Matu

Nevertheless, Matu was confident in his hunting abilities and he refused to be intimidated. At least he refused to appear intimidated, and so he took a few extra moments before reporting to the den of the hunt leader to collect himself. Kiek was the lion's name. He was not a lion Matu had heard of or interacted with before. He didn't know how he had ended up in his hunting party.
Kiek

Thinking about Gliri made Kiek smile as he stalked silently toward Matumaini. She was older than he was by more than she liked to admit, but he was absolutely unbothered by the difference in their ages. He thought she was beautiful, and although she called herself a coward, he knew she was one of the bravest lionesses he would ever meet. He adored her, and he had appointed himself her protector. Becoming a hunt leader was a part of that. He wanted her place in the pride to be secure, no matter what.
Matu

"Kiek?" he asked, proud of himself for sounding self-assured. Sure, it was a question, but it didn't make him sound uncertain, just like he was being polite and making sure that he was addressing the lion he expected to be addressing. So far so good.
He was increasingly confident as he went on to introduce himself: "I'm Matumaini. I'm told you wanted me to report to you today to discuss tomorrow's hunt, so here I am."
Kiek

Kiek hated how formal and stiff he sounded, but it was not easy for him to talk to strangers, even personable ones like young Matumaini, and so he tended to fall back on stiffness and formality in situations like these. He was good at what he did, and so while the hunters he took hunting did not love him, they at least respected him. It would do for now, but he knew in the future he would have to make friends.
"I know you have experience hunting with your family, but this will be a little different. The most difficult adjustment you will have to make will be to do your part and only your part, no matter what is going on around you. You can't deviate from the plan because you think someone needs assistance Do you understand?"
Matu

"That won't be a problem, Kiek," he said firmly. "I don't know these lions, but they're older than I am, and I expect they'll be more experienced. If they can't hold their own, that's their problem. Does that mean that there is no flexibility or room for improvisation in our hunting plan tomorrow? The best-laid plans can easily go awry, after all."
It was daring of him to imply that Kiek's plans might be infallible, but Matu's pride was hurt and he wanted to get a little of his own back.
Kiek

"I expect you to exercise sound judgment on the hunt. I do not like to work with glory-seekers or heroes. Hunting fulfills a necessary and useful purpose for the pride, and there is no need to take risks in doing it." He hoped that he sounded formal and censorious enough to put paid to Matumaini's display of arrogance. He was young, it was excusable. Kiek wasn't all that old himself, after all. He just bore more responsibility than most lions his age.
"I am confident that you can do these things. I would not have elected to bring you on this hunt if that wasn't the case."
Matu

"I can be every bit as responsible as you would wish me to be," Matu told Kiek. "But I plan to enjoy my hunt. I hope you enjoy it, too."
He looked at Kiek challengingly, daring him to say something about the assertion that hunting ought to be fun. Of course it was a necessary action to keep the pride fed, but that didn't mean it couldn't be fun, and an opportunity to do a little bit of showing off. Matu couldn't believe that there were lions who wanted to work with Kiek over and over if this was what he was always like. But maybe there weren't. Maybe that's why Kiek had fresh, inexperienced hunters like Matu in his party.
Kiek

It was the longest speech Kiek had made to Matumaini so far and it certainly did not sound particularly friendly, but Kiek's manner was not entirely that of a challening, domineering hunt leader. A perceptive lion would realize that he was actually injecting a small amount of humor into his statement about how he hated to tell mothers about their stupid sons' deaths.
"Get a good night's sleep tonight. I expect to see you tomorrow morning at dawn. If you're not there, we leave without you."
Matu

"Yessir," he said. "A full night's sleep and ready to go at dawn so that my mother won't have to learn that I'm a moron."
He worried that his tone sounded too surly still. He didn't want Kiek to dislike him. He didn't know how he had managed to screw up this meeting so badly, and now that he had been dismissed he was doing his best to salvage it. He hoped desperately that it wasn't too little, too late.
Earnestly he added, "I won't disappoint you."
Kiek

He, too, felt an urge to try to salvage the meeting, but he knew that saying more would not do that at this point. It would be best to let Matumaini go and hope that the youth got over his pique. There had been a hint of humor in Matumaini toward the end, and that gave Kiek a glimmer of hope for the adolescent. Probably they would not work together more than this once, but Kiek wanted to be on good terms with as many people as possible. For Gliri's sake.
He nodded farewell to Matumaini and then walked the rest of the way back to the den he shared with Gliri. The painfully shy lioness probably wouldn't be there. She had probably been nearby, watching the whole exchange, but he still expected to see her in the den. She could move so very quickly and quietly when she chose to.
He looked forward to seeing her.