-please don’t feel obligated to replicate the length of this post as Al sorts through his thoughts. Unless you want to! :)
Maybe one day they would change their minds, the leader spoke, taking a decidedly more optimistic outlook on the matter. Alarick was not quite so sure, given how his interaction with that terse female had gone, but he supposed it was entirely possible. Perhaps if Avella chose to venture there one day. What mattered was that they were at least at peace with one another, though perhaps a better relationship could be forged by extension, by better getting to know the cove.
What came next, though, was the first thing he had heard Avella speak of, of any real consequence, that he found himself in disagreement with. In what way did a pack ever
need children? In his opinion, it was the opposite of that - pups needed a bonded and cohesive pack to provide for them. There was of course, the need to procreate and continue their species, but Alarick was not entirely sure that was what his leader was getting at here.
The revelation after that, though, left him shocked and disappointed. She
did not have an answer for him. There were many ways those words could be interpreted, and very few of them were respectable or good.
There were few things in the world that Alarick believed anyone had a right to. Certainly, though, a child ought to know his or her parents. Her statement seemed, though, an apparent dismissal of the possibility of these children having a father in their lives. It took a conscious effort to maintain even a modicum of composure, so at that moment, he chose to bow his head and look away.
As the Ridge’s leader, Avella did not need approval or permission to do as she chose, and it was not his place to pass judgement or voice an opinion on her actions. But.. he had expected different.
Better. And at that moment, he felt his respect for his leader eroding.
Not every wolf or pack lived by the same values he had been raised with and held dear. Alarick did not anticipate that nor desire to enforce it. However, he doubted he could stay with a pack or submit to a leader that would seemingly violate a rule as sacred as granting a child a stable upbringing with a mother and father. That went
too far. Which meant he knew, now, that he would not remain here permanently.
But he still felt torn. Was Avella still counting on his help with this? Would she need it? And if so, for how long? Despite his diminished respect, he did not want to walk away from that duty, if for no other reason than it would not be fair to those children. He was trapped between morality and commitment.
”I see,” he murmured, offering a nod.
”Congratulations to you again, then. I am very happy for you.” He tried to be sincere, and in some ways, it was. New life was always a blessing, no matter the circumstances under which it was brought into the world, and he had no doubt Avella would be a good and capable mother. But still, the words felt hollow, and silently the former hunter found himself hoping the other would dismiss him so that he could sort out his thoughts alone.
(This post was last modified: Jun 17, 2022, 01:20 AM by Alarick.)