The week slid by on soft paws. Gabriel’s guitar lived on the coffee table now, and so did Holt. If the sun was up, Holt was on the porch with the instrument in his lap, claws tracing chords, tongue peeking out in concentration. If the sun wasn’t up, he waited for it like a kid at a locked candy store. Whenever Gabriel stepped outside, Holt brightened so fast it looked like daylight had arrived twice.
“You realize you’ve become a full-time guitar school,” Mark said one morning, passing Gabriel a steaming mug. “Congratulations. Your pay is praise and blistered fingers.”
Gabriel flexed his right paw, feigning tragedy. “I suffer for art.”
“Your students suffer more,” Mark said, nodding toward the yard where Holt carefully played through the melody Gabriel had written for him. The big wolf missed a note, growled at himself, then did it again correctly and looked at the porch to make sure someone saw.
Thane glanced up from the step he was repairing. “He’s getting better.”
Holt finished the phrase and lifted the guitar, wide-eyed. “Good?”
Gabriel grinned. “Good. Keep going.”
Holt settled into the rhythm again, the notes slow and honest. From the edge of the clearing, two younger ferals watched, their usual smirks softened by something closer to admiration. When Holt saw them, his ears shot up. He didn’t wave. He played cleaner.
That afternoon brought more clouds than sun. The air held the metallic smell that comes before snow. In town, people closed shutters gently and tied down tarps with extra knots. At the square, Marta oversaw the tarps stretched over the last of the market stalls. “We’re ready for a dusting,” she told Hank. “We’re not ready for a decade.”
Hank scanned the sky. “One day at a time.”
On the walk back to the cabin, the first tiny flakes drifted past Thane’s muzzle and melted instantly. Gabriel lifted his face to catch them and laughed. Holt stood very still on the path, watching the white specks land on his forearms.
“Good?” he asked, suspicious.
“Good,” Thane said.
“Cold sky feathers,” Holt declared, satisfied.
The forest took the snow quietly. Needles collected sugar. The ground kept its color but the air changed—dense, listening. Sable arrived in that hush, a pale shape gliding between trunks, three of her pack behind her. She stopped at the edge of the clearing as if she’d never once been a visitor.
“Your den smells like tea and music,” she said.
“Blame him,” Thane replied, tilting his head toward Gabriel.
“Proudly,” Gabriel said.
Holt looked from Sable to Thane to Gabriel and back to Sable again, guitar held with a possessiveness usually reserved for prey. Sable took that in with one glance. “He clings,” she observed.
“Like ivy,” Mark said, coming out with an armful of firewood. “We’re training him to cling to chores too.”
Holt puffed. “Holt does chores.”
“Today,” Mark said, deadpan.
Sable’s gaze returned to Thane, the corner of her mouth shifting. “You started a thing.”
“Music started it,” Thane said. “We just opened the door.”
The snow thickened to a slow sift, and the cabin warmed around the kettle. Gabriel tuned while Holt hovered at exactly one pace away, tail thumping the wall until Mark nudged a chair two inches to save the lamp. The younger ferals sat near the hearth, pretending not to be watching every move.
“Play,” Holt said to Gabriel, already lifting his own guitar.
“Breathe,” Gabriel answered, then nodded. They began together, Holt’s chords a touch late, then on time. It wasn’t pretty yet, but it was steady, and his body settled into it as if the instrument had taught him how to sit.
A soft tap sounded at the door; Marta stepped in, hair dusted with snow. “I brought you a loaf,” she said, lifting a wrapped bundle. “And a request for whoever is in charge of soothing the town’s nerves.”
Gabriel raised a hand. “I accept payment in bread.”
“Consider it a retainer,” Marta said. “First snow always makes folks jumpy. If the radio boys want to send some music over dinner, I won’t stop them.”
“We can swing up to KLMR at dusk,” Mark said. “Run a couple hours. Keep it warm.”
“Bless you,” Marta said. She turned to Sable. “And bless your wolves for not chasing my chickens last week.”
Sable’s eyes cooled to pleasant. “They learned. Chickens are friends who make eggs.”
Marta beamed. “We’ll embroider that on a banner.”
They left the door open a moment longer—the sound of falling snow seemed to lean in to listen, then the door clicked shut and the world outside receded to a gray whisper. Gabriel started another pattern; Holt followed. At a tricky change, Holt stumbled, growled, and dragged the note back into place by force of will.
“Easy,” Gabriel said quietly. “Strength is good. Soft is better here.”
Holt looked at his own claws. “Strong, soft,” he repeated. “Both.”
Sable watched all of this with the kind of attention that ends in decisions. When the lesson paused, she walked to Holt and placed two fingers under his chin so he met her eyes. “You protect,” she said. “It is good. But not two only.” She flicked her gaze toward Thane and Gabriel, then spread her hand to the room. “All.”
Holt nodded immediately. “Pack first.”
“Always,” Thane said. “The best way to protect us is to protect all of them.”
Holt took that in visibly, shoulders squaring. One of the younger ferals near the fire smirked and opened his mouth; a look from Sable shut it before sound escaped. The smirk softened into something else. Respect had a smell; it hovered now—thin and honest.
Snow muted the afternoon down into blue. They walked to the town together as the light faded, the four from the cabin and the four from the north, footprints already softening behind them. The square glowed with lanterns as people hurried between buildings and laughter puffed white in the air. KLMR’s tower was a dark wedge against the brighter sky beyond the trees.
