you do not know who is your friend
and who is your enemy
Not like this he wanted to say, to bite the black scruff and forcibly hold him in place until the stars fell and seas dried up. Triell was.. Ice hated himself and his treacherous heart for it, but Triell was almost all that he had left of his past self; Serach had been a bundle of white fur and over-sized paws, and now an adult, a stranger, albeit one he loved fiercely nonetheless.
But Triell was something different. It had been him, Corinna, Marsh, Jessie, Fenru, Kisla, and Ice. Corinna and Marsh were dead, Jessie and Kisla were somewhere to the north, Fenru had also left, and that only left Triell—Triell, who had remained here among the oak trees, with a pack that was not his, could never be his. He had shouldered Ice's burden, a burden a snowstorm and a sudden drop down a steep slope had placed on him, and with Ice back, why should he keep hold of it..? It was Ice's burden now, and Serach's pack, so any pleas of moving to the west side of the mountains would fall on deaf ears. Blood loyalty, blood love, was strong. Ice had sown the seeds of this pack, of this wolf whom he called son, and he would stay.
It wasn't a sacrifice. Honestly, it was nothing bad at all—he loved Serach. And in a sense, he loved the old oak too, and the red foothills, and the way the sun glittered in the little brook and chased the eerie fog away.. but he also loved Triell, and the Grove, the Wildwood, the Heartleaf Creek, the many little creeks chirping and bubbling, and all the familiar places. They were old wolves now, and old wolves wanted different things, and Ice wondered if Triell would hate him, if he left some day. Not next year, maybe not even the year after that, but if he ever left, to seek his own fortune, or to find old friends.. Would Triell blame him for abandoning Serach, and the oak wolves?
"You remember the time we got in a fight with Rhysis, and Athena? I don't think I ever thanked you. You've always had my back." It seemed ironic Triell brought up the very thing he'd thought so much about during his chat with Naira, and it made him press his eyes together. Goodbyes had always seemed so painful and pointless; why not just stay together? The words burned in the back of his throat. "And I always will," he choked out into that precious dark fur, the pieces of his heart fracturing further. Mountain or no mountain, he would always, always look out for Triell.
Then he mentioned Spieden, a wolf Ice wasn't sure he had ever known. All he had was the fleeting glimpse after Aponi's victory, of a frightened, battered creature out of her mind with fear of —something. Ice hadn't known what, couldn't even have guessed, but it had been a terrified creature which had fled into the forest, away from Oak Tree Bend, and taken so much with her. Triell called it broken, and Ice's ears pressed back against his head. Part of him wanted to say fuck Naira and stay with me, but the years had taught him to think at least a little while before speaking, so he didn't say it. Had it been Corinna, Ice would've done the same.
Triell pulled back and smiled, and Ice, well, he couldn't help but do the same, sad and tired—couldn't help but remember the dark youth as he had been, searching for Volkan, the she-wolf who had abandoned him in favor of Ruiko's pack. Ice couldn't help but wonder what would've happened if she had stayed, or he had gone. No one would ever know, but as things were, it had given him Triell, and he was glad for that. And Triell, he had stayed that time.. "I'm just selfish," he admitted quietly. "Lost and afraid I did not seek you out before now, only to find you are leaving, and, of course, I wish you would stay..." He blinked, owlishly, and searched that dark face. ".. or that I could go with you."
He let it hang there, only for a little moment, always too honest for his own good. He wished he could've gone with everyone, to watch over them, keep them safe, see them grow... "But I can't. Not yet, maybe—maybe not ever." He belonged with his son, and not just out of guilt or debt to Corinna; he belonged with his son because he loved him, and wanted to know who he was, who he would become. He wanted to watch his relationship with Aponi blossom, help them care for their young, do his best to keep them safe until they were brave, and strong, and cunning enough to take on the world. He had cycles of life to go through and watch over, and only after that, he would know if he had the strength to brave the mountain one last time, never to return.
And only then would he know if Triell's heart had held out and waited for him, so they could be old and worn and aching and wander together through the Wildwood adorned in its splendid autumn garb.
He smiled a little at the thought, the kind of smile where the corners of your eye go a little wet with the hint of tears, and the skin around it wrinkles. He didn't say anything, though. "I'll come visit you, of course. Serach might be pissed at the lot of you for leaving, but I can't—I can't hold it against you, no matter how much I wish I could, and could argue with you to make you stay a little longer. I know you'll leave regardless, sooner or later.. I know that you know what's best for you, right now." And for Naira. He took his eyes off Triell, even though he was afraid he'd simply melt into shadows and disappear while he had the chance. "I was so stupid about Naira," he said quietly. "And about you and her. It was so much easier to just.. hate, not stop and question, or care. It hurt so much because I really liked her—not as you do, but.. she was charming and fierce and devoted; what better could a pack want? And then Rhysis screwed her over and I never really got over myself enough to wonder what had happened to her."
He hung his head a little. "Part of me wants to apologize for it, and part of me says that I'm a wolf, and if you betray my pack like that you're worthless, and that I'm totally justified in loathing her. It's just.. when I heard her story.. and knowing what I know now, and how I almost took Indru's place with Cori that season, and how he left anyway, and Rissa's death.. how can I blame her?"
He shook his head. "I was disappointed, yes, but you were right—she is not the enemy here. It was Rhysis' doing, and I guess, by the time she realized that, not only had we closed the door on her, but I guess she wouldn't want to go back to being under somebody else's rule." He barely knew what he was saying anymore, or why he was saying it—and part of him wondered how Triell had put up with him, the way he had hated a woman he loved. Ice lowered his gaze to Triell's paws. ".. I'm sorry, I guess," he said—weakly, softly.until the ice breaks.
let the stars above shine in your soul