Chapter 75: Fallout
Vampires did this and left her here in hopes we found her. The blood is fresh, I can smell it, the kill is still warm, and I can still feel
the traces of her heat and her scent around me as though her soul still lingers. Feel the ebbing away of her emotions and fears
in the air around us because they are still so recent and my gift homes in, tortured by what I can feel. They knew we were
looking for her and yet they waited until we were close enough to kill her completely and I don’t understand why.
Was this a game to them? It feels like they were luring us out here this far for fun and I look around trying to sense if this might
be a trap with so many of our kind out here, but there’s nothing. The vamps have retreated and gone and only the chaos they
have caused is left behind in the air around us. No hint or traces that they are close in anyway and not even the feeling of eyes
observing.
“Meadow... take Carmen and Lorey back to the house. They don’t need to be here for this.” Colton yanks my focus back to him
as he instructs, and Meadow appears behind me like a sudden shadow. I note that all the other packs are now flooding in to
where we are, so we’re grouped as one unit once more. Obviously Colton linked them, and Carmen’s scream brought them
zoning right in. Colton has lifted up to pull the trembling figure with him to their feet and I look away quickly as he hauls her into
another hug soothingly and let’s her weight rest against him. That stirring of dislike growing like a warm ember in my belly even
though I know he’s only being compassionate. He’s being the Alpha, and this is no time for feeling threatened.
“Come on you.” Meadow leans in to take charge of Carmen in Colton’s arms and I realize tears are still washing down my face
as I stare at them again in stupefaction. Cooling my skin as the air turns them from warm to icy cold. Hating myself that I feel
inner warm relief when she’s taken from my mate’s embrace and blush with shame at my own selfishness. I’m so stupidly
possessive of him sometimes that it’s not admirable.
The shock of what we have in front of us comes back into view as I stare in the direction of chaos and it pushes my own
emotions to quiet as Meadow guides Carmen past me. She seems to snap at the sudden release of his arms and makes a dart
for the remains of body once more in blind hysteria. A painful sob escaping her lips, but this time I am faster and she’s closer to
me than him. Meadow is startled by her sudden change of direction so that she loses grip for a second and I flash my hand up,
catching her in the air, holding her steady and pulling her around, lifting her from her feet and back towards me. As soft as air
and making her fly with my ability.
My gift never fails me, and I glide her to my side and hold her there as she gently meets ground once more, wide and eyed and
still after what I just did to her. The shock silences her completely and I release her once Meadow gets a grip on her hand and
wrist in a way that signals she won’t get loose a second time
“Carmen go home with Meadow.” Colton alpha tones her again, leaving no room for a second error and she reluctantly turns on
her heel. Her skin white and damp, her eyes empty and blurred and her whole body sags with sheer misery. Her whole aura is
that of grief.
“Lorey... come here, baby.” Colton moves to me, bringing my attention back to him as he pulls me into his arms and nuzzles me
close. With one moment of attentive affection, he wipes away my brewing green eyed monster and gives me the kind of hug that
no one else gets. The ‘I need you’ embrace that sweeps me up into him and holds me tighter than he held her, while burying his
face in the crook of my neck. Warming my skin with his deep exhale before pulling up to look me in the eye again. I melt like
liquid with his touch and allow him to wipe away my tears with gentle fingers. I can feel his own despair at what has happened,
and it weighs on me heavily. “We need to bury her. We can’t leave her like this. Go home and wait for me there, where it’s safe,
and warm, and see if you can help her... somehow. I don’t even know how. You’ve been through the loss of your mother, maybe
you can ...” Colton trails off at a loss, squeezes me tight, kisses me softly and wipes away the rest of my tears for me as I hug
him back. Aware that most of the wolves are now moving in to see what’s been done and a couple rush to the bushes to vomit.
Not all wolves can stomach things like this, and I’m actually shocked that I am not one who had to throw up on smelling and
seeing this. Maybe these months and what happened before have numbed a part of me more than I gave it credit for.
“I love you.” I breathe hastily, that inner insecurity peeking out at me because I am sometimes still that unworthy girl he rejected.
