Chapter 48 Provision and Protection
POV: Mina (Age 18 - Eight Days Into the Moonpath)
I wake slowly, consciousness returning in stages.
First: warmth. Not the minimal warmth of a campfire and a bedroll. Real warmth. Comfortable warmth. The kind that suggests shelter and planning and care.
Second: smells. Cooking meat. Fresh water. Pine and earth and something that smells almost like herbs.
Third: the bond. Quiet but present. Three wolves nearby, their emotions carefully controlled but their wolves absolutely certain that mate is safe and cared for.
I open my eyes.
The camp has been transformed.
We're no longer in the clearing where the assassins attacked. We're somewhere else. Somewhere protected. A small cave or overhang, I can't tell which from my position, but definitely sheltered from the elements.
A proper shelter has been constructed at the entrance. Not just thrown together. Actually built with branches woven carefully together, gaps filled with smaller materials, positioned to block wind and rain while allowing smoke from the fire to escape.
The fire itself is perfect. Not too large. Not smoking excessively. Positioned for optimal heat. Meat cooking over it on a spit that someone clearly spent time crafting.
Supplies are organized. Our packs arranged neatly. Water skins filled and within easy reach. Weapons cleaned and ready.
Someone even found herbs. They're laid out on a flat stone near the fire, the kind that are good for exhaustion and magical drain. The kind an Oracle would need after burning through power reserves.
Through the bond I feel them before I see them.
Logan is at the edge of the shelter, having just returned from somewhere. His hands carry fresh water. His posture says his wolf has been in primary control for however long I've been unconscious. Providing. Hunting. Ensuring mate has everything needed.
Asher is the one who built the shelter. I can tell from the precision of it. From the careful planning that went into every branch placement. Through the bond I feel his wolf's satisfaction at creating safe space for mate.
Jax is standing guard at the entrance. Has probably been standing there the entire time I've been unconscious. His posture is alert, his eyes scanning the forest, his tactical mind and his wolf working in perfect harmony to ensure no threats approach.
Their wolves are in control. The mate bond has overridden human hesitation and guilt and complicated feelings. Has driven them into pure instinct mode. Protect. Provide. Care for mate who is vulnerable.
I sit up slowly, my body protesting the movement. I'm sore in ways that suggest I've been unconscious for hours. Maybe longer.
All three of them react immediately.
Logan crosses the shelter in two steps, the water he's carrying suddenly in front of me. "Are you thirsty? You should drink. You've been out for six hours."
Asher moves from where he was adjusting the fire, his hands already reaching for the herbs. "Are you hungry? The meat is almost ready. And I found comfrey and mint. They'll help with the magical exhaustion."
Jax turns from his guard position, his ice-blue eyes sweeping over me with careful assessment. "Are you cold? I can build up the fire. Or add more insulation to the shelter."
All three of them. Simultaneously. Attending to me with focused intensity that would be almost amusing if it wasn't so disturbing.
This is worse than hatred.
Hatred I understood. Hatred I could work with. Hatred gave me clarity and purpose and the anger that kept me moving.
This is something else. This is care. Concern. Desperate need to help driven by the mate bond and their guilt and their wolves' certainty that mate needs them.
I don't know what to do with it.
"Stop," I say. The word comes out harsher than I intended. "Just stop."
Through the bond I feel them freeze. Feel their wolves confused by rejection. Feel their human minds trying to understand what they did wrong.
"I don't want your fake concern," I continue. "I don't want you hovering. I don't want any of this." I gesture at the shelter, the organized supplies, the perfect fire. "Just stop pretending you care."
"It's not fake," Jax says quietly. His voice carries that careful control but underneath it through the bond I feel something raw. "We can't help it. The bond, the wolves—we have to protect you or we go insane. This isn't a choice we're making. It's compulsion."
"Convenient," I tell him coldly. "Blame it on the bond. Blame it on your wolves. Take no responsibility for suddenly caring about someone you spent months destroying."
Through the bond I feel that land. Feel them flinch from it. But Logan's the one who responds.
"You're right," he says. His blue eyes meet mine directly. "We destroyed you. We made your life hell when you were already drowning. The bond showed us that. Made us feel it. Made us carry it." He pauses. "But the bond didn't make us do this."
He gestures at the shelter. The supplies. The careful preparation.
"This isn't just wolf instinct," he continues. "This is us trying to figure out how to atone for something that can't be atoned for. Trying to provide for someone we failed to protect. Trying to make sure you survive what we almost killed."
Asher speaks next, his voice carrying that precise calculation but with something underneath that sounds almost broken.
"We felt everything you went through," he says quietly. "The bond made sure we knew. Every moment of grief while we were hurting you. Every second of terror while we were hunting you. Every ounce of exhaustion while we were demanding more from you."
He looks down at his hands. At hands that built the shelter. That prepared the herbs. That are trying desperately to help instead of harm.
"We caused it," he continues. "All of it. We took someone who'd already lost everything and made it worse. We saw your mask and never looked underneath. We felt the bond pulling and responded with violence instead of recognition."
