Holding a power over Vali though was satisfying, using the treaty like a sword over his head whenever his prick of a half-uncle tried to threaten him from that day forth. Nazara favored the way of the Northmen, but he was sick and tired of having to push his “uncle” who pushed him back, and could not bring himself to run to the shelter of his mother's pack lands. He did not want to be a slave, good only for breeding which he couldn't even do until he had reached sexual maturity...which he had quite a while to wait yet. Neither option was appealing, nor ideal, and so Nazara had bid his time, paid specific attention to the details that Dagrun presented him with whenever the boy would ask his father about his travels to the “Teekon Wilds”, and about his half-brother, Ragnar and when the opportunity struck: left.
It was cold, and Nazara had not necessarily been prepared to deal with the winter in full. Regardless, there was no point of return, no turning back. They could figure out their issues without him. No longer was he their markvörðurinn. And if they wanted him bad enough, they could come and find him. He was not their tool, and they could no longer chain him. He was closing the distance between himself and a pack's borders though he was not sure if he was at the right pack or not. All Dagrun had been able to tell him was that the pack Ragnar belonged too was upon the coast. Even if it wasn't the right pack he might have to condition himself to stay, just until winter's end. No matter how old he believed himself to be intellectually, or maturity wise at the end of the day he was still young, and though he could, pretty much, take care of himself he still needed guidance, and definitely needed a pack to call his home. Stopping in his steps when he was near enough, Nazara tipped his head back and sent up a howl, alerting the pack's wolves to his presence.
She tilted her head, he was about her own children's age, but he stood higher and wider than she, though who didn't really. She held herself upright though, her size was just that a size, it did not count for the heart or the fire that beat beneath her breast. Hello can I help you?
She then waited with astute eyes, and quite manner. Both relaxed and coiled ready for anything. While at the back of her mind, his looks nagged at her as if she should know who he was or at least who he belonged too.
The Sovereign broke the silence then, and Nazara rose back to a neutral stance, though careful to make the effort to not appear like he was attempting to challenge her. It was hard for him to make his body small by any definition, and he had the disadvantage of being quite larger than she. In hindsight, one from far away might have assumed he the adult and she the child, though that was far from the case. Looks, Nazara knew, could prove to be deceiving. “I am Nazara,” He did not bother giving her his Norse name, figuring that at this point in time it wasn't important. He had grown fond of his princess mother calling him “Nazara” something that was his that didn't signify any one culture, or faith. It belonged to neither Nahuatl or Scandinavian and thus he clung to it as if it were his lifeline to freedom. For the moment, he supposed, it was. “And I'm well I need a pack maybe for just the winter. I'm searching for someone. My father spoke of these Wilds when he spoke of my half-uncle,” Nazara used “half” in front of uncle in the case that Ragnar turned out to be just as big of an ass as his youngest brother. In truth, Nazara was just searching for sanctuary, and hoped that if he did manage to find Ragnar that the man would not send him packing back home.
Thistle listened and she frowned at his words. Why should we feed you and take care of you and ask you to take care of our family when you will be leaving in a few months anyway? Perhaps it would be easier to find your uncle than to settle for a home that you would not be entirely loyal too? Whose your uncle Nazara? Perhaps we can find him and that way perhaps you could have your own home immediately without having to only seek shelter for winter?. She had noticed him put emphasis on half uncle, but she didn't care for that. If there was blood shared he was your uncle, or your brother or what have you. It didn't matter if there was a different parent there, there was still blood of at least one of the same flowing through you.
“I understand,” Nazara murmured in the common tongue, his accent a mixture of Scandinavian and Amazon, favoring neither, for despite that he'd been reared in Odinn's Cove and favored the way of the Northmen more than he did the fierce women of whose womb he was born from, his mother had been a prominent figure in his life, regardless. Though he did not love her culture, or their treatment of his sex, he did love her unconditionally, unable to help it. After all, she was his mother more than she had been anything else. Until he had been weaned from her milk she had deigned to stay in the Cove with her “heathen lover”, though Nazara would not have normally gone so far as to call Dagrún and Princess Xiuhcoatl lovers of any sort. Two wolves, under normal circumstance unable to ever take a mate and produce children had been chosen by their superiors, spoken at the decree of their respective Gods, forced into an unlawful and begrudging union to create not a child but a peace treaty. A weapon more like, Nazara amended with a thought that left a bitter after taste in his mouth. Of course, they were going to do it.
He would, if he'd have been in their position. It was stupid to be outlawed from having children or taking a wife/mate simply because, in Dagrún's case he was a bastard, a “half breed” between two opposing cultures, or if one was to believe Váli a mistake that should have never happened, and in Princess Xiuhcoatl's case because she was not Queen and would never be queen given that she was the younger sister. To Nazara, whom might have been clouded by childish ignorance, those rules seemed stupid. Luckily, though, this woman seemed determined to help him search for his half-uncle, of which he was internally grateful. “Well, sometimes he goes by Heimdall on Outrider missions, but his given name is Ragnar. Ragnar Loðbrók.” Nazara told her, figuring that it might not hurt to give her his alias as well, in case she had stumbled upon him and he had given her the guise of 'Heimdall'.
