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.
Yup, and I'd be out as soon as I could walk if I'd been raised in a kobold tribe. Different stuff for different people.
Yeah, that's another one of the differences. Among my people, you respect people by taking them at their word about what they need, and you show respect for others by communicating what you need. It is very deeply disrespectful and antisocial to second-guess people about what they decide to do, or to do what's not right for you and count on other people to save you from yourself.
I don't even know what they want. A tribe, obviously, but if you're offering one -
She peers questioningly at the kobold he was talking to, who tells her that they mentioned the war. "Ah. Yeah, it's pretty much okay now, but it was bad before. And they weren't used to it, their history is kind of weird."
"Oh." Sorry.
Nah, of course not. But that's the thing, I can't ignore what'd be best for someone if they also are going to be ignoring what's best for them.
Nod. I don't really expect they'd settle down if they came back, either, though. For a while, maybe, they've been through a lot this year, but I'm sure in a year or two they'd be back out talking to tigerfolk again. The question is less how to stop them from doing ridiculous things, and more whether they have enough support to be okay anyway.
I don't know them well enough to give really good advice, but... don't wait for them to tell you what they need, is the most obvious thing. That just doesn't work for us, if people're paying that little attention you might as well not have a tribe at all. Asking is probably okay, and guessing is fine even if you get it wrong, as long as they can tell what you're trying to do.
It's not about not paying attention, it's about trusting people. Guessing what they need is what you do for animals and children.