OOC: LMAO another case of "They each have an RP that doesn't quite count as 'complete' and I need to get something done to make it count"

With the buffalo gone, Boneknapper was happy to be able to travel into the Bahari lands through the trees again. While she was no Merchant, though, she was a Crafter, and there were some shells that, somehow, only ever washed up on Bahari sands. There were, too, bones from the whale still hiding around, and she'd found somebody to gather them for her. She stopped in her walk through the trees, spying the wave-marked lion. "Did you find a fair number of them?"

"Of course!" Producing a bag from his mane, Ganesh held it up with one paw. "They're not very big, but there's quite a few. I had one of the baboons help me in exchange for a bit of one of my kills." His gaze flicked over the pink lioness, yellow eyes filled with a hint of curiosity. "Do you have the flowers?"

Boneknapper got her own bag, secured to her side, and held it up. "Flowers native only to our stretch of the beach, with medicinal properties, just as you asked." She tossed the bag to Ganesh, smiling when he tossed his to her. The bones inside made a rattling sound that only sun-bleached bones could make. "A pleasure doing business with you, Ganesh."

"And you, Boneknapper." Gathering the bag, he was pleased to see the lioness wait while he inspected them. Then, with a bow of his head, he turned and headed back to his own pride's lands. Behind him, he could hear the lioness leaving, back to her own lands, as well. This was as close as he would get to the Kizingo'zaa lands. As much as he liked their neighbors, he was wary of them, not so sure after the attempted cubnappings when he'd been a young one himself. His mother had been in an outright panic at the time, and he had wound up feeling one, too. Sometimes he woke up from nightmares about lions in the night stealing him. He closed his eyes, pausing for a moment to breathe, before he finally went to take care of business using the flowers. They'd be dried and saved for later, stored away somewhere moisture couldn't get to them.