He didn’t want to leave her—not when she’d been hurting so badly. He knew his gut feeling had been right; that something had been wrong. Oh, how he wished that hadn’t been the case, and that he would have arrived to no news. The sullen boy knew the pain his friend was enduring all too well. Unfortunately there was nothing he could do to ease the pain. He had reciprocated what she had done for him. There was no amount of words that could sooth the pain that burrowed deep into her heart. All he could do was keep her distracted and lend his shoulder.
It made him curse the distance between them, and wish he could stay longer. But he’d promised that he wouldn’t be longer than a week—which he was already pushing, as he’d lingered near the willows longer than he had anticipated. However, he did not think he would get punished for being a few days late. Especially not when his mother learned about what had happened.
His stop at the grotto was meant to be quick; he did not want to linger too long. Especially when the strange male he’d bumped into during his previous visit to the south lived in the pack nearby. Cyril wasn’t keen on bumping into him again—or anyone, for that matter. But sometimes he wasn’t so lucky.