http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v201/bluepups/RaisTable2.png); background-position:top center; background-repeat:no-repeat; padding-top: 100px; padding-bottom: 20px; padding-left: 20px; padding-right: 20px; text-align:justify;">It was an exceptionally dark night, the moon little more than a slivered white claw on the horizon. Even if the moon were at its apex, Rais knew it would cast no light. Light didn't matter, though. The wolf's crooked smile gleamed in the dull light from the stars, a crafty glint harbored in his eyes. The male that had come across him on Fireweed Rise, Ash, had told him something interesting, about a hidden lake in the mountains. And even more interesting, he had told Rais that he and his mate, Treena Rose, lived up there. Rais wasn't confident that he would actually run into the wolf who was his half sister up here, and not just someone who simply shared the same name. It couldn't hurt to look, and he wanted to see the lake anyways. Rais had caught Ash's scent during the encounter, and followed it up the mountains where it would hopefully lead to the lake.
He moved over the rugged mountain terrain with his nose to the ground and paws light but unsteady. There wasn't exactly a trail to follow, but here and there fragments of scent from the male could be found. Rais' keen nose had no trouble connecting the faint points of smell into some sort of makeshift route. He weaved through the scrubby plants and tenacious conifers that managed to make their home up here, occasionally loosing his footing on a ledge or protruding rock, but fortunately took no falls.
The terrain had begun to shift from an upward climb to a gentle downward slope. It was here that Rais noticed his encroach on what was doubtlessly a pack border. He paused, his tongue flopping out in an exhausted pant. He wasn't used to climbing and clambering up-hill, but he couldn't be stopped for long. After catching his breath, he disregarded the border and set off again. The lake should be easy enough to find, but Treena? Probably not as much. She could very well not even be in the area, but Rais wouldn't be troubled if he didn't see her.
Again, Rais was stopped by a strange scent. It was a little musty, stale, but unmistakably meat. His stomach rumbled at the thought of food, as he hadn't eaten recently. And what he had eaten had been no larger than a hare. Almost constantly hunger was gnawing at the loner. It would delay his adventure a little to find the cache, but it would certainly be worth the trouble if he got some easy food out of it. Wet leathery nose pressed to the earth, he sniffed around the gravely soil searching for the cache. His ears flicked to and fro to keep aware of his surroundings, as he knew that digging up another wolf's cache, especially within a pack's territory, was practically a sin.
He sniffed heavily at a patch of rocky dirt and was sure that the meat was hidden in that spot. Frantically he began to dig at the earth with his forepaws, flinging prodigious amounts of debris out behind him. The shale cut into his paws, but he ignored the pain for the sake of his aching stomach. He would rather get the prize out quickly than quietly, and hopefully he would have a mouthful of meat and be off running before anyone found him.
He moved over the rugged mountain terrain with his nose to the ground and paws light but unsteady. There wasn't exactly a trail to follow, but here and there fragments of scent from the male could be found. Rais' keen nose had no trouble connecting the faint points of smell into some sort of makeshift route. He weaved through the scrubby plants and tenacious conifers that managed to make their home up here, occasionally loosing his footing on a ledge or protruding rock, but fortunately took no falls.
The terrain had begun to shift from an upward climb to a gentle downward slope. It was here that Rais noticed his encroach on what was doubtlessly a pack border. He paused, his tongue flopping out in an exhausted pant. He wasn't used to climbing and clambering up-hill, but he couldn't be stopped for long. After catching his breath, he disregarded the border and set off again. The lake should be easy enough to find, but Treena? Probably not as much. She could very well not even be in the area, but Rais wouldn't be troubled if he didn't see her.
Again, Rais was stopped by a strange scent. It was a little musty, stale, but unmistakably meat. His stomach rumbled at the thought of food, as he hadn't eaten recently. And what he had eaten had been no larger than a hare. Almost constantly hunger was gnawing at the loner. It would delay his adventure a little to find the cache, but it would certainly be worth the trouble if he got some easy food out of it. Wet leathery nose pressed to the earth, he sniffed around the gravely soil searching for the cache. His ears flicked to and fro to keep aware of his surroundings, as he knew that digging up another wolf's cache, especially within a pack's territory, was practically a sin.
He sniffed heavily at a patch of rocky dirt and was sure that the meat was hidden in that spot. Frantically he began to dig at the earth with his forepaws, flinging prodigious amounts of debris out behind him. The shale cut into his paws, but he ignored the pain for the sake of his aching stomach. He would rather get the prize out quickly than quietly, and hopefully he would have a mouthful of meat and be off running before anyone found him.
(This post was last modified: Jul 17, 2012, 03:14 AM by Rais.)