I give him a second kiss, more of a grazing of lips and he nestles his forehead to mine in the way he does when he’s trying to
reassure me. Maybe this time he needs me to ground him, his emotions are definitely on the needier and cast loose side than
mine are.
“I can’t believe I let this happen. I feel like I failed her..... Sun’s coming, so we can do this right and lay her to rest. I owe it to
Carmen and her mom to treat her with the respect of the pack..... Take two wolves as guards and go catch Meadow and get
home. Don’t hang around, especially not this far outside the borders. I don’t want you around this or helping. You shouldn’t be
near this... I love you, baby. Go home for me.” He sighs heavily and tightens his arms around me once more, craving me yet
needing me to leave him for now. I can feel his conflicted feelings and make it easier by letting him go with a nod.
Colton lets me loose and nods to two guards who appear beside me in the now dim and less dark light. I note he’s sending the
two who threw up, sensing neither will be any good at helping with what he has to do. They stand patiently and obediently wait
for me to move.
“With many wolves digging it should be fast and then....” He sighs knowing he has to somehow get that mess buried in some
kind of respectful way and I nod, knowing what he’s thinking. I don’t envy the task of clearing this up and putting every piece of
her and her blood in the ground to honor our ways. He may have to scorch the landscape and burn the surrounding landscape t
properly send her soul to the fates.
Taking one last much needed hug to try and calm my distraught heart I turn on my heel to go but pause a second. Knowing I
should catch up and stay close to Meadow, even if my powers make me more capable than most wolves but something crosses
my mind.
“I’ll ask the Shaman to start preparing a ceremony. Help Carmen with closure and allow her time to grieve. Give the pack a
proper funeral service to grieve a kin member...... Tawna’s mate?” I ask absentmindedly, knowing that Carmen maybe needs to
grieve two parents and not one and we should give her that, even if he’s not someone we should remember. Colton’s face tenses
and he signals yes with the slightest of head movements that makes my heart sink even further.
“Dead, the second her heart ceased to beat. My dad will be in chaos on the mountain too as he just lost his second in command.
Her death wasn’t for nothing but.... I would rather her here with us, than my father losing some control. Ask the Shaman to
mention them both, but only honor Tawna. This is for her, not them.” Colton’s eyes are filled with unshed tears once more and I
can only bite on my lip and agree with a nod, again crying softly despite the overwhelming empty and numb coursing through my
veins. All of this just feels so overwhelmingly awful that my brain can’t process sit at all. There’s a dark heaviness taking over me
that I know is sadness and I can barely breathe. I can’t imagine how carmen feels right now.
“Stay safe, don’t be long.” I add in haste, one last glimpse of his disheveled face and take off after Meadow with my two guards
in tow, making light of the distance in hyper speed. I try and focus on doing rather than feeling and aim to catch up.
I won’t be. I’ll follow once this done. Stay safe, Baby. Knowing your home will make me feel better about being here. Colton’s
voice follows me and in such a short time I manage to catch up to Meadow running with Carmen, although not at full speed as
Carmen seems to be struggling to pull herself together. I slow as I get to them and pull up on the free side of Carmen’s sagging
posture, pulling her arm into mine and holding her up a little. Her body is icy cold, giving off a wave of devastation around her
and she doesn’t even flinch at my touch.
She’s sobbing, staring blankly ahead as her feet stumble over debris she isn’t trying to avoid, and Meadow is struggling to keep
her on her feet, casting a glance at me that says ‘she’s a mess’. Overwhelming empathy runs over me, both from her and my
own internal emotion piping up at the sorrowful state of Carmen. I wish she didn’t see what she saw and I don’t blame Colton for
tackling her and holding her tight. No one needs to see someone they love end that way and it will forever haunt her. Knowing
her mom’s last moments were in terror and agony and untold suffering before she took her last breath.
What are we going to do with her when we get her home? Meadow breaks into my thoughts in a private link and I try and sort my
own emotions from the two invading next to me. Carmen’s despair is so strong I’m finding it hard to keep my own logic and mind
straight.
