It was uncertain how many days had passed since she'd returned from the rye, how many days she'd spent curled up against the back wall of her den. Sure during the time she was under punishment she'd left to fulfill that but that was all she had done, all she had cared to do. It wasn't often she left her den and it wasn't only the days she'd lost track of but her own daughter as well. It served to bring her further down, the realization that she had failed her daughter, Lachesis, her mother, Lorcan, and her pack. She'd stopped caring about it all, whatever trust Lachesis had in her she feared would be shattered.
Inna didn't know if Lachesis left to speak to Jessie but clearly someone in the Fields had it out for her. Why else would they come to Hearthwood and tell the pale leader lies about her. Telling just enough truth it would match whatever she told him, changing that one detail so that he would not question it. What if Jessie said the same? Would he really believe the rye wolves over her? Could she stay in a pack where her alpha, the man who had been like a father to her didn't trust her? Would Hearthwood even be her home anymore?
She squinted her eyes against the sunlight as she left the den and stopped to give her eyes time to adjust. When they had she finally made her way through the forest. Inna no longer carried herself as the proud wolf she once was, what was there to be proud of, her life felt as though it had fallen to shambles. The scent of the water reached her nose but she didn't see it until she was nearly stepping into it. The Raven didn't know how she had made it to the river, did not remember the familiar path. As if she was in autopilot she lowered her head to the water and lapped at it. The coolness of it as it went down wasn't felt, she drank until she'd had her fill before lifting her head slightly.
Out into the water her orange gaze looked, the blood of her mother had been washed away here. It was what she thought about every Time she came to the river. Then her head turned to the place she'd collapsed the night her mother had died, Inna could see her dark form laying in the grass by the river wracked with sobs. She didn't know what she was to do anymore and this time she did not know how to pick herself back up.
Her orange gaze went back the the river, she was a river wolf didn't it make sense that was where she belonged. The pain, and betrayal, she would not be left anymore, all of it would end.
But Oksana…Could she do that to her daughter?
Could she be that selfish?
Didn't she have the right after giving so much of herself only to have this happen to be selfish?
Inna looked at her paws, ears flattened against her skull. It felt like they never left that position these days. Her tail hung limp behind her before she stepped toward the water and staring at her reflection as it looked back at her, “I don't know what to do anymore,” she finally spoke to it. The sound of her voice strange in her ears.