His paws had taken him to a surprising place. The timbers. Slowly the ground had begun to be pecked with trees, which then transformed into a forest of massive timbers. He felt like he was being enveloped in something warm, but he couldn’t tell if it was comforting or suffocating. Perhaps a bit of both. It had been about a day and a half since he’d stormed off from Sahalie and he was having mixed feelings. He couldn’t tell if his reaction had been justified or not. She hadn’t meant to do that, it had been something that she’d said in the heat of the moment. He was sure of it. But it didn’t take away the sting any less. The silver yearling wondered why he’d come here, of all places. But...perhaps there was something that his subconscious had been trying to tell him. So, he’d gone to sleep late in the night buried in the crook of one of the trees. It felt like he was a pup again.
He felt nauseous.
Another curious thing he’d found...the markers for the Crest were gone. There was nothing left of them besides the bones of the caches. The revelation made him nervous for some reason. Now, he had no clue where the man who had given him so much hell resided. He could be anywhere, he could sneak up behind him on his travels and he would never see it coming. But, another part of him was hopeful that maybe they’d left the lands all together. At the same time, a dark part of him found that unpleasing. The part of him that wanted to do unto the man the harm he had done to him. He shoved those thoughts down, leaving a bubbling uneasiness where it used to be.
It had taken him most of the morning and a sparsely picked at meal for him to decide what he’d come here for, and he wasn’t entirely sure he was ready for it but then again he didn’t think he’d ever be prepared. So, he resolved to make his way down to the glenn. The entirely journey consisted on him stopping more than once, spinning in a circle torn between turning and going forward, then steeling himself enough to take a few more steps. The sound of trickling water reached his ears and his pulse quickened, his mouth going numb but he pressed forward until he left the lining of trees to appear in front of the beauty. The winter had frozen much of the water, but it only added to the magnificence of the scene. And the horror he felt.
Standing completely rigid he looked around, his heart hammering wildly in his chest. His mind ran through the events that had transpired in this place, the events that had made him who he was today. A wolf he hated, a wolf he couldn’t stand to be so much that he’d tried to change his name to become someone else. But he knew he could never be someone else, nothing could remove from him what had happened and the scars that had been carved into him. It had only been the wishful thinking of a young boy. A stupid young boy.
Slowly, his gaze traveled to the spot that Minka’s body had laid. He sucked in a tight breath, the image of her lying there almost as if she’d just been sleeping burned forever into his mind. He moved jelly legged to the spot before collapsing onto his rear, his eyes burning but he held back tears. He couldn’t speak, a lump forming in his throat. Hi, mom, he thought, lowering his head to press his nose to her grave.