by hirokas » Mon Dec 05, 2011 8:16 am
Thanks so much! I had NO idea anyone liked it that much. I'll write more today.
Edit from several months later: must use post for chapters. Here's 3 and 4!
Chapter 3
Holly stormed back to her den, her mind boiling over with images of Hawk, ready to attack her, and Sparrow, saying “I’m going in,” like he was going on some war mission instead of watching a birth. Seriously? There was definitely something messed up with guys.
Holly circled in her snow-patch for a moment, then flopped down with an angry huff. Sometimes she wondered if she was right when she counted Hawk as a brother. Her brother, if he existed, was not that stupid. Hawk was still obsessed with Snow. His new attitude toward his trainee? “SNOW IS GOING TO KILL ME! WE’RE ALL DEAD! NO!”
Guys.
Speaking of Snow, Holly’s trainee Rose needed some training, and Holly had to go hunt… Holly sighed again. She had to get some sleep sometime soon. Holly’s dreams nowadays were either nonexistent because she was awake, walking to the river, or they were riddled with memories of her mother. Holly’s mother Poppy was the only person that seemed to care about her, but Poppy was hundreds of moonskies old, far too old to carry pups, far too old to survive another litter of pups. Poppy had survived about a season before dying of fever caused by her pups, orphaning Holly without any siblings in her litter. Holly had a brother and sister, but they had never met her and Holly knew that the wolves in her pack pretended that they alive for her benefit. Her siblings were dead.
She was alone. Very, very alone.
Holly pulled herself out of her depression and sat up. She rocked back and forth slowly. She’d go see Rose and give her fight training. Holly put her paws out and began moving towards the three rocks that made a staircase up to the pack’s densite. It was an odd gait, one that mostly involved walking with her front paws and dragging her hind legs. She was sitting the whole time. Was this what Hawk would classify as a symptom? she wondered. He seemed to believe that she was sick. No. She was sick of mind. Sick of heart. But she wasn't sick. Winter was cold. Holly was orphaned, alone, tired and worried. Maybe she looked a little insane. It wasn’t Hawk’s business, anyway.
Holly finished dragging herself to the entrance. She finally felt strong enough, so she got to her feet and walked the rest of the way to the trainee’s den. She shook her snow-dusted reddish fur and poked her head in the den, then shrugged and shoved past the trainees, stepping on a half-asleep Oak, who yelped angrily. Holly rolled her eyes, muttered “Chill, Oak,” and finally came to a stop in front of Rose.
“Rose?” Holly murmured.
Rose opened an eye, and then sprang to her feet. “Holly! What are we doing to do today?”
Holly made a soft murring sound, which was a sort of quiet wolf happy noise or laugh. “How about fight training with Light and Leaf by the forest?” Holly suggested.
Rose’s eyes widened. “But… I wouldn’t be fighting you?”
Holly shook her head. Rose had only trained with Holly. Rose had never tried fighting with an evenly trained opponent that wasn’t holding back so she could gain self-esteem. Of course it would scare her.
“No, Rose,” Holly told her gently. “You’d be fighting Light, but she’s just as strong as you. You’re perfectly matched. You’ll be completely fine,” Holly added as the trainee’s expression of unease grew. Would she really be able to fight?
Rose nodded, still looking a bit frightened. She followed as Holly swept her tail towards the entryway and broke into a run.
Storm and Sage were waiting with Leaf and Light at the edge of the ditch. It was a windy day, and their fur was buffeted by the gales of wind. Storm matched his namesake, appearing to be a dark gray cloud. Sage just looked tired and annoyed.
Light bounced at the sight of her sister Rose. Leaf nodded politely, not looking at Holly. Of course, Holly thought, her brother Snow would have told her about Hawk and Holly’s fight. Leaf would be feeling guilty.
Rose dashed over to Light. “Fight training today.”
“I know!” Light squealed, bouncing up and down. “And there’s a pack meeting this morning!”
Rose brightened considerably. Pack meetings were every half-moonsky. Thunderpack and Skypack would meet in peace and share news and meet each pack’s wolves, but the next day they became enemies again. It was acceptable to have friends in the opposite pack, so long as your friendship didn’t threaten your packs, involve lying to your pack or it didn’t become more than a friendship. Rose had a friend in Thunderpack, another female trainee named Apple. Holly and Tide, Apple’s trainer, had become grudging friends due to their inseparable trainees.
Sage sighed. “Yes, pack meetings are great, but unless we start training, Cloud and Moon will be fighters faster than you!”
Light straightened and nodded somberly. “What do we do first?” she asked Storm, her trainer.
Storm shrugged. “You tell me.” His fur swirled around his face, so he spoke through a mouthful of fur.
Light screwed up her face, concentration burning in her dark brown eyes. She shot a glance at Rose, who shrugged.
“Um… I attack, right?’ Light pointed out, confusion in her voice.
Sage prodded Rose, and drew her aside with his tail. He whispered something in her ear. Rose’s spring-green eyes gleamed with uncertainty. She whispered something to Sage, who shook his head.
Storm didn’t even flash a glance at the two. He kept his gaze on Light, whose fur was ruffled with embarrassment.
“How?” Storm asked patiently.
Light’s fur stuck up straight, and a small amount of red was visible underneath her dark brown fur. “Um…”
Sage flicked the ground with his tail, flashing a look at Rose. She nodded.
“I would jump at you?” ventured Light.
Suddenly, in a flash of pale red, Rose sprang and landed on Light. Light was completely caught off guard, and she merely yelped while Rose pinned her and battered her with her front paws.
Sage nodded again, and Rose released Light. Rose trotted back to Holly, her tail held high and eyes happy.
“Well done,” Holly murmured, pleased with her trainee.
“And that is exactly what you would do, Light,” Sage told her.
Rose’s eyes were bright and clearly overjoyed at the praise given to her. “Can I try again?” she asked Sage eagerly.
This time, Sage glanced up toward Holly, clearly asking permission. Holly nodded- she seriously needed help with Rose’s training; the trainee was obviously behind.
“Yes,” Sage told her. “Look- you put your paws like this, sort of bunched up, put your tail out, and crouch.”
Rose nodded, looking determined. She swept her gaze across the wolves in front of her, trying to pick a victim. Holly murred again at her eager trainee; Rose’s green eyes were glinting with mock ferocity. Holly turned away from her trainee and trotted towards the trees, yelling, “I’m going hunting!” to Storm and Sage. There were some whispers and giggles at her announcement, then a scuffling sound.
Holly rolled her eyes. The trainees laughed at everything. She took another step forward.
“Ha!”
A small laugh sounded, and then Holly was attacked by a huge lump of fur. The lump rolled Holly over and pinned her on her back. Holly was staring into Rose’s eyes, triumphant and framed by her pale red fur.
