A set of jaws reached out of the darkness of old memories and took a hold of him. Her familiarity could no longer be put down to coincidence and the large number of white wolves he was acquainted with. Her presence could no longer be excused or denied. His fleeting, fragile soul began to tremble and quake as he reconstructed the identity of a ghost who was not standing in front of him. <i>Vlar.</i> The scars she had given him along his muzzle and shoulders tingled as he recalled a muddled, violent series of images from the fight in that den. He was unsure of what to do with himself, caught somewhere between fight or flight, revenge and escape. But another part of him longed for redemption, and this part was so new and innocent that Kiche was drawn to it's raw beauty. It finally occured to him why she stood trembling in the snow, so reluctant to trust him. <i>Does she know it's me?</i> Even if he had given her a different name, he was sure she still knew him.
Frightened and hesitant, he took another look at Vlar. She was a shadow of the imposing cult-member she had once been, her face marred by the echoes of old struggles. He could probably silence her with just one flash of his teeth, and that was no honorable vengeance. Would it make him feel any better? Would it erase every painful memory?
With a sigh, he took another step forward, his tongue reaching out and gliding over her scarred muzzle, "<b>I'm sorry, Vlar.</b>" That one frighteningly serpentine scar that ran down from her eye and crossed the bridge of his nose, that one had been his fault, hadn't it. She had been the heathen he had exiled, hadn't she? Slowly, everything came back to him, and filled him with dirty, solemn shame. "<b>I promise I'll make up for everything.</b>" He moved to stand beside her so that she might lean on him, hoping that she'd still want to.
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