Change was such a small and insignificant thing to her. She liked to think that wolf could change but she knew that the evil wolves would always be cold and bitter and detached with no hope for a reprieve from their wrongdoings. Aesire liked to think she was a just and fair wolf. She liked to believe that she did not possess the evil genes that others inherited and learned. The dappled woman liked to believe that she had a stronger will to resist such temptations if only for enough time to remove her from the situation. Aesire’s past suggested otherwise for her. It wasn’t her fault that she had snapped at him, truly it wasn’t. She had just been so angry by the arranged marriage that she took it out on the poor sap and in return was forced to leave the col she had called home since birth.
She remembered as her would-be in-laws demanded that her head be torn from her body in a violent rage by her own father. She was lucky that her father had always favored her because any other sibling, he would have done it. Banishment it had been and it had been quite a lonely banishment. Was there any other kind of banishment? Day after day of being cut off from her family was punishment enough but she started to hear voices of home calling out for her. She liked to believe they were real and she liked to believe she could run to them and embrace them as the Destine heir she had been but she knew she could not. She had royally screwed herself.
The mottled woman, coated in her earthy tones and hues, pushed forth while bitterly recounting all of her plights. She was surrounded by a giant river that would no doubt have icy cold water in it as a result of the late autumn weather. She approached it, her paws crunching against the leaves that gave scarce protection to her paws from the cold, hard ground. She gulped as she peered into the water, debating taking a drink as she examined the area. There were trees around but not many near the edge of the water. Fish danced underneath the surface as they raced by her and she couldn’t help but smile. Life continued on, even without her or her family. She tucked her head down, lapping up some of the cold water before turning away from the river and heading towards the forest again. Perhaps she could wrangle up some food while she was wandering. There was no point in dying if she could still be of some use. She wove her way through the reborn forest as she searched for some signs of prey.
There was one thing certain about this mysterious place that she noticed as she searched for the prey that was not there. This forest was bursting with a feeling of bliss. Everything worked together in a harmonic way. That was how she knew that she would be alright in the forest. She could afford to stay for a day or two before continuing on to another land. Hopefully she would wander to a close-by land next.