It felt like it was madness that had brought him here. After kissing his daughter and Nina goodbye and assuring them both that he'd be back before they could even miss him, Mirren left out of Secret Woodlands with a longing for the unfamiliar. He needed a change of pace, a change of scenery, and more than anything, he needed to remember what it felt like to be truly alone; there was a stark difference between that and the feeling of emptiness that had made a home in his quivering heart.
Tonight, the moon was bright as it hid behind a cloak made of heavy and troublesome clouds. Its light still bathed the hills and meadows and forests in silver-blue, the sort of color that he found to be beautiful and haunting at the same time. He welcomed the gusts of wind that blew through his summer coat, and even when the first drop of rain fell to burst on the bridge of his muzzle, he wasn't bothered. The air out here seemed fresher than he was used to and it helped him think ─ about everything.
He'd been so happy for so long that, the day he'd been mistaken for someone's brother in Copper Rock Creek, it dawned upon him that although he'd seemed to have everything, he was missing a big part of himself ─ his family. His childhood seemed like a faraway memory now, but Mirren had never forgotten his brother, Nios, not even after they had parted ways. And there wasn't a day that passed that he didn't wonder where Vaeta had gone to and whether or not she was some place where the salt of the sea clung to her fur...He'd made up his mind that he would see their faces again, no matter what. This was the longing that drove the man to the forest of his predecessors, which he reckoned was as good a place as any to start looking.
Rain fell down in gentle sheets, cold and wet and quiet. Mirren traversed most of the Wildwood already, having spent a number of hours during the day retracing old steps and passing by places he'd come to know. As the night darkened and the last traces of sunset were washed from the world, he was far from the old den at Hidden Tree where he'd planned to sleep off the weariness that his travels had wrought. Behind him was a meager expanse of rolling hills and open sky and before him, just in the distance, was a treeline that, despite his grandest recollections, he didn't recognize. Mud squished beneath his wide, dirtied paws as he stopped to glance over his shoulder before proceeding to close in on the forest that held some of his family's darkest memories.