Thistle listened and the youth before her had a accent, but she wasn't sure where it was from. It sounded a bit like her husband's but it wasn't as pronounced and there was something else to it. She was puzzled and stood there for a moment with a furrow in her brow trying to figure it out.
Thistle heard her husbands name and she laughed. Well then Nazara I believe you've come to the right place. Your uncle is my husband and he will be pleased to meet you I am sure. Dagrun is your father? he was the only one that she could think of that was her husbands half sibling other than hati, but Hati was far too young ot have pups at least she was fairly certain she was.
“Right,” Nazara was skeptical about Ragnar being pleased to meet him. “You'll have to excuse my skepticism. My experiences with my known half-uncle were anything but great.” Nazara told her bluntly, hoping that she did not take it rudely, but in the end she could take it however she wanted. He had stopped caring if he insulted others because it seemed that all anyone ever did was insult him. Like being called a “half breed” wasn't insulting enough. He would have never fully been accepted into the Cove, and though there was no question of being accepted into Coatl's Rise, he did not want to subjugate himself to being a slave. Why were those his only options? Why did he have to settle for those or nothing else? He didn't. He wouldn't.
“Yes, Dagrún is my father,” Nazara responded slowly, confused as to how this woman knew of him. “Do you know him?”
Thistle growled softly Vali I assume? I have not heard very good things of him. You do not have to worry here. Ragnar views Dagrun as his brother, perhaps his only brother at this point. She wasn't really sure what to say there. The other brothers had all betrayed him, Dagrun had not. She was pleased to offer him that small bit of good will.
Thistle nodded, smiling softly Yes I know your father. He actually gifted Ragnar and I with a wonderful hide when I had my first litter. He was a kind wolf at least to me, though i know his nature is savage as is Ragnars.
“Most might disagree with your assessment of my father being kind,” He had a reputation for being a famous warrior in the history of the Cove, but he was brutish and just as ambitious as Ragnar himself was rumored to be, and in this ruthless when it came to getting what he wanted. Despite how much Nazara claimed to be like his father, he was as cunning as his mother, and though he attempted to deny that he was much of an “Amazon” it was staring him in the face that the Amazon in him toned down the brutality of the Northmen quite a bit. He wasn't vicious in the sense of brute force, but in the power of his wit, which was probably more dangerous than brute force.
"So I guess that this means that I've found the pack I'm looking for," Nazara hedged, unsure what it was that she needed from him to either accept him or send him away.
Thistle chuckled I imagine they would, most would say the same of Ragnar when I say he is a good man including him. But well he is a good man to me most of the time as was your father. So I hold no nature against them. They are savage and brutish, but they are also very well..complex they are complex. that was the only way she knew how to put it.
Thistle nodded and looked him over I guess it does. I assume you can hunt and fight if needed? Yes? I can't imagine you wouldn't know these things.
“Most are too busy being terrified of them, claiming that they are savage and heathens to see that they're actually well cultured,” Nazara spoke thoughtfully. “Even the Amazons' culture is well structured. Ruled by a Queen of War, and a Diplomatic Queen. Though I shy away from their culture for obvious reasons as a male, I do respect how they reign.” He liked to believe that he was well cultured and his father had always told him that one must always respect their enemy even though there was animosity between them. Technically, he was an enemy of both the Amazons and the Vikings, but he was also, so long as he lived, their only chance at salvation. The only thing that kept them from slaughtering one another. If the Cove and Rise went to war with one another the Eldingar Valley would undoubtedly be crimson with the running blood because it was unlikely that either of them wouldn't drag the other packs in the Valley with them.
It was a terrible burden to bear.
“Of course,” Being the son of a Berseker Warrior and the Princess — who held the unofficial title of War Queen — not having knowledge of battle would be nothing short of an insult to both sides. “But I am willing to learn other things. Whatever the pack needs the most I will set my focuses too.” He told her, wanting to make sure that she knew he was not set in his ways. He was not a war machine, nor was he a just a peace pact, and he did not want to be treated like either or. He just wanted to be normal, or as normal as he was ever going to get. The impressionable years of his childhood were long over but he wanted to live while he had the chance.
Thistle chuckled at his words, Oh but they are savage and ruthless, but they are also only canine and they feel as much pain as the other. Though usually their pain and upset manifests into anger and irrational thoughts usually. It was true, Ragnar had been hurt before, upset and he had lashed out in anger rather than any other emotion. He could barely say he loved her, he did, but she knew it was not easy. It's good to have a healthy respect for those who bore you and their culture. You come from two very admirable sides.
Thistle listened and dipped her muzzle to him. At the moment we need gamekeepers for we are short on meat and we have little ones to feed. Come i'll show you around and then you can have your leave to find Ragnar unless you would like me to be there?