When dawn came he awoke to find the day the same as all the others in the past several days. No Hush to be found, she was simply gone as if she had never been here at all. Even the earth surrounding the den was washed of her scent – the coming and going of his own passage had brushed away all that remained of her, obscuring it into nothing. Though his heart did not want to admit that she was gone his mind was finally forced to acknowledge that which he did not wish to be true – his pale companion had vanished and it did not seem that she would return – at least not any time soon. Prior to the last day they had spoke she had not given him any indication that she intended to part way with him, there hadn't been any reason to believe in those first few days of her absence that she would not come trailing back to the den after an especially long adventure of her own.
As the hours dragged on, day after day, it had become more and more clear to him that it wasn't just an ordinary adventure she'd gone off on. His worry for her increased as the days went by until finally this day came when he knew he should admit to himself that she wasn't going to return. Either she'd met with a bad end or she had found reason to leave him behind. Either way she wasn't coming back and he knew there was no real way for him to track her trail. Which left him alone again – facing the decisions he'd previously been putting off. Would he stay here, would he go? With only himself to look after things were made monumentally simpler than they had been when he'd needed to care for Hush as well.
These were the things he mulled over as he sat beside the mouth of the den, feeling the tentative touch of morning light as it reached through the trees of the red woods around him. The heat of day would come soon, or so the soft buttery light of early dawn warned him as it began to warm his dark colored coat. The scar on his chest ached, though he could not discern if it were simply a phantom ache of sympathy at the emotional loss of his companion or if it were truthfully just the pain of an old injury, complaining early in the morning before it was warmed and stretched to the functionality.