All the loose ends that he wanted to tie up, they were already done. Just moments spent with only two souls, @Cernan and @Neha. It was all that was needed, the only words he had to speak, before he felt free to turn his back on the pack he'd served and protected for a year now. So much time, and yet his roots had been that fragile and dry. It was pathetic, really, but just all the more reason that he needed to leave. His paws took him quickly over the earth, away from the lake and toward the crest of the mountain. Away from the strangers he'd spent every night by, the man who he had never been loyal to, and the woman whom he would never be able to speak his heart to.
All for the better, because if he stayed longer, he would not be able to bear it further. He might actually mount the courage, a word would slip out or a gesture be made that could not be ignored. It was best he disappear than cause harm like that. This time, he would not be selfish. He would finally do the right thing.
As he marched, Nathaniel could not tell if the sky disagreed with him or was grumbling its reservations. The lightning struck intermittently and the air was charged with an energy that reminded him of the one-eyed wonder who had vanished under similar circumstances. He should have taken her offer then, and had always cursed himself for not doing so each time a storm rolled in and revived her memory. Perhaps he could find her now, maybe she hadn't gotten too far from him. Better late than never, no?
The wind picked up and shifted as the storm moved through the sky, bringing him the scent of land that was not stained with the stench of Vuesain piss. While the man had mixed feelings about leaving Fallen Tree Cove, the beckoning of freedom lifted his heart and his pace picked up; only to abate with the recognition of the nearby presence of another. Suddenly his tongue was dry and his muscles weak. Of all wolves, Namid was nearby. Alone. Nathaniel found himself frozen as his heart began to hammer.
She was exactly the person he needed to avoid, the one he was so desperate to leave behind. Yet everything within him screamed to be selfish, that this meant something, to seize this final chance. Indecision mired him for countless moments before, inch by inch, he unthawed and fire took over. Just slipping away would not do. He needed to end this, here and now; need to leave nothing but scorched earth to come back to so that he could not fall prey to his weakness and make that ultimate mistake.
His strides turned and took him to her, and when he saw her he kept his head high and called out to her, "Namid, I have something to tell you."