Karina had been feeling optimistic since Gitano had settled in nearby the Sorenson family. Before, something had been tugging at the edge of the woman’s consciousness; a sinking feeling of uncertainty, like there was something about life in Dragonveil Fold that just wasn’t exactly right. Kjors had been in a mood, though whether it was because of the new young male in Karina’s good graces or that something else Karina couldn’t say. For some reason, that little something else that Karina couldn’t put a paw on, Kjors had never been satisfied with their life in Dragonveil. He spoke every now and then of finding somewhere different to weather out the winter, or even to move their little family for good. Couldn’t he see that this was the land that The Mother chose for them? Winter hadn’t been easy, but they were surviving. Together, as a family, finally… without secrets or lies, most importantly.
Well, mostly.
Karina had declined to tell Kjors of Gitano’s prediction for his future. If their places had been reversed, Karina would certainly not wish to know that her own death was on the horizon. What a terrible curse that would be, to know when you were to die. Kjors would be resistant to the soothsayer’s predictions anyway, as he was only likely to listen to spiritual communication that came directly from the Mother. With Kjors’s and Gitano’s differing spiritual beliefs it was difficult to say exactly how the young male would fit into their budding family, but Karina was optimistic. Even if they could not, the priestess could see that the two males were more alike than different in spirituality.
Truth be told, Karina was much more at ease with Gitano here. He had predicted that a male of great importance to Karina would perish, and yet here he was... he himself becoming a male of increasing importance to the young woman. If he did not fear the danger of living so closely to such an ominous prophecy, Karina would not fear either. She clung to the conviction that when danger was truly upon her loved ones, Gitano would somehow see it and warn her.
It was this knowledge that gave Karina the confidence to travel from the Fold for long stretches at a time, returning to the mountainside to feed from their stores once her belly ached from hunger. It was from one such trip that Karina returned from on this gloomy afternoon. She shook the chill from her body as she entered the cave that the little band had claimed as their nest. It only took her a moment to realize that the scents of her family were stale. With Karina gone, they wouldn’t all leave. Someone always stayed to guard the Fold. The anxious mother rushed from the cave, poking her nose into several other of the empty caverns that honeycombed the great Mountain. Bennet? Kjors? Gitano? Where are you?!
Karina’s unease grew alarmingly as she searched the empty territory. A familiar scent brought her to a dead halt, and her heart dropped into her stomach. It was him. The Second-- the man she had seen in a vision around this same time last year. Or at least she had thought it was a dream, concocted by a weakened, starving mind running wild with the story of the Sorensons’ past. Kjors’s brother was dead after all; Kjors had said so himself. And yet, he had been here in the flesh; Karina could smell it as plain as anything. She began to shake, realizing that her encounter with the Second had not been hallucination.. it had been real, and she had been in real danger that day.
Danger that Bennet and Kjors were now in, with the Second returned. It did not take the frantic mother long to chase the scent of the secondborn dragon to the place where he had first encountered Kjors. There was bloodshed—scraps of fur and decaying flesh scattered around, but no sign of either brother. Karina’s fear mounted as she stumbled after the bloodstains, traveling far faster than was wise for a girl with cloudy eyes. After what felt like an eternity, Karina arrived at the bloody scene that she had been dreading since she had first heard Gitano’s prediction.
The poor woman’s eyes and nose were flooded with sensory input as she surveyed the battleground, awash in the blood of her loved ones and the smell of stale terror. Without even realizing she had moved, she found herself at the side of her fallen mentor, the father of her child and the dragon to her gem. He was barely recognizable to the eye, face matted with congealed blood that had flowed from his stump of an ear. He was barely recognizable to her heart as well; the creature before her was hardly more than a carcass… just a lupine shell that had once contained the soul of a dragon. Karina buried her nose into her dead mentor’s ruff, hoping to find comfort there as she always had. She felt nothing; cold nothingness. She backed away from the body, confused, squinting.
This was not Kjors. This was certainly his body, a body he had always felt trapped inside, but the dragon had long since flown free. Either to be with the Mother, or (the more likely option in Karina’s opinion) to settle within the skin of one Soren’s other decedents, seeing as they had been so close by. Kjors’s wolf ran in the Mother’s pack now, Karina had no doubt, but his dragon would not so easily abandon his treasures. The dragon lived on now, just in a different form... within Bennet, or the Second, or both.
Karina scraped at the stony earth until her paws were bloody, but she put hardly a dent in the frozen, rocky ground. She had wanted Kjors buried like her father, but the Mother seemed to have a different plan. Switching gears, Karina began gathering the small boulders that littered the mountainside, stacking them up over her beloved’s body until his remains were no longer visible beneath the mound. As she covered each of the deceased man’s wounds, the healer could not help but notice that many were not the sort that could have been obtained from a fight with another wolf. The flesh had not been torn away, as with a wolf bite... it had been shredded. The Second might have begun this fight, but a far more hated foe had finished it.
The mountain cat had returned to reap its long-awaited revenge. Karina could smell it now, so strong she was uncertain how she had missed it before. As she continued to search the area for boulders to add to her grave marker, she found more clues to piece the story together. She found the bushes where Bennet had hidden, and her heart broke to smell the panic that still clung to the hiding place. Her daughter had been here... she had seen everything. This was the spot her daughter was standing in when she saw her father slayed. The young mother ached with sorrow for her child.
She also found the trail by which the two dragons had left; dotted with the Second’s blood (but thankfully none of Bennet’s). They had fled the Fold together, likely under Kjors’s orders. The firstborn dragon would never allow his family to remain here, where they were in danger, even to wait on Karina’s return. There was a mountain cat on the loose after all, and it seemed to have a taste for wolf blood. Karina could only thank the Mother that the Second, out of moral rectitude or obligation toward his blood-relative, had decided to take his niece under his (dragon)wing and protect her.
A sense of foreboding settled over Karina as she put the final stone in place. Now that her mate was laid to rest, it was time for her to leave. She had searched, but found no cougar body to put her mind at ease. It had lost blood, but so far as Karina could tell not enough to end its life. She was not safe here any longer, and neither was Gitano. Gitano! How could Karina have forgotten about him? Without another moment’s delay, she lifted her voice to the sky to summon her friend. She did not wish to worry him, but she could not keep her voice free of her heartbreak. The man would know she needed him, and he would guess long before he arrived that the worst had come to pass.