Sorry for the wait! Does Serach know Aponi is Naira's daughter? If not, will his timeline get screwed over if Ice tells him?
you do not know who is your friend
and who is your enemy
Beyond the touch of a nose to the scruff, the cheeks, the forehead, Ice knew little of comfort. Words were fickle, and the ones he had spoken to a heart-broken Corinna had nearly led to things Ice hadn't thought of, but even if it had led to that.. would things have been so different? If Indru had returned and found that Corinna had moved on, for the sake of the pack, would he have left again, and spared them the pain? Or would he simply have fought Ice, and claimed the children as his own, if they were still unborn, or young enough to be fooled? Ice had no way of knowing, and it was a pointless thing to think about. Things had played out as they did, and here they were, on the other side of the mountain. He closed his eyes. Embraces were all good and well, but sometimes, you needed words too.
This seemed to be one of those times, as Serach slid backwards, away from him. His pale rump connected with the snow and Ice opened his eyes again. It was as if somebody had stolen the fire right out of him, and left him a husk. Pale brows drew together in consternation and Ice shuffled around to sit down next to his beaten son. What do you say to someone, whose entire world has come crashing down? They won't come back. He didn't know about Spieden, but Triell and Naira had left for good—at least, for as long as Naira lived. There was nothing to hold out for. There was nothing to wait for. There was no Indru, going to come back. Not from this, not from something as simple as moving across the mountain, to found a pack, safe from the child you feared. Letting out a low sigh, white breath smoking into the air, Ice leaned against Serach. Did he know?
The silence stretched. Ice both minded and did not mind. It was nice to not have to search for words, but if he waited for Serach to speak.. he might as well wait forever, the way it seemed, ragged breaths breaking the stillness of winter. Then, "He didn't even say goodbye..." What? he wanted to ask, unable to deny the surprise; Triell had left without a word? After all he had done for the pack, and all he did to it now, he didn't even seek Serach out, and say goodbye? He blinked his silver eyes, and let out another sigh. Triell knew what it was like to be abandoned without a word. Why would he do it to Serach? Why—?
Old habits died hard, and he found himself blaming Naira for it, like so much else he heaped on her poor, aging shoulders.
"I don't know why these things happen," he said quietly after a moment. The snow muted most sounds. He preferred it that way—just him and his son and the vast, lonely forest. "I don't know what happened to Spieden's head after the fight, but she clearly wasn't alright. That others chose to follow her.. well, I didn't know them as well as you did." Slowly, he canted his head to the side, aiming to plant another kiss at Serach's ear. "Naira was afraid, and after all these years apart.. Triell would do anything for her. But that he didn't even say goodbye..."
As they grew up, had they ever heard stories of Swift River, of the Tainn family, the demise of the Hidden Tree pack? Of how Indru left the Grove several times? How the Tainns split, into Copper Rock Creek? Of Naira, and Rhysis? "I thought things were fine, too, a long time ago. Indru had disappeared, which broke Corinna's heart, only to return again a few months later. As summer approached, three healthy cubs were born into Swift River—they were Torrel, Aiyana, and Rissa. Things were great, but then.. one day we realized Indru had left in the dead of night, taking young Torrel and the yearling Rihael with him. No goodbye, no nothing, no explanations. He never returned, and even if he had.. I don't know if Corinna would've forgiven him." The only way Ice would've, was if Corinna had, and told him to. His gaze dropped to their paws. "I still don't understand it. He had everything—a mate so loyal, healthy children, a thriving pack, at least two steadfast guardians who would die for them.. and yet he left, just like that. Triell, however..." The image was blurred in his mind. Ice and Triell, in front of the charred remains of The Hidden Tree, the northern lights far above... "Naira's afraid of Aponi, and what Aponi would do to her. She saw no future for her here, not one free of fear anyway. I don't understand it, but there you have it. She was afraid and she left and Triell, naturally, followed, because.. because he loves her, and he missed the Wildwood." He could go on. He could recite the entire conversation they had, about everything Naira had been through, how she saw Rhysis in Aponi, how she said Triell had wanted his own thing, and how Triell had said he'd be thought of less either way, no matter when he left. He didn't say any more, though. Not now. Well, except for one thing. "You'd think they could've at least stayed to explain themselves to you." This conversation wasn't so much for his sake, as it was for Serach's, so his silver eyes searched his son's face, waiting for questions, judgment, confusion, anything—something to respond to.until the ice breaks.
let the stars above shine in your soul