She’s nose-deep in yarrow and winterfat when something shifts in the clearing behind her — not the scrape of claws against the frostbitten earth, not the familiar rumble of a greeting or the scent of the stony Court, but a sense of proximity, and of being watched.
“Sparrow,” the herbalist hums. Her teeth click delicately against the tangled roots. She paws silken leaves away. “What brings you out all this way? Did Oriole lose a squabble with a squirrel again?” The packleader’s jaw presses against her shoulder blades. Spider turns and noses along the dark line of Sparrow’s mouth. Catches the earth smell of the Crown, now, imprinted deep into Sparrow’s fur. The smell of snow, too, and of Shrike, warm and familiar. “Thrush smelled an intruder at the edge of the taiga,” Sparrow says, matter-of-fact. “Legatus found the remains of a rabbit, too. I was hoping you’d have time to lend a paw. The Crown has been hungry.” Her eyes are sharp, but her teeth are soft, for now. Not for long, Spider thinks, mulling it over. “Shrike?” she asks. “He’s busy.” “Mmm,” Spider says. She rubs her cheek against Sparrow’s. “Well then, it’ll just have to be the two of us.” -♕- They aren’t hunters, but this particular intruder leaves an easy trail — here, the ragged pelt of a rabbit, the bloody ribs blooming from the snow like a flower; there, the scrape of pawprints through the snowdrifts, meandering northward. Sparrow prowls through the wooded hollow, and Spider follows in her wake with a sour wrinkle of her muzzle against the howl of the wind. But they come upon the lone wolf suddenly, cresting a barren outcropping to find a lanky gray wolf chewing a bone clean. He startles at the sight of them — leaps to his feet and snarls stiffly. His muzzle and paws are streaked with red, but there’s a desperation about him, Spider thinks, that suggests he hasn’t eaten in days before this. Sparrow’s stride lengthens. Spider, like a shadow, glides after her. “Stay back!” the wolf snarls. His teeth flash shiny in the dying light. Later Spider will wonder what it is that he sees in them — whether his fear stems from the chill of Sparrow’s fixed stare, or the quiet intent of their paws across the frost, or the glint of teeth and hungry, impatient breath. But they’ve gone over this before at the Spire, rehashing duty and morality and cold necessity. The gray wolf bristling and pacing, caged by silent stone, might be any other frightened trespasser that has come to the Court before, discounting the stories of the needy land. But words and bartering, all the polite predecessors of a fair fight, go nowhere when the Crown whispers to be fed. Sparrow lunges, and the gray wolf screams. -♕- Spider drags him to the Crown, after. It isn’t far, but the wolf is heavy despite his lanky frame, unwieldy to navigate through the dense, clinging underbrush. Her breath comes in harsh pants by the time they lay him at the Crown’s center, and she leans against Sparrow’s flank as the packleader arranges the splayed limbs, the reddened mouth. “He was weak,” Sparrow says at last, the first she’s spoken since the gray wolf dragged his last guttering breath. She seems disappointed as she circles the wolf’s body, licks her teeth clean. Spider shrugs. “Blood is blood.” “Hm,” Sparrow says. Her eyes focus briefly on Spider. “I suppose.” “Besides, better weak than a fighter.” Spider’s lip draws upward. She peels herself away from Sparrow’s side and noses through the overgrown brush, searching for leafy fronds to lay across the wolf’s cooling body. “It’s bad morale for packleaders to come home injured.” “I would hate to dent your herb supply,” Sparrow agrees dryly, but her eyes brighten minutely, too, and after a moment she rises and pads across the clearing to help Spider. Together they draw long, dark plants across the red and silver body, create a soft path of leaves and vines from the gray wolf to the Crown. Sacrifice, Spider thinks as she lays the last frond across the gray wolf’s open, empty eyes, must be beautiful. The wilds do not always provide something worthy of the Crown’s hunger, but even the most haggard offering may be made beautiful. Sparrow leans down, quiet again. Her teeth reopen the gray wolf’s throat, delicate, deliberate, precise. She steps away, and the violent spill of blood soaks into the thirsty, waiting earth, and something in the still night and the silent Crown seems, very distantly, to sigh and to settle. |