@Skadi @Garmr @Vali @Ainashi , I'm tagging you guys for informational purposes since Nayeli is recounting what happened to her in this thread.
Their pace was slow and measured as Nayeli walked at Triell's side. The trek home had cost her a good deal of energy and she hadn't dared stop to hunt or rest for the last two days or nights. Now that the euphoria of making it home was beginning to ebb away, her body was protesting tiredly with each step, and the pain around the bite wound on her front-left ankle had returned to haunt her, only amplified. She took strength and reassurance from the quiet man next to her, from his tangible warmth and solid presence there at long last. She had missed this, had dreamed of it so often that now she kept having to tell herself it was real.
For a time they had simple walked in silence, her silver gaze flickering to his and then to the landscape as each rock and tree became ever more familiar. Eventually, she drew in a breath and began to speak, the words at first choking out of her throat, then flowing out in an oddly detached cadence as she continued, the story finally beginning to unfold itself fully. "I'd ventured south of here - I never meant to be gone long at all, and it was foolish of me not to let anyone know where I was going ahead of time, but I ran across the scent of an injured deer, and it seemed like... well, like good fortune." Perhaps she should have known it then. She remembered how stir-crazy she'd felt, how good it had been to run through the trees with prey ahead of her and the promise of a hunt, to be on her own for a few hours. "I'd followed it for over half the day, into the unclaimed lands to the east, when I injured my paw," she continued, her voice sounding drained and matter-of-fact as she recalled the events of late last autumn. The paw in question was the same which was injured now, though the wound currently troubling her was far fresher that the one she now spoke of - It has happened in an instant, a quick tumble of loose stones on a precarious slope and she'd been trapped, pain scorching through her limb like fire.
"I slipped and wedged it between two rocks... as it was, it kept me from tumbling further down the slope, but I couldn't free myself. I called out then, but I was deep into the hills by then." She'd struggled, pulling at her trapped limb and scratching at the rock, but from her position she couldn't budge it enough to get free. She'd howled again and again, voice echoing back off of the treacherous slope, hoping that someone from the Bend, or anyone at all, might hear her anyway, and cursing her own stubborn folly for travelling this far. At last she'd succumbed to exhaustion and shock, and passed out.
Through waves of sleep and waking, Nayeli came to the conclusion that she'd need to chew herself free, but she couldn't stay awake long enough to summon the will to do it. The desperation had begun to build like water in a weakening dam, though, and she wondered which of her battling instincts would have won out in the end, if she had remained there like that. But then she'd woken up to a voice - a strange she-wolf telling her not to worry. She'd wondered if it was just a dream, but soon enough the woman, whom she would later come to know as Skadi, had returned with others at her side, and somehow they'd managed to move the rock and free her. "My calls did get the attention of some loners - they came to my aid and managed to shift the rock and free my paw. I was dead set on returning here right away, but I couldn't have made it if I tried - they helped me to their camp, on the far side of the Sierra Hills. Luckily enough, one of them was a healer. They vowed to aid me, and send word back here with an acquaintance of theirs." She spoke one particular word with a disdainful grimace, fully aware of the irony now, looking back.
The next days had passed in a haze, but they tended to her wounded leg, bringing her food and asking about where she had come from. They were travelers, they told her, though they had decided to settle in the lands East of the Lore for the winter. She'd instructed them to send their friend westwards, over the red hills, carrying her message, but she'd never actually met the wolf, and as the days turned into weeks with no word from home, she knew the message had into reached it's destination. "I take it I'm correct in assuming no word ever reached you?" she glanced up, realizing the'y reached the borders proper as she voiced her question. Her head was raised once more as she paused to drink in the scents there, silently counting the familiar, the new, and those that seemed to be missing from before.