Rose’s eyes sparkled. “Did I scare you?’ she asked with absolutely no concern for Holly’s health.
“Yes,” Holly admitted, while Rose murred loudly and shouted back to the others, “I got her!”
Storm sighed. “We can see that quite obviously, Rose. Get off Holly.”
Rose reluctantly stepped off of Holly, still looking pleased. “I got you!”
“I know, Rose,” Holly told her.
“How about we go back to the pack?” Sage suggested. “It’s almost midday. The pack meeting will be soon.”
Holly nodded. Between hyper trainees and lack of sleep, she was exhausted. “Lead the way.”
Sage took a step in front of Leaf, sweeping his tail to tell the other wolves to follow. Holly nudged Rose and slowly walked up to the others.
Hawk was waiting for her, looking annoyed. “Where were you?”
“Training my trainee, idiot, like you should be. They’re called trainees for a reason,” Holly told him.
Hawk’s eyes narrowed, but there was a flash of uncertainty. “You know what he’s like!”
“Yes, I do, and he’s a trainee about half the size of you that can fight. Oh no! We’re all dead because Hawk is scared of his little tiny trainee!” Holly rolled her eyes. “Snow. Is. A. Trainee. Hawk, would it kill you to actually teach him, or would it be an opportunity for him to kill you?”
Hawk stared, gaping, at her, and Holly sighed in exasperation. Hawk goes and acts like someone died and made him captain, then gets all sad and whiny whenever someone mentions how irrational he was? Well, all Holly could say was: if you’re going to do that, then act like you aren’t terrified of your stupid trainee, and if you do, don’t throw a tantrum whenever someone mentions him!
“Hawk, you need to do some training with him,” Holly reminded him harshly. “He’s going to train himself.”
“But he is!” Hawk blurted. “He leaves every dawn and comes back a little later and he’s all mad and tired!”
Holly sighed. “Yeah. Your trainee trains himself?” But there was a core of truth and logic to his words. Snow did leave every dawn and come back more irritable and tired. He did seem to learn new fight tactics and moves that no Skypack or Thunderpack wolf had heard of. He did seem to know how to fight and hunt, even when his trainer was too scared of him to talk to him. He did seem to hate Hawk, and actually throw himself into fights with him as if Hawk had some terrible crime on his conscience that Snow had to punish him for. Holly jerked her head up involuntarily. Hawk was right.
Snow was somehow training himself. He hated Hawk and probably wanted him dead.
And Hawk might not stand a chance in his terrified and tired state.
Holly’s mind was whirring. It was possible that Snow was training alone, and it seemed that he was to Hawk, but what if that was merely a cover for some other thing that Snow was doing? What if Snow went hunting that time of day because of routine? What if Snow was plotting against his pack? What if, what if, what if?
“Hawk.” Holly’s tone was softer, a little more gentle, but still steely. My insane, paranoid sort-of brother. “I know you think Snow is out to get you. But did you consider that Snow just goes hunting that day? Or that he just needs time to think? He’s kind of always mad at you, so it’s a little idiotic to decide that he wants to kill you. Hawk?”
Hawk’s eyes had widened in fear as if he hadn’t considered that possibility, and he was now trying to squish himself into the ground. He was pressed flat to the soft grass that coated the densite’s ground, his fur was spiked up, and his tail was fluffed out like a porcupine was sticking out of his rear end.
Oh no. Seriously, was she able to talk to Hawk without a show of terrified behavior from him? Yeah, Holly was scared for her pack too. A fire raged in her mind, burning away any thoughts not based on Snow and obliterated rational reasoning. But would it really be intelligent to tell Hawk “I KNOW! SNOW IS GOING TO KILL US!”?
“Hawk, I realize that you’re convinced that Snow is evil. He is a trainee. He does not possess the power to kill you. Okay?” Holly attempted logical conversation in her best I-know-you’re-crazy-but-I’m-not-telling-you-that voice.
Hawk slowly retraced from his terrified position. “Okay…” he muttered uncertainly. “But what if-“
Holly’s gaze swept the densite, and she cut Hawk off without looking at him. “Snow is not going to kill anyone. He doesn’t have a reason or way.”
“But what if he…” Hawk just trailed off at the end of his next sentence, as if he didn’t want to consider the possibility of his new thought, or he was trying to be dramatic. Either way, his “reasoning” was getting annoying, and knowing Hawk, he’d trailed off because it was dramatic.
“What if a giant beaver fell on your head?!” Holly yelled. “Hawk, kindly finish your stupid sentence and then be as dramatic as possible!”
Hawk scrunched his face up like Holly had clawed it. Oh, so he actually was scared. “Hawk,” Holly said, trying to pretend she was totally calm and indifferent and that she hadn’t just set her former friend into a meltdown. “Just finish your sentence.”
Oh, joy. More drama: Hawk was scrunched up to the point of hilarity, and he was acting like Holly had told him to bang rocks on his head and then go play with the nearest bonfire he saw. This was the reason that Holly woke up angry. Or, as Sparrow put it, attacking any living beings within reality. What Sparrow didn’t know was that Holly yelled at trees and rocks, too. Oh, what fun insanity is.
Holly sighed as Hawk flopped over onto his side. Seriously? That was pushing it- way too far. She was about to deliver some smart comeback, but then heard Storm’s call to bring the wolves over to the camp entrance.
Every half-moonsky, the two packs in the forest to share news, discuss treaties and anything else. There was a truce during that time, but if it was broken by the other pack, the attacked pack was free to fight. It had happened before once, and that had been one of the bloodiest wars that the wolves knew, the second war in their history. Holly sometimes wondered if her father’s father’s father’s father had been killed in that fight.
“Hawk, no one really cares or is pleased when you do that,” she reminded him harshly. “Now get up and let’s go to the pack meeting.”
Thunderpack didn’t look happy.
Their captain, Bluethunder, was standing at the entrance of the clearing, waiting for the Skypack wolves. He was frowning deeply, and Grass, the commander of Thunderpack, was speaking quickly and quietly. Holly strained her ears to her what Grass was saying.
“…but Apple said that she’d seen him with them!”
Holly stiffened. What could possibly have happened that Apple could have seen, for Thunderpack to be in such an uproar?
Bluethunder shrugged, and seemed to contemplate his commander’s new information. Holly had to push her ears even farther forward to pick up his quiet reply.
“I’ll ask Starsky about what she’s seen. If she has found any evidence that supports Apple’s theory, I’ll announce it here. It’s possible, Grass, but not certain. Go calm them down, will you? And tell Rock to stop giving Dark and Steel those glares.”
