Rook explained that he'd been out keeping up the borders, which had been washed of the Hollow's markings beneath the onslaught of ran ─ which was reasonable and acceptable, and she didn't think more about it. They made their way in silence for a time and here and there she would look from down at her paws as they squished in the mud to the storm-lit trunks of the cedar forest. Once she dared to glance over at Rook, who she knew was trying to put what he was trying to say in order in his mind. Quil was willing to let him take his time. She didn't want to rush him, or rush their time together, since they didn't have a lot of it to begin with.
As the weeks had passed by without much of him in them, she'd been back and forth in her own mind about the state of her happiness and his, and Tomen's well being and all the ways he was growing up so fast. It was true that, in her thoughts, she'd envisioned something different when it came to her family ─ to Rook and Tomen. Maybe she'd believed it would be more of a fairy tale, that the three of them would spend their days together, growing together and learning together and together with Borden and Jaysyek and their siblings. Perhaps what she'd thought would happen since her pregnancy involved a dynamic that allowed her and her mate to be more cohesive instead of leading their different roles separately. Walk the borders together. Care for Borden together. Wake up in the mornings with their baby together. At least lead together...She'd gone back and forth between sadness and denial and frustration and anger and acceptance many times, in her heart, but one thing she never truly did feel was regret. Quil never wished things different, not when it came to being with Rook, because she'd been resolute in falling for him, letting him in, loving him, marrying him, and having his child. She didn't look back at what could have been and she didn't need to, because this thing with him here in this place was everything she wanted. On her good days, she accepted the fact that she'd chosen her own decisions every step of the way and didn't blame him for things at all, knowing that she was in control of shaping her own life. Knowing that, even when things were hard and disconnected, this was where she belonged. With him.
She could feel his response to her question coming before he'd given it, the composite energy of their silent feelings and thoughts and the words that hung in the air unsaid flowing hot between their bodies in the cold rain. The wet made the surfaces of the forest shine.
He began with "I guess I just wanted to see how you were," and went on to say he wanted to be sure she was happy and provided for. Then came his admission of feeling guilty and he explained why he felt he was lost. She took his words in with an open mind, attentively, and weighed what she heard against her perceptions of him and of herself an of their situation. The will to support him and share some of his load ─ the one that had obviously been weighing him down ─ came so naturally. "Firstly, I want you to know that I think you've been doing an amazing job of keeping things together, for your family and for the pack. I...understand how it can be hard for you, and it's reasonable that you feel you've lost yourself somewhere in between the day we came back to Grizzly Hollow and now. I mean, we were both so young, we still are, and the responsibilities you accepted to build on your dream would be hard for anyone to handle ─ especially a new dad, with an ailing dad who needs as much caring for as a new cub." She paused to inhale and exhale and clear her throat. Her voice was as steady as the ground they walked on. "And, Rook, there's no one who can be in two places at once, and no one expects you to be able to. You've got to just do your best, every day, one day at a time, and that's enough. It matters most that you try, and...you do so much more than just try."
She felt a bit guilty herself now, her own words to him ones she needed to hear for herself, to know that she believed in him and all he was doing. In her own melancholy, she'd nearly overlooked the fact that, even if he'd been absent in her life, she could have made more of an effort to be in his. And Tomen was old enough that she could. And she should.
She stopped walking, looking at him and feeling absolutely raw. "And you're right ─ a lifetime of memories are passing you by. They're ones you'll never get back. But your son is strong and he'd growing up so fast and he is something to be so proud of, and he loves you, and so do I. There's─" she shifted her weight, "─a lot that you've missed, but there's so much more to come, so much that you have to look forward to. So much that I have to look forward to. You can't change the past and you don't need to...I am sad when you're not around, and sometimes I feel other things, but I am happy. I have an amazing son and I have you, and you two are my whole world. You always will be. So..." Her eyes fell to her paws again and she traced the shape of her toes long enough to keep her composure, to not let the swell of emotion rattle her.
"So don't worry, love. To answer your question, all I want for is you. I know you're busy, and I know you've got a lot to deal with and I understand. I'm so sorry you feel lost." Sadness touched her features. "I don't want you to feel that way. Not ever...If there's anything I can do to help, just say the words ─ I'll do anything to help you find your way. I'll do anything for you, Rook." I'll endure anything for you. She knew then it was the bottom line in her heart.