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Naia’s honey eyes were open at the first sign of dawn peeking through the Cedar branches. The daylight hours were growing shorter, and she wanted to utilize as many of them as possible for her mission today. She squirmed her petite body through the opening of the shallow den she had carved into a snowdrift, the entryway collapsing on top of her as she emerged from the burrow like a pup from the womb. After a slight struggle she was free of the snowy cell, and she shook the remaining flakes from her smooth pelt of mottled browns. In the last day or so the weather had taken a turn for the worse; Naia already felt chilled to her very core after being exposed for just a few breaths. Eager to start moving and generating some heat energy, she sniffed around the collapsed den for a moment before unearthing the frozen pronghorn flank—the only remains from the carcass she found on the Rise above the meadow. Her belly gave a rumble as her teeth closed around the haunch, but instead of consuming the meal the delicate female carried it with her as she traveled deeper into the forest. She had no right to this meat; it was to be a gift for whichever River Wolf leader greeted her at the border.
Naia felt a shiver of anticipation roll down her spine. Never before had she approached the border of a pack she knew so little about; never before had she implored a pack membership from a strange alpha. The nearer she drew toward the border, the more her stomach clamped up with nerves—perhaps it was a good thing she had no meal this morning. She stopped in her tracks as she came within scenting distance of the River Wolves’ border. The scent marker was unmistakable; it was the delightful smell of the fresh moist earth found near a water source mixed with a slight hint of the tangy marsh nearby. With a scent like that, no doubt the River Wolves had a den carved into the soil by a riverbank (hence her naming them ‘River Wolves’). Naia dared herself to hope that tonight she would be sleeping there, as opposed to her usual snowy burrow where she could feel her body heat seeping away from her and into the frozen floor below. She dropped the pronghorn limb between her front paws and gave a howl; a polite request for a leader’s audience. Once she was finished, she straightened her back and legs so as to not look quite so small on first impression. She also tucked her tail and flattened her ears deferentially in anticipation for reception by a pack wolf. Even if she was not greeted by a leader, any pack wolf was superior to a diminutive lone wolf like herself.