Okay, so what was Apple’s theory? From the sound of it, Thunderpack was either upset at or blaming some trainees named Dark and Steel- whatever that name meant, what was “steel” anyway?- for some random wrong that they believed had been committed. The two trainees could very well be the “them” in Apple’s story. But who was “him?” Apple had seen somebody with “them.” Holly glanced at her pack- they’d entered the clearing where the meetings were held, and most were conversing with Thunderpack wolves. Good, Holly thought. She’d be able to talk to Apple or Tide without looking odd.
Holly darted over to Rose, who was trotting happily alongside Light and Oak. Leaf hung back, but was close enough to be called part of their group. Holly fell in beside Rose.
“Rose? I saw Tide and Apple, do you want to go talk to them?” Please, please say yes, say yes, say yes…The words became a quick, obsessed chant in her mind.
Rose looked up at her, a curious expression on her face. Her thoughts seemed easy to read at the moment: Why, oh why did I get the crazy trainer? But Rose seemed to shrug off her worries about Holly’s mental health, and nodded happily.
“See you, Light!” she called over her shoulder as she tried to keep up with Holly, who was racing as quickly as possible over to Tide and Apple. Yes, Holly was compulsive. No, she didn’t have a problem with it. And she didn’t see any reason why anyone who did should be anywhere near here. That was the reason she spent time with trainees and male wolves: they were often too oblivious to notice anything, and were up for anything Holly could think of doing. Although, for the “males” bit you could also throw in “likes fighting, running around maniacally and annoying anyone and everyone.”
Rose skidded to a stop beside Holly. Holly now stood in front of Tide and Apple, and they didn’t look great. Tide was sitting stiffly, her eyes darting around wildly as if she was about to be attacked. Apple was a tiny heap of brown fur on the ground. Her paws were crossed over her nose, blocking her vision, and she was curled up in a small ball.
Well, now it was obvious that Apple wasn’t pretending to have seen the “them.” Holly took a deep breath and sat down next to Tide.
“Tide?” Holly glanced over at the gray-blue she-wolf. Tide had looked up, frightened though Holly was using the gentlest tone possible. Her eyes darted to Apple quickly, as if Holly was going to attack her.
“What?” Tide’s voice was quiet and sad, not at all matching her ragged, depressed appearance. She seemed to calm a little bit at Rose’s presence, and Holly gestured for the light red trainee to come over; maybe she would calm the frightened pair further?
Rose stared wide-eyed at the two depressed wolves. Apple was one of her best friends, and now she was curled into a little frightened ball. Not very happy.
Rose whined softly. “Are you sure they’re okay?”
“Of course,” Holly told her. Yes, she was lying. No, it didn’t matter. Much. “They will be.”
Rose nodded determinedly. She trotted to Tide’s side and hesitated, glancing at Holly, as if to say, Are you sure?
Holly hesitated. She’d already lied to Rose once about the well-being of the two wolves, so what was she supposed to say? Finally, Holly nodded.
Rose sat down next to Tide and cocked her head. “So, what happened?” she asked, sounding gentle and genuinely curious. She fixed her light green eyes on Tide, the picture of innocence. Holly made a mental note to consult Rose the next time that she ever wanted to get a story out of someone.
Tide looked upward and raised her head slowly. She blinked a few times, and a small amount of the fog covering her eyes lifted.
“I don’t know,” she whispered. “Apple was the one who saw them.”
Rose nodded understandingly. “Do you think I could try to wake her up?”
“Wake up?” Tide blinked, looking confused. Then she laughed weakly. “Oh, you don’t have to. She’s awake. Not sane, no, not sane, not at all, but she’s her, yes, she’s here…”
Holly stared at Tide in alarm. Tide was maybe a summer and a half. Now she was blabbering like an old Healer. She wasn’t making any sense, nor did she sound like the young wolf that she was.
She didn’t have a lot of time to think it over, though. As if in a daze, Rose turned to Apple. She prodded the dark brown trainee’s fur, looking concerned, then closed her eyes, and stood absolutely still.
For that small moment, Holly couldn’t see anything but the two wolves. Her mind was completely focused on wishing for Apple’s revival. And she could not take her eyes off Apple.
Apple’s fur quivered and her legs twitched, as if she was trying to wake from a deep sleep, and it finally struck Holly that Apple shouldn’t really be unconscious if she’d merely seen Dark and Steel talking to Snow. Had something happened to her that was to frightening for words?
Holly looked towards Rose. The young trainee wore the same expression that Holly did- her eyes were troubled and guarded, as if she was unwilling to share how bad the situation was.
Apple twitched with a sharp jerk, her legs splaying out, her head thrashing. The Thunderpack wolf’s eyes popped open, and Holly realized that she had never seen Apple’s eyes. They were actually quite pretty, sort of forest-green, she was thinking, when Apple twitched again and Holly’s attention was focused on her.
The final spasm seemed to make all the difference. Apple coughed and shuddered, then stretched. Her eyes seemed to focus, and she flinched when she spotted Rose so close to her.
Rose eyes popped like she was a young bird, and it would have been comical if it hadn’t been such a tense situation, almost. Only almost
Holly stifled a sigh. So much drama. The trainee wouldn’t be so messed up if all that happened was that she saw Dark and Steel talking. So… why the show?
As if on cue, Apple shook her head and sat up, looking actually pretty healthy. Holly looked at Tide questioningly.
Tide looked down at her feet and sighed sadly. “Trauma.”
“What?”
Tide glared disdainfully at Rose’s question. “My half-aunt or something was a Healer. Trauma is extreme shock, and sometimes it can send our type of wolves into stress-induced comas. Apple was completely frightened, and hit her head on a rock, therefore rendering her unconscious. The only reason we put all the effort into getting her here was for proof.”
“Proof?”
“Against Snow.”
“For what, eating his kill before taking it home?” Holly rolled her eyes, and Rose glanced reproachfully at her.
“For attempted murder on the entire forest,” Tide said gravely.
There was a moment of quiet.
“Right, Tide.”
“Seriously?”
“Yes. I’m not kidding!” Tide shouted, her voice gradually rising with hysteria.
“Okay, then,” Rose said. “How’s he gonna go about it?”
“First, he wants to start killing all the wolves that weren’t born in the forest. Then, he wants to attack anyone who doesn’t support his decision. The rest, he said, can live.”
But why’s he want to do this anyway? Holly wondered.
“Why?” Rose asked, echoing Holly’s thoughts.
“I don’t know!” Tide said. “He just will. I think it’s some insane idea about how we aren’t pure enough. I heard Dark and Steel talking him, about how they’d start the plan immediately.” Tide stared at her. “I fully believe that they mean it.”
The rest of the pack meeting went by in a blur. Holly was impatient and her mind was racing. No thought could be complete or understandable. Everything in her head had shifted focus to Snow.
