It was time. This was his only window, his only opportunity, the chance he couldn't burn—he was done with deciding what the hell to put first, done with trying to make some damn prioritizing game. Get over your fears, come home, great, they take you back—go hide behind your 'they need me' facade, too afraid to make the trip north and face what you so desperately need to face. And see how well that went? It was just a few days. Could've killed a couple of deer and left in a cache and no one—no one—would've died, or noticed. Hells, he could've told Serach he wasn't leaving, just taking a trip to Kingsfall to see Serach's sister, the one who was his not-quite daughter, but loved all the same.
He hadn't, and he had the scars in his face to pay for it, and a heart so heavy he wondered how he could move at all. It plummeted towards his sternum, defied gravity time and again and pulled him down, until he lay with it beating hard against the ground, whispering out a treacherous rhythm he wanted not to hear, curses and blessings, saints and demons howling in his ears.
How he had gotten the days to pass—how he had gotten the breath into his lungs—he didn't know. It was a blur of darkness, anxiety, and fear. It gnawed on the edges of his mind. It kept him awake even after too many hours, when stars wheeled quietly overhead, distant and blinking and a painful reminder of that night by the lake. A reminder of a foolish youth, who swore by them, loved by them, lived by them, knowing they were dead and distant and cold and never more but silent witnesses. He, who had never believed in a higher power, because the higher power had been nothing but the wind and an excuse to attempt to banish him, he—that one, had loved the stars.
And they had watched him all his life, from the first time he stepped outside of the den he was born in, and even now, as the giant trunks cast stark shadows and the cold breeze rippled through his dense fur. Their cold, crystalline light glittered upon his breath, upon the frost of the world, on the tips of his pale hairs, and in the depths of his silver eyes. They had watched him commit mistakes, they had watched him kill, they had watched him love, and now, they watched him be brave.
Kisla had said nothing when they parted, had roused herself only after he had slept. She had sent no word. Aponi's sides had begun to swell with Serach's kids, but the moment he left their company, the black thoughts of what he'd done with Kisla flooded back in. Worn, he finally made the journey north. He could wait no longer. She would become den-bound, and he would be needed to hunt for his son and his mate. It was now, or not until the summer days grew shorter.
It was not even a choice. He had to go.
The scent markers burned in his mind, yards off yet, beacons to guide him, beacons to warn him. He stopped, and wrinkled his nose for a moment. The north had a smell that was bittersweet, and this place in particular reeked of pregnant females. There were subtle differences to the scents. He barely noticed, too busy hearing his loud heartbeat, and the confusion seeping through his body. It was almost tangible, a thing he could reach out and touch. What if she's expecting? was not the question that had kept him up at night; it was the question what the hell does she want from me?
He tipped his pale back towards the stars, and eyed them in silence for a moment. "For once," he whispered, "give a damn and help me, alright?" Then, he drew in the cold air, and expelled it in a howl, calling out for Kisla.