Take her to the med bay, maybe Doc Maigo can give her something to relax her and make her calm down, I don’t know. The
homestead looms into sight and the rustle behind us of the following guards alerts me that they are still close and keeping watch
over us. I turn and glimpse over my shoulder as I feel the physical change in the air of us crossing the frequency boundaries and
the static sizzle of safety that means we no longer need assistance. We’re safe.
“Go back and help. We don’t need you now. More hands make swifter work. Sun isn’t up yet and there are dangers for our pack
out there.” I order and get two unquestioned nods as both males turn and take off back towards my mate and my people in a
gust of breeze as they hyper speed away.
Meadow gets tired of dragging Carmen and stops to hoist her over her shoulder in an unresisted maneuver and frees our clumsy
deadweight. She takes off in front of me at speed and I follow, running and skipping through the last half mile of forest floor and
fallen trees until we end up on the illuminated gravel drive. More wolves are out here, some of the less capable sentinel guards
which were left behind, so the house was not completely unprotected, and some from the village have ventured out to find out
what’s going on. Mostly concerned males worried their families are in danger because news spread fats that most of the capable
had spread into the woods to chase Tawna.
“Everything is okay.... Go back to your homes and we will call a meeting for the whole village before noon. To explain. The pack
will be home shortly and there’s no need to worry about them, sun’s coming, and all is quiet now.” I announce as loudly as I can
before following Meadow indoors and we head straight for the sick room. I know those who heard me will pass the message on
and I hope it brings some calm back to those left behind.
We have twenty-four seven staff in our medical bay because we never know when we may need it so I am relieved to see the
Doctor and a nurse coming to Meadow’s aid. Since moving here to damper air, the children have been getting sick sometimes,
and with playful fearless wolf cubs, they injure themselves frequently.
Carmen has stopped fighting at all, in any kind of way and seems to have ceased responding emotionally. Silent, numb, and
staring at nothing as she’s manhandled like a wet rag and does nothing to stop us. It’s like her mind has left the building and all
that’s left is a broken empty shell of shock and I wonder if life finally played that last hand at her that snapped what was left of
her mental strength.
I walk behind Meadow; Carmen’s body is limp, her face partially concealed by her masses of blonde hair but there’s a heavy
ambience of surreal calm because she is so motionless. Her sobbing has stopped and it’s like all her energy is gone. She’s
defeated and broken and despite our past I have never felt so much sorrow and pain for anyone as I do in this moment. Maybe
it’s because I know what it’s like to lose your parents in one fell swoop, your whole family, when they were all you have. Maybe
it’s because I too witnessed the horrifying death by vampire of my home family of rejects and still live with the memory of their
blood and bodies scattered across the ground, much like we found Tawna. Either way, my heart pangs for the girl before me and
I internally cry for her pain.
Vampires are ruthless and brutal killers. They leave mess and chaos and rip their victims to shreds when the frenzy to feed takes
them. In the case of wolves, they can’t drink too much of our blood or it kills them, and it somehow makes the murder more
violent. They tend to leave nothing but remains spread across the countryside when they battle our kind. An act of violence
purely because they hate our kind.
“Luna Alora, it’s my pleasure. How may I assist.” The doctor gracefully moves towards Meadow who is rolling Carmen from her
shoulder onto the bed and flops her back against cushions. Carmen has no fight in her, her skin ashen and her eyes are red
rimmed yet lifeless as she continues to silently gaze into the air. Her mind somewhere far away. Tears roll down her pale cheeks
sorrowfully as the warm voice smooths over her, showing a hint of acknowledgement she hears her, but she stares at the ceiling
regardless. I gesture the doctor aside and pull her close with a hushes tone.
“Her mother was killed in the forest by vampires tonight.... she saw the remains..... it was traumatizing. Both her parents are
now dead. She needs emotional help to get through the shock and despair tonight until this sinks in and she’s more able to
process what’s happened.” My voice trembles as I push the memory aside and focus on the task at hand.