It was difficult to believe that a small, introverted young wolf could or would take over the forest. Why would he? Was Tide telling lies, just to throw the Skypack wolves off and so Thunderpack could attack them easily? But the reality had became too apparent; everything just clicked into place and Holly would make better use of her time planning how to tell the other wolves than suspecting them.
Rose might have said some things to Holly during the meeting, but she’d wasted her breath. Holly wasn’t really noticing anything, just nodding whenever she thought she heard someone’s voice next to her.
Tide’s voice and scent had vanished into the crowed. Her fur was now lost in the mixture of wolves. Holly hadn’t even seen her go, much less been looking for her. But she did have some idea of where Tide had gone: after Apple woke up, chances were that Tide had gone to consult the Healers, who had received a lengthy training in medicine rather than a few passed-down terms from relatives- Tide’s assessment was really nothing more than a guess.
Holly became a little more aware after some time, and jumped when she saw Hawk right next to her. He had a confused expression, as if it was only rational for him to be scared. Holly’s half-asleep, freaked-out face appearance might’ve helped, too.
“What do you want?” she sighed, after pretending she hadn’t seen him proved useless.
Hawk seemed to brace himself. “What happened to Apple?” he asked.
“Nothing,” Holly answered, trying to seem offhand and failing.
Hawk began to look exasperated. “Really, what?”
“If you want to know that badly, I’ll tell you later,” Holly said, knowing that it would annoy him.
Oddly enough, Hawk believed her. “Okay,” he said, and wandered off.
Holly’s tail swished in the snow as she stared at the snowflakes that had been unsettled. The snow was more watery now, a sign of springtime. Good, so at least there would be something nice about whatever fights that would be fought, Holly thought. Then she realized how much she sounded like Hawk and quickly switched to another train of thought.
She sat for a while, feeling idly bored. She couldn’t remember a time when a pack meeting had gone so long, and she was being serious, not exaggerating. What was keeping everyone? Whatever, she could ask Hawk later.
Finally, she heard Starsky’s order to leave. Holly jumped up jubilantly and sped after her pack, glad that she could go home.
Sparrow seemed on edge; Holly guessed with annoyance that Hawk had told him how Holly hadn’t wanted to tell anyone anything and hadn’t listened to the meeting. Usually, Holly listened carefully at the meetings, and not because she was into politics. She simply liked to comment sarcastically on everything that the captains said. Today would have worried Hawk, because he worried about everything and because Holly had offered absolutely no commentary and appeared to be falling asleep. At least, she assumed she looked sleepy. She felt that way.
Sparrow glared at Holly, probably orchestrating a series of accusations to hurl at her. Hawk merely stared off into the distance with a strangely happy expression, probably imagining what drama the war would bring. He would likely feel at home, Holly thought sarcastically.
Sparrow marched towards Holly with Hawk trailing happily behind.
“Since you’re not going to tell me yourself, what happened?” Sparrow asked her wearily.
Holly smiled slowly. “Why should I tell you?” she countered.
Sparrow stared at her. “You know, the joke gets kind of old when you pull it constantly. We know you’re going to tell us-“ Holly stifled a laugh; maybe Sparrow knew but Hawk seemed to not know anything in his daydreamlike state and was obviously contradicting Sparrow- “you pretend you won’t, okay. We get it.”
Holly glared at him. “Fine, but the pack’s going to go insane if the hear. Tell Starsky we’re going hunting and we can talk about it somewhere else. Sparrow shook his head, looking suspicious. “I can do it on my authority. Oddly enough, I do have a somewhat high rank.”
Holly nodded. “Okay, then. Let’s go.”
“We do need to catch some prey on the way,” Hawk reminded the other two wolves dutifully. “It’s going to look weird if we can’t catch any food.”
“It is the middle of winter, hadn’t you noticed?” Sparrow asked absentmindedly.
“Yes, but it’s thawing,” Hawk pointed out. “More animals can find the plants they have to eat, and there should be some prey.”
“Hypothetically, Hawk. We’re not actually hunting.”
“Right.”
Hawk had snapped out of his slightly disturbing stupor, and was now bantering easily with Sparrow, while Holly occasionally called someone out for being stupid. Sparrow had a place in mind to talk, and since Hawk and Holly had not had any suggestions to offer they had assumed that Sparrow knew what he was doing and had decided to remain silent.
After a short while Sparrow announced, “Okay, there’s a good hidden route along here that we can follow.” There three wolves walked in silence, Sparrow and Hawk probably waiting for Holly to start and Holly herself not knowing how to start. She finally decided to just tell them the whole story.
When Holly had finished, she received mixed reactions. Sparrow continued steadily along as if he had known all along that Snow was planning total destruction. Hawk stopped dead as if it were the worst possible thing to realize that he wasn’t just paranoid towards his trainee.
Actually, it kind of was.
Holly was about to ask what came next when she received an answer, sort of. A small brown and white puppy barreled through the brush ahead of them and stopped dead on Holly’s paws, staring up at her with exuberant green eyes.
Holly heard a sharp intake of breath from Sparrow and Hawk. She realized that they were worried that she would attack the pup and sighed. Just to spite them, and because the puppy actually was really cute, she leaned down to the puppy. It was male by the scent of it, but it didn’t smell of any pack. Oh well. That’s what questions were for.
“What’s your name?” Holly asked the pup. Hawk relaxed, but Sparrow stiffened. Holly bit her tongue, trying not to turn around and yell at him to stop judging her. Hooray for stereotypes, Holly thought.
“Forest!” said the puppy happily. “I live over there.” Forest waved his short tail at a vague gray line of thatched material that smelled of the bored-looking wolves it enclosed. Holly nearly growled at it, angry that it kept her fellow wolves trapped, but didn’t want to scare the puppy.
Hawk didn’t seem so subtle. “You live over there?” he asked incredulously, gaping. “Willingly?”
“Sure!” Forest said. “It’s great. They give us tons of food and they play with us too!”
“Wait,” Sparrow said. “Who’s ‘they’?” He was frowning.
“Humans!” Forest replied brightly.
The pack wolves groaned collectively.
“Joy, we’ve got a captive wolf for help,” Sparrow muttered. “I’m sure this will give us all the answers we’ll need.”
“Come on, Sparrow,” Hawk said. “He might know something about Snow.” Apparently, Hawk had smelled Forest’s gender too.
Holly glared at him in disgust. “Really, Hawk? If you were a parent, would you tell your pups that they were all going to die?” She looked at Forest, who had thankfully just been sniffing some nearby buttercups and had not heard Holly.
“I guess not,” Hawk said, “but logically, shouldn’t his parents know? Snow’s targeting captive wolves, and his parents are probably captive too. I thought you’d figure that out, Holly; you’re usually very smart…” He trailed off at Holly’s expression.
