RE: The northern lights are particularly brilliant tonight.
The sun was just slipping behind the horizon as Deneb set out, leaving behind the borders of his new home. Not that it was so new to him anymore... others had joined after he had, but he still knew that the leaders neither knew nor trusted him. Not really. He didn't care so much that they didn't know the real him, the real Deneb Cygni - that was a privilege he bestowed upon no one. But he would have liked if they'd showed a little more faith in him... after all, he had joined at the end of winter, and had been following Phineas's orders quite dutifully: filling the caches, patrolling the borders, and doing his best to keep his foolish brother, Albireo, in line.
Since that day when he'd joined the Glen pack, spring had arrived to the lands with a fury, changing them beyond recognition as it banished the last traces of winter. No longer were the woods around the Glen desolate and lifeless... though the male was pleased to see the forest had not lost all of it's eeriness. But he recalled his alpha's words, back on that day, hinting that when spring arrived, there would be some sort of mission over the mountain that he wanted Deneb to take part in. The pale wolf paused, his coin-like eyes drifting upward across the darkening landscape until they fell upon the white-caped mountain far in the distance. The spirit lights had already begun to dance tonight, adding brilliant streaks of green to the fading sky. For a moment the Cygni allowed himself to take simple pleasure in the beautiful sight, thinking of those he'd lost dancing across theheavens, but soon enough his thoughts turned dark once more, disrupting the moment of inner peace, and he shook his head with a huff, padding on through the shadowy trees. Spring had come, and Phineas had made no more mention of going venturing to that distant place.
Perhaps he had good reasons - being the father of a new brood of whelps and all - but Deneb was going a bit stir-crazy. The way the whole pack was fussing over the new additions didn't help either. Thinking of cubs only brought forth painful memories in the smoky white wolf, and awoke festering resentments. His thoughts would inevitably turn toward his brother, toward his desire for revenge... but the time was not yet right for that, and so Deneb struck out, away from the hub of the pack, seeking a change in scenery tonight. He'd ventured further than usual, meandering closer to the looming peak as the lights above lit his way. Something would have to change, and soon, or he felt as if he would lose his patience. That would still be better than forgetting what had brought him here in the first place, but not by much. "I haven't forgotten!" he called out toward the lights, toward his sons, knowing it was unlikely anyone who mattered was close enough to hear him. "I can't bring you back but... I can make him pay for what he did." These words were quieter, uttered as a growl under his breath. It was highly foolish, he knew, but the tirade had made him feel a little better nonetheless.