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Nagga took her teasing in stride, claiming himself as “always the pariah of the bunch”. He even shot her a defiant smirk, giving Naia the impression that he was proud of that fact. An amused grin twitched at the corners of the tawny girl’s mouth. She enjoyed this newcomer’s easygoing sense of humor—not often did she come across a strapping young male who was willing to laugh at himself. As she described the beauty of Relic Lore in the springtime, she noticed Nagga glance around, as if he was wondering what she could possibly see in the place. ”It can’t snow forever,” he said with a little smile, which Naia thought was curious. It was true of course, the snow would eventually melt, but the optimism behind such a statement was what drew Naia’s attention. Most wolves would have replied with something jaded—it was refreshing to speak with someone who wasn’t yet a victim of life’s cruelties.
”Yes,” she sighed in reply to Nagga’s comment on her struggle, ”He was the kindest leader I had ever known… it was hard on all of us. Especially his pups…” Naia’s honey eyes narrowed, and she fixed her stare on the pronghorn carcass hoping that Nagga wouldn’t see the anger that flared up in her expression as she thought of Shade’s children. The delicate girl usually shrank from any sort of violence, but she wouldn’t mind seeing Shade’s assassin ripped open and prostrate in the snow like this deer. It took a special sort of evil to orphan two pups at the start of their first winter. Naia looked back up when her companion asked about Shade’s death. Oh… she began, trying to find her place once more in the story. She shook her head, embarrassed that she had let her emotions distract her. ”Slain by an enemy from his past,” she said simply—not because she was hesitant to reveal information to him, but because that was all she really knew about the circumstances. After Shade’s death, the situation in Pitch Pine Trail had been chaotic to say the least. Frantic preparations for winter were constantly interrupted as pack members struggled to create a new hierarchy, and nobody who knew the whole story was available or willing to discuss the event in detail.
Near stranger as he was, he did not offer sympathy for her situation. It was probably better that he didn’t—if he had expressed sorrow, Naia might have cheekily replied, “Do not apologize for them,” echoing her companion’s first words to her. That was Naia’s curse; she was engaged in a near constant effort to lighten the mood, even (especially) during a serious discussion. No doubt the impulse was left over from the time she spent serving her birthpack as an omega, whose primary responsibility was to dissipate fights before they happened. Although the role of the omega is important, Naia felt shame for her previous Lowest position, certain that she was meant for a more respectable rank. She attempted to suppress the residual behaviors that she felt were indicative of her time spent as an omega, but the biggest problem was that if her vigilance lapsed she acted on her involuntary impulses without really being aware of it.
As it was, she felt relieved when Nagga changed the subject, alleviating her instinctive discomfort with such a serious topic. She grinned easily at his description of the two of them as “homeless,” enjoying the respite that even such a small action as a smile provided from the gravity of their previous subject. ”As a matter of fact, I do!” she answered his question enthusiastically. Naia was more than willing to share what she knew—she collected information from other loners whenever possible, and she was happy to return the favor for a change. ”There are three packs that I am aware of which reside within a day’s travel of our location,” she began, turning away from their meal to face the meadow. Their position on the Rise was perfect for her explanation, with the lands she was about to discuss spread out like a blanket below.
”The closest are the Ridge Wolves—they live directly north of here, along the edge of the Pass,” she told him, turning her head to point the way. If she did not know the name of a pack she used a nickname to keep them straight in her mind. After she delivered the facts, she gave him her opinion. ”I passed their scent markers on the way here and…” she paused, wondering how best to describe the smell. It was always so difficult to put a smell into words. ”They smell sort of rigid, if that makes sense. Strong, though—if that’s what you’re looking for.” A harsh pack with black-and-white rules and swift discipline was not the place for restless Naia, and that was the impression she had received. What she didn’t tell Nagga was that this was the pack that housed Shade’s murderer, and Naia would rather die out in the cold than live in the umbriferous shadow of such a monster.
”If you cross the meadow and enter the woods, you’ll smell the Cave Wolves. I don’t know much about them, but perhaps you can do some sniffing yourself. If cave living suits your fancy.” She grinned as she delivered the last sentence—it amused her to imagine Nagga living in a cave, ivory coat streaked with the abominable gray cave sludge. His pelt would probably never recover. She wished she could tell him more about the Cave Wolves, but the strong stench of cave clay they left behind flooded her senses whenever she neared the border. The smell overwhelmed any other scent, and she was never able to glean anything more from the markers. Naia supposed that it was something you just got used to, but she couldn’t stand the thought of living with that smell following her wherever she went, clinging to her pelt and drowning out her senses. In fact, Naia’s roleplayer guides cave trips professionally, and she finds it hard to believe that anything would actually choose to live in a cave. Even the bats have to escape at least once a day.
”If you pass the Cave wolves and keep travelling north, you’ll reach a marsh. Cross the marsh, and you should smell the River Wolves. They are a fairly new group—At least I don’t remember smelling them last time I was west of the Pass.” The River Wolves smelled like a delightful mixture of fresh, moist soil with a tangy hint of the marsh. It was rare to come across the scent of a River Wolf this far south, but when she did it always intrigued her. She thought perhaps this was the pack that Aeolus had mentioned joining, following two of their other former Pitch Pine Trail packmates. Despite the pack’s collapse they still felt like her family, and she trusted their judgment. If the River Wolves were taking in Pitch Pine Trail refugees then that was where she was headed. ”Once I stretch my legs a little, that’s where I’ll be going,” she imparted. ”There might be another pack or two even further north, but those are areas I have never explored.” Finished with her lecture, she turned back to the pronghorn for a bite to chew on while she waited for Nagga to give his impressions.
OOC|| Random question-- do you ever wish there were more words for "smell" when you're playing a wolf? I think that if wolves actually had a spoken language, they would have all kinds of words for smelling and the different scents and whatnot. I sort of struggled with this post, since I felt sort of limited in what I can describe from the perspective of a human.. ||