“Shut up!” she shouted. “Let’s just ask Forest, okay?” She looked around for the puppy, but only saw a brown-white tail disappearing into the snowy foliage. “Oh, great,” she sighed. “Let’s play Hide-and-Seek with a captive puppy.”
“You should really be more optimistic,” Hawk suggested.
“Just shut up,” Holly growled, and she followed Sparrow into the bushes.
It turned out that the pup’s family wasn’t that far. Holly, Hawk and Sparrow followed him to the strange woven gray stuff, where Forest slipped under a part of the material that had a hole torn in it and a ditch dug underneath. Holly gritted her teeth as she tried to fit under it without tearing out too much of her fur.
“What is this stuff called, anyway?” Holly asked the puppy, glaring at the material which now had several tufts of red and brown fur stuck to it and had left Holly’s skin stinging.
“Oh, you mean the gray thing? It’s called a chain-link fence,” Forest informed her, sounding very important.
Holly nodded. “Nice.” She looked out towards the wolves milling around inside the “fence,” or whatever Forest had called it, and tried to find some wolves that resembled Forest.
Forest noticed her. “My family’s this way, come on!” Holly and Hawk followed him obediently, whereas Sparrow sighed and muttered something before coming.
Forest came to a bouncing stop next to two adults and two other pups. One of the adults smelled male and was so dark gray he appeared black. The male- who was almost certainly Forest’s father, unless there was some other insane backstory going on- was also splotched randomly with white and had amber eyes. A wolf who smelled female and was, as Holly’d said before, probably Forest’s mother, stood next to the male. She was red-gold and had medium brown eyes, white paws and a white chest. The two pups that stood next to them also smelled female. One was pale gray with bright blue eyes and white paws, a white tail and a white patch on her chest. The other was brown and white, like Forest, with slightly lighter green eyes, but that was really the only difference. Even their white front paws and stomachs matched.
The parents now stood, watching the pack wolves, but didn’t look apprehensive; in fact they looked quite welcoming. Big mistake, Holly thought. If they acted like that to every wolf who passed through their place, they were going to end up losing some pups. Maybe it was just Holly, though; fighters were trained to defend against strangers, and Holly was extremely naturally apprehensive of other wolves.
The two puppies wrestled on the ground, but looked up when Holly, Sparrow and Hawk got closer to them.
The female adult looked directly at the pack wolves. “My name is Cider, and this is my mate Bishop. Who are you?”
Weird names, Holly thought, but Hawk answered her politely. “I’m Hawk, this is Holly, and that’s Sparrow. We’re from Skypack, one of the wolf packs in the forest. We live down the river, on the plateau.”
Bishop looked like he’d never even seen the river, much less the plateau that Skypack lived on. “We’re rescue wolves, from the humans…?” Bishop faltered when he saw that the pack wolves were almost as confused as he had been. “Basically, we’re the human’s pets,” Bishop amended.
“Oh.” Hawk appeared to be struggling to maintain a polite expression, and his disdain was becoming apparent. Sparrow was just staring at the ground, trying not to laugh, and Holly was staring back towards the packlands, trying not to growl at Bishop and Cider. “Well, we need to talk to you,” Hawk continued. “We’re investigating a certain wolf in the forest.” Holly winced at how much he sounded like a curious puppy.
Bishop and Cider stared at the pups. “Can we take them?” Cider asked.
“Sure. Why not?” Sparrow finally spoke up, sounding like he didn’t care. He probably didn’t, actually.
“Piper, Misty,” Cider called softly. The brown pup looked up and trotted over to her mother, but the gray puppy, since her wrestling partner was gone, instead stared at a bug climbing a flower, fascinated.
“Misty,” Cider said, a little more forcefully. The pup, Misty, looked up and noticed her family, then stood up and followed them. Holly wondered why they were walking away, when she saw that Hawk and Sparrow were walking towards a corner of the enclosure. Holly hurried after them, trying to pretend she’d known that they were leaving all along.
“Holly, can you tell the story?” Sparrow asked.
“Why not you?” Holly growled, but resolved to after he stared at her, remembering that wolves’ classic staring contests for dominance with Sparrow were not easily won. It was like he never blinked. Also, because she was the one who knew the story.
Holly told the entire story, how Hawk had been frightened of Snow, how Snow had been so secretive, how the pack meeting had gone. When she finished, Cider and Bishop looked utterly perplexed and terrified.
“So, we’re just here to warn you and ask if you’ve seen any of Snow,” Hawk told them. “He’s white, with some gray spots across his face and body. He’s got blue eyes. See him?”
“No,” Cider answered thoughtfully, “but remember Shine and Pepper, Bishop?” she asked her mate.
Bishop nodded and turned to the pack wolves. “We originally had five pups, but our last two, a female named Shine and a male named Pepper, went missing about a month ago. We never saw them again.” Bishop stared at the ground.
I would bet anything that Snow kidnapped them for an army, Holly thought. Hawk and Sparrow seemed to have reached similar conclusions; they both looked worried.
“Shine is gold-brown, with blue eyes, and Pepper is gray with brown eyes,” Cider added helpfully. “Tell your pack to look out for them, please.”
“Okay, thank you,” Sparrow told them.
All together, Hawk, Holly and Sparrow sprinted from the cage, their hearts pounding and their minds racing, filled with adrenaline and having no idea of the future.
On the walk back, they were mostly silent, but once Hawk spoke up.
“So, Snow’s definitely going to try to kill us then?” he asked.
“Yes, almost certainly,” Holly replied, keeping her eyes focused on the small mound ahead that was the plateau that they lived on.
“So, what now?” Hawk asked. “We fight? Are we the heroes or something?”
It was probably a rhetorical question, but Sparrow walked in silence for a minute, then replied, “Yes, Hawk, I think we are. I think we are.”
Chapter 4
It was a normal day again, or as normal as it could be, what with the difficulty of keeping Snow’s possible plans. Who, in their right mind, would attack someone tons of helpless pups along with fighters? Who would decide that even the smallest wolf was a threat? Who would go so far as to attack an entire forest and build a war force against it? But Holly and Sparrow insisted that they had more information before accusing Snow. Well, Sparrow insisted, and Holly had gone along with it as to annoy Hawk, as usual.
The previous dawns had been quiet, and Holly, Hawk and Sparrow had not spoken much, out of a combination of thinking and awkwardness. It was too difficult to be cordial and talk when they all knew how likely it was that the forest’s time was coming soon. Sparrow was out more often, for reasons Hawk could only guess as to be fear. Holly was more sullen, if that was possible, and she hid in bushes more often, plotting who knew what. Knowing Holly, though, she was probably just wracking her brain for ways to wreck people’s days. Classic Holly.
