Jackson Carmillan of Carmillan Collars. The metal collar around his throat hadn’t felt so tight, so restrictive in a long time. I think I know how the collars work better than you do, the words echoed in Wren’s mind.
Wren stayed on edge. He wasn’t going to trigger any anger in Jackson for as long as he could help it. Silence had always been his best friend. He couldn’t say the wrong thing if he didn’t say anything. He didn’t have to guess the right choice if he just waited until the choice was made for him.
He knew he stunk. He knew his hair had grown out to a better length but had become unmanageable in the process. The makeup caked on his face itched. He wanted to be clean, but he didn’t want the bath. His old owner was bad enough, a bucket of cold water tossed over him to clean off the blood after a fight and it was called a day, he didn’t want to know how the Carmillan heir treated his wolf. What his idea of a bath would be.
Wren’s hair had been kept short under his old owner, unnaturally so. It made his fur thin and any protection he might have had in a fight was lost.
Any protection from the cold basement cell was lost.
That first step into the garden, surrounded by flowers… Wren never wanted to leave and wanted to hide away from all that space at that same time. It was entirely too short of a walk with his eyes trained directly ahead when all he wanted to do is look around, take in the colors, the smells. Hide in the shadows and hope he was never found.
Instead he stepped into a kitchen full of wolves. He tensed as the wolf at the stove scolded Jackson and scented the air. Jackson… apologized. He apologized to the wolf, to Margaret. His confusion only grew.
Then the bedroom door. Jackson’s bedroom door. His mind flashed to those nights his previous owner came home drunk, came home angry, or just got horny and wanted to feel powerful. He’d reacted, loud enough that Jackson had noticed and paused, then explained. Took the time to explain to him why they were at his bedroom rather than the cell he would be kept in.
It made following him into the bedroom easier, not that he had a choice either way. Then the bathroom, where he tried to keep his silence, but was commanded to answer. At least that answer was easy. He had no idea how to work the tub or shower. Even when he was young and with his mother and siblings, they heated water gathered at the river for baths. It was nothing like what was here, in front of him. It was nothing like the bucket of cold water.
Jackson turned around and Wren didn’t waste any time. He wouldn’t suffer the indignity of having a young human wash his body as in his unshifted form. He shed the clothes and shifted, remembering just a moment too late that he hadn’t taken off the sunglasses. If he shook them off he could break them, and that was a surefire way for this moment of peace, of relative painlessness, to come to an end. So he sat there, well aware that he looked like an idiot, until Jackson turned back around.
“The wolves here usually clean themselves as humans.” Wren couldn’t figure it out. No human ever referred to a wolf as human, even when their form was an almost identical copy to a humans. “Get in.”
He’d braced himself for the cold. Braced himself, even though he could see the steam. Braced himself for a cruel trick. Then his paw touched the water and warmth, blessed warmth. Not the unbearable heat of the sun on a too-hot day at that market place. Not the stinging burn of a lit cigarette being pushed against him. A comforting, embracing warmth that surrounded him and comforted the sore bones, muscles, aches he carried.
He sank down into the water, for a single, blessed moment, he forgot he was being watched. Forgot he was trapped in a neverending hell. For one, peaceful moment, he was in the wooden tub, and his mother was on her way back with another pail of heated water.
Jackson clearly thought he was completely stupid. It was fair enough. He listened to the expectations Jackson had… Then Jackson left. Wren waited for his steps to disappear and shifted back into human.
He carefully folded up Jackson’s sunglasses and set them outside of the tub, then sunk under the warm water. His shoulders hurt more so than the healing marks that he knew criss crossed his back.
He’d lost count of the days he wore those cuffs. Lost count of the days with the blindfold cutting off his vision. Long enough for his hair to grow and mat around the headband. His lungs ached and he came up for air. He could hear footsteps in the room outside the bathroom. He pushed his hair back, as much as he could with the tangles refusing to loosen then let his arms rest along the tub.
“I’m just bringing some clothes in.”
