"We've had a fair bit of that already, dirtying our paws with the ignorant." Caden rolled his sore shoulder, rubbing at it with his paw as he recalled the fight in the supremacist tavern. He was glad that Tanya had taken it well in stride, accepting both him and Daniil without so much as any semblance of awkwardness or hesitation. There was something he felt at her offer of protection, a warmth of gratitude and even something akin to a feeling he had not experienced since he was a kit.
It took a moment to place, but a distinct memory of his mother suddenly surfaced. It was so vivid in his recollection, Caden did not know how he had forgotten it until that moment. They were on the deck of her merchant vessel during those brief years between when Sken left the Imperium before her eventual return. Their ship had been attacked by pirates and his mother and the crew were fighting off a boarding party. He was supposed to stay belowdecks and out of sight, but of course he did not listen and charged into the fray with his dirk. At six years old, and a small kit at that, even with his training and scoring several good hits on the enemy, it did not take long for one of the pirates to take hold of him and attempt to use him as a bargaining chip. Sken did not hesitate. The look of cold fury on her face made Caden's hackles prickle even as he remembered it. She had charged the offending pirate, moving faster than Caden--and likely the pirate--thought possible. He was not quite sure what happened, probably because he closed his eyes as he saw his mother's sword swing, but he felt blood pour out onto him, and when he opened his eyes he was looking down at the pirate's head on the deck in front of him. His mother took Caden and placed him behind her, standing between him and the enemy like an immovable wall.
"Stay behind me, Cade," she said. "Nobeast is going to hurt you, I promise."
And they didn't. Outnumbered as Sken and her crew were, the fury and love with which his mother protected him did not know defeat that day. When it was all over, he recalled breaking down in tears as she held him close.
Blinking in the present, Caden realized he had been gone in the memory longer than he thought, and his eyes shone.
"Oh," he said softly. He took off his glasses and wiped at his eyes. "Sorry. Just got lost there remembering something from the past, my mother...she..." Caden tried to find the words to explain. "Well, Tanya, suffice to say that it's been a while since I felt the warmth and comfort of something akin to maternal protection. I'm very grateful for your care."