Whatever the reason, they didn’t see each other much. It was possible that solitude was just a result of paranoia, but how did you figure out a side effect of a lifelong trait? Paranoia was normal; maybe solitude was just a passing phase, maybe it would come in handy for whatever was about to happen. Whatever that was.
Hawk slumped downwards; he was sitting and leaning against a large rock, hiding in the shade. It was cold, being the end of winter, but Hawk was happy to note the end part. Next moonsky it would be spring, and far warmer. Prey would be plentiful, and all would be well, if Snow hadn’t launched his plan by then.
Hawk’s sadness and nostalgia were nearly audible when they returned. Was there anything that wasn’t going to change? Even Holly was obviously more studious and relaxed. Sparrow was slipping up in his charades. And Hawk was visibly scared for the first time he remembered. Normally he’d be happy, maybe helping out with the puppies in the pack. Now he was thinking over what could possibly happen whilst hiding in the shade of a snowy boulder. Holly, Sparrow and Snow were formerly the only wolves who lied and slunk around the densite. Now they’d been joined by Hawk, who had promised himself to never lie. Look at him now. Hiding something from his pack that could kill them. Yet another thing he now had in common with Sparrow. Hawk was yet again looking up to his old mentor, only this time he despised it.
It was kind of his fault, though. Hawk’d been responsible for Snow, and look where he was now. Ready to wreck his forest without a shred of regret that anyone could see. Ready to kill Hawk, his trainer. Did he even care at all about Hawk? Was there any small bit of him that didn’t hate Hawk’s guts? Was it possible that deep down, Snow still liked Hawk, who had basically raised him? Was it possible that Snow could come back to everyone, and abandon his visions of destruction?
No.
It was painful, but it was so true; Snow was gone. Metaphorically. He’d crossed the line of caring. He didn’t know anyone but himself anymore. He was on Snow’s team now, and he wasn’t going to come back, so Hawk was going to suck it up and just accept it. That would be easy, right?
No. Again. He was kidding himself, in a sort of melodramatic way. A sad melodramatic way. Something wishful again that would never come to pass, as if one of the songs in wolf howls about never giving up. Something like that, something easier said than done. Something happy for optimists blinded by happiness. For wolves like the former Hawk, something small to content wolves and satisfy them when they thought everything was horrible for them, boo hoo.
Now he sounded like Holly, too. Where was he going to end up if he kept it up like this? Shoving trainees off cliffs? Cursing his head off at Starsky?
Like Snow?
Anything else, he thought. He didn’t want to think about Snow.
Against some protest buried deep in his head that she was too attentiative, Hawk went to see Willow.
Willow was curled into a small ball, sleeping. Her herbs were stacked carefully on the stone floor, and Rose quietly played with some extra fireweed strands in the corner. Hawk hadn’t realized she was here; that was going to make it harder for him to think about Snow, so it was probably good.
Rose looked up when she saw Hawk entering, and shrugged. “She was asleep when I came here.”
Hawk nodded, kind of worried about Willow. “Can I try to wake her up?”
“If you’re insane enough,” Rose said, shrugging.
He didn’t have to. Willow came to a split second before Hawk reached her, and she was panting and staring at nothing with wild eyes. Her eyes finally found their ways to Hawk.
“Snow!” she whispered.
She apparently didn’t see or care how confused Hawk was. “What?” he asked, completely lost.
“Snow. He’s going to take over the forest… and he’ll kill them… and everyone’s going to change… and Skypack will die…”
Rose and Hawk froze, now extremely confused and scared. “Willow, come on!” Rose shouted forcefully. She glanced at Hawk. “It’s a prophecy,” she told him. “She had a dream and saw everything that she just saw. It was probably a little clearer, but anyways, whatever she just said is very likely to happen. Not all of it, just most of it. You’d better go, anyway.”
She really hadn’t had to saw anything. Hawk was already gone.
“So, what you’re saying is that we’re right?” Sparrow asked.
Hawk had run to the fighters’ den and got his Sparrow and Holly when he had left the Healer’s den. All three of the wolves were now following the same trail they had followed several dawns ago, when they met the captive wolves.
“Yes. Almost certainly,” Hawk said. “First Cider and Bishop, now Willow, and she gave a prophecy. It’s pretty much given.”
“Why would he, though?” Sparrow asked himself. “Snow, I mean. Why would he want to destroy the forest?”
“Because he does,” Holly said, rolling her eyes. “Weren’t you even listening three dawns ago? I told you what he was doing.”
“Right, but why would he destroy the whole forest?” Sparrow asked.
“Actually,” Hawk commented thoughtfully, “’because’ references the cause of doing something, and to do something because he wants to do something would mean that the cause of doing it was because he wanted to, so there should be an underlying cause.”
Holly and Sparrow stared at him.
“What?” Hawk asked self-consciously.
“It’s nice when you correct sentences, Hawk,” Sparrow told him, “but when you give us the full explanation, we get headaches.”
“And it makes me want to rip your throat out,” Holly added helpfully. Sparrow shook his head at her. “Fine. Maybe just attack you.”
“Not even that,” Sparrow said wearily.
Holly glared at him. “What’s the point of having claws if I can never use them?” she asked, looking irritated.
“You’ll get a chance, soon enough,” Sparrow said. “Just not on Hawk.”
“Why not?” Holly asked, seemingly mystified.
“Shut up,” Sparrow said, not even looking at her.
Holly’s eyes brightened. “Hey, you sound like me! I have taught you something!”
“Do you want Snow to hear us?” Sparrow asked
“Yeah.” Sparrow sighed. “Okay, maybe not. Why are you correcting all my sentences?”
“They are grammatically incorrect,” Hawk pointed out.
“Let’s just get this over with,” Holly growled.
The three wolves crept under the fence, trying not to be seen. Hawk and Sparrow were doing well, as the snow had partially melted in that area and the grass underneath was dead and brown. Holly’s red coat, however, stood out like an elk in a tree, and Cider noticed her immediately. Holly groaned loudly while Cider ran over.
The goldish wolf, usually so bright and happy, now held her head down and dragged her tail on the ground. Her brown eyes were dull, and her coat was spiked in some places while in others it was flat, as if Cider had tried to smooth it in an attempt to appear unruffled by something.
Holly, in an unusual show of compassion, asked her, “What’s wrong?”
That seemed to be the wrong thing to say. Cider squeezed her eyes shut and tucked her tail between her legs. She didn’t speak.
Hawk stared across the fenced area, looking for Bishop. If Cider was this depressed, then how was Bishop holding up? Hawk decided to try Cider again.
“Please, Cider,” he said quietly. “We have to know. We might be able to fix this.” Hopefully, that was true.
Cider looked up slowly. “You shouldn’t be here.”
