She had coerced one of the other females of the pack to stay with the children once more as the sun began it’s slow decent. Given the cramped quarters and the general painful nature of changing positions she had told the other female to stay the night. Now spring was well and truly on them she would be more comfortable under the stars for the night, after tomorrow it would be far easier on them all.
Despite the failing light, she was sure-footed on her pass of the borders, stopping to mark diligently as she went. She allowed her mind to wander on nothing in particular as she went about the familiar tracks, the strong scent of Mapplethorpe accompanying her all the way. Since the birth of the girls she had been otherwise occupied and she had begun to worry that she may not have been offering him the attention he deserved as her equal. Their encounters, though often had been brief, the squealing of one pup or other tearing her attention away as children were known to do. He had clearly been working so hard for them all, and the children that he worked so hard to protect weren’t even his own. Even she knew she was blessed.
So when she stumbled across his scent deviating from it’s usual path she followed it without a thought. While it came close to the den that she shared with the children, within sight and close enough to scent that all was well, it was not close enough to intrude. A grateful smile had worked its way to her face as she continued to track the ever faithful advisor right up to the familiar tree under which he made his den.
Quiet as a shadow she moved forward, his furry outline coming into focus as she drew nearer. Her head hung low in her approach as she lowered herself to lay against his back, her head resting on his hindquarters. A sigh left her chest as she breathed the familiar scent in and took a moment to enjoy the absence of squirming squeaks and squeals. She allowed her eyes to drift to his face and offered an apologetic smile. It had been too long.