Wren froze where he was, arms out in the open and so exposed. He stared at the door and forced himself to relax. Stop his aching shoulders from tensing again. Whatever was going to happen, was going to happen. The door opened. Jackson stepped in. They made eye contact. Wren listened to Jackson’s heart speed up, speed up to a pace that matched his own. When several long moments passed with Jackson staring at him, he couldn’t keep up the facade of feeling comfortable. He started to sink lower into the water and Jackson jolted like he’d been shocked.
“Do you need anything else?”
Jackson left. Left without a single glance back at him. Wren was too uncomfortable to enjoy the warm water anymore. He grabbed the first bottle. The shampoo was scented. He wrinkled his nose in preparation for too much, too chemical, too artificial… but to his surprise it was lightly fragranced with lavender. It wasn’t harsh on his nose at all. He found himself breathing in deep as he did his best to scrub his hair clean.
The blindfold wouldn’t come out. Not when he rinsed the shampoo out. Not when he scrubbed and rinsed the conditioner. His hair was wound tight around the material. Wren wasn’t going to be able to get it out alone.
He wasn’t quite sure when the last time he’d felt so clean had been. The washcloth was thick and soft. The soap had the same soft lavender smell as the shampoo. The only thing he couldn’t do was get the thick makeup off. It didn’t matter how much he scrubbed at his face, the stuff acted like it had fused with his skin.
He gave up. If Jackson was mad that he didn’t get all the filth off, then he was mad. There was nothing more Wren could do about it. The tub drained and left a layer of grime. Wren wrinkled his nose at the dirt. He wiped it up with the washcloth, not daring to leave it dirty.
He dried off, perched on the side of the tub, and waited. The clothes were folded on the sink where Jackson had left them, but Wren didn’t want to dress only to undress and shift moments later… plus a part of him didn’t really believe he was going to be able to put those clothes on and leave this room, just like that. Not after he was given so much.
He was going to be expected to give something back.
The room on the other side of the door was suspiciously silent. The most he could hear was a very faint humming, and that was only when he really focused. The complete lack of noise from the room is why he was so startled when two knocks sounded on the door and Jackson stepped into the bathroom. Jackson kept his back turned to him.
“How’s it going?” Jackson asked. He didn’t know what the correct answer was, so Wren stayed quiet. “I’m going to turn around now.”
Jackson turned. Wren kept his gaze steady and straight ahead as he waited for the punishment. His face was still dirty. The blindfold was still attached. Jackson was quiet as he stared hard enough that Wren wanted to shrink in on himself. “Food’s here.” Jackson’s voice seemed too loud in the still bathroom. He stepped closer. Wren didn’t move. He couldn’t. This is exactly what he’d thought would happen. He prepared himself to be touched, turned around, taken over, even as revulsion swirled in his stomach.
“Oh. I hadn’t even realized… Hold on.”
Jackson turned to dig through the cabinet. Wren focused on his breathing. In and out. Slow. Steady. He couldn’t change what was about to happen, let it happen. Then breathe and get over it.
“Here.”
Jackson held out a thick wipe that smelled of chemicals. Wren was too worked up to reach out for it, not that he’d know what to do with it anyway.
Jackson hesitated.
“All right. I’m going to wipe your face with this. Stay still.” Wren tensed as Jackson reached for him. Jackson was gentle, though, as he ran the wipe along his jawline. The pressure gradually increased. Wren carefully didn’t look up at him. Instead, he listened to Jackson’s steady heartbeat. Jackson jerked his hand back. “What the heck is this stuff made of? Hold on.” He stepped to the door. “Oh, put the clothes on.” He gestured at the clothes Wren hadn’t wanted to touch then stepped out the door.
The silence was immediate. Jackson’s heartbeat vanished with the door shut. Not long after, a different, slower heartbeat appeared and walked away from them. Wren gave up trying to hear into the silence and slipped the sweatpants on. His shoulders hurt as he pulled on the shirt, but the fabric was much softer than the clothes the market owner had made him wear. He glanced at the door, then plucked up a section to run his fingers over it. He dropped it before Jackson could step in and see that he liked the fabric and take it from him.
