Overcast. 61 degrees F
It was still quite hard, trying to adjust to the new environment around her and keep up with her duties at the same time. She was much more cautious when it came to the prey on the other side of the mountain, clearly remembering the fox that had died an untimely death due to the transmittable disease that had been going through the Lore. The land there was beautiful though…even more beautiful than the Sacred Grove. Jessie felt like it was so much darker in these parts though, probably because she mostly secluded herself to the shadows. She was much more talkative than she had been though…since Rissa’s body had been found. She had gotten a good kick to help her start back on her way and now the Swiftpaw girl was getting there. She still had a stable family to be around and she wasn’t alone. As long as she stuck with the new pack, she knew she would never be alone.
Today, however, she was alone. She sat by the creek watching the fish swim by and wanting desperately to reach out and snag one of the scaly things wither strong jaws. Belun was no longer with them…an unfortunate sign to her that he too had deserted them. For some reason, she had felt like he might have been…different, but in the end he had turned up just as everyone else had in the past year. A deserter, something the Oak Tree Bend wolves had grown use to. Sometimes the pepper and salt colored woman still found that she was thinking of the pack as Swift River, but in the end knew how to catch herself from thinking such thoughts. This was their new beginning and each and every wolf within the pack was going to end up making the most of it. With this thought in mind, she dipped her small paw into the water, watching as the silver fish glimmered as they rushed away from her awaiting paw.
It was a shame that she had found no one within the pack to hunt with but found herself looking for other things recently. Like dead bodies…or even something one of her pack mates was looking for. According to Ice she had an “expert nose” and when she thought about it hard enough, she quickly realized she had no clue how the hell he had gotten that for her. T amazed her with some of the things her family came up with, but she still loved them dearly and would not trade any of them for the world. With this thought in mind, she removed her paw quickly before emerging her body within the creek, her emerald green eyes gleaming with joy as she watched the fish swim around her in ease. Oh how she wished someone would help her hunt fish again like she had back in the day. It had been something that had brought her joy, but she knew very well that most wolves within the pack, namely a white snowball, did not have much of an appetite for fish.