September 21; Evening; Partly Cloudy; 47 ° F, 8 ° C.
Rook needed to get away. It seemed like there was no more hope anymore. Another fight, another squabble, and the boy had left his father to his own devices. Rook simply had no more patience for the aging man and, for that, it was just too bad. While Borden was left at the pack den, the Grizzly Hollow Leader let his feet aimlessly eat up the ground, sprinting as fast and as far as his limbs could take him.
Denial shouldn't have hurt this much.
His ears were slicked back and his tail stretched out behind him like a white flag in the wind. His eyes stung from the onslaught of the coming storm, willing the tears to remain where they were. He wouldn't cry; he would save those for a different time and a time such as that was nothing compared to this wave of distress that would soon come to pass. It was just another storm. It would come and it would go, then there would be a time of calm and, perhaps, some sunshine and warmth before the next tempest rolled in.
A raindrop hit him somewhere above his left brow, catching in his fur for only a second before being shaken to the ground. At the foot of the bluffs, his mismatched eyes looked up towards the darkening sky. If lightning struck, the bluffs would be the perfect spot to be closest to it all; and, if he could be there at the right spot at the right time... His mottled head gave a shake. He'd never heard of anyone being struck by lightning (if that was even plausible) and he wouldn't even want to imagine himself as being the first.
Where the forest came to meet the tower of stone, Rook lingered, pacing in hopes his heartache would finally give way to actual grief. The sooner he grieved, the better. To him, it would possibly mean less pain and more acceptance on his behalf. He hadn't come to terms about his parents dying and he wasn't sure he was ready to despite everything he constantly told himself day in and day out. The torch had long since been passed, all that was left to do now was to make Borden comfortable and he was failing at even doing that.
The winds swept through the trees and up against the crags towering over him. It roared in his ears and forced him to close his eyes until it passed. It was the closest he could get to what might have become of him on that fateful day with Veho if the wandering medic had not come when he had.
His dirtied limbs folded beneath him and he tucked his nose to his left forelimb. The thought of returning home crossed his mind but he whisked it away. As anchored as he was to the lands that he helped secure for his family's sake, one night away from the borders could have been enough to set his sights back into perspective...
Chances are I have a BEN WHISHAW gif for that.