Lunette Vuesain
I’ve got my love stuck in my head
Her poor, beautiful mother—Lunette had to look away for a moment. She.. she guessed she had wanted someone to understand, not for someone to ..be afraid, of her, for her? For her life? Her life wasn't in danger. She doubted she would have the courage to end herself. She mightn't be good enough to do it properly. And besides, it was the easy way out. She swallowed. She hadn't wanted to worry her mother. She had.. she had just wanted for someone to say.. well, she didn't know. Okay. Me too. Whatever. Apparently the rest of the pack didn't go around thinking it'd be better to be dead.The space between them felt wider than the Serpent itself, and colder, too. On one hand, Lunette, small and silver and confused and hurt and angry. And on the other, her mother, suddenly worried. She turned her head back, and looked at the wolf she had loved and looked up to all her life. When had she become so..small? So fragile? So mortal? She wondered if she should reach out, touch her muzzle to Namid's pale cheek, or.. since when was she the one giving out comfort?
Because she had broken this in the first place.
"Reckless?" she echoed, almost insulted. Reckless? Since when could anyone ever fathom her being reckless of all things? She, who was more timid than a mouse—reckless? The laughter bubbling up her throat was bitter and unfamiliar. "You let the reckless one go! You let her go, you didn't lose her! And where is she? How is she doing? Is she still alive? We don't know, because somebody though it was a great idea to let a wolf not even a year old go off on their own!" She chuffed, carried by the high of her rage, and grasping every moment of it, because she knew she was going to touch down soon. "And you call me reckless."
That was that, and she was spent. The embers of her fury cooled. The wreckage of the battlefield all that was left—blood and bones and bruises. And what had that achieved, honestly? She'd yelled at her mother, who she had also.. told she wanted to be dead, and obviously rattled to the core. Here, have a present! Your kid doesn't want to be alive! That enough? No? Here, have your kid yell at you about things that obviously pain you!
Oh, she was such a miserable fucking idiot. Lunette felt her lungs and eyes tremble.
"It's not your fault," she said, quietly, brokenly. "Stopping Ismena is like stopping a storm. You just can't." And what else was she going to say, to somehow make good all the stuff she'd spit into the air between them? Could she take it back? Did she want to take it back?
".. I'm sorry for being an idiot," she whispered, and stepped closer, intending to put her head over her mother's neck and hold her close and whisper "I love you, Mama," into her soft silver fur.