“Of course Fero,” Vera chirped as she pranced happily over to the Skunkbush, eager to help Florence in any way she could and be useful while doing it. It always made her feel valuable and not someone who was worthless and couldn’t do the simplest of things. Some wolves thought that immediately just because she was so tiny, but she quickly proved them wrong with her sharp tongue and her knowledge of herbs that she knew.
Gently picking the berries from the bush, careful to not break the skin or crush any with her jaws, she collected two pawfulls and placed them on a large leaf, before using her blunt claws to scrape strips of bark, also placing them on the leaf. When she was certain she had collected a fair amount of her useful herbs, the diminutive she-wolf turned expectantly to her larger companion as he started to speak. Her ears twitched at his order – a foreign thing to roll off his tongue – but didn’t reply back with a snarky remark. She knew that he was only worrying about their safety, and when he was his words often became clipped, but they were never harsh.
As Florence grabbed the leg of the moose and began to drag it back to the den, Vera used her paws to fold the leaf into a bag shape that she could grab the ends with so none of the berries or bark could fall out and bounded after him. When she caught up to him, she slowed down her pace to an even trot, stepping much more carefully than she would normally as to not drop the bundle of herbs that was grasped tightly in her jaws. Her caramel brown eyes lifted up into the sky where the clouds had grown darker and more foreboding. It would not be a balmy evening.