This piece is based on the plot of the 2006 animated film version; it's also loosely inspired by the tale of White Fang.
Scenario I
The drive back to the farm was consumed by a questioning silence. Though it wasn't as if Peter and his grandfather had that much to say to each other to start with. Neither of them tried to drown out the sounds of the rusty motor.
The old man drummed his calloused fingertips against the steering wheel as they made a left turn. They could have made a fortune from that wolf pelt. The mere thought of that sort of money never earned echoed inside the his mind.
He cast a fleeting glance at the boy strapped in beside him, staring ahead at the empty road. The lad even had teeth marks on his cheek, for goodness sake! The old man could not fathom what force could have possessed Peter to actually make him free the wolf after all the evident effort it took just to capture it!
And, he eventually felt like he had to ask Peter, to know the facts. Since, really, anyone else there in town would have raised the gun and took the shot.
"...Why let it go?"
These sudden words were low and gruff as ever, but his grandson heard a certain sense of wonder clinging to them.
"Because," replied Peter quietly, "I understand now. Wolves are not meant to be caged. Or skinned."
However, his implied answer was clear enough.
"He was the same as me."
Scenario II
Every now and then, if the cold winter winds grew still and if the snow settled in, and when the darkened woods stood there waiting...as if it knew a storm was nearing, that's when Peter could hear it. One long, lone howl ring out amidst the trees.
He could just sense the call was for him. His heart told him so.
And at those very moments, depending if he was in a particularly good mood—or even in a bad mood—Peter would curl a hand around his mouth and howl right back.
Scenario III
Peter's grandfather may have been old and distant, but he still noticed how the other children in town gradually began to reject his grandson following the whole incident.
They isolated him.
Boys around Peter's age seemed to make a sure point to not linger in Peter's sights for too long...it was like they were afraid they were trespassing on his territory without permission. The girls avoided speaking to him just as much, as if they feared of getting bitten by some savage beast who was ready to pounce.
No one wanted to play with Wolf-Boy.
But slow changes were showing in Peter as well. He was somehow influenced by the incident, too, probably even more then they all were.
Some days, when his temper was getting the better of him, his walk would become so calculated and so determined that it actually looked like Peter was out on the hunt for something. One time—when had he caught Peter fighting with a lad twice his size—and he could have sworn he saw Peter draw his upper lip back to reveal his clenched teeth in place of using his fists.
Yes, the old retired hunter knew infants like Peter became boys, and all of those boys were destined to grow into men.
But he never expected the only grandson he ever will have to grow into...quite the wolf.
Scenario IV
Natalya remembered the first time she saw the shy boy called Peter, the grandson of that strange and aloof farming-hunter whom her father and mother already detested.
Her yellow hair was loose and long under her pretty knitted cap that day, and she was wearing a heavy scarf with her winter coat that matched her rosy cheeks.
She remembered how Peter stared at her across the street first, almost looking envious toward her group of friends. Like he longed for a friend to call his own. Then she remembered the neighbor boys bullying him in the alleyway thereafter.
And Natalya remembered when Peter rode into town a few days later when he'd managed to trap a wild wolf. She remembered how Peter had released the beast to spare the its life, and how all of them backed away in fright and confusion. She remembered how the wolf strolled evenly at Peter's side on its own free will—acting as if Peter was his equal. She also remembered that same night her sleep was plagued by nightmares of hungry black wolves running through the woods, and of a boy with a similar patch of wild black hair and a wide toothy grin, stalking towards her.
In person, there was now something gleaming behind that brilliant blue gaze of his each time they happened to cross paths around town. Peter definitely wasn't afraid bullies any longer.
My, what piercing eyes you have...
Scenario V.
During each season, Peter would wake early in the morning and go on about his long day of chores.
Grandfather still had him painting another coat on the side of the house, repairing new holes in the fence, and still had him out fetching bread and bullets from the market every passing week.
Though once in a while, he'd find a set of familiar canine tracks imprinted into the fresh soil right beneath his window.
Peter did not panic about his secret "companion" checking in on him after dark, and he never wanted to cry for help.
Nay, Peter would actually chuckle softly at the sight, since all the chickens in their coop were left safe and untouched.
So as long as it was only a causal visit, there wasn't anything he needed to worry about.
Scenario VI.
After Peter had buried his grandfather, he tended to the farmlands nonetheless, partly out of a sense of duty and partly out of remembrance to the old man who'd raised him. And by then, Peter had become a grown man with a tall, lean body handsomely built from years of chopping fire wood, and a healthy chin lined with stubble.
He generally lived alone in privacy, much like everyone had expected him to considering his...uniqueness they couldn't quite place.
Peter had a way with the wilderness unlike anyone else did. The forest did not frighten him, and that still seemed to frighten them more.
Life had never offered him a wife so far, nor did Peter have any children of his own to care for or close friends from town he could invite over for supper.
But in all honesty, he still had the wolf. Or presently known as Howler.
Overtime, Howler had begun to guard the house while Peter left for a period of days at a time, looking for a little side work. (No burglar had ever dared to poke around his home with a wolf on the lookout.) Other days, Howler carefully approached him around dusk and fed from Peter's careful hand and allowed to have his ears scratched before scampering off again. There were even a few bone-chilling nights when Howler had actually come inside him room to slept next to him in bed, providing Peter extra warmth until morning broke over the hill.
They had formed the most surprising and unexpected bond; for neither of them were completely wild, though really not that tame either.
But they were a pack.
