Her question went unanswered for a moment's pause and while she knew it was not with the intent to ignore but to think through her answer, it did not mean the girl felt her nerves bristle slightly -- not in annoyance, but anxiety to what Corinna had in mind for her children. What were her dreams for Fenru and Kisla? They had never discussed such things before, and while the she-wolf attempted to live up to the standards placed upon her as not only the eldest child of Corinna's remaining children, but as the daughter of the pack's matriarch she knew she was a far cry from what the silver Leader had likely expected. The darkness that clouded her might not ever give way to light -- she had grown to accept this, but that did not mean her pack mates would.
Finally, Corinna's voice answered, and the younger girl looked to her mother curiously. The thought of raising cubs was not something she was opposed to.. but leaving her pack? Her family? The thought was intolerable. She could no more imagine traveling the way her mother had than she could welcoming her birth father home with warmth. "I couldn't leave you, Fenru or the boys," she murmured, feeling her ears slide back to her skull. Oak Tree Bend, as hard as it was to settle and call the land home, was her home by default -- her heart remained with her pack mates.
Yet the topic slid to pack matters in itself, and the girl bowed her muzzle slightly now before her Leader. Corinna offered her opportunity, and eager to show her talents, she was quick to agree. "I will give you a report within the next few days," she offered, her tail giving a content swing through the air as she lifted her muzzle to nudge it tenderly to the underside of her mother's cheek. "The pack will feast," she decided, a smirk forming upon her lips at the thought. Oak Tree Bend had yet to establish a larger pack hunt within their new home.
sparking up my heart