There were some things she had to fix.
But she was terrified of fixing them.
If she didn't, she could pretend everything was fine. If she didn't, she could just—do exactly that, leave it be and go bury herself with her shame somewhere, where no one would ever find her unmarked grave. Where she didn't have to go through this.
The easy way out. The one she wasn't good enough for.
There was more than just that, though. There was the whole damn world and the sun and the moon and the cursed mountain they lived on—why did it have to be a mountain? Couldn't her parents have settled in a forest, too? Maybe.. maybe things would've been better then.. if she had grown up feeling safe in this world, and not just within the den in which she was born. If she had been able to explore beyond the horizon without thinking the land itself would eat her, and not just the inhabitants of said land, would she have come out different?
The older she got, the more she thought about it—and the more she thought about the explosion of her four months younger self. It had been the first time she had tasted frustration and bitterness and anger in its potent mix, and it had been as intoxicating as it had been frightening for those brief, brief moments of riding her furious high. She had known she would come down hard, and she had, but by then it had been too late.
She felt something similar still, but it was aimless and restless, and had her roving the mountain the darkness. Sometimes, she was reckless, making jumps she wasn't entirely sure of, challenging her footing as she raced along slick and steep cliffs, but just as she wasn't sure of them, she was never unsure of them either. And she had begun to venture down into the forests below, never being away for more than a day, but long enough to get down where she could speed up among the trees, and forget about the world she'd left behind.
She liked the west better than the east, but the east was closer.
As a child, she had been meek. She had been withdrawn. Introverted. Insecure. And what was she now? She stuck to herself, avoiding mostly everyone but Kajika, and most of the time in between her doing something actually useful, she felt like a bomb about to blow up. She was still withdrawn, and introverted. She was still insecure—it was probably what made her flash her teeth at shadows when no one was watching. Anxiety was running her body, and sometimes, when she thought no one saw her, she allowed herself to look as worn and ragged as she felt.
Kajika helped, but he was making her mind go places it couldn't go, think of things she couldn't, dream things she could never have. She stuck to him, like a burr in his fur sometimes, but there was something else she needed to do. Something she needed to get over.
Something she needed to fix.
She didn't have the first clue as to how, though. All she had was a broken memory of an encounter that couldn't possibly be real—fragmented and edged in a suffocating blackness—but everything pointed to it actually having had happened. The way her mother acted. The way she'd wanted to throw herself off every cliff she'd found for weeks.
And nothing had changed. She'd gone, she'd come back. And all she'd had since that day was a facade of politeness, but noting more. Nothing deeper.
It hurt more than being ignored would've.
Restless, she stalked through the Cove in the blackness, following a scent trail and feeling.. sick. Weak. Ashamed. Angry. She had.. done unspeakable things. And she had wanted someone else to fix them for her. She had waited for someone else to fix them, or for things to just magically return to normal, but as ever, the world had not come to her rescue. She had been left in a cold, confusing place, and nature didn't even have the grace to take her back, even though she clearly was good for nothing but making Kajika happy.
Which.. was a big deal, to her, but it wasn't helping. Not with this. Not with the voice in her head, calmly pointing out to her that she had absolutely no right to feel miserable about what she had done, because it was surely much, much worse for Namid.
Or she had simply burned that bridge, her mother had given up on her because she was hopeless and spiteful and worthless, and this was how it would be from now on out. Nothing had certainly pointed in any other direction since that day.
She swallowed. Thinking about it—that grim, bleak, all too likely possibility—still made her throat feel thick and her eyes threaten to overflow.
All she wanted was to.. damn, it was so hard to admit it, even to herself, to handle that emotion without wanting to trample herself or feeling silly or ..just giving herself a hard time. Get over it. You're on your own. You have to deal with life yourself. No one sticks around with their parents for fifty years. She swallowed again. The trail had come to its end, leading into the dark maw of the medicinal den.
"Mama?" she whispered, tentatively, into the darkness.
Above her, the myriad of stars shone bright and distant and cold.