It was slumber that held Nagga captive, long into the recesses of morning, stretching into the early hours of the afternoon. His journey have been long and taxing, among surviving against the trials that winter seemed intent on throwing his way. Naga didn't not yet appear haggard, or ill, but he was thinner than he should have been. Food was a rare resource this winter thus far, and it was simple survival instinct that told him either he would find a pack to call home, or he would wither and perish in winter's icy, piercing claws. The ghost had not come this far, intent on satisfying the desire to stand and individual against the accomplishments of his parents, only to have his life claimed as a nobody and nothing. grasping ambition was not a trait well carried in his family, and he would not consider his own to be malicious in their intents. Rather, to him, ambition was on equal footing with potential. After all, ambition was nothing without the skills that were required to accomplish such a goal.A crow let out a shrill caw nearby, causing Nagga to stir wake, pulled, rather violently from his deep slumber by the annoying feathered creatures that hopped closer, Nagga watched as his eyes the fierce beauty of a reddish orange sunset, peeked open to study the wretched avian with unhindered vexation. The creature cawed once more, the sound echoing into the silence where it faded. Disgruntled huff was given, breath slipping from leathery, black nostrils in a wispy, white furl of steam. "Get lost wretched bird." Nagga grumbled at the crow, despite that he knew it would not listen. For a few seconds, Nagga eyed the bird as potential prey, wondering if the avian would offer any sort of substantial meat. Abruptly he changed his mind, with a yawn as he stretched in the snow, stretching once more to his paws. Besides the fact that he could not get it out of his mind that birds probably grisly (not to mention all those feathers) it felt like it might be bad luck - though Nagga had never given too much thought towards superstitions - to kill and consume a crow.
Not to mention, in hindsight of things, it was probably just looking for scraps of food just as he would be doing a little later on. With that consideration at the forefront of his mind, it was hard for Nagga to fault it, despite how irritating he found the bird. A shake of his pelt was given, as he stretched one last time, rooting his muzzle through the snow he'd slept on and melted, studying the mashed greenery, and the wilted petals of the wildflowers that have once prospered in this territory, their likely once brilliant oranges and reds now resembling the muddy brown and crimson coloration of dried blood.
A shrug of broad shoulders was given as he turned away from his temporary bed, figuring that it was best if he continued on. Winter would only prove to become harsher and the more time he wasted, the hours of his life were likely ticking away like a clock wound too fast.
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