Calanthe had indeed spotted the pheasants - her ears had picked up their distinctive, scraping calls soon after she and Moraxia had started their hunt - and similarly to Moraxia crept towards the small group as silently as her paws could carry her. It wasn't about simple footfall; Calanthe's whole body slipped so low to the ground that with every slithering step her belly threatened to scrape across the forest floor beneath her. The pale woman's breaths were low, steady, only just enough to carry her forward. She had never hunted pheasant in her life, but she had listened to the stories of wolves who had. Stealth, they had so often told her, was the only way one could take down a pheasant, for the birds were as flighty as they were stupid.
Amani, Cathair, if you are watching me now, guide my teeth. Calanthe's prayer was unvoiced, but she imagined she could feel strength pouring into her body as she moved from then on, as though every muscle were coiling itself tightly down so that she could leap at a heartbeat's notice.
There they were, a group of four of them. Calanthe's spine itched with anticipation. Her best bet would probably be the closest one to her, one of the smaller hens who hadn't realized yet that she was here. If she could catch that one while its back was turned, maybe she would stand a fair chance of actually taking it down. It had been a good long while since she'd eaten anything feathered--
Chaos took the clearing as Moraxia leapt forward with a great, thunderous bark that sent all four birds scattering into the air. Calanthe reacted, throwing herself into the fray with two or three hard bounds and flinging herself into the air after the slowest bird to take flight. Her teeth snapped together on the bird's leg, and she dragged it back down in a flurry of squawks and feathers. More than once a wing slapped her hard across the face, effectively blinding her before she was finally able to pin the thing down and snap its neck.
Calanthe stood over her bird, breathing hard as she stared dumbly at it for a moment... and then she snorted in disgust and stepped away from the mangled thing. Clumps of feathers lay scattered around it, most of them bloodied from the violence with which they had been ripped from the bird's flesh; the leg she had initially caught was broken nearly in two, and oozed with more blood. What a wretched scene it made! A good hunter didn't spill this much blood, not over anything so small! Amani or Cathair would have had this stupid bird pinned down from the outset and snapped its neck in the next instant, all without ever drawing a drop of blood.
Calanthe might have, as well, if she had had a fair chance at her quarry... Something settled like a low-burning coal in her gut as she snorted again and gave herself an angry shake, then reached down to very carefully gather her catch in her jaws to carry back to the den - the perfect excuse to avoid looking at Moraxia. If she had been hunting on her own, she would have made a better showing.