March 4th; Sunrise; Partly Cloudy; 25° F/-4° C
Since the discovery of the diseased coyote and the pack meeting, Mapplethorpe had been keeping himself very, very busy. Having anticipated the youths of the pack being overcome with hormones and varying degrees of lust and salaciousness, the old man kept watch over the Nomads from a distance. When the young princes slipped out of the corner of his eye, he made certain measures to ensure that they both returned at the time they were expected. When Naira retreated to her lair, he went out of his way to make sure a small token - a bit of rabbit leg, a fragment of antler, or a small rodent - was left at the entrance whenever it seemed she might have needed a pair of ears to listen. When Rhysis went off on his own, Mapplethorpe took care to continue on his way in the opposite direction.
In trying to steer clear of whatever the day might have held for the monarchs and the pack, he climbed down from the Pass and followed a week-old trail to the place where he had first met Sagacity. A stringy rabbit hung loosely from his jaws, proof that he had been quite occupied already a few hours ago at daybreak. Instead of hanging about the place where the coyote corpse had been (he assumed some sort of twisted soul had taken it further into the forest for safekeeping) and opting to hide his prize nearby, he meandered about the base of the mountain, listening idly to the sound of the woods and its inhabitants. With Spring on the way, it wasn't unusual that the birds above had started to sing more and more tunes or that the distinct scent of hare now littered the forest floor in more places than it had the month before.
Vivid yellow eyes scanned the roots of the trees, half-defrosted and still blanketed with snow. If only he could find a good spot for this excuse for a meal, let alone a quick snack. He had made quick work of the leporid's innards and he hoped that the intact skeleton could be put to use at a later date when the sinew aged and hardened into something akin to jerky. Wandering wolves, he knew, though, were usually desperate to get their jaws on anything they could properly stomach; at least his leftovers would do little more than temporarily placate hunger pangs.
Coming to a halt inside a ring of trees where the sun barely filtered through, Mapplethorpe stopped to take in his surroundings. He could have sworn the birds had stopped chirping but a cheerful warbler was quick to assure him nothing bizarre had caught him unawares. He huffed and shook his head, walking onward until he found a suitable place: where two low-lying shrubs had merged together above the ground, a narrow depression was visible, and it was no doubt a perfect fit for the remainder of his meal. Placing his kill aside, he willed his creaky elbows to work and his back to maintain his angled position. Bit by bit, clods of earth were pushed aside and soon enough the copper-dusted man had fashioned an ideal cache.