High rises of snow and ice surrounded the small pool that sat above Bramble Falls, itself having frozen over in wake of the recent temperatures. The winter afternoon sunset basked the surrounding forest in a golden glow, but within the snow-forged castle all was blanketed in blue shadow. The small waterfall that fed the now-icerink had frozen, but evidence of some activity beneath the ice remained as Bramble Falls below refused to halt its flow, though the rush of running water sounded like something more of a trickle of defiance to her ears.
Quick stood within walls of white, perched delicately on the frozen pool's ice surface, and ran her silver eyes up the snow-capped mountain as it rose far from her. Though unforgiving and, frankly, intimidating, she couldn't deny the beauty of the icicles that reached for her from the bottoms of severe cliffs and crags lining the way up. That is, if there was a way up. All she could see was ice coating the sharp rocks, glinting in the sunlight as if to tease. No matter, of course. She was fine down here.
Though there was something awfully unromantic about this empty castle. She was supposed to be the lady of one, the princess among noble wolves, a high-born possessing all the powers of diplomats and all the grace of dancers. In truth she felt unimpressive - but not totally disconnected from the realm of ice. She had previously established her place was yet unfound, but it was comforting to think every relic of her past was not so aggressively against her as she had thought. This is not your palace, Quick reminded herself as she turned away from the mountainside and slid-walked across the thin ice toward the opening in the mounds of snow that had brought her there in the first place. She cast her silvery gaze over her shoulder in a detached goodbye, to continue her original search.
Her white limbs pushed her into the winter labyrinth beyond the Hidden Grotto, careful of where she placed her hapless paws. The little hide-away she'd found was beautiful, but not fit for shelter as it was for the eyes. She was still skirting the local packs robustly as she could, their heavily-marked borders to her uninviting. Once the pit in her stomach grew ravenous enough she assumed her stubbornness could be placed aside, but until then she continued to scout a temporary palace of her own.