What She Left Behind

1251 Words
After the dark-eyed Alpha left the room I sat on the edge of the bed for a long time and stared at nothing. My mind kept going backward, the way it does when the present is too painful to sit inside comfortably. It kept pulling me back to the beginning, to the first thread of the thing that had unravelled so completely two nights ago, searching for the moment where it all started to go wrong. I was fifteen the first time I saw Caden smile. Not the practiced one he gave the pack during official gatherings, the careful Alpha smile that was all authority and measured warmth. The real one, the one that started slow and reached his eyes before he could stop it. He had been watching two young pups chase each other around the training ground that afternoon, completely unaware that anyone was looking at him, and for about ten seconds he had looked like a completely different person. I had been completely unable to look away. We met properly that same summer at the annual pack gathering. He was seventeen and already being shaped into the Alpha he would become, already carrying himself with that quiet certainty that made people step back without knowing why. I had been standing at the edge of the food tables trying to look like I was not nervous when he walked over and stood beside me. He did not introduce himself because everyone already knew who he was. He just stood there for a moment and then said, "You're Lena's daughter." "Yes," I said. "She was a good wolf," he said, simply and directly. "I'm sorry she's gone." My mother had died three months before that gathering and I had not cried properly yet, not at the funeral, not in the weeks after, not once. I had been waiting without knowing I was waiting for someone to say the right thing. He said it without even knowing he was doing it, and I had to turn away before he saw my face. He stayed beside me anyway for the rest of the evening. We did not talk much, just stood together watching the rest of the pack, and somewhere in that quiet something inside me that had been loose and rattling since my mother died settled gently into place. I was sixteen when I understood that I loved him. I was eighteen when the mate bond confirmed it, that quiet certain hum between two wolves that says, without words or ceremony, this is the person. This one. I built everything around that feeling for the next three years, shaped my entire life around the certainty of it, turned down a transfer to the Eastern Pack when their Beta offered me a warrior position because I did not want to leave Caden's territory. I told myself his slowness was patience. I told myself the times he went quiet for days were the weight of Alpha responsibility. I told myself he felt what I felt and was simply taking his time. I was very good at telling myself things that made the waiting feel like wisdom instead of warning. My mother had tried to tell me something different, years before she got sick. I had been thirteen, sitting at the kitchen table while she braided my hair, when her hands went still and she was quiet for a moment in the way she got when she was choosing her words carefully. "Aria," she said. "Your blood is not ordinary." I laughed a little because I did not know what else to do with that. "What does that mean?" I asked. She did not laugh back. Her hands stayed still in my hair and her voice stayed low and careful. "It means you are going to be more than the people around you expect," she said. "More than they will be comfortable with. There will be people who try to make you smaller because your size frightens them." "Mama," I said, with all the patience a thirteen year old has for a parent being serious about something she does not understand. "You're being dramatic." She turned me around to face her then and I stopped smiling immediately because the look on her face was not dramatic at all. It was serious in a way I had rarely seen on her, steady and certain and slightly sad, like she was telling me something she wished she did not have to say. "Promise me something," she said. "What?" I asked. "That no matter what anyone does to you," she said, holding my face in both hands, "no matter what they take away or what they say about you, you will remember that your blood knows who you are. Even when you forget." I promised her the way you promise things at thirteen, quickly and sincerely and without understanding the full weight of what you are agreeing to carry. I filed it away somewhere underneath the years that followed and I did not take it out again, not once, not until right now. The infirmary ceiling came back into focus above me and I realized I had been lying down without noticing it, staring up at the wooden beams and letting my mind wander. The room smelled of herbs and pine and that unfamiliar pack scent that was going to take some getting used to. The rejection bond was still aching low and steady through the center of my chest, not the sharp tearing pain of the first night but a duller persistent throb that I was beginning to understand was just going to be part of my daily experience for a while. I pressed two fingers against the inside of my wrist and found my pulse, steady and even under my fingertips. Still here. Still going. That was something. The door opened and the healer came back in, carrying a fresh bandage in one hand and a small bowl of something warm-smelling in the other. She set both on the table beside the bed with brisk efficient movements and then reached for my arm without asking, which I had already learned was simply how she operated. She unwrapped the old bandage from my forearm carefully. I watched her face while she did it because I had learned in the last day that her face was useful for information, and what I saw there made something tighten in my stomach. Her hands slowed down. Her breathing changed slightly. She leaned closer to my arm and then closer still. I looked down at my own forearm. The cuts that had needed stitching two days ago, deep enough that I had felt the pull of the thread every time I moved, were almost completely closed. The skin was pink and smooth and clean, like wounds that were a week old rather than two days. I stared at them and they stared back at me and neither of us had an explanation. The healer looked up at me slowly. Her eyes were wide and very still. "How is that possible?" she said quietly, like she was asking herself as much as she was asking me. I looked at my arm and then back at her and I thought about my mother's hands in my hair and the promise I had made at thirteen that I had not understood until right now. I had no answer for her. But somewhere deep and quiet inside me, something was beginning to wake up.
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