book two ❧ [iv]

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"Welcome!" Renjun smacked the tip of his lecture pointer against his TV screen. You jumped a little at the sound. "To your exclusive History of Werewolf-Human Romance crash course taught by yours truly!"

Now that the fall semester and finals week were over, you were over at Renjun's place. You had asked him if you could finish your conversation that you were having at the park about werewolves and humans. And truly, you don't know why you had thought that you two would just grab coffee or something. You shouldn't have expected anything less than a full-blown PowerPoint presentation from your friend who practically lived, breathed, ate, and slept Magical Creatures Studies.

"Did you just have that laying around?" You asked, referring to the pointer in his hand.

"Yes of course."

"Of course," you echoed humorously as you reclined into your seat on his couch. "Anyway, go for it, Renjun. I'm all ears."

"Okay, so—" He pressed the spacebar on his laptop that was projecting to the TV. The first slide popped up. "Archaeological data. This is where we left off in our conversation. Entire packs have been found that were half human and half werewolf—"

You raised your hand. "Excuse me? Professor Huang?"

"Yes?" He called on you, having fully slipped into his role as lecturer.

"When you say the packs were half human, half werewolf, what do you mean? Like the population statistics were 50% humans and 50% werewolves? Or the individuals themselves were half-and-half genetically?"

"The former. These packs were integrated evenly with humans and werewolves."

"And you're saying 'packs' specifically. Not villages, or societies, or groups. Why?"

"From what we've been able to gather bout how they lived from the artifacts left behind, it seems their social structure more closely mirrored the customs and habits of werewolves than the humans that lived in that same area at the time."

"So the humans that were in the pack adopted werewolf culture?"

"You're getting ahead of me," Renjun beamed at you. "You're a very perceptive student."

"Oh. Go ahead, Professor Huang." You gave him a humble seated bow to proceed with the slide he was on.

"So, the archaeological data itself that was found was, like you said, bones, obviously, but also pots, stone tools, trinkets, even children's toys or bits of clothing have been found." He clicked to the next slide. There were pictures of some of the objects he'd mentioned, and a couple more. "This is where it gets interesting. Even if we hadn't found any human skeletons, we would've known that humans had lived there because there were human tools found. Tools that werewolves didn't need. Like knives to cut their food into bite-sized pieces, and jars that have residue from medicine that we know was used to treat diseases communicable among humans but not werewolves."

"Wow."

Next slide. This one had a picture of some objects on one side, pieces of worn leather, smooth colorful stones, and on the other side, a drawing of two necklaces, with matching opalescent stones wrapped securely in them.

"On the left—" he smacked said side with the pointer. "—are the pieces of two leather necklaces that were found with a pair of skeletons that were buried together. The right—" smack "—is an artist's rendition of what the necklaces most likely looked like originally."

"They're beautiful."

"Werewolves will traditionally bury mates together."

"Like human couples who buy a plot of land in a cemetery big enough for the both of them before they pass." You nodded.

"Exactly. This specific pack wasn't 50/50 werewolves and humans we think. From what we've been able to parse out, it was more 80/20, with more werewolves. But they still buried werewolf-human couples together with all the same rites as werewolf couples. This pair right here was a werewolf-human couple."

You smiled up at the image on-screen, feeling the familiarity of them reach across time to you in that moment. "And the necklaces?"

"It was sort of like a wedding ring-slash-mating claim fusion." Renjun tapped the two necklaces with zeal again. You were starting to get a little afraid that he was going to damage his TV. "You were asking if the humans in these packs adopted werewolf culture, right? For the most part, yes, they did. They took on all of the werewolves' culture as their own as far as we can tell. And what they couldn't do, like eating raw meat, they adapted so they could. Obviously, day to day meals, they'd cook with heat. But many culturally important events held significance in the rawness of the food, so the humans would cure meat in salt ahead of time so they could safely consume it for those instances."

"What sort of events?"

"The celebration of the solstices, uh mating rituals, burials, any number of things most likely involved the consumption of specifically raw meat as part of the tradition. It was an important staple of the werewolf diet, hence why Jeno has to slam down those protein bars now."

You chuckled a little bit, able to perfectly picture your boyfriend's shelf in his pantry that was taken up by boxes upon boxes of protein bars specifically formulated for werewolves. "Ah, yes, the ancestral chocolate peanut butter flavored protein bars."

"And now you know the important cultural significance of them." Your friend sighed wistfully, then switched back into his lecture-mode. "Back to the necklaces. So while the humans largely assimilated into werewolf culture, they also introduced a few things of their own. Typically, when two werewolves mate for life, it's a whole biting and scenting thing and bam— every wolf in a hundred-mile radius gets the message. But human noses and teeth aren't exactly up to par for that, right?"

"...Right."

"So these pairs did both."

"Both?"

"Again, extrapolation, and oral tradition." Renjun qualified his explanation as he quickly clicked to the next slide, which had bullet points for what he was now laying out to you. "Unlike a normal wound, a werewolf's mating bite would heal quickly and had no risk of infection, even for a human. But a human couldn't do that back to the werewolf, and the human can't really smell that much of a difference. But handmade, matching necklaces with a precious stone? Now that's something everyone can see and understand."

You nodded, "Yeah, okay. I get it. You want to make sure that both of you feel honored and loved in however that manifests for each of you, and obviously you want your partner to express their love for you in whatever way feels the most genuine and powerful."

"Uh... yeah..." Renjun gave you a strange look. "I mean, in the field we look at it as a fascinating example of the blending of different cultures but-but that's... cool... too..."

You gave him an unamused look before gesturing to the screen and to the left. "Can you go back one?"

He obliged, and you pointed at pictures. "What stone is that? Do you know?"

"Do I know what kind of stone it is?" He scoffed mockingly. "Of course I do, it's moonstone."

"Helps werewolves have more control over and less pain through their shift on the full moon." You smiled as you recognized exactly why the human had chosen it all those years ago. "A perfect choice for the necklace that you intend for your werewolf lover to never take off."

Your friend put a hand over his heart, looking at you with delight. "I knew you'd like that one. God, I almost don't want to tell you about the werewolf brothels of the 1600s now."

"The what?!"

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