@Nineva <3
He could do it.
Pawing at the sprigs of dead grass under the melting snow, eyes down and open but focused on nothing, Duck fought with himself. The dense thicket sheltered him from most of the elements, and even though it had snowed heavily in the morning, there was not a single flake in his pelt to show for it. This territory was really the best possible for a wolf like him, he'd realised long ago. Enclosed and secure, lots of places for a small wolf to hide and run away through, his ever-thin pelt negated by how the brambles and trees and foliage protected him from the worst of the wind and rain and snow.
He couldn't do it.
@Miccah was still sick, the pneumonia holding on fast, but at least he didn't seem to be getting worse, and with a mate as loving and knowledgeable as @Aideen, Duck was confident that the dark king would recover fine. It couldn't happen soon enough, of course, but the burden of leadership was not what the Athesila needed to deal with right now. So, while Duckweed was entirely unsuited to it himself, he struggled dutifully and silently under its weight, though his legs wobbled furiously and his back felt like it was going to break.
He was strong enough.
It was fortunate that the Woodlands was such an insular, private, quiet pack. Duckweed thought back to the Lake wolves of his childhood, of how many lively wolves had lived under his parents, how many strong opinions and dominance shifts, and his relief that Secret Woodlands was nothing like that was extreme. Nobody bothered this pack and nobody bothered him, letting the runt get on with his endless self-assigned tasks so that he might try and feel like he was living up to even a fraction of Miccah's precedent.
He wasn't strong enough.
Why @Rayne hadn't yet challenged him was a source of constant anxiety, even though he didn't fear the elder man and, indeed, rather liked him. There were times when Duck wondered if they'd undergone a rank swap just because he struggled to keep his tail any higher than the other's, and yet Rayne treated him the same as ever, the same as Aideen, and Duck realised that if it was going to happen... he would have to initiate that conversation. Because that's what the Woodlands were like; diplomatic, unified, peaceful. It was the only reason he'd coped this long.
He wasn't gonna do it.
The pale wolf sighed, leaving his paw in the muddy snow after his last half-hearted nudge, and lifted his gaze to stare up at the thicket ahead, almost able to visualise where the pack's territory turned into no-man's land. He wanted to go out and be productive, but couldn't help but obsess over what might happen if he did, who he might meet, what abuse he might be too weak to resist. Because the Woodlands didn't deserve having him as their figurehead. It deserved so much more.
He was gonna do it.
His throat tightened, and he though he pushed down the memory of her face, her soft voice whispered in his ear all the same, and he hated that he was going to have to let her down.