Perhaps Anthony Edwards was always this way, or perhaps this is an effect of the two closest people in his life, his mother and grandmother, each dying of cancer five years ago when he was 14.
But Edwards doesn't let people in easily. He's not afraid to tell you as much.
"I'm the type of guy where a lot of people have to gain my trust," Edwards said. "I'm not just an easy access type of guy."
There's only one surefire way to gain that elusive trust.
"My most important quality I look for is loyalty. I'm a very loyal person …" said Edwards, the 19-year-old Georgia guard chosen No. 1 overall by the Timberwolves in Wednesday's NBA draft. "When you show me you're loyal, we can start building a relationship."
So when the Wolves met with Edwards a few weeks ago they had about 24 hours, a dinner and a workout to prove they could rise to that level in Edwards' eyes. Total trust can't be earned in 24 hours, but Edwards can at least see if there's potential in that amount of time.
Since last week, when Edwards called his meeting with the Wolves "excellent" and through the post-draft euphoria, when Edwards' tone of voice would light up when discussing that meeting, Wolves President Gersson Rosas and coach Ryan Saunders started getting past those walls.
"I feel like I'm going to trust these guys, when I get to know them …" Edwards said. "They're just cool and laid back. Coach got energy. Gersson got energy."