The One 11
The One He Claimed
THE ONE 11
Chapter 11: Injured 288 Mouchers Chapter 11: Injured Sophie Penny woke me up in the middle of the night and I took my shift, watching and making sure that we stayed safe while she slept. About an hour before sunrise, I woke her. I could see a train station coming ahead and we needed to get off this train before anyone spotted us. As the train starts to slow, I strip out of my clothes and put them in my bag, shifting back into my wolf. I make sure that Penny is doing the same, then I grab my bag in my mouth and wait until the train slows as much as I feel I can let it before I need to jump. I find a spot with grass, and I leap, quickly turning to watch and make sure that Penny joins me and lands safely. Her landing isnât as graceful as mine and it looks as though she might have twisted her ankle. I race over to her, sniffing her leg. I nudge her with my nose and wait. She puts weight on her leg and almost instantly, she lifts it again, a painful yelp escaping her lips. I look around. We are very exposed here and as soon as the sun. comes up, anyone close by will be able to see us. We need to get to the forest, and we need to do it quickly. I shift and quickly take Pennyâs paw in my hand. I gently move my hand up to the knee joint where she flinched, whimpering as I touch it. âIâm going to have to carry you Penny. We canât stay here, we 25:130 Chapter 115 Injured 1 have to move.â She shakes her head, pushing me with her nose, telling me to leave her. âIâm not leaving you. I know itâs going hurt to shift, but I need you to shift, and then you can climb on my back. Iâll carry you. Weâve got to get to the forest before the sun comes up,â I tell her urgently. When she doesnât instantly shift, take her face in my hands. âWe donât have much time. Itâs going to
be hard enough for me to travel carrying you. We have to go, Penny. You have to shift.â She nods, and I release her face. She whimpers as she begins to shift and when her leg shifts back, she cries out before slapping her hand over her mouth. Her knee looks terrible. Itâs swollen and already bruising an ugly purple color. âThatâs going to take some time to heal. Come on, we need to get going.â I help her up into a standing position, grabbing both of our bags and handing them to her. Once she has them over her shoulders, I turn, crouching down in front of her and I help her the good leg around my waist, and get onto my back. She wraps I carefully wrap my arm underneath the thigh of her bad leg. She whimpers softly as she bends her knee and lets it hang. âIâm going to have to run Penny, so just hang on.â âOkay, just hurry,â she says and I can hear the pain in her voice. I take off running as fast as I can. I run in the opposite direction of the train station and train tracks. It looks like thereâs a mile, Chapter 11 Injured â maybe two, before I can get to what looks like a forest. I hope thatâs what it is. I hope itâs a thick forest, where we can hide and maybe find a place to let Penny rest and heal. When I get to the tree line, the sun is just starting to rise and I can see very quickly that this is no thick forest. This is just a smattering of trees, and weâll have to continue on. Penny pushes her face against my back as I run. I can hear her whimpering periodically, but she keeps the sounds as quiet as she possibly can. I frequently stop listening to make sure that no one is following us, that no one has caught our scent. This is a bad situation, and it would be very easy for us to be captured. Somewhere around noon, I stop near a lake, sitting Penny on the ground. I need to catch my breath and she needs to stretch out her legs. Thankfully the trees have gotten thicker as Iâve run. Iâm still moving in the general direction of my parentsâ pack, hoping that itâs them leaving the food out. I know weâll need to be more careful as we get closer to my parentsâ pack. There are several wolf packs in the surrounding area. I donât know how many of those Alphas have found their mates, but
Iâm sure if they havenât, theyâll be on the hunt for one. I take our water bottles and fill them quickly in the cool lake coming back and handing one to Penny as I sit beside her. I drink the water quickly, thirsty after my long run. Then Llook down at her knee. âHow does it feel?â I ask her. âBetter,â she says. I look at it and see that itâs turned into a yellow and green brdise from the ugly black and purple that it was earlier today. Thatâs a good sign that itâs healing, but the fact that itâs still bruised means itâs not healed enough. 21:13 1 âDo you want to try walking on it?â I ask her. âYeah, let me at least try and if nothing else, maybe I can walk for a while. The forest has gotten thicker here.â âOkay,â I agree, knowing it would be better if I can look around, see if I can find a place for us to hide tonight. I pull out two more granola bars from my bag and hand her one before taking our water bottles down to the lake and refilling them. âLetâs try walking around the lake, maybe thereâs an area here where we can hide for the night, or at least let you rest until your knee is healed. It looks like it should be fine by tomorrow and then we can both begin to run. âIâm holding you back. You should just go without me,â she says, âIâm not leaving you here. Youâre at risk at being captured. Iâm not going to do that to you.â She nods and surprises me by reaching out to hug me. âThank you.â âThatâs what friendâs do.â âI wish we were the kind of friends who could stay together and not have to separate in another day or so.â âMe too. Maybe someday. We can hope.â I help her up and wrap her arm around my shoulder before we begin making our way slowly around the lake. We both listen intently for the sounds of footfalls, running paws, growls, or howls of any kind. © - All rights reserved.