Hawk flinched at the sound of her voice. It was raspy and dark, as if she hadn’t drunken anything for days. Her eyes, now seemingly boring holes into Hawk, were darker than a few moments ago, and her tail was now pressed to her side. She wasn’t the same Cider at all.
Sparrow looked at Hawk, his face cautionary. Staring straight at Cider, without moving or blinking, he said, “We know. But neither should he.”
Cider’s shoulders slumped like a heavy weight had been taken off them. The clouds in her eyes lifted, and she looked at Sparrow calmly.
Now with a clearer voice, she said quietly, “Why is he, then? He’s done too much.”
“Can you show us?” Sparrow asked, strangely gentle.
“Me.”
“You?” Sparrow asked, sounding confused but still with a light and soft tone.
“Yes. Me. He said I wasn’t good enough.” Cider’s voice was short and slightly wild-sounding.
Sparrow nodded, as if finally understanding something, his eyes becoming something strange, like an old memory that he didn’t like. “Oh. He tried to kill you.”
Hawk stood, numb with the accusation against his trainee. No matter how true it was, it was still an accusation, and the reality only made the shock worse. How could Snow have done that? He would’ve liked to ruminate on the possible motives and cause, but Cider’s voice cut his thoughts short.
“Yes. He didn’t succeed. But he did for Forest.”
Yet again, the shock that hit was Hawk like being dunked underwater. One cold, freezing feeling after another with no rest or pause to absorb it. Forest was dead. By the cause of his own trainee? No. It couldn’t happen. Snow didn’t have the means necessary…
Thankfully, Sparrow answered some of Hawk’s unspoken questions. “Can we see the body?” he asked. It wasn’t going to help out Hawk very much in the way of closure, but at least he might figure out how it happened.
Cider turned around, her head drooping again. She’d retracted into her own mind, most likely remembering, as Hawk was, her young son. The body, now, Hawk reminded himself, trying to make himself think in the cold, stiff way that Sparrow had. Maybe it would be so painful.
Nevertheless, it was.
By the time the reached the circle of trees were Forest’s body allegedly lay, Hawk felt like he’d shatter into a million pieces if he heard anything more. Thankfully, Holly didn’t say anything, which may have made Hawk just crumple up on the forest floor.
The four wolves now stood before a small lump of dirt, which Hawk assumed was covering Forest’s body. He steeled himself, not wanting to see at while wanting to know the answers that would only come from seeing the body with his own eyes.
Cider pawed at the dirt silently, tossing small amounts to the side. She growled at Holly when the pack wolf tried to help, and Holly for once backed away, even whining quietly. But the look she gave Hawk made it clear that it was all a show, and that Holly clearly outranked Cider. Why was Holly worrying about ranks instead of pup’s deaths?
When Cider uncovered Forest’s body, her eyes were dead and dark again, and she ran off into the other side of the fenced area.
Forest’s body wasn’t as bad as Hawk thought it would be; it was worse, but so were Hawk’s coping abilities. He stared at the body silently, then put his head up and howled.
He was cut short by Holly.
“You idiot!” she growled. “Do you want Snow to hear? We aren’t supposed to even be here, and even the stupid captive wolf knew that!”
“Holly, shut yourself up,” Sparrow growled back.
“Fine.” Holly’s teeth were bared, and she was almost nose-to-nose with Sparrow.
Both their heads turned, though, when they heard soft footsteps that Hawk knew they recognized.
The newcomer, though, was red-gold, not white and gray, and carried no pack scent. Cider had come back, and following her was a black, gray and white shape that Hawk knew as Bishop.
Cider’s eyes were wide; she most likely didn’t expect or want some strange wolves fighting by her son’s body. Bishop sort of peeked out from behind her.
At Cider’s feet lay two small puppies, a brown one and a gray one. Piper and Misty. Cider shuffled them along, occasionally nipping one when she didn’t move. Both pup’s expressions were incredulous and mystified, as if the news of Forest’s death was news to them. Their faces brought up a new question about Forest.
“Cider,” Hawk began, trying to sound conversational- or at least as conversational as you can sound when discussing the death of someone’s pup. “How long ago did Forest die?”
“Just this morning,” she said, now looking as confused as her pups. “Why?”
Holly lowered her head, her eyes now closed. “Because,” she said quietly, a strange feat for Holly, “that was when the murderer was here.”
After explaining that Snow was the murderer and telling Holly off for being so cryptic, Sparrow bid the captive wolves goodbye and assured them that both they and Snow wouldn’t be coming back. He’d had to drag Holly out by her ear, as she wanted to sweep the enclosure for Snow, and she did end up scratching his muzzle badly enough that she drew blood. After he shouted at her again, the procession continued on, and Sparrow, probably in an attempt not to be further attacked, agreed to let Holly run the rest of the way back. Her response was almost funny in the childlike way she reacted: bouncing up and down, then racing off.
The silence between Hawk and Sparrow was sharp and obvious; they really didn’t have anything to say. They’d both seen the body, and they both knew that Snow was still in the outskirts of the forest by the enclosure. Sparrow’s eyes were dark and thoughtful, and he appeared to be dwelling on something.
It was Hawk who finally spoke.
“Why did you let her go?”
“Who, Lily?” Sparrow asked absentmindedly, as if that was his default answer.
Hawk was intrigued. “Who’s that?” he asked. “Lily? Where’s she from?”
Sparrow seemed to snap out of his daydream. “No where,” he muttered. “Who do you mean?”
“Lily, the one who just were talking about?” Hawk asked tentatively.
“No, I mean the one you asked me about before that,” Sparrow grumbled.
“Oh. Holly. You knew Snow’s still here.”
Sparrow sighed, stopped walking, and turned to Hawk. “Because she can handle herself and she knows the enemy. You, on the other hand, would try to work out a truce and go down trying to make friends.”
“No I wouldn’t!”
“Yes you would, and you know it. Holly’s here, now be quiet and try not to be cursed out. I think you can handle that.”
Hawk still felt annoyed that Sparrow was assigning different tasks, but when the red streak that announced Holly’s arrival came into clearer view, he did stop talking and listen idly to Holly’s heated rant.
When they all arrived back at the densite, only Rose noticed them, and that was just so she could tell Holly about what had happened in her absence and worry over Sparrow’s cut, so that was normal. What wasn’t was that everyone was out of their dens and staring up at something.
A small gray flash streaked over the top of the rock where Starsky made announcements. It was directly over her den and conveniently located. But the distance from the rock to the ground was about the size of a moose, and would prove fatal if anyone fell.
Hawk was still confused when he saw the pup.
Moon was atop the rock, dashing back and forth with her brother. Cloud seemed to lose his footing a few times, and whenever he did every single wolf watching would gasp, and Feather would howl sadly. Storm was sitting next to her, and he looked terrified.
