triskehale (
triskehale) wrote2013-12-04 09:12 pm
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if only in my dreams
It seems like before Derek can even blink, it's December.
He stops paying attention for a minute and there are Christmas lights up everywhere, more hustle and bustle in the streets and canned holiday music pumping out from seemingly every single speaker in the city. Derek's in a decent mood, despite all this. Things with Stiles are moving forward in ways he never imagined. Stiles has feelings for him. Real, actual feelings similar to those Derek has for him, if maybe not as strong in intensity. It's enough to keep Derek buoyant and light on his feet, able to ignore most everything else.
They need some groceries, so Derek heads into the grocery store and grabs a basket. He gets sort of lost in his own head and slips into auto-pilot, grabbing things from the shelves. He comes back to awareness in the seasonal aisle and blinks down at the bag of candy cane Hershey's kisses in his hand. They were Laura's favorite Christmas candy. Derek hated the smell and the taste and she'd eat them all day, crumpling up the wrappers and throwing them with perfect precision at Derek's head.
Laura always handled Christmas. She made sure Derek never got too lost in memories or pain, made sure to keep his spirits bright, as the song goes. He swallows hard and looks from the candy, down to the basket where many of their holiday staples are currently residing.
He'd been shopping for his sister, like he hadn't remembered that she was gone. For one lingering moment, she was alive again, and Derek was looking forward to another year of her being a pain in the ass.
But no, she's dead. She's dead and buried in pieces in a place he can't even get to anymore, and she won't be here for Christmas. She won't be anywhere with Derek ever again.
The basket in his hand rattles noisily and that's when he realizes how badly he's shaking. He calmly sets the basket on the floor and walks out of the store. The holidays snuck up on him and he's just now realizing that this is the first Christmas where he has no family left. They're all dead, except for Peter who is pretty much dead to him anyway.
Derek doesn't stop walking until he's at the edge of the forest just past the park, and he starts taking clothes off as he heads into it. It's cool outside, the last sunny day before an oncoming storm that Derek can smell on the air. But it doesn't matter. He can't feel the cold. The world tilts for a second and then he's shifted, shaking out his thick black fur.
It's easier to deal with things like this when he's shifted, running as hard as he can on four paws. He runs until he's panting and lets out a long, mournful howl when he just can't keep it all inside anymore.
It's still daylight by the time he comes back to himself, but there isn't much of it left. He stops about a dozen feet from the treeline, still shifted, and looks out at the park as he drops to the forest floor with a whuff. His ears are back and his tail is curled around himself, and he looks every bit like a sulking puppy. He doesn't even care. There's not much here cares about at all right now.
Loneliness hasn't consumed him like this for awhile, and he misses his big sister like a severed limb. He lays there, whimpering softly, and tucks his nose under his paws to block out the world.
He stops paying attention for a minute and there are Christmas lights up everywhere, more hustle and bustle in the streets and canned holiday music pumping out from seemingly every single speaker in the city. Derek's in a decent mood, despite all this. Things with Stiles are moving forward in ways he never imagined. Stiles has feelings for him. Real, actual feelings similar to those Derek has for him, if maybe not as strong in intensity. It's enough to keep Derek buoyant and light on his feet, able to ignore most everything else.
They need some groceries, so Derek heads into the grocery store and grabs a basket. He gets sort of lost in his own head and slips into auto-pilot, grabbing things from the shelves. He comes back to awareness in the seasonal aisle and blinks down at the bag of candy cane Hershey's kisses in his hand. They were Laura's favorite Christmas candy. Derek hated the smell and the taste and she'd eat them all day, crumpling up the wrappers and throwing them with perfect precision at Derek's head.
Laura always handled Christmas. She made sure Derek never got too lost in memories or pain, made sure to keep his spirits bright, as the song goes. He swallows hard and looks from the candy, down to the basket where many of their holiday staples are currently residing.
He'd been shopping for his sister, like he hadn't remembered that she was gone. For one lingering moment, she was alive again, and Derek was looking forward to another year of her being a pain in the ass.
But no, she's dead. She's dead and buried in pieces in a place he can't even get to anymore, and she won't be here for Christmas. She won't be anywhere with Derek ever again.
The basket in his hand rattles noisily and that's when he realizes how badly he's shaking. He calmly sets the basket on the floor and walks out of the store. The holidays snuck up on him and he's just now realizing that this is the first Christmas where he has no family left. They're all dead, except for Peter who is pretty much dead to him anyway.
Derek doesn't stop walking until he's at the edge of the forest just past the park, and he starts taking clothes off as he heads into it. It's cool outside, the last sunny day before an oncoming storm that Derek can smell on the air. But it doesn't matter. He can't feel the cold. The world tilts for a second and then he's shifted, shaking out his thick black fur.
It's easier to deal with things like this when he's shifted, running as hard as he can on four paws. He runs until he's panting and lets out a long, mournful howl when he just can't keep it all inside anymore.
It's still daylight by the time he comes back to himself, but there isn't much of it left. He stops about a dozen feet from the treeline, still shifted, and looks out at the park as he drops to the forest floor with a whuff. His ears are back and his tail is curled around himself, and he looks every bit like a sulking puppy. He doesn't even care. There's not much here cares about at all right now.