“I’ll sedate her for now. Let her sleep, as it might be the last she gets for some time when she wakes up. I’m so sorry.” The doctor
is one of our gentler femmes, with compassion and a big heart. She trained with humans in a medical university and learned a lot
about mental health and ways to deal with human reactions to certain things. Death to wolves is not as normal as humans, so
our grieving can be completely horrific when we do lose someone we love. I guess that’s the downside to being almost unkillable
and having long life spans.
The doctor moves aside as Meadow comes to my side and they switch places. The doctor checking over Carmen and wiping her
tears away as she checks her pulse, and temperature and generally looks her over. Meadow sighs heavily and casts me an
intense look that translates to ‘I feel helpless, I wish I could do something’. Despite her history with carmen, Meadow is still a
caring wolf and wouldn’t wish this on anyone, even her. I nod knowing this is exactly how I feel, and I gesture her further from the
bed in a bid to give them space to let the Doctor do what she needs to do.
“Doc is going to let her sleep; we should take it in turns to sit by her until she’s more with it. I’ll ask sierra too, maybe for a few
days we can rotate and switch out femmes to comfort and support her. So she’s not alone.” I don’t know what else to do as I was
so young and surrounded by grief when I lost my own family that it was completely different. We have been at peace for years so
the horror of losing our people isn’t as numbed out as it was a decade ago. I have no experience of how to comfort someone
else in this way when I was never comforted in any kind if way at all.
“Luna Alora, Luna Alora!” A wolf bursts into the med bay startling us out of our huddled somber and makes me jump with the
speed and urgency in which he shot in. We spin on him, glaring to pipe down seeing as he startled the crap out of everyone.
“What is it?” I ask in a harsh tone, hating how panicked he looks and the raised high pitch of a distressed tone coming through
his words. My stomach churning in unease at this interruption and my gut instantly tells me something is off.
“Come quickly, there’s something ... in the air.” He throws his hands up, look somewhat confused and beckons us.
“What?” Meadow and I exchange glances and follow him at speed, leaving Carmen with the doctor and her capable care and
speed outside to the main entranceway of the drive to see what he’s talking about.
Sure enough, just like he said there’s some sort of green smog in the air in the far distance of the mountain, which seems to be
rolling down and into the forest at great speed like a heavy blanket sliding over the landscape. It’s like smoke, or a dense cloud
and the rate it’s moving is alarmingly fast and swallowing all things in sight wherever it slides.
Colton something is coming towards the pack.... a fog. Get back here NOW!! I link rapidly, in panic and fear, reaching out to my
mate in case he hasn’t looked up and seen it heading his way. I don’t know what it is, but all my senses are telling me they
should get the hell away from it and get back here to safety behind the rune border.
“What the hell is that, Chica?” Meadow stares at the same thing I am fixated on and we watch in horror as it splays out and
spreads sideways through the forest, expanding as it travels and encompassing everything as it moves. It seems to extend and
move widthways until it starts to curve around the homestead at a distance and still continues to head this way. It seems to be
grower larger and denser and picking up speed.
We see it, we’re moving. It’s fast as hell and almost here. I have them heading back. Colton quiets some of my anxiety by
responding and I will him to get here. Whatever it is it’s not natural and the way it came down from the mountain raises all kinds
of alarms. We long ago figured the vamps use the mountain to stay close enough to mount attacks, maybe have tunneled
inwards, and they definitely use it as a vantage point to look over the lands surrounding. We know they have witches, and I don’t
like whatever this is, even if it might be nothing more than a harmless strange colored fog.
Colton it’s spreading. It’s taking over the forest and circling us. My mind link doesn’t hide the panic in my voice, and it wobble
uncontrollably, my heart racing as all I can do is watch this monster smog eat our landscape so effortlessly.
Stay in the homestead boundary. It may be a way to let the vamps move in daylight now the suns coming up. Stay behind the
runes. We’re coming.
I grab Meadow’s hand in a tight grip as we watch and I can tell by her fixated gaze on the fog she’s linking Cesar, checking on
her mate as it moves at us with deadly haste. It feels like an eternity and not the few seconds it’s been in reality. Both poised,
numbly quiet and just waiting.
