The wolf was a simple creature.
In the short span of her life so far, Isolde had made immense strides in her study of life; her family were her favorite subjects. This home of theirs was something called claimed and they patrolled it every day. Each day the members of the pack controlled the cache, which was where they put the food that mom ate. She used to turn it into milk but these days she turned it into different food that suited her new teeth better. They worked during the day and slept, preferably in dens, at night. The wolf was not so hard to figure out.
For some time she had believed Morganna and Greer were simply born of that size and that herself and Ravenna and Niles would be ankle height forever, but then one day she stood up and headed toward the mouth of the den and bumped her head on a low hang that she had always been able to clear before. Surmising that she had grown, she moved on from an amateur to a true scientist.
What she had been studying for several mornings now was a winged thing - a bug, she'd been told. Specifically, a flutterby - one that came around the den a few hours after she woke each day. It had beautiful wings in shades of the sunset, bright orange and soft red and even a little yellow from the right angle. It was veined in black and spotted in white, and most amazing of all was that it walked in the air. This was called flight, and was something Isolde had been informed was not possible to achieve for a wolf (she'd see about that, of course). It went wherever it pleased, as high as it could go, stopping on flowers and trees and even rocks sometimes. But every time the youngest Lyall followed a little too close to its trail, the flutterby would run away into the sky and completely disappear from sight. This frustrated the budding scientist; not only could she not determine where the flutterby came from, she couldn't figure out where it went. Did it sleep in a den at night? Where was its mother? Why didn't it understand her when she spoke to it?
Invaluable data, simply unobtained. Today would be different, she decided as she crawled forward from the den (minding to lower her head at the bump spot). Soon her subject would appear. Nose twitching and ears alert, she poised herself at the mouth of the den in wait.