З життя
The Wolves That Howled at the Moon

In the snow-laden forests of northern Scotland, where the wind whispers through ancient oaks and night lingers like an uninvited guest, there lived a pack of wolves led by Edmund and Elspeth, a pair bound not merely by blood but by a tale the elders of the woodland still murmur of.
Edmund was a lone wolf when he found her. His first pack had vanished beneath an avalanche, leaving him to wander without direction, avoiding men, hunters, and even other wolves. His heart was a tangle of scars that never quite healed.
Elspeth appeared under a moonless skythin, limping, one ear torn, her eyes blazing with defiance but never fear. She was a warrior, cast out from her own pack for challenging the alpha to protect her pups. She had lost them, but not her pride.
Edmund did not attack. Nor did he flee. They simply stared, and in that frozen silence, they recognised one anothertwo broken hearts still brave enough to beat.
From that night, they hunted together. Slept back to back. Learned to trust, slowly, in their own wild way. There were no sweet words, no grand gestures. Just companionship, respect, and a loyalty that asked no proof.
Years passed, and they raised their own pack. Had pups. Taught the young to fear neither snow nor dark. Edmunds howls were deep and rolling, like distant thunder in the forests chest. Elspeths were sharp and bright, like icicles shattering the air.
But when they howled together the sky listened.
Scientists claim wolves howl for territory or to call their kin. But the old shepherds of the Highlands know a different truthsome wolves howl for love.
One bitter winter, Edmund never returned from the hunt. Elspeth searched for days. Each dusk, she climbed the highest crag and howled. But he did not come. Only footprints in the snow, trailing into the misty glen.
Elspeth refused to eat. Refused to hunt. Each evening, she returned to the crag and let loose her cryshort, piercing, unyielding.
Until one night, beneath the shimmering northern lights, an answer came.
A low howl. Distant. Familiar.
Experts swore it was another maleperhaps a challenger, perhaps a suitor.
But Elspeth did not snarl. She sat upon the rock, closed her eyes, and howled as she had the very first time.
And in that moment, the winds stilled. The snow hung motionless. A dual howl, perfect and seamless, wrapped around the valley like an old, sacred hymn.
At dawn, she was gone.
Shepherds found the crag empty. Only two sets of pawprintsone beside the otherled away toward the mountains peak, as if two wolvesone unseenhad walked together until they melted into the horizon.
Now, every winter, when the first heavy snow falls, Edmund and Elspeths children lift their voices to the sky. Not from fear. Not as a summons.
But because wild love leaves its mark even when the wind tries to erase it.
