Viorel went on with a counter-offer, but the more he heard of it, the harder it was for Eros to fight back a frown. He masked his disappointment by looking away, off into the forest, battling inside himself to reign in emotions. Because really, he still wanted to cry, badly. He wanted to give up and go back to the banishment ruling, to go hide somewhere and melt into his misery and mope about having no real control. That wasn't true though, and he knew it. Being grown meant refusing to let feelings like that win, no matter how strong they got. Especially when he was here making decisions for the rest of his pack, choices that could impact an untold number of wolves down the line.
"That's what you tried last year," he finally answered, immensely grateful that his voice came out steady. Did Viorel realize he was trying to sell the same plan to Eros, did he think he wouldn't notice because he was too young or dumb or- stop. He knew his father better than that, recognized his insecurities even if they tried to wear someone else's face as a mask. Viorel was offering visits this time. Still, Eros didn't feel that was enough to make a difference.
"Kateri heard that we were going to take her children from her and it shut her down completely. I don't think visits will soften that enough. I know that if we tell them that's the consequence, and they do the thing anyway, they shouldn't be surprised when we follow through but even if they accept it that still means for the litter that we're sending their mom away from them when they're still just kids. When they still really need her for all sorts of things, things they won't be able to get just through occasional visits."
No, he wasn't liking the idea of breaking up a family regardless of how said family came to be. Not when it had hurt him so deeply to lose his own mother, and he'd almost been fully grown when that had happened, a year older than what Viorel was proposing. He also had wanted to make a path to redemption possible for the parents. Archer had come back, after all. Was that really only accomplishable through a child's death? He shifted on his paws, clearly uncomfortable with the ground he was about to give.
"... what about a year?"