She felt so old.
Her new scars pulled and again she cursed the memory of her golden brother with his ridiculous ideals and the way he... Her lips pulled back in a silent snarl. It wasn’t painful, but she didn’t feel completely herself in this new skin. It would take some time for the newly knit flesh to feel as though it was her own.
She hadn’t slept properly in... She couldn’t remember the last time she had slept at all. All of the food she managed to scrounge was given to the scrap of a cub who remained at her side. She could only hope her other children fared better.
The dark child followed obediently in his mothers footsteps, never faltering or complaining no matter the distance they travelled. He truly was his fathers son. She hated to have him in the open, especially so close... but she couldn’t leave him at their niche in the Heights with night quickly falling. The boy would grow bored and their were others about who would gladly kill a young cub for simply being. Mountain Lions, and of course her old nemesis, the wolverines. His coat blended into the night so well. She was a skeletal ghost and he was merely a shadow.
She would die for him.
She almost had.
It was to her advantage that she had spent so much time during her pregnancy walking these lands. She knew of the perfect place to leave her son, well within sight of where she would be hunting for their dinner on this night. With any luck, she would land enough for them both. The steady ache of hunger radiated from her core incessantly but she would not put her own wellbeing over that of her child, even then, she knew he feigned fullness to allow her enough to scrape by.
Motioning with her nose to the cracked boulder she expected him to wait at, she watched as her son moved obediently to fulfill her wishes. She forced a smile and continued towards the lake, her own thoughts so heavy on her mind that her head dropped to hang at her chest. She had forced him to grow up so fast. He should spend his days romping in the sun with his siblings and pack, but they were loners. All it took was one mistake...
The still waters moved effortlessly around the wraith as she waded deeper into the depths of the lake and stared intently at its mirrored surface. Her stomach growled in anticipation as she stilled to focus on the task at hand.
So enthralled was she that she didn’t notice the white wolf approaching from the other side of the lake...</blockquote>