Max
âHave you ever considered...maybe you canât find her because she doesnât want to be found?â
My listless wolf reared up with defensive anger at Willâs suggestion. I was unprepared for the flood of distressed pain that came from him at the idea that she might intentionally be staying away from me or the rage that surged in its wake. âWhat are you suggesting?â I asked, my growl leaking into my voice.
âIâm not saying she doesnât. But think about it, man. Like we said, itâs been three years, and at the beginning, it made sense you couldnât find her. Everyone was fleeing and hiding, worried that Stonemason would be coming after them. But now, itâs not like that anymore. Youâve basically managed to find every known survivor but her, you donât think thatâs a strange coincidence?â
âIâve basically managed to find every survivor but her and her father,â I corrected, trying to keep my voice steady, and forcibly unclenched my fists. Will wasnât the enemy. He wasnât trying to be harsh or cruel, he was trying to help. It wasnât his fault that my wolf chose this moment to feel murderous or that I was no longer used to controlling my animal nature. It had been so long since my wolf had reacted to anything...
âThen do you think heâs the reason why sheâs disappeared?â Will asked.
âNo.â
âHe did oppose you.â
âNot really. He just didnât want her knocked up when we were in high school.â It had been frustrating at the time, but not unreasonable. One day, ifâno, whenâI found her, and we had children, Iâd probably feel the same way.
Will sighed. âIf she wanted to find you, she would have by now.â
âStop saying that.â
âWhy not? Itâs true. There are a hundred ways she could have found you by now if she wanted to. All sheâd have to do would be to find one other survivor and they could direct her on. Or even stumble upon one of the countless people youâve spoken to while searching.â
I gritted my teeth and held in the next growl that was threatening to tear out of me. âIf she hasnât found me yet, itâs because she canât. I know Lillian better than I know myself, and she would never willingly leave me like this. Something happened, and thatâs all the more reason that I need to find her.â
âAnd youâre sure sheâs still alive?â
âWhy does everyone keep fucking asking me that!?â
Will didnât flinch at my tone. âBecause itâs a reasonable question, Max.â
âI can still feel her.â I growled. âThe pack bond snapped, but our mate bond is alive, and that means sheâs alive, and that means that she must need me. Itâs the only thing I know, and if I have to spend the rest of my life searching, thatâs what Iâll do.â
âCalm down. I just wanted toââ
A stray thought, an idea, a small hope crossed my mind and flipped my wolfâs attention over like a switch. Will wasnât an enemy, he was an ally. âYou...â
âWhat about me?â
âYouâre good at magic, good enough to be a professor here. Good enough to transform yourself into a jaguar.â
âYeah. So?â
âYou could trace the bond between Lillian and I.â
Will was instantly wary, holding himself more stiffly than usual. âI probably could, but itâs against the witchcraft ethics agreements. If I got caught, I could end up before a disciplinary committee or living as a pariah.â
âWho says youâd get caught? And since when have you cared about the rules?â
âYouâre not asking me to ignore rules, Max. Youâre asking me to use magic on something as deep as your very essence. Lillianâs essence! And even if I were willing to do it, you want me to perform potentially dangerous magic without her consent.â
âShe would want you to, if this is just about your ethics agreements.â I ignored his concerns and watched him steadily. Finding her was more important than petty idealism. This might be the break I had searched so long for.
âForget ethic agreements. The ways that sort of power could be abused are countless. There are things you just donât do. You donât mess with the dead. You donât use magic to impede free will. And you sure as hell donât fuck with bonds that are wrapped up in peopleâs souls.â
âWould it hurt her?â That was the one thing I wouldnât risk.
âProbably not if I were just looking. But I donât know. Itâs not like Iâve spent a lot of time researching forbidden magic.â It was a pointed jab.
âDo it for me. Please, Will.â I wasnât above begging.
His form was tense. âNo.â
âI need her back. I need your help. I canât ask this of anyone else.â
âYou canât ask this of me, either. Itâs too much.â
âIâve been through too much.â
âWe all have.â
My shoulders slumped and my wolf again struggled inside me, wanting to break out andâI didnât even know what. All he knew was that he had to do something, anything, to find her. His desperation was my own and I would do anything, break anything, if it would get her back. I met Willâs eyes accusingly.