Holly, Hawk and Sparrow just stared at the two puppies, but thankfully Starsky had just come out of her den for whatever reason, and noticed the pups. She scrambled up the side, ignoring Willow’s pleas to let someone else do it, and snatched one of the pups- Cloud or Moon, Hawk couldn’t really tell.
The remaining puppy stared down at his sibling and skipped to the edge of the rock for a better look. Unlike his sister, though, he managed to hop from rock to rock until he was at the height where Starsky could get him to the ground safely.
Feather breathed an audible sigh of relief.
Starsky glanced at her sister, then straightened.
“Some of you are probably wondering why I came out anyway. First of all, it’s slightly difficult to sleep with puppies running around above you, and second of all because there’s an announcement I have about these two.”
Moon’s eyes brightened, probably thinking that it was a good announcement- she was an eternal optimist- but Cloud’s shoulders slumped. Like Hawk, he seemed to think that he was going to be punished, and he glared at his sister.
“As you’ve probably noticed,” Starsky continued, only looking at the pups, “these two have reached trainee age.”
Cloud’s eyes brightened, and Moon looked like she wanted to bounce up and down.
“Blossom, as of now it will be required of you to train Moon.”
Blossom nodded, and she watched the new trainee as Moon skipped over to her trainer.
“I’ll train Cloud,” Starsky said, only looking at Cloud’s astonished, happy face and, yet again, completely ignoring Willow’s worrying.
The crowd began to disperse slowly, with Cloud and Moon dancing around their trainers happily, and all the younger wolves’ eyes turned to Willow. A popular custom in Skypack was that the Healer would tell the story of the Dawns, the way that the packs were all created, after pups became trainees. Late at night, all the younger wolves would wake up and sit in a circle as she told the story. No one knew what happened in Thunderpack, but it was probably similar.
Holly didn’t like the story- she made snide comments the whole way through- but Hawk still remembered the night when they had become trainees: she had listened with wide eyes and great attention, nudging Hawk whenever he started to fall asleep. Knowing Holly, she did love the story, but wasn’t, as she said, “soft” enough to admit it.
Willow was retreating back into the den, tail swishing. Cloud and Moon had left their trainers to follow her, and Rose, Light, Leaf and Holly were following after them, with Oak dragging behind and sulking.
Hawk trailed slowly after the group. Snow wasn’t there, so he was sort of breaking the customs as well as who knew what. He should be here, but then, wouldn’t he just ruin the story?
Feeling slightly shallow, but happy, Hawk followed the others into Willow’s den.
The interior of the den was rather small, so it was a tight fit, but all the wolves managed to squish in. Holly wound up next to Oak, who glared at her sullenly, and she happily told him that he was something rather inappropriate. Light was next to Rose, and both trainees’ fur was fluffed up and spiky. Leaf sat by Hawk, and her eyes made it clear that she was not available for conversation.
Once everyone was settled, Willow began her story.
“Hundreds of springs ago, before anyone any of you remember was born, a huge plague was transferred from the humans to their dogs, and in turn to the wolves. More than half of them died; it was nearly mass murder, you can’t imagine. Brave fighters, small pups, mothers, captains. Of course, back then nothing was very organized so they were just leaders. They only spoke in body language, too; they couldn’t communicate very effectively.
“Finally, when the strongest fighter had fallen, the leaders of all the packs agreed to leave. They would travel to a new home, a better home, to raise their pups in peace. They could be safe and continue the generations.
“At the same time, the dogs’ humans and family were dying. Being dogs, they didn’t want to leave, but their leader died finally, and all the humans left with most of the dogs. The remaining dogs tried to survive, feeding on scraps and corpses, but they had no water and became sick from the infected food and meat. They too decided to leave with the strongest among them.
“The two groups, now nearly infection-free, traveled slowly to a new land. The weak died until the disease died out among them, and they arrived in a beautiful forest filled with a lake and herbs that the more medicine-oriented wolves remembered as useful for treating disease. They couldn’t find anything for the strange epidemic, but they doubted that it would come back anyway.
“The only problem with the mixed-breed group was that they numbered over a hundred. They couldn’t possibly make their own pack that large. At least, that was the logic of most of the wolves. One of them, Thunder, decided that he could find a way to overcome the population and make it work. So, one dawn, Thunder announced himself as leader of Thunderpack.
“This was, as some of you know, the first dawn.
“Needless to say, he didn’t. Food was scarce, and the lower-ranking wolves didn’t get any at all and died of starvation. Some wolves left the pack in rebellion. Some of the loners were captured by humans yet again. But the ones that stayed in the pack began to make a plan.
“The rebelling wolves told Thunder of their decision to leave and make their own pack, but he didn’t take them seriously. So the rebels attacked, killing many of their own kind and in turn, themselves. They were not prepared. Thunder and an older rebel wolf who couldn’t fight stood back and watched, helpless, as their armies destroyed each other.
“After dawns of bloodshed, Thunder and the old wolf called for peace. They announced that they would fight each other to save the remaining wolves.
“The fight lasted for seven dawns and nights. It was bloody, and no one knew how they both survived. But when they finally broke away, Thunder had been bested. The rebel wolves had won their freedom.
“But the fight had taken its toll on the old wolf. He staggered away, and then died in the shade of a tree. The rebels were stuck in a period of grief while trying to find a new leader.
“The good news, though, was that the dawn he died a young brown-and-white female stepped forward. And you all might want to listen, because this is how our pack was created. The female announced herself to be Sky, granddaughter of the old wolf. She said that, to prevent the bloodshed and high population, the wolves would split into two packs, one led by Thunder and the other by herself. She laid down the basic rules, detailing the life of a Healer, the role of a mother, the separate territories. She created the basic rules, and that’s why we call them Sky’s Laws, after her.
“The moment that the dawn ended- by the way, that was the second dawn- Sky and Thunder took their wolves, went their separate ways, and both lived long lives before dying peacefully. Sky carried pups many times, sadly only having one litter live, and Thunder became a father. The Dawns became an important part of our history, and the reason we came to be this way.”
Willow looked up at the audience. Light was asleep, Rose was exhausted-looking, Oak looked annoyed, and Holly was rolling her eyes. Only Hawk remained attentive, staring at her with wide, excited eyes as he always did. He obviously loved the story; after all, he’d filled in many of the blanks that Willow couldn’t. He was rather obsessed with peace and nonviolence, something that would come far too soon, but he was still a good wolf.
Contented and a little tired herself, Willow gestured that they should all leave. She watched each of them go, from the sleepy Light to the sarcastic Holly. Only Hawk actually stopped to say goodbye.
If only he knew how long he has to live.
Last edited by
hirokas on Thu May 03, 2012 5:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.