Loneliness hasn't consumed him like this for awhile, and he misses his big sister like a severed limb. He lays there, whimpering softly, and tucks his nose under his paws to block out the world.
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Like this, however, as an angel he senses what makes up Derek's equivalent of a soul and instantly flies into the edge of the forest, tilting his head as he stares down at the wolf.
"Hello Derek."
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He makes a sharp right and stops in his tracks, eyes wide at what he sees just a few feet away. There's a giant goddamn wolf, and he'd probably be backing away slowly right about now if the thing didn't look so... well, sad. Instead, he takes a few cautious steps forward, tilting his head when he hears a whimper and wondering if the big guy's been hurt. He holds his hand out when the wolf notices him--or at least finally decides to acknowledge his presence. "Not gonna hurt you, buddy. Everything's good, we're good."
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Saffron catches sight of it as she's walking by and stops, puzzled, before going over and picking it up, looking around to see if she can maybe spot who might have left it there by accident. It looks decent enough, something someone might miss if they realize later they don't have it, but she doesn't see anyone. But then not far away she sees a shirt, and she keeps collecting what look like men's clothes until she's gathered up an entire outfit.
It's not the strangest thing she's come across, but it's puzzling all the same, and Saffron keeps walking into the trees, wondering who in the 'verse would have just strewn clothes around like that. A sloppy nudist? Someone wanting to get rid of clothes with bad memories attached?
She stops and is about to start folding the clothes she's gathered when she spots the wolf and sucks in a gasp, her eyes widening. It's huge and black and doesn't look particularly menacing, not with the way it's sitting with its paws covering its nose, but Saffron has no way of knowing what it'll do next.
"Wǒde mā, I hope you're not hungry," she murmurs, rooted to the spot, not sure whether to stay there or run.
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I wouldn't have looked up at all, if it weren't for that little whimpering sound, sad and strangely human, but at first, I think the black shape near the treeline is a lost dog.
"Hey, buddy, wha--" I say, walking across the grass toward it, until I realize that it's not a dog at all. "Okay," I say, stopping a good distance away. I don't really wanna get my fuckin' throat ripped out, if I can help it.
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Along the edge of the forest, branches and other dead brush crunches underneath Sookie's boots as she shivers her way through the thick of the trees. After being chided some time ago by Kisuke for being completely incapable of aiming, Sookie has made it her priority to learn how to use her powers more effectively. The only problem is, there's no good place to practice in the thick of the city, where there are too many people around with prying eyes, and too little room for recovery from potential harm done to property. When even the smallest of blasts from her hand is able to send a vase smashing against the opposite wall, Sookie knows that she needs to take to other measures to practice.
Even if it means dunking her warm Louisianan ass into the bitter cold.
"It's gonna get worse," she breathes to herself, teeth chattering slightly. "It's only December now; imagine what January's gonna be like. Shit." She feels a little remorseful for swearing so much, but it's cold. Trundling through the forest and finding herself unable to even concentrate, Sookie only pauses when she realizes that there's a wolf sitting in her path, curled up and entreating.
"...so I should have looked where I was going," she murmurs to herself, pausing and considering turning right around.
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He looks up, eyes widening when they settle on the source of the noise. From here, all he can see is a mountain of dark fur, peaked by two furry ears. His first instinct is to go for his gun, but Dean supposes there's a slim chance this is someone's dog. He clears his throat, wondering if the thing's just lost. "Hey boy."
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He's starting to pack up his things when he hears the howl and immediately thinks of Derek. Sure, okay, maybe there are other wolves out there (a thought that should alarm him more than it does), but it's probably Derek - probably - so he does the only intelligent thing and heads out into the woods, fully prepared to wander like it's easy to find a single animal in acres of land. Derek's his friend, his alpha, and hey, once he stops being chickenshit, he's going to find a place to drag Derek to dinner and they might be kind of dating, so it's more than worth the time and minimal risk.
He doesn't have to go more than a few steps before he spots Derek a dozen yards or so down the treeline from where he is and he grins, trotting over in his sweats and sweatshirt, overpriced lacrosse gear forgotten in a backpack in the park. He raises his hand in a dopey wave as he starts to head over, smiling, but shuffles to a stop as he gets closer, clearly able to see the absolute forlorn expression in his body language.
"Hey alpha," he says sympathetically, coming over and sitting a couple feet away in front of him, lanky limbs crossed underneath him. "What's up?"
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The howl that cut the air brought him to a halt, his defenses up as he looked around, scenting the air. It was faint, hard to pick out among the deep green and brown smells of the forest, but his familiarity with the scent made it easier. He followed the trail cautiously, unsure of what kind of greeting he would get from Derek, but wanting to make sure he was okay, if nothing else.
He found him in full wolf form, a brief pang of jealousy hitting him before he pushed it away. What would it be like to be able to become a wolf completely? he wondered as his own hair and claws receded and he strode upright toward the curled up black wolf. "You all right?" he asked quietly, keeping a few feet back until he was able to discern how Derek would react to his presence.
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That's no what happens, though. It never is. She stops at the edge of trees, sitting on a rock and very determinedly not crying. Only she knows that she is, her cheeks cold where the tear stream down. There's just nothing she can do today, other than ride it out, and she hates it, even more than she hates this place for taking her away from her family.
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