And even though it's hard to see
The glass is full and not half empty
(a thousand beautiful things)The brown woman moved easily enough through the forest. She was old enough to know how to navigate this sort of place without floundering about. Over the needles and snow, past a fallen log... and nose ever to the ground. Yes, that was Kyadi's way. Her pace was quick, though not quite even - every so often the brown wolf would stop as she caught a scent that interested her. Unfailingly she'd move on again however, her tail waving like a flag behind her. It was dark, but since when was that a problem for a wolf? Kyadi's nightvision was excellent and her senses keen. She wasn't old yet - oh no! She was in her prime! Well, prime might've been a strong word. She was at the top of the hill getting ready to face the other side. But Kyadi would never be one to let her age stop her. Stop thinking like you're old, you stupid old git. Kyadi stopped suddenly, a smirk plastering itself on her maw as she shook her head once, firmly. A joke! I made a joke. Geez I need to get a life.
The Healer's movements slowed as the night progressed. She clearly wasn't finding whatever she was looking for and she was getting rather bored of it all. She could just find somewhere to sleep, she supposed, but she was more interested in finding a more permanent solution to her, er... problem. No where to store my plants! And no one to do her bidding, either. Ah, if she could but have the days back when she could order yearlings to help her gather herbs while she tended to her own duties... but no more. The past was the past, and it could stinkin' stay there.
When Kyadi next stopped, it was an abrupt movement. It was as if she had turned to solid stone at a moment's notice, so rigid her body went. Her tail stuck out straight behind her, her nose virtually plastered to the forest floor. That one's fresh, she thought to herself, russet eyes squinting as she inhaled deeply. Her face - formerly colored with an alert but neutral expression had changed. Her brows were furrowed, her lips drawn into a tight line. This was the scent of another she-wolf that had passed by mere minutes ago. And, unless Kyadi's keen senses deceived her (and they never did that, afer all, ahem) there was another trace of something vital. It wasn't surprising, given the season. "Children, hmmm?" whispered the wolf to herself as she absent-mindedly plopped down where she was, much of the tension leaving her so she fell like liquid. It wouldn't be anything to think on if not for the fact Kyadi knew for a fact she wasn't within pack foundations. Sure, there could be one nearby, but what would a she-wolf-with-pup be doing out here this time of night? Alone! Couldn't be anything good.
Steeling herself, Kyadi got back to her paws - grimacing as her right leg tried to give out on her - then continued on more quietly than she had before, her nose keeping close to the scent trail she'd discovered. She only stopped when she glimpsed movement through the cracks in the trees. There's the lass. Sniffer hasn't let me down yet! Kyadi made no attempt to creep up on the other woman, nor did she make more noise than necessary as she approached. She stopped several wolf-lengths away so she could peer between the twin-trunks of a peculiar tree, her russet eyes wide and expression curious. The other wolf had plopped down in a place that looked - to Kyadi's sensibilities - far from comfortable. She padded a little nearer, announcing herself with a soft sound in the back of her throat.
"Pardon me, Lass. It's not my business you know... but you look blue." Kyadi said it so bluntly you'd think her saying so made it so. The lass was probably just tired.