“Two hours,” Mark said at the station door. “We keep it simple. Weather, a few tracks, a voice to keep the rooms company.”
“Play Holt,” one of the young ferals said, startling himself at speaking up.
“We will,” Gabriel promised, clapping him lightly on the shoulder. “Soon.”
Inside, the console lights blinked awake like old friends called by name. The generator sent its steady thrum through the floorboards. Mark moved between meters with practiced ease. Thane sat behind the mic, cable wrapped neatly under his palm but not tight. Gabriel stood by the CD racks, plucking discs with the care of a librarian. Sable remained at the studio window with her wolves, listening to the room gather itself.
Thane’s voice went out into the snow. It didn’t fill the air so much as warm it. “Good evening, Libby,” he said. “First flakes of the season. Don’t panic. The roads are clear enough, the soup is hot, and Hank’s boys are doing circles around your worries as we speak.” The faint sound of laughter carried from someone in the hallway. “We’re here for a bit tonight to keep you company. Consider it a fire you can hear.”
He nodded to Mark; the first song rolled. Old world rock, something familiar enough to make people breathe, something with drums like a heartbeat slowed for calm. In the lobby, two children appeared with their mother, pushing noses to the window glass as if the sound lived there and they could see it. One of Sable’s wolves leaned down and showed them how to cup a paw to the glass to make a circle. The children copied, delighted to have made their own portals.
Between songs, Thane gave the forecast and told a short story about the first time he’d seen Montana snow, which was really just a list of things he’d learned quickly, delivered like instructions you’d rather give as a joke: don’t lick metal, don’t trust clear ice, don’t assume the truck knows better than you do. People listening nodded in kitchens and smiled at nothing in particular. Gabriel slipped on air long enough to tell the story of a feral declaring snow to be “cold sky feathers.” In the cabin later, three separate households would call it that without meaning to.
Sable stood beside Thane for the last break. She didn’t take the mic. She didn’t have to. Being present sent its own signal. Thane watched the light, waited for the next downbeat in the room’s unspoken tempo, and said, “We’re not alone tonight. The north is here. We’re here.” He tapped the console softly once. “We’re here.”
On the walk home, Holt ranged steps ahead of Thane without realizing it, scanning the trees with a silent vigilance that made Gabriel hide a grin. When a branch cracked in the woods—some small thing settling under snow—Holt’s head came up, body tall, then he glanced back at Thane and relaxed.
“You know he’s going to start sleeping on the porch,” Gabriel said.
“He already did,” Mark said. “Twice.”
Holt looked mortified and proud at the same time. “Warm near door,” he muttered.
“You have a bed,” Thane said.
“Cloud den too soft,” Holt said, serious.
At the cabin, the snow had finally started to stick. The porch steps wore a thin white edge. Holt opened the door for Sable without thinking; she gave him a glance that said she’d noticed and sat on the rug near the fire, shaking snow from her fur the way a swan would shake off rain. Her wolves settled nearby. Gabriel put the kettle on again. Mark poked the fire, which caught on the first try because Mark had decided it would.
Holt stood near Thane in a posture most wolves only used in battle: left shoulder slightly ahead, attention forward, weight balanced, ready. Thane said nothing about it. He walked to the bookshelf, reached behind a stack of maps, and pulled out a narrow varnished strip with four small hooks.
“What’s that?” Gabriel asked, pouring water.
“Wall hanger,” Thane said. “For a guitar.”
Holt looked at the strip like it might be made of lightning. Thane found two screws and set them under his tongue, took a driver from the shelf, and fixed the hanger to the log wall next to the door where the evening light hit. He stepped back. “Go ahead,” he said.
Holt moved slowly, lifted his guitar with both paws like a ceremony, and set the neck into the cradle. The instrument hung there, gleaming dully in the firelight, a quiet, waiting thing that belonged now.
Holt watched it for a long beat, then turned to Sable without words. She saw everything. “Good,” she said simply. “Now you learn two songs. Next you teach two songs.”
Holt considered that directive as if it were an oath. “Teach,” he said. “Holt teach.”
“Start with the pups,” Thane said. “And the ones who teased you. Show them what you learned.”
Holt’s grin came slow and enormous, not sharp, not dangerous—just light. “Yes,” he said.
The kettle clicked off. Cups made soft sounds. Snow whispered against the windows. The guitars stayed on their hooks and their laps. Sable and Thane shared a rare, unhurried quiet on opposite sides of the hearth, each aware of the other, neither wanting to break the symmetry. Holt drifted to the threshold, sat with his back against the doorframe, and kept watch because he wanted to.
When they finally settled for the night, the cabin had a new shape to its silence. It held more and asked less. Out in the clearing, the snow gathered in patient white layers and made room for whatever would come next. Inside, Holt slept sitting up against the wall beneath his guitar, head tilted, one paw resting over his ribs as if cradling a drum.
In town, a child asked her mother if the radio would sing them to sleep again tomorrow. At the northern camp, a young wolf tried clumsy chords and didn’t quit when they buzzed. In the studio at KLMR, a meter still glowed from leftover heat, a needle resting on zero like a heartbeat that had learned how to wait.
Morning would come. And with it, the next lesson.