âYou werenât there.â Was it wrong to play on his guilt over Glenhaven? Maybe, but I didnât care, not with my wolf pushing me towards my singular goal.
âAre you blaming me for not being there?â Will asked, instantly on edge.
âYes. No. Maybe if you had been there, it could have turned the tide. Maybe you owe me. I savedââ
âIâm grateful that you saved my sisterâs life, but youâre fucking insane if you think that having one more substandard warrior there would have changed anything.â
âIt might have.â
âIt wouldnât have. You know I wasnât much of a fighter.â
His stubbornness further aggravated my wolf and my temper. The results of the Glenhaven massacre wasnât his fault, but he was refusing to help me. He was just another roadblock, just another disappointment, after years of disappointments. âWeâll never know if you could have helped back then because you were too busy playing with magic and becoming a big shot mage, right?â
âFuck you.â
âAnd you werenât there, while we fought for the life of our pack and our family.â
Will got to his feet like he was going to storm out of his own apartment, but then he whirled around and faced me. âDo you think it was so easy for me? Do you? I was in my fucking dorm room and was woken up in the middle of the night by the snapping of every connection Iâd ever had. No idea what happened, unable to contact anyone to find out. I didnât know who was alive or dead!â
âWhile I was fighting for my life, and the life of everyone we loved.â
âAnd I would have been doing the same if I had been there.â Will raked his hand through his dark curls in frustration.
âBut you werenât there. But you can help me now.â I watched the internal conflict play out across his face.
âNo. Iâm not doing it. And fuck you and your attempt to manipulate me!â
Under the pounding of my wolfâs furious determination in my skull, his words hit home and highlighted just what I was doing to someone who didnât deserve it. My shoulders sagged like a marionette with cut strings, and I forced myself to meet his angry, betrayed eyes. He was shaking with some heavy emotion, and he looked away from me. The rejection hit me viscerally, and guilt stung me. What had I done?
âYouâre right. I am sorry, Will.â He was my friend, my best friend, even if disparate experiences had carved a gulf between us.
âFine.â He was still angry and walked to the small kitchen and cracked open another drink.
âIâm just...Iâm running out of direction. Itâs been so long. My wolf is desperate and I let him influence me.â
âI know. Iâm sorry, too,â he said. âI wish I could help.â
âI just canât give up. I have nothing else. Sheâs my mate. And thereâs nothing more important.â
Will returned to his spot beside the unmarked papers. He leaned his head back, looking straight towards the corner of the opposite ceiling instead of at me. âI havenât found my mate yet, and my wolf is getting restless. Do you think Iâve never been tempted to try it for myself? Find a way to see and follow those thin wisps of connection between me and a stranger who would be the most important person in the world if I could only find her? But I donât. I just wait and hope.â
âThis isnât like before I found her, Will. I canât go on like this forever. You think this is living? My wolf is all but gone most of the time, and every time he gets his hopes up and gets let down again he retreats a little bit further. You know what Iâve done these past three years? Iâve searched for Lillian. Iâve watched, and listened, and smelled for any sign of her. Other than that? Iâve protected Kain, and supported my friends and the new pack. But even that is for Lillian, because I know she would want me to, or because I need somewhere safe for her to live when I find her.â
âYouâre selling yourself short. Even without her, you would still do those things.â
I shrugged. âMaybe. Without her, why would I even bother? Why not just go rogue? I need to find her. This is a half life, and the only thing that keeps me going is the fact that I am going to find her. And if I have to violate some ethics to do so, Iâm going to do it. I get you donât want to violate your conscience, but what if you just taught me how? I couldââ
âIâm not teaching you how to do something that dangerous. Youâve got no magical knowledge, and even if you did, this isnât something you can just find in a random book. And even if it was, canât you imagine what would happen if someone with ill intent figured out how to exploit and manipulate the bonds between wolves? It could destroy the entire werewolf population. Itâs our biggest weakness. If you control a mate, you control a wolf.â
He was right.
My wolfâs hope was exhausted and he had faded back to barely a whisper again. I was so alone.
âââââ
Authorâs Note:
Did I write another (initially) depressing story? Apparently! I swear I donât see it until Iâm getting it ready to post. Sowwy! XD
Thanks for reading!