The snow from two days before was beginning to melt away as the autumn sun made its milky reappearance through the clouds; where nearly all the ground had been covered in a blanket of white, now only small piles of slush remained here and there, most gathered around the bases of larger trees that kept the brightest and warmest sunlight at bay with their outstretched limbs and what gatherings of tremulous leaves remained firmly attached to the boughs.
Calanthe didn't grieve the snowmelt; there would be more, and it would pile even higher and pack itself down more densely with its own weight. Better to enjoy what warmth remained before clouds and frigid wind overtook the skies for good. The snows would bring thinner, more difficult hunting and colder dens; winter storms might change their territory so radically that new hunting spots and patrol routes would need to be decided upon come Spring. For now she enjoyed the calm that came before the storms.
She was using it to her advantage, as well, and wandering the territory in another attempt to press every last shrub and stone into her memory. If she scented prey, she would take it, but this was more of an internal scouting mission - her heart twisted at the thought. Kenelm would have teased her for this, told her learning the layout as it was would never prepare her for the way it would be... She shook herself away from that thought with an angry snort and nearly stumbled into a very tall, very wide, certainly very old tree. She only just swerved away in time to walk past it, crossing as she did beneath the fallen body of a younger tree, taken down by rot and a strong wind or four and propped in the arms of its senior.
For a moment Calanthe paused and took in the sight; there was something very poignant about it, something soft and silent and still heartwrenching to look at. The pale woman sat quietly down, her eyes unable to stray from the two trees - at least until her forepaw brushed against something small and thin on the ground in front of her. It didn't feel like any twig, but it was too big to be a needle... with a frown, the woman looked down to see what in the world she had touched - and jumped away with a shriek.
The thing was a dead centipede - innocuous to any other wolf, surely, but to a wolf who had soaked up the teachings of the Gambol wolves as diligently as Calanthe had the little carcass was as good as a death knell. Centipedes, she had been taught, were beloved to the capricious nameless spirit, the one responsible for all twists and turns of fortune in life, who chose no sides but aided or hindered all without bias... except when a wolf came across a dead centipede. The spirit asked no questions; it was too impatient for that. A wolf it found hovering over the body of a dead centipede was a wolf cursed to the most horrific forms of bad luck imaginable. And if the spirit hadn't noticed Calanthe's error before, she had just drawn its attention with her screaming.
For a moment she could do little else but stare at the centipede, half willing the thing to go away, to disappear, to wake up and start crawling away so that she - and the spirit - could know that the stupid thing... er, the poor, unfortunate little creature was only asleep, only pretending, and so there was really no reason for the spirit to punish Calanthe at all - certainly not with any fires or hurricanes or floods or outbreaks of incurable disease or long, rocky drops off the steepest area of the mountain... But no, of course it didn't get up and move. Of course it didn't. That would be too wretched simple, wouldn't it? That would be lucky, when clearly Calanthe was not a woman who courted luck in any form.
Maybe the centipede wasn't bad luck. Maybe that was just a... a... a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy. Or superstition. Whichever. Maybe if she just brushed it off and pretended nothing was the matter, it would turn out that nothing bad at all would happen to her. She backed away, her manic smile more of a grimace as she tried to console herself with the idea. Kenelm had run afoul of Malkhaz after finding a dead centipede, but that wasn't the spirit's work. Kenelm was always in trouble with the pack leadership. Finding the centipede had been a coincidence--
In her badly-stifled hysteria, Calanthe didn't take the time to look behind her. Her back paw fumbled across a raised root, and she couldn't recover her balance quickly enough to keep from tumbling into a heap with a startled yelp.