They've left him alone in his cell.
He can't really be said to be lucid but he has very acute instincts for when there's someone and when he's alone - it's the last of his senses to depart him - and he's alone.
And then suddenly he isn't.
Nod.
I expect I'll be more stable once I've had a chance to be around more people, by the way. That's part of why I'm trying to get this done soon.
No, I should be okay. Reminding herself that he's hurt in the particular way that leads to claiming not to have preferences will haul her back from basically any freakout; it's not pleasant to think about, but she can keep it in mind enough to forestall them, too, for that long.
That only gets a little flinch. Kobolds come in tribes of about a hundred people, who spend almost all of their time together and know each other really well - enough to get by without talking for nearly everything. Speaker's a pretty important position - we say sometimes that the chief stands for the tribe but the Speaker stands for the people in it - and I'm very used to that, we knew I was going to be one when I was nine, but I don't think I need it.
Slightly shaky nod. Yeah. I think I can be okay without that exact thing, but I expect I'll need at least, like, ten or fifteen people that I'm reasonably close to. One is much better than zero but I don't think it'd be enough even under better conditions.
I'm not sure I'm in a good enough place to get used to a whole new culture, that's going to be really hard.
Oh. Okay. That doesn't sound like the kind of thing you need to describe as 'making people do things'.
Manipulating people into doing things can be violence, too, if they aren't things the people would actually want to do on their own, that's something Speakers have to be careful about. But that sounds at least generally okay.
Relieved grin. Good.
Speakers are kobolds who can talk - the most direct application of that is that we help with communication between tribes, but since we have to know everyone really well in order to do that, we also help with interpersonal problems within the tribe if they get bad enough or complicated enough, and generally keep an eye on everyone as individuals and make sure they're getting what they need, as opposed to the chief who's in charge of things that affect the tribe as a whole.
Nod. I'd assumed that, when you mentioned earlier that you'd been fighting a war. I meant before that, if you wanted to tell me about it.