Kekale

That didn't mean he found activities like his present one all that interesting. No amount of telling himself things would be exciting eventually could make it more interesting to watch a brown lion as he slept. Partly that was because Kale couldn't allow himself to become too distracted, just in case, and so he was literally sitting there, in the questionable shade of a stunted tree, watching someone sleep.
If he hadn't been a reaver, this sort of thing would have been downright creepy. Since he was a reaver, it was just part of his job.
Fon Youn

For his part, Fon Youn's life since the Pepo`porojo was scattered had been less than satisfying in every respect. He had lost track of his friends, and - worse - been forced to abandon his mother's shrine. All that remained to him was the pouch of his mother's small bones, which he touched frequently, even in his sleep, for reassurance and guidance. Whatever the others in his pride had said about his mother's wild ways, he knew the would have been kindred spirits.
Kekale

All right. He'd had enough of being patient.
The black lion rose to his feet, stiff muscles protesting the sudden movement after more than an hour of near-perfect stillness. He padded forward until he was less than a foot away from his quarry and regarded him from up close. Fit, not too old, and probably malleable enough, once things were explained to him. He'd do for a thrall.
Kekale drew his left forepaw back and struck the slumbering lion across the cheek.
Fon Youn

He was not expecting his eyes to snap open and come to focus on a dark lion with red markings. What lion could hit that hard? Even when he was being punished in his youth, no one had ever struck him like that. Given him chores upon chores, certainly, but violence just wasn't something visited upon poupes like Fon Youn. He was special. He was necessary.
In an instant Fon Youn was on his feet, teeth bared in an indignant snarl, demanding to know, "Who do you think you are?"
Kekale

When he snapped his paw back, his claws snagged on the thong that held the intriguing pouch around his quarry's neck, which hadn't actually been on purpose, but which suited the young reaver perfectly well. He had been curious about the pouch anyway.
Throughout all this, he had not bothered to answer the other lion's question, he realized. He decided to see what would happen if he simply didn't. After all, it seemed like there was no real danger from the yellow-eyed lion. He was only snarling and asking questions.
Fon Youn

"Give that back!" he snarled, lunging for his mother's bones. The idea of someone else even handling the pouch was abhorrent.
As soon as the other paw came up and swatted him aside almost effortlessly, Fon Youn realized that attacking was absolutely the wrong way to go about solving this particular problem. This was a bully, and Fon Youn had done his share of bullying in his youth. Bullies liked to be flattered and appeased. At least, Fon Youn had.
"Please," he said, humbling himself for his mother's bones as he would have done for no other thing. "Those are my mother's smallbones. They are precious to me, but only to me."
Kekale

Kekale regarded the pouch for a moment, then shifted it between his paws. It did feel like there could be small bones in there, but what kind of weirdo carried around his dead mother's smallbones? He was going to assume the mother was dead, because if she wasn't that made the whole thing so much stranger.
"If it's that important to you, let's make a deal," he proposed. "You come with me and obey me, and if I decide you've done an acceptable job, I'll return the pouch to you."
Fon Youn

"Are you serious?" he gasped, horrified by the ramifications of entering into a deal like that, with no specificity in the terms, no limit on how long he would be bound to service. It was a terrible deal. Absolutely terrible.
Unfortunately, it was also for his mother's bones, and Fon Youn knew that if he was given no other option, he would take this one. But there was one point he had to make abundantly clear: "It's not the pouch, it's the bones inside. I won't make any kind of deal unless it's for the bones themselves."
Kekale

"I am very serious, so you either take the deal I've offered you, trusting in my good nature that I will, in fact, include the bones with the pouch when I return it to you, and do as I say in the mean time, or I will eat these bones right now and s**t them out Stormlords only know where."
That sounded like a pretty good threat to Kale. It was obvious the lion hated to see him even handling the pouch, so the idea of someone eating the bones, digesting them, and then shitting them somewhere must have been horrifying.
Fon Youn

"I understand," he said, bowing his head in defeat. "I will serve you until such time as you see fit."
He didn't mention the bones again, and wouldn't even when they returned to the black lion's fellows and he was made aware of the true nature of his deal. Thralldom. For one such as he, it was distasteful, but his mother's bones were at stake, and they mattered more than anything. The sting of that realization was probably the closest Fon Youn had ever felt to feeling truly dutiful or responsible. Too bad it had earned him a lifetime of servitude and slavery.