There was something very wrong.
She had awoken alone – something she had gotten used to now that the girls were older, and Maksim had been under Lachesis’ strict regime for getting better. She did not hold life in her this year, and so there had been no need to seek out the whelping den she and Maksim had for Lekalta and Inna. Instead, her lissome form had rested by the river, beneath the stars.
But when she awoke, the world was still dark. Clouds had gathered overhead, but the air was not yet damp with a spring shower. She could not place it – something was wrong.
Her throat was dry, but she did not stop to quench her thirst. Instead, in the silence of early morning, Kisla’s paws carried her past the borders of Hearthwood River, to Lavender Ethos, where her newborns that had suffered from their travels had been buried. The clearing was large – but she spotted him easily – so at peace beneath the dimly greying sky.
A gentle smile fell to her lips – it was such a rare sight to see him far from the enclosure Lachesis had him rest. “My love,” she murmured, her voice soft as she tiptoed toward him. The grass was soft beneath her paws, and the world remained silent, spare for the gentle song of a bird nearby.
He did not stir with her words – such a strange thing.
He did not stir, even when she stood over him now, a realization forming to her heart before her mind could truly grasp what had happened. Maksim Baranski no longer breathed – his chest did not rise and fall as she was so used to seeing – his green eyes did not open, and blink upward to her, a smile on his broad and handsome muzzle. He did not move to make room for her – to enfold her in to his embrace, as he had done countless times over the years they had spent together.
Maksim Baranski would never do any of these again.
The realization struck her with a weight that drew a shuddering gasp from her lips. The poised woman’s vision clouded for a moment, the silver of his fur becoming a blur as she all but collapsed at his side, her face burying in to the now cold neck of her dead mate.
The sobs that wracked her body now were mostly silent – guttural, and completely lost in the turmoil of losing the only man she had ever loved. Words he had spoken to her in the past echoed in her mind, as if a replay on one of the only times she had ever known pure freedom. “What I'm trying to say is that I want you here, by my side, through whatever seasons may come.”
Never before had the words he spoke brought heartache until now.
sparking up my heart