She had spied the mountains in the distance from her tree, the peaks beckoning with their snow-capped tops, bidding the mountain wolf to relinquish her hold on the lower, softer grounds. How long had it been since she touched the mountain's likeness? Five, nearing six seasons since her travels began? And how often was it that she thought of the rugged lands? Their generous slopes and treacherous cliffs. It was a calling, same as the one that had led her from her home that compelled her to take stride toward the distance to make it all the more closer.
The goal remained in her eyes long after the days began to blur. Even after hunger began to settle again upon her. What meager meal she found was quickly devoured then forgotten as the energy of travel drained all the flesh from her her belly, rendering her tired and exhausted even with what she could find. It was never enough, yet she cared little for it. What mattered was that she saw the glimpse of home in the rock face. Her family in the steps of lupine like herself, and the smell of the pack in the mountain air.
Even if the likelihood of all were nil.
The elements took their toll on the tired body, but still her perseverance carried her onward. Through split and jagged rock, she wore on being mindful of the terrain and the danger it posed. But it was not without awe for the beauty of such danger. Were it not for the slopes and the progression of her climb, she would have paused to admire the beauty that much longer... Yet she was granted her opportunity when the earth inevitably fell away.
However thinner her frame had become due to lacking nourishment, it was not enough to leave her lighter on the more fragile cliffs of the mountain. She had heard the sound before she felt the pull of gravity take hold, the groan of stone as it gave way to her weight. She felt not the hard stones, but the cool air of the mountain as it rushed across her muzzle, then the sting of her cheek as it struck a sharp edge. Her body as a whole went numb in the fall. The ground took a turn as her vision failed to follow its movements, yet it was her mind Thad made her realize that it was her that was turning- rather rolling down the mountainside toward the earth. She made no sound, for it was lost to the clatter of loosened earth and stone. There was only the audible 'thump' on her behalf as her body came to a halt at the base of her beloved vision. She had found the mountain, but like a novice she had let her footing falter. And her reward was the tinge of blood upon the air. And though she could not see it source, she could feel its leak from her crown, til it parted her forelocks and slipped down her resting muzzle. And for a moment, the beast was still.