Mercy Thompson 01-05 - THE MERCY THOMPSON COLLECTION
from the pack bonds, Mercedes. The pack bonds are not built to subdue individuality to the Alpha or enforce behavior of any kind. A pack needs all its differences, and we find strength in that: a lot more strength than one stupid fairy queen who is stealing magic and using a witch. You understand me? â His fury shook my whole being, he was so angry.
He wasnât angry with me, though, so it wasnât my concern.
âI understand,â I told him, even though he couldnât hear me. Or mostly couldnât hear me.
âIâm going to show you something,â he said. And suddenly in the white snow there was a silver garland. âThis is one of your pack bonds,â he told me. I couldnât see him, but I could feel him walking beside me as we followed the garland. We stopped by the end, and there was a rock tied . . . enveloped in a soft cage of silver. The rock glowed a warm yellow that was very welcome in this cold place.
âChristmas garlands and a rock?â he said, a smile in his voice. âWhy not an ornament?â
âWolves arenât fragile,â I told him. âAnd theyâre . . . stubborn and hard to move.â
âI guess that imagery works as well as anything,â he allowed. âDo you know who this is? Can you feel how worried she is for you?â
âMary Jo,â I said. And once heâd pointed it out to me, I could feel it, too. Could feel that she was looking for me, running on four feet to use her nose to its best advantage. She wasnât hot on the trailâand I had the impression of miles traveled and miles to go stretching out both ways in weary infinity.
âIt is not usually so clear,â Bran said, pulling me out of Mary Jo. âPartially it is because I am with youâand I am the Marrok. Another part is that the fairy has locked you into your own headâI can tell that by the quality of my contact with you. That she has done this is an unforgivable offense ââonce more I felt him try to contain his angerââbut that will give you strength here you would not otherwise have had.â He paused. âThe connection between you and me is stronger than it should be, too. Iâm not getting words back, but there is something . . . No use getting distracted with the why of that now. We have other tasks.â
He took me to another silver garland and had me tell him whom it belonged to. After the third, I could find the strands myself without his guidance. The fourth was Paulâs. He was running with Mary Joâand just as anxious to find me. He still didnât like Warren, though. I could see that his garland and Mary Joâs were intertwined and connected to all the other garlands, too. One by one we walked by the rocks that were the wolves in the pack.
Bran held me at Darrylâs, when I would have hurried on because I wanted to find Adam.
âNo,â he said. âI want you to look here for a bit. Can you find Darrylâs connection to Auriele? Itâs different from the pack bonds.â
I looked and looked. I found Aurieleâs rock nearby, but I couldnât see anything. Finally, in desperation, I picked up Darrylâs rock and saw that it moved Aurieleâs, tooâas if they were tied together . . . and then I couldnât understand how Iâd missed the blazing gold rope between them, it was so obvious. Maybe Iâd been looking too hard for a silver garland and instead their bond was very differentâsofter, stronger, and deeper. Unlike the pack bond, it wasnât tied onto the rocks; it originated in one and ended in the other.
Bran took me by the elbow. âOkay, quit playing with them. Youâre making Darryl unhappy. I have another one to show you.â
He led me to the center of all the strands of silver.
All but buried in the pack magic was a very, very black rock. It radiated anger and fear and sorrow so strongly it was hard to go near it.
âDonât be frightened,â Bran said, and there was a rough affection in his voice. âAdam has been frightening quite enough people lately. Look and tell me what you see.â
This was Adam? I ran up to the rock and put both hands on it. âHeâs hurt,â I said, then corrected myself. âHeâs hurting.â
âWhere is your mate bond?â
It lay in the snow, a fragile and worn thing. There were a lot of places where it had been roughly knotted,
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