A soft, low growl reverberated in his chest as he accepted Morganna's affections, though didn't yet return them beyond pressing his cheek against hers when they touched. He was tired of re-affirming his position with everyone all the time... it was satisfying to just let
her do it for
him.
He had expected her sentiment regarding Hecate's confirmed absence to be rather more pleased than the uncertainty he got. How was it not a good thing? He snorted in response, expecting her to come around to the side of reason by her own brainpower, she hardly needed Craw to convince her that running off her children's rival was in her benefit. She was just weary and doubting herself. Until the next sunrise, so much was up in the air; he forcibly reminded himself to be patient with her.
She then mentioned Skoll, or, at least, Craw could not imagine that she meant anyone else. The problem with her brother - which had been Craw's problem with him all along - was his entire lack of predictability; any loyal or lawful creature would naturally wish to protect his brood (Craw would have given his right leg to be the one with a pregnant mate right now), but Skoll? The fact that he had whelps on the way was indicative of his wild nature, that he would likely make the same lust-driven mistake year on year, and that more Isoldes would suffer for it. Running Hecate out was good on every level; running Skoll out was similarly well-advised, but throughout all of Morganna's vitriol towards her littermate, Craw knew there was still deep attachment there. He could not easily relate, having no living siblings of any age, nor any other close familial ties. If pushed, he could say that he loved his mother, but there was a heady dose of
pity mixed in with that which muddied the sentiment.
Prepared to discuss the topic of her brother, his jaw had been opened when her last question shot through anything he was about to say. His mouth closed again with a quiet
click, and he inhaled deeply through his nose, the air rolling over the gravel in his throat.
She'd pushed so hard for Skoll to challenge at that meeting, had made her feelings on her uncle so very clear... and they had had a conversation like this, not very long ago, where he had said he would do his job if necessary. Either something had changed, or she hadn't made her feelings on the matter entirely clear the first time around. This sounded like a plea.
Licking his lips, he turned his head to the side and down at the smaller woman at his side, eyes pale and desaturated in the moonlight. He regarded her for a long moment, making no sound other than his wheeze.
"Are you asking," he said finally, deliberately,
"because it's what you want, or are you just cycling through the suitable men of the pack until one sticks?"
It was a question he was almost certain he already knew the answer to, but they had built the entire foundation of their relationship on playing games and manipulation of the pack, even if they had always been, generally, forthright with one another. Only a few days previous she had pressured Skoll to do the same thing. What if she was eyeing Renier or Wraith also? He expected her to react with either indignation of the accusation or brush it off with apathy for stupid questions. What she was asking, though, wasn't trivial; he would have to go through Skoll and Nicolo both, and that was not a short order for two such bull-headed wolves, both of whom likely wanted it a great deal owing to their Archer inheritance.
But the question of leading alongside her? Morganna Archer was, in many ways, his ideal female counterpart; she was strong-headed, decisive, ambitious. She didn't pull her punches and had never tried to pideonhole or restrict him. He could imagine very well what leading Willow Ridge beside her would be like.
The real answer to her question, of course, was nothing but yes - he would gladly have
her, but he didn't want Willow Ridge. Not like Skoll or Nicolo Archer did. Not as anything more than a placeholder, not unless something fundamental changed. With how little he knew of what was happening back home... his entire life was becoming one long temporary solution, and he had no idea how long his patience would last before something irrevocably snapped.