Quinn tested her weight upon a frozen reverie of once was a musical river, although with her current weight she presumably couldn’t break the ice even if she tried to apply whatever weight or strength was left. Traversing right over it (even giving something of a half hearted skate with her paw pads across), Quinn was rather whimsical on her current pursuit of a hunt. Malnutrition led to several bouts of misinterpretations of what was seen against a background of white on a constant basis, so Quinn was actually unsure whether or not she had deemed herself fortunate to be tracking after a single buck of a Mule Deer who could have been long since separated by his herd. Quinn had crossed paths with those herded animals who abandoned their weakest, sickest, and incapable. Many of which who had welcomed her presence and death to come with; though it made the task easier for her in her state of health to take them down, it also left an eerie reminder she was in the same exact predicament as them. Her surrender wasn’t ready to give in so easy yet.
The degree of weather was in the negatives this afternoon, and Quinn could've swore it was so cold the fine nerves of her olfactory senses were frozen off (that or it had been terribly too long since she utilized her senses for a true successful hunt). The sky was as dreary and cloudy as the ground. Not a figure in sight except the barren bark structures of what was left of this orchard. No sweet cherry aroma of ripened fruit, no fine stroll full of sunshine. For all Quinn knew her imagination could have been playing a timeless trick on her again with an imaginary Mule Deer she sighted not long ago, but Quinn had all the time in the world and more to kill.