The nice thing about the cedar wood forests was the sheer amount of land to explore. It varied widely in such a small space, Felix never needed to adventure far from the safety of Grizzly Hollow’s borders to find something new and interesting to study. Sometimes, wandering through the snowy willowwacks, he had to wonder why there were no other wolves nearby – or perhaps he simply wasn’t looking hard enough. It was so quiet in the cold, the only noise he could pick up the simple squeak of snow beneath his paw pads as he tread.
So much to see, and so little time – after the fiasco with the bull moose, Felix rather imagined he was always expected to return home each night, had never even requested permission to explore any further than he could travel in half a day’s time.
He did wonder, sometimes, though, what it would be like to see the rest of the world.
Curiosity led him today to the small pool of water formed by Heartleaf Creek, frozen solid by the recent cold snap. The ice was clearer than any glass, and Felix could not help his curiosity as he slithered forward, slipping and sliding onto the surface. It was like walking on air – if air was as slick as the insides of a fresh kill, he mused, right before doing a splendid spread eagle and splatting against the ice. But instead of whining, he pressed his face against the cold window, peering down into the frozen world below.
“Amazing…”