RE: You catch a glimpse of a long dead friend.
remember you could weep fire with wild eyes
The full moon hung low in the star speckled sky, lighting the coniferous forest in a soft blue glow. Oula tread lightly through the trees, nose twitching as she scented for any unwitting prey or anything out of place. So far it had been a quiet night, little piquing the female's interest. It was almost disappointing, having nothing to do on such a perfect evening.
Just as she was wishing for something interesting to happen, something shifted in the corner of her vision. Her round face quickly turned, catching through the trees a moonlit form draped in rippling cinnamon fur. For a moment the red tinted male stood still, then flinched as if he noticed Oula watching.
Her heart leapt into her throat, thudding as if it were trying to break free from her ribs. He looked much too familiar, even in the intervening months since his death she hadn't forgotten him. But it couldn't be him. She'd watched his life spill out in red rivulets, the light leave his eyes, the soil cast over his body inch by inch as they buried him. He was dead.
Her mind had to be playing tricks on her, but still she couldn't stop herself. Her breath huffed out in misted clouds as her pale paws dug into the damp ground, propelling her forward and after the suddenly fleeing form. She just had to know.
No matter how fast she ran or what shortcuts she took, the wolf still remained just out of reach. Not fast enough to outrun her, but too quick to catch, leaving her with only a glimpse of copper fur through the trees. If she hadn't been so panicked she might have noticed the lack of scent, the absence of tracks. Rushing water met her ears, and Oula knew they would soon be at the creek. She'd had the area scoped out well enough that she knew the water at this point would be too deep, too wild, to cross. Finally she would have him pinned.
As Oula broke through the treeline she caught sight of the river glinting silver in the moonlight as it tumbled over jagged boulders, spray lighting the air like stars. She slowed as she expected the wolf to finally stop. No one would be crazy enough to cross here, but... She gaped as he continued running, launching an impossible distance over the rapids and landing on the other side. He finally paused on the opposite bank, staring back with an all too familiar amber gaze.
"RORIK!" She screamed, running forward as the figure turned and vanished like a shadow into the trees. Her cream paws stopped at the waters edge, breath coming in tremulous pants as she watched the wood, waiting.