Thundery outbreaks in nearby, 69° F, 21° C
More River snakes! All welcome.
The little ghost had her ears perked as her neck craned around the outside of the den's walls. She itched to find the source of the low sound that was coming from, what felt like, everywhere. The outside smelled different today, wild and exciting. The blue skies were gone, and it was a new purple and grey colour that replaced it. It did not give the cub the same sort of free-loving feeling that the sunshine did, but it also did not deter her enough to stay inside with her family. Once she was sure the great sound was not in the near vicinity, partly because she could not fathom something she could not see, the white smudged female darted out of the den. She paused a moment, looking back to the other den opening that had all of the commotion the other day, when her and Bennett had been plucked from the unseen dangers the adults had identified. She decided to head in the other direction, and quickly forgot the past.
Atropos stayed on the easily accessed paths that the adult wolves followed, some of the taller grasses tickling her still-thin puppy fur. The jamboree of blundering sound happened again, giving the girl curious pause again, this time turning her face towards the clouds. Up there? Looking ever upwards, she stumbled slightly, unable to balance effectively without the visual stimulus of the ground. It was not until another noise of ruffling grass nearer to her sounded that she finally broke her concentration of the clouds. A strange slithering and winding tail disappeared into grasses up ahead, almost unseen had the cub not been so close. What was that? Her tail wagged curiously high over her back, ears and eyes pricked forward in concentration. She lowered her nose and body to the ground as she padded slowly after the weird slithering creature where she had seen it disappear into the grass.