As the tall, swarthy male breached the edge of the woods, he found awaiting him a fresh blanket of snow. It was difficult to see new snowfall within the trees, where the boughs caught the bulk of it, but here on the open floodplain it was unmistakeable. The snow was windblown, but unbroken by paws or hooves, save for those few pinprick markings left from crafty ermines. The weak mid-afternoon sunlight shone a pale and watery yellow off the surface, as if reflected by a fog glass mirror. It was not bright enough to inflict snow blindness, as the sun was cloaked in a thin shroud of cloud, not enough to hide it completely but enough to dull its glare sufficiently for the wolf's vision. It was an appreciable sight, particularly for the adolescent wolf whose first winter, and the magical beauty of the first snowfall, had been abruptly interrupted by family tragedy.
But his family was safe now, and there was nothing left for Mace to fear or regret but the disappearance of his brother. It weighed heavily on his mind in the mornings and evenings, and plagued his sleep with nightmares, but in the middle of the day, Mace succeeded at banishing his negative thoughts. He had sworn his life to Maksim's cause, and resolved to be strong for his sisters, no matter his own misgivings. Here, at the edge of the woods with the marsh (though it resembled a simple field now) spread out before him, his only thought was that he had his very own playground, untouched by any other.
A large wolfish grin pulled at the edges of the male's lips as he pumped his legs through the thick snow, surging forward with his chest like a battering ram to clear the first foot of snow that had blown up against the forest's edge. Half an hour of ploughing through snow this deep was a hearty workout for the young male, but it took only fifteen minutes for his blood to run hot and his chest and sides to heave with the exertion of his breathing. His mouth hung wide as he took in great gasps of air, only to expel them as hot breath with a mindless ease. Nothing contented Mace more than physical exertion; he had been born with his father's build, and his father's strengths were his own.
He was a physical wolf, a fit wolf, not a thinker or a wordsmith or a diplomat. Pragmatic, and simple, and to the point; but, above all else, he endured, and excelled at endurance sports, not unlike his new routine of pushing his legs past exhaustion to move him through chest-deep snow. He desired to be strong, a fitting guardian for his sisters and his Alpha. Above all, Mace relished the burn of hard work, no matter what form it took, and so he challenged himself to make it a mile before pausing to rest his muscles.