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Naia stopped in her tracks as she was hit with the unsettling feeling that she was going the wrong way. The realization was not a sudden notion; rather, it had crept up on her slowly as she trekked along the riverbank of this murky, ominous-looking brook. The tiny female lifted her muzzle, nose searching for any sign of pack wolves in the area. The scent she searched for was that of Shade Slayer, an alpha male that she had met several weeks ago and taken to immediately. Although she had yet to meet the rest of the family, she had accepted his invitation to join his pack with faith that such a gentle, kindhearted wolf would surround himself with similar packmates. Still feeling disoriented and unsure of which direction to proceed, the golden-eyed girl picked her way carefully down to the water’s edge. As the water lapped up over her paws, Naia smiled, reminded of the day that she had met Shade. She had been standing in the shallows like this, and the older male had approached and actually asked her permission to take a drink—and him an alpha! After she had accepted a position in Pitch Pine Trail, instead of following her new leader home they had parted ways so she could inform her friend, Gruahir, of her decision to join Shade and his family. She knew that her traveling companion and self-appointed guardian would worry if she simply vanished, however after a week of searching Naia had to conclude that Gruahir was the one who had disappeared.
Naia shifted nervously, swamp mud squeltching between her toes. She had been all over the northern territories this past week, but she hadn’t detected a single whiff of her friend. Though it bothered her to give up on him, the tawny female knew she had a commitment to her new pack as well. She had been gone too long already, and was itching to be at home with her family.The girl shook herself to clear her mind, pushing her worries aside in order to focus on the present situation. She had been walking along the brook for an hour or so with the idea that it might lead her to the Fen where the Pitch Pine Trail wolves had made their home. However, the stream seemed to be leading around the fen instead of through it. The young wolf nodded to herself, deciding that the best course of action would be to cross the river and then strike it out randomly into woods. Not for the first time, she found herself wishing she had asked Shade for better directions. The woods beyond the Pass were dark, extensive, and strangely enigmatic—certainly not the place for a wolf with little idea of where she was going.
The slight wolf’s attempt to move was met with a strange resistance around her front paws. Am I stuck? She tugged again at her front paws, but they remained adamantly cemented in the mire. Beginning to panic, Naia pulled backwards with all her might, her hind feet slipping on the mossy riverbank. Despite her best effort, she could not remove her front paws from their sticky, muddy prison. Naia let loose a shrill bark of alarm, still scrambling to find some sort of friction against her back paws. She barked again, hoping against hope that she was close enough to the pack’s borders for someone to hear her cries of distress.