The Shadow Wolf With Moonlit Fur
A little five year old girl looked into the waters and saw the Shadow Wolf with Moonlit Fur. That cannot be⊠she thought, I cannot be... She was beautiful, wild, free, with glowing moonlit fur slowly shifting in the wind, white razor-sharp teeth in a soft smile. How beautiful She is, how I wish to be Her, thought the little girl, but I can never... I am not beautiful enough, I don't have such beautiful smile. Iâm not powerful or glowing, and I don't know what the Wind is...
"But you are", whispered the Wolf in a voice like silk, "you do".
There was a deep dark shadow in Her eyes, it was heavy, but warm and steady. A sword lay next to Her feet.
The little girl felt the cold heaviness of the Sword's handle, her fingers too little to fully grasp it, her shape too small to lift it off the ground. A shadow settled inside her.
There was something in the air now, vague and uncertain, scary even, but it called her name.
"The Wind?" Whispered the little girl. The Wolf smiled.
"Listen", She said once more, "The Wind calls... West." The Wolf began turning away.
"Wait!" Shouted the little girl, attempting to drag the Sword behind her. "It is too heavy, I cannot carry it."
The Wolf paused, the darkness in Her eyes a little heavier. "I know", She said, "sweet child... But it is yours."
"I've seen my parents with similar things, but theirs don't look like... mine. Theirs are sharp and smaller. Why canât I have something like that?"
The Wolf said nothing, yet there was a softness in those shadow-filled eyes, a tenderness that only pain knows how to carry. She turned around and vanished, yet the little girl could feel something change in her, like the shadow of The Wolf still lingered.
Once more she met The Wolf, when she was slightly older. She came in the middle of the night and startled everyone. She was awakened from Her slumber against Her will, called by the little girl. The Wolf bared her white teeth and shook the air with a low growl, âIâm here, don't worry."
"No," said the little girl, âYou frightened the girls."
"They were wrong", whispered The Wolf.
"No... this isn't me." She pulled out a grey rope and wrapped it around The Wolf's mouth. "Go," she whispered in a trembling voice. The Wolf said nothing, She lowered Her head and once again vanished into the mist.
It was a long time before the little girl met The Wolf again. But she could hear the Wind calling, clearly, and her hand could now close around the hilt of the Sword, even though it was still heavy.
"Your Sword doesn't look right", said her parents, "why do you carry it? It is meant to be sharpened with a whetstone every day, and returned to the shelf, it's way too heavy to carry." "It's sharp enough, and I will carry it," said the little girl.
One night the Wind called West again, a shadow of The Wolf ran forth, and so she followed. Hands shaking, she couldn't see through the mist, but she kept walking. Sharp branches pierced her soft skin, coals burned the bottoms of her feet, and ice cold rain shaped her solitude. Slowly, the mist cleared and in a blur she saw a solemn scene. A lifeless grey industrial machine, some years shy of three hundred, an infant, only taking its first breaths and already getting it wrong, already looking like an apocalyptic wasteland, regurgitating bills and pollution while devouring spirit with a grimace of racist disdain. And no people... The little girl was sad, she felt the shadow grow darker. She squeezed her hand around the Sword, shivering, unable to rest by the fire that didnât feel warm.
Again the Wind called in the night, this time East, and again the shadow of The Wolf ran forth. She followed. The rain, the coals, the branches. Yet when the mist cleared, to her surprise, she saw a different scene. An ancient force coated in rich green foliage, clean and organised yet with a wild flavour, shaped in melancholy and battered by years of turmoil and collected mistakes turned into art, with roaring fires of humble but assuring warmth. And full of people! Her steps were weighted, but something shifted in her shadow as she walked. Home?
She turned around and saw The Wolf for the first time in forever. Tears ran down her cheeks as shaking hands undid the knots she once tied around The Wolf's mouth, they dug inside Her skin now and restricted Her breathing. "Oh..." whispered the little girl with gentle tenderness, "I'm so happy to see you!" The Wolf stretched herself from head to toe and pranced in roaring laughter. "You have grown!" She beamed, "can you hear the Wind?" "Yes," laughed the little girl, "it's like a song here!"
She held The Wolf's face in her hands and gazed deep into Her eyes. The waters she saw long ago loomed into view, and in the shadows she could see her smile reflected.
"Look", said the little girl, one arm around The Wolf, "The Sun is here, you don't have to run anymore." The little girl lay down the heavy Sword. "And the Wind," she smiled, "you don't need the Wind anymore either!"
The Wolf said nothing, She grew quiet, laying next to the Sword. The Wind rustled no more, but Her moonlit fur grew brighter and brighter, until there was no shadow, no Wolf to be seen, no Sword. Just the moonlight shrouding all in a thick haze. "I just want to rest here a little nowâŠâ, the little girl whispered in a trembling voice, curling up into a ball. It was warm in that light, so warm that for a while the little girl rested, without the Sword, without the Wind, without The Wolf.
This time the Wind didnât call in the night gently, it came in like a hurricane and swept away the haze, the moonlight, and The Sun. The little girl sat by herself for a long time, there were no people here, just that lifeless machine coated in frost. Slowly, a shape appeared in the darkness, The Wolf walked toward her, the moonlit fur glowing in the shadows. She gently lay the Sword by the little girl's side, and curled around her. The moonlit fur was warm, Her low breath steady.
âIâm sorryâŠâ cried the little girl.
"For what?" answered The Wolf.
"I thought I could just be the moonlight, I didnât want the shadows, I never asked for the Sword, or the Wind."
"Sweet child", said the Wolf, "I know. But look how beautifully you carry them."
"Maybe they were right, maybe... the Sword belongs on the shelf, only taken down to be sharpened daily."
"NoâŠâ whispered The Wolf, gently wiping heavy tears with Her soft fur, "their swords may be, but yours you carry how you want, how you always have. Listen for the Wind."
The little girl managed a shallow breath âBut I'm not... You."
"Oh, but sweet child⊠you are."