forgive him, father, for he knows not what he does
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OOC: Sorry for the delay in getting this up! 500+


Hell and damnation, would the rain never end? To Lubomir, it seemed as if the gods themselves had decided to empty buckets upon buckets of water, drenching all the land in it. It came from the sea, it came from the mountains, it came from the plains, all this water, and it sapped Dahlia of light and colour, all sound replaced by the splatter of water on the rooftops of Wolfville and Berwick. The grey wolf was at his tether's end about his beloved library. With the events of summer now come and gone, with his addiction to alcohol increasing somewhat, his disdain for the Library had also increased. After the night in the lighthouse he'd returned home, chastised and even more confused, but he'd tackled his apathy head-on. Which was why today, of all days, he was running in and out of the library, trying to salvage as much as possible. The roof, where he had fixed it after meeting Alexey, was looking much better now. However, other spaces had started falling apart and his books would suffer for it. Outside the Library he'd gathered as many crates as he could carry and in them, in the brief pause of the downpour, he was stacking works upon works, books of inconceivable value, before putting a tarpaulin over them and securing it to the ground, to make sure no water could leak.


It was a gruelling task and once again, he would undertake it alone. Well, it would clear his body of the toxins, that much was for sure. Lubomir paused once, to look up at the sky. It was rolling over his pack like a grey monster, bringing flooding and melancholy in its wake. He recalled the warm summer days that would sometimes last for weeks in the Old Country. The winters would chill every bone in your body, sure, but that was what summers were for, to come alive with joy and celebrate. Here, the cold seeped into the lands and insinuated itself among the wolves. There were days when he could not get out of bed, the sadness was too overwhelming. He would think of drinking and only the presence of his beloved would stop him. Lubomir wondered if he should call for her, but he'd sensed a wall between them, ever since admitting to drinking with the coyote. She had not left him, but how much longer until she did?


The wing of the Library where the water could do the most damage was empty of books now. Lubomir climbed a ladder and started working on the exterior of the roof, careful not to slip. For all his age, he was still agile and the realisation of this gave him a welcome boost of energy. He'd do fine. As long as it didn't rain until he was finished here, he would be just fine. With a wag of his tail, he started humming an old lullaby he'd heard from his sister, just to pass the time, to make the loneliness bearable.





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#2
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Slaying the Dreamer
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What delay? Smile


It was hard to imagine such a large creature acting bashful, but that was surely the best word for how Dahlia's head hunter was acting at the moment.


He had only recently learned how to shift for the first time - five years old, and only now - and to be frank, he was not enjoying it so far. It felt like he was going to topple onto his face with every lurching step he took, and it all seemed so... unnatural. It had been drilled into him as a child - walking on two legs was taboo. No wolf needs hands. Keep things the way nature intended. And while he had run away from home, and shed most of his superstitions and pointless traditions, this was a hard habit to break.


The lumbering werewolf moved cautiously behind the faded buildings of the town, his wide footpaws sinking into the muddy ground. Having been a veritable recluse for the past month had shielded him from the worst of the rainy season, and when he raised his broad muzzle to blink at the grey sky, he almost welcomed the thought of getting wet. Rain might tame his wild mane, the bushy white and black hair that hung lank from his brow down his spine. Even being inexperienced with the ways of the luperci did not shield him from the notion that he looked rather different from the other shifters. Even disregarding his distinctive ebony markings and faded blue eyes, his new Optime form was huge and fierce and more feral than any other he had regarded. He did not have the slender lean build of Mew or Kansas; nor did he have the clean chiseled girth of Henratha or Elliot. He was still so wolfish and... strange. At least his narcolepsy had not plagued him in some time. This upright way of walking must be more energy efficient.


The tall building before him looked just like any other to the uneducated male, but the scrabbling sound and the humming from above was not. Looking sheepish, positively embarrassed, the throwback werewolf crept closer, clumsily crushing a noisy bush beneath his heavy feet. White-tipped ears fell back against his broad skull, lost in the mess of mane as he waited hesitantly for whomever worked above to glance down. So far he had only spoken to the two ladies closest in his life, his mate Cercelee and his friend Cwmfen. He had yet to reveal his uncomfortable new height to anyone else in the pack. Would he be mocked or shouted at? He still felt so wrong inside, standing on his hind legs like the humans were said to. Ebony-daubed tail lashed nervous circles behind him as he peered upwards, trying to recognize the dull colours of the wolf atop the roof.



I've got soul but I'm not a soldier


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