He stretched a bit and rolled his shoulders, but he froze when he heard the slow heartbeat growing closer. The heartbeat vanished into thin air. Wren took a step toward the bathroom door. His heart ticked over into overdrive as he realized what he was about to do. Instead he returned to sitting on the edge of the tub.
Jackson didn’t know he thought about opening the door. Jackson couldn’t. Wren was not going to get in trouble for those thoughts. He took a deep, settling breath.
Jackson opened the door and shut it behind him. Wren didn’t jump, but it was a close thing. Jackson held a small white container in his hands. Wren swallowed down his nervousness. “All right. Do you want to do this or do you want me to?”
Do this? Do what? He sat, frozen. Jackson wasn’t giving him the slightest indication on what the right answer was, on what he wanted Wren to do. Jackson’s eyes closed and Wren’s heart sank into his stomach. He’d fucked up. Jackson was fed up with him.
“I’m going to rub this all over your face, then wipe it off with a cloth unless you tell me now that you don’t want me to.”
Did that mean Jackson wanted him to tell him he didn’t want Jackson to do it? Before his spinning mind could figure anything out, Jackson had some white cream scooped on his fingers. He stepped forward, between Wren’s knees and one hand pushed his head back.
Instincts took over. Wren growled, low in his chest, warning off anyone who thought he was submitting and Jackson froze. Several long seconds passed before he was able to stop growling. Then Jackson moved his hand and Wren was sure pain was incoming. His head was still tilted back, his neck on full display. It was too much. Too fast. Too different. He growled as the first bit of cream touched his skin. Jackson stilled.
“You can do it yourself.” His voice was soft. It sounded like an offer, like it was really up to Wren how the next moments went.
Wren stopped growling. Whether he meant it or not, growling wasn’t going to help anything. It wasn’t bad. The cream didn’t hurt. It was unscented and gentle on his sensitive nose. The only times Wren fought off another growl, was when Jackson’s fingers ran along his jawline and dipped beneath his chin. He managed to hold back any more sounds, but it was a close call.
Jackson dampened a washcloth and wiped off the cream. His touch was gentle against Wren’s bruised skin. Wren’s mind was spinning.
Jackson cleared his throat. “All right. Let’s eat.” He opened the bathroom door and looked back. Wren didn’t move. It felt like a trick. He was going to stand and follow and Jackson would laugh. He’d withhold dinner. Wren wouldn’t be allowed to eat, all because he’d assumed he was supposed to follow Jackson when he wasn’t. His spiraling thoughts were cut off when Jackson sighed. “Follow me.”
Wren stood and followed. Easy, clear instructions. That was what he wanted. Nothing else made sense.
Kia stacked their empty bowls back on the cart then migrated to the bed and the open laptop. Jackson dug through his bathroom drawers for a comb. It’d been awhile since his hair had been long enough to require a comb to tame it, but he knew he had one hidden somewhere.Wren sat in the wooden chair and didn’t move. Jackson wondered how his hair was taken care of before, though judging from the scars covering his face and the visible area of his arms, he’d take a guess that it wasn’t taken care of at all.Finding the comb, Jackson paused with a good bit of space between him and Wren. “Someone needs to comb the mats out of your hair. It’s your choice who does it; you, me, or Kia.”Wren didn’t say anything, but his shoulders tensed and his hands clenched into fists.“Choices might be difficult,” Kia spoke from where she was laying on the bed with his laptop open on her stomach. “I mean 24
Jackson flipped the switch on the bedside box as they left the room. “Come back in an hour with some lavender tea,” Jackson spoke clearly as soon as they stepped out into the hallway.“Yes, sir.” Kia blew him a kiss and laughed as she left.“Follow me.”Barely in his peripheral, Wren kept pace with him. Down the hallway, up another staircase. They stopped in front of a set of intricately carved double oak doors. Jackson ran a finger over the nose of a carving of a wolf and steeled himself before knocking.“Come in.”Jackson straightened up and opened the door. “Dad.”His dad was sitting behind his desk, bent over some paperwork. His glasses rested on the end of his nose. His dark hair was starting to gray around the edges. A shadow of stubble told Jackson enough about what kind of day he’d had, and he straightened his spine further.With a heavy sigh, his dad took
