- Oct 22, 2022
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- 63
He's been at this for a while. The longest con that there is. Faking regularity against anguish's grueling rhythm. Hiding his emotional tracks by following trails to nowhere. Disobeying direct orders from the part him cursed to love. His grief for her had turned to ice so many cycles ago. He was of the mind he could carry on with his life as if nothing ever happened. Wounds are supposed to scab over, then heal and flake away. The frozen callous surrounding the hole she left in his chest instead thickened. Expanded. Festered.
It'd be unfathomable for him to expose the hideous emptiness she left him with to the air. It'd easily destroy his perfectly cultivated demeanor. It'd force him back into his own skin. Back to being the vulnerable mewling creature he ought to be. In over his ears in regret and pitiable despair.
Pressure mounts around the subject he keeps under pad. Cracks form in the shield. They've widened almost immeasurably in the past few moons, notably since his first litter all became warriors. A recurrent sequence in thought; Halfshade was deprived of seeing her little ones bloom. Garlicheart, Ashenfall, Applejaw, Swansong. She would've spoiled them rotten after they'd gotten their full names, there was no questioning. She was always so affectionate. Sweet in the heart and a sweetheart through and through. She was a tender peach down to the stem.
Another season is about to pass him by, for whispers of Greenleaf carry in the wind. That makes two seasons since she'd passed. A molly with many more sunrises to live. It was too soon.
Nailing down the exact moment of his collapse remains uncertain. Smogmaw is aware only to the nook he sits in at the hollow's edge, and the repeating pattern in his thoughts. Halfshade never saw a single one mature. Never saw a single one named.
The realisation hit like a falling tree, and with it, his heart fumbled to beat. Fumbling went to staggering, and staggering went to drumming, frantic. The camp around him blinked away to a blurry smear; tears clouded his vision.
Fortunately for his all-important image, it is raining. Droplets smacked his face at a fraction below torrential; at a fraction of what he truly deserved. The dampened air obscures his weeping for the most part. Only his expression gives it away—too loose to be a grimace, too tight to be neutral. He has not cried this way before, all riled emotion and taut muscles, body clenched for the drop. The feeling is surreal, this wet-nosed sputter, and his voice escapes in an accidental croak.
The lump in his throat ebbs away to dust. An acute twinge in the muscle below his eyes has replaced it, and heavy lids draw over unfocused irises. He tries to wipe them with a jittery paw, hoping to conceal the evidence.
It'd be unfathomable for him to expose the hideous emptiness she left him with to the air. It'd easily destroy his perfectly cultivated demeanor. It'd force him back into his own skin. Back to being the vulnerable mewling creature he ought to be. In over his ears in regret and pitiable despair.
Pressure mounts around the subject he keeps under pad. Cracks form in the shield. They've widened almost immeasurably in the past few moons, notably since his first litter all became warriors. A recurrent sequence in thought; Halfshade was deprived of seeing her little ones bloom. Garlicheart, Ashenfall, Applejaw, Swansong. She would've spoiled them rotten after they'd gotten their full names, there was no questioning. She was always so affectionate. Sweet in the heart and a sweetheart through and through. She was a tender peach down to the stem.
Another season is about to pass him by, for whispers of Greenleaf carry in the wind. That makes two seasons since she'd passed. A molly with many more sunrises to live. It was too soon.
Nailing down the exact moment of his collapse remains uncertain. Smogmaw is aware only to the nook he sits in at the hollow's edge, and the repeating pattern in his thoughts. Halfshade never saw a single one mature. Never saw a single one named.
The realisation hit like a falling tree, and with it, his heart fumbled to beat. Fumbling went to staggering, and staggering went to drumming, frantic. The camp around him blinked away to a blurry smear; tears clouded his vision.
Fortunately for his all-important image, it is raining. Droplets smacked his face at a fraction below torrential; at a fraction of what he truly deserved. The dampened air obscures his weeping for the most part. Only his expression gives it away—too loose to be a grimace, too tight to be neutral. He has not cried this way before, all riled emotion and taut muscles, body clenched for the drop. The feeling is surreal, this wet-nosed sputter, and his voice escapes in an accidental croak.
The lump in his throat ebbs away to dust. An acute twinge in the muscle below his eyes has replaced it, and heavy lids draw over unfocused irises. He tries to wipe them with a jittery paw, hoping to conceal the evidence.