Gone Tomorrow
Winter had brought not only snow, but a blanket of silence that covered Relic Lore. The chorus of birds had been quieted and today not even the wind filled the silence. The frigid temperatures had even stilled the rushing river; the ice thick enough that Corinna was easily able to cross the temporary bridge safely. Leaving behind River territory, she had headed north, skirting the Wildwood, as far away from Hidden Tree as she was able. Ever since Torrel and Rihael had gone missing, the River matriarch had consciously avoided venturing to the birthplace of her absent mate. Her heart had permanently barred itself from warm feelings towards Indru; she did not want to venture there and risk having those particular wounds reopened.
There was no real purpose to her travel; she certainly wasn't attempting to track down Rissa. Her search party had returned home empty handed. Cori had mourned to the sky, her hallow calls defying the silent winter. The wounds were far from healed, but she did not have the liberty of locking herself away in her den again. Losing her life to depression and inactivity would not bring her children back; but there was no denying that she was growing increasingly discontent with the physical space she was in. The reminders all around her of those loved ones that had been lost were just constant reminders of the tragedies that had befallen them.
Safe inside her warm coat, the leader removed herself from that dark space, her progress hardly impeded by the falling snow. It was the unpacked snow beneath her that proved to be more of a challenge. A cloud of hot air rose around her muzzle as she huffed, pushing through the deep snow, forging a trail in virgin ground. She greatly envied smaller creatures who could run easily across the surface of the snow. But slow progress was better than none, and eventually she reached her destination; the frozen tributary that spread out before the falls. Frozen above and below, the water was only free during its short descent. it would be freezing, of course, but motion had prevented the ice from taking hold. But that hardly mattered; the important part was that this was not her River and that was all that mattered for her at the moment.