Wren almost cowered. The garden was so big. Flowers as far as he could see with small trails through them, some brick, some dirt. Every breath brought more information to him. Lavender, honeysuckle, lilies… Fresh, overturned soil. The pine trees in the distance. The sky was so high above. There were no walls to hide in. Nothing. Just space, and room… He focused on Jackson. Followed Jackson in the right position. Let his entire world shrink down to just Jackson.His panic diminished once they stepped into the gazebo. It was a small space. Enclosed. Safe.He loved being outside. He just needed a smaller amount of outside. But… Feeling that breeze. Listening to the leaves of the vines rustling. Slowly, his heart rate returned to normal and he risked looking up at Jackson.Jackson was completely turned away from him. Wren followed his line sight to see a little pond in the not too far distance. It’s surface was highlighted orange fro
Jackson opened the door across the hall from his room, then stepped aside and gestured for Wren to step in ahead of him. Wren hesitated, then stepped forward. The room was dark and smelled faintly of disuse. Jackson stepped in behind him and Wren forced himself not to whip around. He didn’t like people at his back.“Light is here,” Jackson said and the lights came on. Wren turned around at a normal, sedate pace, in direct odds to the pounding of his heart. Jackson had his hand on a panel at the door. “Bed, couch, bathroom.” Jackson pointed at each thing in turn. “Just come to my room when you wake up in the morning. Kia’s bringing breakfast up.”Wren stared over Jackson’s shoulder. The words Jackson said were all normal, easy words… They just didn’t make any sense. Why was he leaving Wren in this room? Where was his cage? The bars with the slot so food could be pushed in to him. The flat pillow and thin
Kia shoved his laptop towards him as he fell face first onto his bed. “What am I doing, Kia?” He turned his head to her.Her gaze was sympathetic. “A good thing. You know as well as I do that the chances of him being alive this time next year was next to none. Besides, it could always be worse. According to this some former fighters are near uncontrollable without constantly manipulating the collar.”Jackson pulled the laptop on top of him. ‘Severity of Aggression in Rescued Fighter Wolves.’ He scanned through the article. A lot of it wasn’t very optimistic. The best results seemed to come from wolves who were saved at a young age. They were successfully switched to other positions with fairly minor leftover effects.“Did you notice the ages?”“Yeah.” The oldest wolf they had ever rescued was 22 and he was damn near feral according to the article. “I think once they found out
Jackson showered before going to get Wren. He assumed Wren would be enjoying his time alone to relax, or maybe Wren was sleeping in. He hoped Wren was sleeping in. Which is why it took him a moment to comprehend what he was seeing when he opened the door.Wren stood leaning back against the fireplace. His arms were crossed when Jackson opened the door, but fell to his sides as he stepped into the room. Dark circles were under his eyes, clear even from across the room. His hair hung in loose waves around his shoulders. Jackson glanced over. The bed was either perfectly remade or Wren had never touched it. “Good morning,” Jackson said, looking back at Wren.Wren didn’t answer. Jackson hadn’t expected him to.“All right, follow me.”Wren followed. Jackson had him sit at the table again. All at once, Jackson was overwhelmed. Wren wouldn’t talk. Wren wouldn’t sleep. Wren wouldn’t… No. He stopped. He
Wren floated in the river near his home. The water in his ears muffled the cries of his baby sister and the laughter of his mom. The sun warmed his face. He couldn’t figure out why his chest ached when it was such a pleasant day. The scent of his mother’s lavender water was surprisingly strong in his nose. It brought a smile to his face. That scent had never come with anything negative. That scent had never hurt him.The river pulled him down stream and he heard his little brother banging a stick against a tree. He frowned. The day was peaceful and calm and his brother always had to be so loud. He opened his mouth to respond, but remembered his mother’s unhappy frown when they fought and closed it.He kept it shut and the banging kept going on. It would pause. Then three rapid bangs would happen. Then a pause. Frustrated he opened his eyes and froze.There was no river. There was no forest. There was no mother, or brother, or baby sister. The s
