Pale yellow eyes watched as the sky darkened, painted in soft auroral gold and pinks and blues - although the gold had faded and diminished until it had become a single, burning line about the horizon. After another few breaths, even that had faded, plunging Stonewatch Timbers into the velvety violet shades of early dusk. It was such a peaceful thing to watch, this transition from day to night - from sunny and warm to shadowy and cool. Calanthe rolled her shoulders as she lay watching the world turn dark around her, marvelling to herself at the growing strength she could feel rippling under her fur. Such an easy thing to miss, even now, but when nothing else battled for her attention Calanthe was quick to count the blessing that was her continued return to health.
Still... there were other things on the pale wolf's mind, things she pushed back as often as she could, so that the sadness they brought with them did not mark her every waking moment. Some quiet part of her mind, the logical part, maybe, wondered if she would ever stop moping, ever stop revisiting the bad things and the losses that she knew cursed well could never be undone. Would never be undone. The past was dead; when would she learn to bury it? She shook her head, sunfleck eyes closing for a moment. Her mother would say it was refusing to let herself grieve that kept the woman trapped in the mistakes of yesterday. Was she right? Was Calanthe keeping herself pinned down by ignoring what she ought to mourn and let go?
A whine escaped her muzzle; her tawny ears flattened against her skull as she lowered her head to her forepaws. All well and good in principal - but the suffering she saw before her when she considered allowing herself to grieve was worse than an ocean, was more endless than the flames had been. No. No, she was not going to give in to that. The skinny she-wolf gave herself a hard shake and shoved those thoughts away again, shoved those names and faces into the corner of her mind that stayed locked away until she slept. The past was done. There was no reason for her to ruin her present with it anymore.
But... she could honor the past. Just once, just tonight, she could let herself remember them to the stars - and so she raised her muzzle to the sky and sang for them, just once, just one small song, not searching for them in the midst of chaos, but releasing them from her nightmares - not pleading with them to come back to her and bring her with them, but forgiving them for leaving her behind and thanking them for the time she had with each of them. Overhead, though her eyes were shut and did not see, a shooting star raced across the sky, leaving a trail of white fire in its wake before dissolving into the growing darkness.