/vibrates omg
For discomfort or for guilt she could not hold her father's gaze for very long, and her head turned away towards the forest as she vaguely took in the shape of the trees and the light and tried not to wonder where any of this was going. "
That's good," she commented in a matched whisper, for as much time as she spent around all the cubs she really felt like she had no idea how they worked or how one raised them. Somehow it all felt like one crazy mystery. But clearly this was not why she was here, and anxiously she waited for her father to begin, finding now that she was here next to him she wanted, no
needed to hear some explanation from him. And if that was not the direction he intended to steer this conversation in then Sahalie would steer it there herself. It was time she stopped running away from the
elephant in the room moose in the forest. Her paws began to itch when the blessing for the journey ahead of her was given because, sure, the sentiment was nice, but she felt in a rush to reach the heart of the topic. Almost on autopilot, the girl bobbed her head in agreement.
Yet as her father's head tipped as if it might allow some secrets to spill out just by a small movement, a new topic picked up that was far removed from any expectations Sahalie had possessed about this not-intervention-but-intervention. Her name? The girl looked at her father with one gently twisting ear. She remembered that, sure. It would have been around this time of year, the girl thought, before realizing
no: this would have been the moon of her father's absence. That sure did sour the moment. Her head bobbed again. And then autopilot flicked off all together as her ears snagged on that painful word
mother.
Sahalie had never really wondered anything about her mother. Ever. The girl had spent a great deal of time thinking that Nayeli might have been a made up wolf, never existed at all, and learning that she had been her "real" mother had never kindled a desire to ask any questions or to wonder more. Her dad spoke but the girl was lost in some painful, half-lit memories of Spieden's uncomfortable stare and a wordless desire to be loved by something, by anything. She had these things, now, and she had never
thought there had been a hole in her life, never
remembered a hole in her life, and she wished it would go away. Part of her did not want to hear anything about Nayeli. But the other part of her was so curious about what kind of woman her dad was with before he tied himself to Naira. If only for that.
With a jolting surprise the girl realized two things: that the "lee" sound of her name could have
ever come from a woman who had given her nothing; and that her name itself might have some connection to the sun before the girl had ever introduced herself to the world.
It was another thing, though, to accept that Sahalie was something like her mother. She didn't like knowing this. Somehow it was very painful.
Unimaginably painful to feel, for the first time in her life, abandoned by a woman who—if she was
really anything like Sahalie—would have never ever
ever left. Her eyes turned towards her father and they were now sparkling with dismay, her jaws parting as she shrugged, not knowing if she wanted to hear anything else. She did not think she did.
And then
yes: there was
Naira. Knowing as little as she did about Nayeli, Naira and her father made even less sense than it ever had. Her father was a good man, a man who felt things deeply and thought about things a lot and enjoyed the sensation of being connected, and his being with a woman who was optimistic, a light in the shadow,
made sense. But how could... The thought was derailed, however, by the names of her two new siblings and she stared at her father in disbelief, hurt that he could ever think she would hold her feelings for Naira against two innocent children. Naira was Naira. Reiko an Treyah were family. She hoped her eyes said as much, for she could not find the words in the thick of so many springing to mind.
"
That's... that's not it, though," she said, "
I never wanted you to find me a new mother and I... I don't know I don't care that... you're with someone else. I just... why her? What do you see in her?" How could she live with the idea that her father was such a poor judge of character? Well, clearly she could still live in denial about whether or not the whole "mother replacement" thing mattered. She'd done that long enough, for sure. "
I just don't understand. It's like one day you were my dad and then you left to go look for some woman I never met with some woman no one knows and when you came back you... I don't know you were just with her all the time. I... like.... I needed you. But it just felt like you were hiding somewhere with her all the time, even when you were around. You were with her all the time and I wanted you with me." Her breathing was heavy and her face was pouty.
(This post was last modified: Sep 28, 2016, 11:56 PM by Sahalie.)