It was a little intimidating, just a little, to see the massive wolf come sprinting straight for him. Wren’s ears were flattened back, his head and tail held down low. It wasn’t a friendly approach, but it wasn’t aggressive either.Wren slowed to walk and slunk into the gazebo. He crawled under the table and lay down. Jackson stared at Wren’s tail - the only visible part of him from where Jackson was sitting.“Kia will probably be out there for awhile.” There was no response, but Jackson hadn’t expected any. When Wren was human he barely responded, as a wolf, Jackson figured it was useless. “Why don’t you get up on the bench? It’s more comfortable than the floor.”To his surprise, Wren slowly crept out from under the table. His ears were still flattened tight to his head. He stepped up on to the bench and lay down. Jackson held back his laugh. Wren was almost too large to fit, but he squeezed his
Jackson dug their big knife out of the drawer. He crushed and minced the garlic and scraped it to the side of the cutting board. “Wren?”“Yeah?”“Check the chicken.”There was a rattle behind him. Jackson turned to the carrots and started peeling them. The peeler was apparently a little loose and cocked the side after just two swipes. “Chicken’s good. Want me to adjust that?”“Nah, I got it.” Jackson straightened the peeler clamped on the edge of the counter. He tightened the grip and switched back to peeling the carrots. “Has anyone texted yet?”“Kia and Belle said they might be a little late. Otherwise, no.”Jackson glanced over. Wren was leaning his hip against the counter. His hair was loose around his shoulders. The sun beamed through their kitchen window and lit him in a warm light. Jackson set the half-peeled carrot down and stepped forward.
Nine months since he’d lost his arm and he and Wren were homeowners. Jackson laughed as he caught sight of the white flakes swirling in the wind outside the kitchen window. He opened the cabinet doors in search of the cocoa. Wren was starting a fire in the fireplace. The first snow of the year was later than normal and nothing more than barely there flurries. “Wren,” Jackson called from the kitchen.“Yeah?”“It’s snowing.” Jackson found the container. He braced it between the counter and his hip and used his hand to pry off the top. He mixed the chocolate into the hot milk, squeezed the excess out of Wren’s tea bag, placed both cups on his tray and carefully carried it into the living room. “Our first kiss was in the snow.”The fire was just starting to catch on the logs. Wren settled on the couch next to him and reached for his steaming mug on the coffee table. He tossed his other arm across Jack
Six months of therapy and rehab and sympathetic looks and Jackson was sick of it. He was tired of living in the hotel. He was tired of nonstop people. Nonstop sound. Nonstop everything. For a moment, he considered asking Wren if Wren would want to move in with Grandma Rose and Grandpa Frank. Then he realized what they could do. What they had the means to do.Wren stepped into their room. He was sweaty from the run with Zain. His dark hair stuck to the back of his neck despite the ponytail’s effort to keep it off. Jackson pushed his laptop to the side and rose up on his knees.Wren leaned forward for a kiss and Jackson pulled him in closer with his arm around Wren’s neck. Wren chuckled and gently disengaged. “What’s going on?”Jackson fell back and reached for his laptop again. He avoided eye contact as he pulled up the screen he had minimized. “I was just thinking that maybe it’s time we get a house? Just for the two of
Three months. His scar was still red and angry. Jackson’s therapist was great. Really. He knew any body image issues he might have were something he’d get over with enough time, but for now, staring at the angry red skin that marked where his arm should be… He felt a stupid mixture of embarassment, shame, and disgust. Jackson was pale. He’d always been pale. He’d never had an issue with it before, but now, the paleness of his skin made the scar look all the more alarming. The knock on the door startled him and he realized he’d been standing there for a little too long. “Just a second,” he called. The shirt was still a struggle to get on, but he was getting quicker every time. Jeans were a no go since he couldn’t button them one handed so he spent all of his time in sweatpants. Sweats were comfortable, but they were just another reminder of what he couldn’t do anymore. What he didn’t have anymore. The empty sleeve hung limp over his shoulder. Jackson turned hi