Through the connection I feel his shields, still shattered from days ago, leaving him completely exposed to his own guilt. Leaving him unable to hide from what they did or intellectualize it away.
Jax moves closer but stops at a distance that suggests he's learned something about boundaries. About not crowding someone who flinches from proximity.
"It's not just the bond anymore," he says. His voice is quiet. Measured. Carrying the weight of someone who's thought about this carefully. "The bond forces us to protect you. But knowing what we did—that's what's driving this. Not wolf instinct. Guilt. Remorse. Desperate need to do something, anything, that doesn't hurt you."
He pauses. Through the bond I feel him searching for words that don't exist.
"We can't take it back," he finishes. "We can't undo four months of cruelty. Can't make Rafe not dead. Can't erase the trauma we added to trauma you were already carrying. So we do this instead. We provide. We protect. We try to be what we should have been from the beginning even though we know it's too late."
The silence that follows is heavy.
Through the bond I feel their emotions flooding the connection. Genuine remorse that goes beyond forced empathy. Self-loathing that's eating them from the inside. Desperate need to atone that has nowhere productive to go except into building shelters and hunting food and standing guard.
I don't know what to do with it.
Don't know how to process three wolves who spent months being my tormentors now being my caregivers. Don't know how to accept help from people who caused the harm. Don't know how to let them provide when accepting feels like forgiving and I'm not ready to forgive.
Not sure I'll ever be ready.
Through the bond I feel them waiting. Feel them understanding that I don't have an answer. Feel them accepting that maybe there isn't an answer.
"I didn't ask for this," I tell them quietly. "Didn't ask for the bond. Didn't ask for you. Didn't ask to be needed by people who broke me."
"We know," Asher says.
"And I don't forgive you," I continue. "Building a shelter doesn't erase what you did. Hunting food doesn't undo the damage. Standing guard doesn't make us okay."
"We know that too," Jax adds.
"So why do it?" I ask. "Why not just do the minimum the bond requires and nothing more? Why this?" I gesture at everything they've built.
Logan answers, his voice rough with something that sounds like honesty stripped of any protective layers.
"Because the bond made us feel what you felt. And now we can't stop feeling it. Can't stop carrying your grief and your fear and your exhaustion. Can't stop understanding that we made everything worse. And doing nothing while you suffer feels worse than knowing you hate us for trying."
Through the bond I feel the truth of it. Feel all three of them recognizing that inaction is its own form of cruelty. That watching mate struggle while doing nothing violates something fundamental in their wolves and their blood-debt and their guilt.
They're stuck between helping and giving space. Between providing and respecting my hatred. Between following instinct and acknowledging damage.
Just like I'm stuck between needing them and hating that I need them. Between accepting help and maintaining distance. Between surviving with them or destroying myself trying to do it alone.
The bond has trapped us all in impossible positions.
I look at the shelter they built. The food they prepared. The care they took while I was unconscious and vulnerable.
Look at three wolves who are trying desperately to atone for something unforgivable.
I don't forgive them. Can't forgive them. Maybe never will.
But I also can't deny that the shelter is warmer than sleeping exposed. That the food smells good after days of sparse rations. That having someone stand guard means I might actually sleep without waking to threats.
Practical acceptance isn't the same as emotional forgiveness. Using their guilt-driven service isn't the same as wanting it.
"Fine," I say finally. "You want to provide. You want to atone. You want to carry blood-debt through service. Fine. But don't expect gratitude. Don't expect me to act like this makes us okay. And don't ever expect me to forget what you did."
Through the bond I feel their acceptance. Feel them understanding that I'm offering the only thing I can. Permission to help. Not forgiveness. Not absolution. Just permission.
"We won't," Jax says. "Forget or expect forgiveness. We won't."
The meat on the fire is ready. Logan brings it to me without asking. Sets it on a clean stone within my reach.
I eat it. Because I'm hungry. Because refusing would be cutting off my own nose to spite my face. Because practical survival requires accepting help even from people I hate.
The herbs Asher prepared actually do help with the magical exhaustion. I can feel them working, subtle but effective, easing the drain I've been carrying since the battle.
Jax returns to his guard position. Continues watching for threats that might never come but that his wolf needs to guard against anyway.
Through the bond I feel all three of them settling slightly. Their wolves calmer now that mate is awake and eating and accepting their provision. Their human minds still carrying guilt but finding some small relief in being allowed to help.
I finish eating and lie back down in the shelter they built. The warmth is undeniable. The comfort real.
I hate that I need it. Hate that I need them. Hate that the bond won't let me survive alone.
But hate isn't enough to make me refuse shelter when I'm exhausted. Isn't enough to reject food when I'm hungry. Isn't enough to turn away protection when there are Council assassins hunting us.
Practical survival. That's all this is. Using their guilt. Accepting their blood-debt service. Nothing more.
Through the bond, as I drift toward sleep, I feel them understanding.
They're not forgiven. They're useful. And right now, in hostile territory with weeks left to travel, useful is enough.