The blood was running thick down his forearm, his pale fur tainted pink. Shiny and fresh, the jagged tear on his shoulder oozed red with every step, the movement encouraging blood flow. Onward he pressed, as though his paw was not beginning to go faintly numb, as though the relentless pounding belonged to someone else. The long scratch on his browbone bled slower, but the line of red slowly made its way to his nose and mouth, and he spat it out angrily, leaving a dark splatter on the short, dense grass that crumpled under his feet. It was just one of many, joining those which were pressed into the ground with every step, his paw slick with it.
The sun was setting, and as the horizon to the west began to run bright and bloody, Craw was forced to move faster, his body grasping at every noisy lungful he drew, and even as the creatures of day began to quiet and settle in, he knew that night beasts were waking up, were watching, were waiting. Another hill was crested, the bloody trail made longer, longer, a beacon leading directly to him, and onward he was forced to go.
It was only when he tripped on a grassy knot did he realise that all feeling had drained out of his paw. The urgency which had urged him on was replaced by a new urgency, for he was fleeing death and here it was, trying to claim him, limb by limb. The rattle in his throat grew louder, grew aggressive, as he turned towards one of the small watering holes that the dying light still glittered over. The water was as still as the air, quiet and serene, and he regarded its surface for a moment upon reaching it. His forearm and shoulder pulsed terribly, but were grateful to stop. Licking at his chops, Craw exhaled hard, noisy, his throat raw and rough-edged, expelling the dead energy so that when he took a fresh breath it filled and cooled him.
Slowly he waded into the pool, the water drawing away any wet blood, chilling him. When it reached his wound, he hissed, but let it wash over him. The cleanse was crude, and was not nearly enough, but it was better than the alternative. Only minutes after submerging his torn flesh, the bulky wolf pulled himself out of the water, and shook himself even though it aggravated the wound. He had two choices; continue to walk through the night, to hope he could run fast enough, or to wait, and let sensation return to his leg and paw, let his blood have a chance to clot. Waiting guaranteed more broken flesh, though.
Waiting guaranteed a vicious retribution. Breathing quick and deep as adrenaline pre-emptively pumped through his veins, Craw set his yellow eyes to the north as the light faded, and waited for his night beast to find him.