The female inhaled deeply, sampling the heavy scent of pine pitch and deer scat several yards away. Iopah sighed quietly and looked around. Although the light was dimming rapidly, the she-wolf had no problem seeing the scrub pines and lush ferns. It was so unlike home. She laughed softly at herself, the sound quickly swallowed up in the surrounding forest. <i>Where was home now?</i> Iopah sat, thinking of the pas months and years that let to this quiet pine forest just after dusk. Several minutes passed, somewhere in the forest a twig snapped. Iopah swiveled a tawny ear.
She needed a place to spend the night. Iopah continued her way north, sighting out the same star that allowed her birth pack to easily navigate the vast Great Plains. The she-wolf slipped past ferns and rotting tree stumps coated in musty-smelling moss and lichens. Eventually she came to a break in the forest. Iopah found herself gazing into a field overgrown with wildflowers. It was a good place to sleep. The air was thick with the smell of the flowers and it would help to mask her scent. She stepped into them and, finding a spot to lay down, curled her narrow form into a circle.