His storm calmed, it seemed. A sigh heaved from his dark lips and his body seemed to reluctantly relax, falling back into its natural form-- ears perked forward, muzzle held perhaps a touch too high for her liking. Growing up, the Whelans had always been a strong vein within their Clan -- after all, they were the very blood their Clan was built upon. They had always been the backbone, and she supposed that came with some notion of pride or ego-- and yet, Toren's father hadn't been quite so... pronounced in that trait. True, as Kenna had known him, he had been older and his his role for some time. For all she knew, Chief Cian had been just the same as his son in youth. She hoped so, because the Chief they were enduring would certainly not last.
Kenna watched, eyes drawing over every line of The Lion's earthen face. “Is that what we are still?” he asked in that apparent and bitter tone. Her ears twitched, and her lips pursed. “Does death relinquish marriage vows before Them?” she demanded roughly, and perhaps callously. She recognized his question was likely rhetorical -- but still. It stung them all, and he did not have special privilege to act like a child in his grief.
She inquired about the tree, and his current state. “You are correct.” he affirmed simply. And she was relentless. He attempted to interrupt -- “Me? How dare you --” but she continued over him-- the things that he needed to hear. “They left me. She--our…” And then she did truly let her features soften. She understood, truly. He must know that.
She rose to her paws, stepping forward with careful paws. He seemed to crumble upon himself, buckling underneath the weight of it all. Her frown deepened, but she moved forward. Her muzzle reached out slowly, tentatively -- and if he allowed it, her nose would brush like a ghost along the bridge of his muzzle. She retracted her touch almost instantly, but her eyes remained steadily on him. “They never leave us.” she said, her eyes meeting his own if she could catch his gaze. It was what they believed, what they knew -- that their loved ones never truly left. Their essence, their souls, their beings, remained in the earth around them-- forever. "Not if they don't want to," she continued, and pulled her muzzle fully back to level her stare at him. "But we can still be abandoned, even if not separated by distance or realms." and her meaning, she hoped, was quite clear: He had to be there. His wife's body was taken from their realm; his children had chosen to occupy different spaces of earth. But he still had to there, he had to be present.
For them.
AND WE ALL LIFT, AND WE'RE ALL ADRIFT TOGETHER, TOGETHER