His dad was on his way to Jackson’s hospital room. Grandma Rose had reassured him countless times that if he changed his mind then she would personally escort him from the entire country. Jackson appreciated the thought, but he needed to talk to his dad. It had been a week since Jackson woke up. A week and Jackson was leaving the hospital in hopefully another day or two. He wanted to talk to his dad now, while he was still in such an impersonal place such as a hospital room.Jackson stared at the door. His dad should be arriving any minute. His dad had told Grandma Rose that he would be there at noon and it was currently 11:57. Wren sat next to him, on his left side, the side of his missing arm. He glanced at the clock. Then the door. Then the clock.When the knock came, he jumped and glanced at Wren. “Can you get it?” Jackson asked. Walking across the room in his hospital gown with one sleeve hanging limp would have put him in too vulnerable a positi
About two hours after your shooting, all of the collars in Oconee stopped working.Jackson didn’t understand. “That’s not possible. I know the coding in those collars backward and forward. There are countless fail-safes. For them to just, stop working…” Jackson shook his head. He was already feeling tired again, but he pushed through. “Do we know what caused it?”“There was a statement put out from that Carmillan Collars PR lady that they were looking into what caused the problem, but that was three days ago. There’s been no word since.”Three days. “What day is it?”“You were shot four days ago. You’ve been in and out of consciousness but every time was only for a few seconds and you were pretty confused,” Kia said. “You mentioned geese a couple of times.”Jackson’s lips twitched in a reluctant smile. “I think I was dreaming of
Jackson woke up confused. His brain was fuzzy and he couldn’t move. The ceiling was unfamiliar to him. It was white and speckled… like a quail egg. Jackson chuckled, but the laugh sounded wrong. He couldn’t stop though, because quails made him think of geese and geese made him think of Kia getting chased by the geese that lived in the pond.His chest heaved as he tried to stop laughing, then a sharp burst of pain stole the laughter from him. He gasped and closed his eyes.“Jackson!” That was Kia. Wasn’t she just chasing the geese? “Jackson! Wren, wake up.” There was a thump. Wren? Did she name the geese? Maybe he’d help her chase them…* * *Jackson opened his eyes to the quail egg ceiling. “Did you get the geese?” There was a weight across his legs that he hadn’t noticed until it was gone. He tried to turn his head, but his muscles didn’t want to work so he just closed
They mingled. Jackson shook countless hands. Laughed with people as he passed them by. The crowd bubbled around him and let him through easily. Kia held tight to one hand as she pulled him forward through the crowd. “Come on!”She shoved him up onto a truck bed, then pushed him higher so he was standing on the cab. A megaphone was shoved in his hand. He gripped it tight and stood up straight. In the most surreal moment of his life, the crowd in front of him stilled and grew silent without a word from him. Hundreds of people. Thousands of people? A lot of people, quiet and staring at him. Jackson lifted his chin and raised his hand in a wave.“Are you ready?”There was a murmur of assent through the crowd.“Please, march quietly. We ask that this be a time to reflect. A time to ask ourselves what else we can do for those oppressed in Oconee. If you’re religious, use this time to pray for our neighbors. If you’re no
Jackson couldn’t believe it. The sheer amount of people who had crammed their way into the small town near the border… He turned to Kia. “How did you do this?”Kia grinned. “The power of the internet… And your second interview was probably the main thing.”People in bright colors carrying signs of various messages milled about. The streets were packed. There were police officers out, some of them carried signs of their own.No More Collars. Freedom For All. No Rest Until We’re All Free.Jackson shook his head and stepped back from the window of his hotel room. “I can’t do this. I shouldn’t be the one speaking.”He heard the shower cut off. Kia leaned against him. “You’ve done so much more than this already, Jackson. Now you’re going to lead this march. You’re going to climb on that stage and you’re going to give that speech. Look out there