A huff escaped from Deneb as he lifted his muzzle from the muddy bank of the stream, scanning the brush around him irritably with yellowed eyes. Clouds hung in the sky above, breaking apart the summer blue with splotches of white and grey, and the air felt humid and still, pressing close enough to make the smoke-white male feel positively claustrophobic. And so, he had left behind the confines of Magnolia Glen today, wishing to be away from his brother, from the pack's new pups, from, well, all of it. He was hoping to forget his current worries, and the scent of a small band of deer heading southwards away from the borders had provided him the perfect excuse. He had followed the winding course of a small creek through the thickening forest, the air only managing to grow warmer and more still as the hours wore on.
Now he had lost the scent. This displeased Deneb greatly, for tracking was really one of his fortes... he had boasted to Phineas when he came to the Glen of his talents, and not without due cause. Not everyone could have followed another wolf across countless miles during the cruelty of winter, undeterred by dead ends and set backs, to finally locate their quarry in the end. It was a skill he was quite proud of... and yet now it seemed that mother nature had gotten the best of him. The tantalizing odor of the deer had faded abruptly into nothingness at the water's edge, and no matter how many times he wandered up and down this stretch of bank, he could find no sign of where the deer had left the stream again. It was enough to make one question themselves... unless that one was Deneb Cygni. Instead the stained ivory male was huffing at the trees and water, irritated with nature and the little trick she was playing on him.
At least this journey wasn't entirely in vain - he still had some time to himself, away from it all, to think. Stepping back into the shallows, he lowered himself until he was lying in the gentle tug of the stream's current. The cold kissed his skin, pulling the tension from him to a degree, making the man feel a little less claustrophobic. When was the last time he had simply relaxed and enjoyed himself like this? He couldn't even remember, which meant that such solace was certainly overdue. Ah yes. Peace. Solitude. He had almost forgotten what it was to erase his cares and schemes from his mind, to simply be. It was rather nice, actually. Perhaps he should make a habit of it. Yeah, right.