October 2nd; Late afternoon; Clear; 29° F/-2° C
As was customary for a yearling without much to do, Rook's feet brought him to his favorite thinking place: the Iridescent Lagoon, just hours before sunset. A rabbit he had caught in the coolness of morning had been cached away for someone whose pack duties and sense of responsibility often kept them well away from the thought of breakfast, lunch, or dinner. He, on the other hand, was still full from what he had stomached just the other day; it was not much but it surprised him that a bit of squirrel had gone quite a long way. While he had thought to try again at fishing, he brushed the thought away; Namid and Lady Narimé's instructions were nothing but encouraging, but he had yet to prove to them that he could snatch up a catfish or two on his own. The more his nose twitched the more his interest piqued. Something was not right here, but what, the yearling had yet to find...
He went along the water's edge, an apparent scowl on his masked face. On one hand, the scent around the area was familiar; on the other, the faint traces of decay wafting in his direction was utterly abhorrent. The smell began to hang heavily in the air the further he went, but it wasn't long until he discovered what and why the bridge of his muzzle would just not smooth out. What looked like a partial skeleton of a petite, four-legged creature now rested on the pebbled bank where there had been nothing else but dry driftwood and dust-covered stones only the day before.
For a time, Rook stared at it, drawing close enough to discern that the bones were indeed of the canine variety. He grimaced as he stared at the whiteness of her temple, the smoothness of her teeth. A few of her curved ribs were barely longer than his forearms; and, what he assumed to be her forearm (at least, it looked like a radius and an ulna), were small and brittle-looking. Clearly, she had been much younger than he was when she had died, maybe only six or seven months old. A small whine escaped past his lips and he briefly pressed his lips to her crown and trailed the tip of his nose down the vertebrae of what had once been her neck or back. He thought of the older brothers he never had the chance to meet and, knowing of their stories (the thrill of adventure and the danger of rattling snakes), wondered if this cub's mother still lingered within Relic Lore in search of her child. His lips pursed as he withdrew from her and his large ears drew back.
His posture straightened and, with one fluid movement, he looked over both of his agouti-furred shoulders before turning around and digging his paws into the ground. Back home, in Renegade's Reach, death had yet to touch his family, but due to his religious upbringing and the lessons he had been taught as a cub, he knew better than to leave her bones out in the open. He trembled a bit as he began to fashion a makeshift grave for the young girl that had washed up from the depths of the still, dark pool; his eyes momentarily went to the sky, as if he were looking for a sign from the Spirit. The cool autumn breeze brushed again his ears and he thought he had heard something...
"You are such a moron... Leave."
Rook blinked for a time as he scanned his surroundings, but he found no one lingering nearby. He shook his head and went back to work, using the brawn and muscle in his arms and shoulders now to its full extent as he pushed the unearthed heaps of loamy soil away. Perhaps when he was done he would receive a sign, a signal that he had done well in laying a moderate portion of Malia Thorben's body to rest. For now, though, he had a task to complete and he would not leave until he was done.
Chances are I have a BEN WHISHAW gif for that.