Itâs slow going as Penny limps her way around the lake trying not to put too much weight on her bad knee. Once weâre around the Lake, I look around and see that away from the lake, the forest becomes thicker with trees. âWhat do you think, Penny? The lake or the forest for tonight?â She looks around, then looks back at the forest. âI feel too exposed here by the lake. I feel like anyone in the area will come here to get water, and then they will find us.â âI agree. I think itâs time for you to climb back on my back. Iâd like to make some good time and get away from this lake. As soon as someone catches our scent, theyâll come after us and Iâd like to be far enough away that we still have a chance.â âWhy donât we swim across? If we get in the water, our scent will be lost, and it will take a long time for them to find our scent again. If we swim straight across, we can get out and then cut left heading north again.â âAre you sure your knee can handle it?â I ask her, worried about her ability to swim. Itâs why I hadnât already suggested that we cross the lake. âIâd rather take longer to heal than to get caught,â she says resolutely. âOkay, letâs do it. Weâll swim together. Iâll carry our bags and keep them over my head. You worry about swimming and keeping your head afloat.â We strip off our clothes and make our way into the water. Itâs cold and my body is covered in goosebumps almost immediately. Once weâre submerged in the water, Penny looks at me. Her lips have already started turning blue. 211 Chapter 11: Injured âAt l-l-least the c-c-cold f-f-feels g-g-good against m-m-my knee,â she stutters with the cold. I nod, focusing on keeping our bags over my head as I use my legs to kick and push me across the lake. Penny uses her arms, pulling her body behind her, letting her bad leg drag limply in the water.
Thankfully, there isnât much of a current. The problem is the cold. By the time we reach the other side, the sun is starting to set. We get out and I immediately grab clothes out of both our bags, handing hers to her and putting mine own on. Once weâre dressed, I give Penny our bags and I help her get on my back again. It takes me about a mile to work out the cold and the stiffness in my joints. But after that I get into a rhythm and begin running. This time itâs not as painful for Penny. And sheâs able to listen for sounds of others chasing us while I focus on running and finding a place where we can be safe for the night. While Iâm running, I cross the path of a small Alpha hunting group. So rather than stopping, I continue on much longer than I intended to. Itâs well into the night when we finally find a place to stop. We both collapse, exhausted. Neither of us even bothers to change. We put our bags under our heads and fall asleep. Itâs late the next day when we wake. I step out of the little shelter I found and sniff the air, looking around. We had both been so tired that we hadnât kept watch, but I donât hear anything, and I donât smell anyone. I turn back and I look at Penny. Sheâs checking out her knee and it looks much better than it did yesterday. Chapter 11: Injured âHow does it feel?â I ask her. âBetter. Healed,â she says. âGood. I donât think weâre too far from where weâre supposed to be based on the directions you gave me. If we run hard, I think we can be there in a couple of hours, early afternoon at the latest. Then you can have some food and maybe youâll be nice enough to share the water with me,â I smile at her. âIâll share both the food and the water with you,â she says. âYouâve been so kind and so generous to me.â âLetâs just see whatâs there. Letâs hope that there really is food and water.â We pack up our things and we start slow, making sure that Penny is able to run on her injured leg. But it seems that itâs healed, if not completely, then almost completely, so we begin running much
harder. Itâs early afternoon when we arrive. We slow down and I let Penny take the lead. She has a better idea of where sheâs going. The terrain here has become much rockier than the forest, and we have to be careful. I lift my nose in the air, sniffing to see if I smell any Alphas in the area. What I smell has me stopping in my tracks. I smell the scent of a she-wolf. Thatâs expected. Itâs not one that I recognize, but it makes sense that a she-wolf is the one leaving the food and water for us. Itâs the other scent that makes me stop. The scent of pine, the scent of home. âMate,â Hedda says.