you do not know who is your friend
and who is your enemy
He felt too old for what if's—those pointless little mind exercises where you dreamed up a future forever out of reach, and woke with nothing but the taste of bitterness in your dry mouth, like old blood drying between your teeth. He felt too old for thinking back on a life lost and thinking those two cursed words and wondering what it would've been like had so many things not happened, but most of all: wondering what it would've been like had he stayed.
But he hadn't.
And for the longest time, he hadn't even known what he had left.
It wasn't easy, to wake from oblivion, to slowly pull yourself together from a world in which you felt only half-alive, in a setting where your heart pounded with a certain kind of pain but you couldn't find the reason why. He had lived, a shadow in his own mind, sworn and stood by his instincts and survived simply because his body demanded the hunt, but as the vastness of the world came back into focus, he had become the prey. Bit by bit that ache in his heart, and the nagging feeling at the back of his mind, had grown stronger, until every day was spent hounded by a feeling of imprecise loss, the need to be somewhere, do something, find someone. Ice had roamed, had settled down, found a pack which didn't know him, but that was fine, because he hadn't known himself, either. He had been a wolf with a face and a name, but no past, no soul. Fangs had flashed in the warm sunlight of a summer evening, ears had flattened against heads, paws and claws torn up the earth as he spoke the only language he knew how—and so, he had become part of something else, something new, something where he kept his distance because that thing lodged in his heart kept telling him that this wasn't going to last forever.
What did, anyway? All things ended. Even stars fell.
Pale ears pressed against an equally pale head. The memories, made fuzzy by the sharpness of a rock, had come back in a trickle, and piece by piece, Ice had realized all that he had—white breath spiraled out of his half-open maw. He had no word for it. Left behind? He hadn't known what he was doing. Lost? It made it seem so final.
He didn't want it to be final. And maybe, scoured clean of the past weighing upon his shoulders, he had not wanted to remember. Maybe, he had clung, without knowing it, to the bliss of ignorance, until the weight of the guilt became too great and the narrow confines of his mind opened to let it all back in. He wasn't sure if he possessed enough self-awareness to tell if that was the case, and through the raging flames of shame, how could he even begin to guess..? It was like trying to tell where one bruise ended and another began when in truth they covered all of you.
Names and faces connected in tentative patterns, a spiderweb spun of blood and light, but as he had wandered the northlands with a pack he could not bring himself to love he had tried to deny his memories. There was too much ignominy in what he had done—what he had become.
How he had cursed Indru each time the wolf had left, how he had vowed to never become him, to never abandon Corinna, to—in that hour of hope and light before everything had come crashing down with words he now only remembered in meaning—never abandon his sons. And all of this, and more, he had done. He had become that which he had learned to loathe. How did you even move on from that? How did you live with it, when it was an acrid fire burning in the back of your throat, a constant desire to throw yourself someplace deep, from which you can never rise..?
He didn't know if he remembered everything. He didn't know if he remembered enough. How could he know what he had forgotten?
But he had one hope, one salvation, he could do the thing Indru had never done: he could return.
Snow fell gently from a cloudy sky—it was the first of the season, at least for him, a pale, powdery carpet dusting the forest floor. He could still see the brown of the earth beneath it, the shadows underneath the upturned edges of frozen leaves, and among the trunks of the great evergreens he saw the bright red of deciduous trees. It smelled unfamiliar, all of it, too much of north and cold, not enough like—like old moss and swift rivers, of times when life wasn't that disastrous but still, fairly disastrous. Silver eyes blinked in the shadow of the forest. He knew that he was getting closer.
He also knew that he was afraid.
until the ice breaks.
(This post was last modified: Oct 15, 2016, 07:18 PM by Ice.
Edit Reason: format stuff
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