She watched the dragon fend off the cougar's attacks from between the stranger's legs, wide-eyed, never doubting, unable to see how its claws dug into her father's hide and left vast bloody marks because it jarred so completely with her reality.
She heard her name spoken in an unfamiliar voice, heard the warning and advice, but it all came through a thick plane of glass, too thick to hear properly, to absorb. There was a nose on her shoulder, pushing her, and she staggered to the side under its force, but the moment the stranger left she was unable to move any further. Stood out in the open and far from the rocks and shrubs he'd tried to urge her towards, the young dragon was now the complete opposite of earlier, when she had been able to do nothing but run, for now... now she could not move an inch.
Two images swam in front of her vision. Two movies, played out at the same time, side by side. One was of a mighty black reptile, wings wide and jaws snapping, forcing back the much lesser predator with insulting ease. The other was of a tired old wolf refusing to give in, even though surrender might have been wiser.
The stranger rammed into the cougar and for some strange reason, the first movie now showed two dragons against the common foe, but the foe had grown in size and strength and ferocity and repelled the attack with a well-placed strike to the second dragon's face, who then staggered back, and the foe grew larger until her beloved dragon sank its teeth into its legs and then - and then -
The sound of her heartbeat in her ears had been replaced with white noise, but perhaps it was still her heart, moving too fast and frantically for her brain to keep up. Her head felt faint, lines of electric snaking in from the edges of her vision, and then she blinked and focused and the foe was gone.
So were the two movies. Now all she could see were two dark wolves, fallen like heaps of dead leaves in the red-dotted snow. Distantly she heard the second talk to the first, but she couldn't make out the words for all the static in her head. Her legs moved without conscious thought. To his side she strode, blind to the blood, to the gouges in his flank and chest and everywhere, to the ragged way he breathed, to the look in his eye, because if she saw it then it might be true.
She sank to the ground next to him, as though proximity might clear the clouds in her eyes, might bring clarity to her confusion, reassurance to the worst fear she could hardly bring herself to consider.
But it was staring her in the face. Breathing light and fluttering, as her body began to panic, she swept her tongue out and over his face, his cheek, his ear, his neck, as though she could merely clean it all away, because this, this was not something she could just accept, she couldn't, she couldn't, she couldn't.