They Call Me Back, but I Was Gone
Two years ago, as a graduate of Werewolf Medical School, I volunteered to go to the most remote and poorest pack, as it had always been my dream to help werewolf patients in need. I heard from my teacher that the werewolves in the Rogue Pack were the poorest and that their living conditions were the worst. Most of the werewolves there were old and weak, so I volunteered to go to that pack as soon as I graduated.
After I arrived, I helped them build an infirmary and even set up a blood station. Every year, I led them in voluntary blood donations.
But one time—right after I had taken a short break following a blood donation—they turned on me.
They slandered me, calling me a selfish and heartless healer.
Worse still, they accused me of faking illness, claiming I was lying comfortably in bed while patients were dying—refusing to lift a finger to save them.
Not only that, they stormed into the infirmary, seized all my herbs and equipment, and completely trashed the place I had built for them with my own hands.
Recalling the days I had spent day and night healing them—only to see my infirmary destroyed and my dream shattered—I let out a bitter smile.
I picked up the phone and called the dean of my home pack.
"I'm ready to return," I said. "I want to serve the patients in our own pack."
Then, without a trace of regret, I left that place behind.
However, after I gave up, the whole pack regretted it and begged me to return.