Where are you now? Colton, how far?
I tap my foot on the ground, aware my feet are human again, naked, and I’m standing on gravel but oblivious to the pain. My only
focus is them, my heart and soul out there who needs to come to me so I can be sure he’s safe.
Not far, it’s almost......
I wait for him to finish his sentence then glance at Meadow again as nothing comes. She screws up her face indicating
something is up with her link to Cesar too. I can feel it between us, the swirling rise of concern and panic as we both wait out this
endless silence.
Colton? What were you trying to say. I ask, waiting patiently but no response at all comes through the link. Instead, an eerie
solitude that I haven’t experienced for a long time, not since Colton cut me off many moons again when he rejected me swirls
around me. It starts to dredge up my inner anxiety with a fury as I pull at my mind to make the connection but feel like I’m facing
a blank dark wall. Meadow moves forward and she stares at the tree line, seemingly trying to concentrate real hard and I realize
she maybe too has lost her link to Cesar. This is not a coincidence.
“He’s not responding anymore.” I point out, distress rising in my throat and I watch as she moves as far to the edge of the trees
as she dares. Her face stiff, her eyes wild and dampening by the second as hysteria rises in her and points ahead suddenly with
a shaking finger.
“I think I can see them in the woods..... moving fast but the fog it’s with them, all around them.”
I move beside her, my heart lurching into my throat and stare as far as I can see into the woods and strain to distinguish in the
dim light of dawn. The woods are dense but she’s right and I spot dark shadows in semi wolf form hammering this way like
lightning and sigh with relief. Exhaling heavily as my body loosens lightly and I almost laugh as emotions swirl and cave in
indescribable joy.
“Maybe the fog stops the gifts, like the frequency does?” I point out and Meadow shakes her head and points out into the
shadows.
“I could have sworn some are turned and in wolf form so surely that means their gifts are fine. We need to get closer to the
boundary, something is stopping them from getting closer, it’s been too long.... look, they haven’t come nearer.” I stop my inward
rejoicing and turn and look where she’s gazing to see for myself that she’s right. Despite being close enough to leap home in
under a second, they aren’t appearing beyond the rune border but instead seem to be lingering on the other side of it. I move
beside her and nudge her.
“We don’t need to. Here.” I lift my hands, flattening them palm to palm and point forwards as though slicing into the forest and
slowly move them apart, splitting the trees and pushing foliage and branches back with my gift. Clearing a passage of sight so
we can view all the way to the border of the boundary. A tunnel of unrestricted vision where I can see the fog has met the border
and seems to be rolling up into the invisible protective wall and climbing higher to get past it. It’s smothering all beyond in a
dense haze which makes it hard to really see anything.
Sierra’s family magic is keeping it back but it’s completely clouding our wolves from sight with the thick fog and we can’t see any
of them coming our way.
“Why aren’t they coming?” I ask numbly, fear slowly dwindling around me once more and I know if Colton could link me, he
would. He isn’t able to. We have a break in communication because whatever that stuff is it’s doing something to keep them out
there.
“I have to go look; I can’t leave them out there in this with no contact.” Meadow’s voice breaks, her tears becoming evident as
she loses the will to hold them in anymore, her own emotions stifling me. Her love for her mate and her pack reigning supreme
and I can’t argue with her. My need to know Colton and my pack are okay overwhelms me too, and I walk past her, against
Colton’s wishes, and head to the tunnel I am still holding apart. Meadow follows without question, without hesitation, both holding
our breath in anticipation and we carefully, slowly, walk the long distance until we come almost level with the smog.
“Look” Meadow points up and we see from this angle how it’s risen more than thirty feet up, still blocked by our protective barrier
and doesn’t seem to be able to climb any higher. Instead, it’s travelling the entire perimeter of the boundary, spreading, and
looking back I see it’s far behind the other side of the homestead at an equal distance. Surrounding us on all sides and leveling
itself off, but it can’t pass the rune border and it’s still too dense to make out the pack out there among the trees.
For the time being, we’re cut off, with no links, no visual and I stand here motionless unsure what we are meant to do.