to the teachings of a not-stupid outlander who said one should never tell everything you know.
Skjo

"You're not getting any younger, you know, mother. You should probably take it easy and not go picking fights with lions so much larger and stronger than you are." He was teasing her, but there was an edge to it. There was usually an edge to interacting with Kazul. Uncle Odd said she had always been prickly, but Skjo couldn't believe his mother had ever been anything as mild as prickly. She was a hardass, and had been for Skjo's entire life. Not that she had ever forced her children to do things against their will, per se, but still...
Kazul

"Watch yourself," she warned him with false sweetness. "You're not so big that I can't take you down and give you some new scars."
She didn't press the matter though. She was still capable of feeling, despite her behavior since her father's exile, and she was curious what her son wanted. At least a little bit, anyway.
Skjo

Actually, now that he thought about it, Skjo wasn't sure he had told his mother about the period of time Aesir had spent recovering from his wounds with that other lioness. He hadn't seen it, but he strongly suspected that his grandfather was ******** the lioness. He hoped he had told his mother at least the first part of that. Otherwise he'd be in for it.
"They're both alive, and I think his one eye's healed completely," he went on, hoping to cover up his faux pas with more information. He didn't know how his mother would feel about her father being with someone other than her mum. She seemed to like her half-brother Odd well enough, but her relationships with the others in his litter were obviously complicated.
Kazul

"I'm glad to know about his eye," she told Skjoldr. She didn't sound particularly glad, but she really was. He was not blind. There was a foolish part of her that hoped he would return and claim his rightful position, but she knew that would never happen. And, much as it pained her to admit it, the fight had been fair and so the position of warlord was no longer rightfully his. Even thinking that felt like a betrayal, but it was the truth, and Kazul would not allow herself to flinch away from it just because it was unpleasant.
She didn't say anything about the other piece of information. He had told her about the other lioness, in fact, and she thought she could understand her father's reasoning. Being back with her mum must be difficult for him.
"Thank you."
Skjo

"Um."
Kazul

It wasn't until Skjo uttered a non-word sound that she looked sharply at him and reprimanded him: "If you have something to say, say it. Don't mumble or grunt like a beast."
She had never minded that sort of thing in her youth, but people changed as they grew older, and Kazul had spent many seasons trying to keep a horde of increasingly large and boisterous cubs from getting into the sort of trouble that would get them killed. It had shortened her temper and diminished her tolerance for irritating habits. Like non-words, fidgeting, or time-wasting.
Skjo

Automatically Skjo had touched briefly on the location of his other family, just to reassure himself that they were not in any danger, and in doing so he had noted that there was family on the way to speak to his mother. He could be there when they arrived, he supposed, but he didn't much want to. Something about their expressions told him this wasn't a scene he wanted to be party to.
"That was all I wanted to tell you. Good day, mother."
Kazul

"Do not die in bed, Skjoldr." She used his full name rather than the shortened form because he had bid her a more formal farewell, which in her mind meant a full-name reply. It wasn't that she had anything against nicknames.
She watched her son depart and wished Odd was here. She relied on him more than she cared to consider for emotional support and stability, and she had the feeling that she would be needing him soon.