February 5th; Midnight; Freezing fog; 11 ° F, -11 ° C.
The family had been taking some time to grieve. Candidly, it did not bother Skoll Archer in the slightest, seeing as he was active in the hours when most of them were asleep. Seeking out some time for himself, to vent and, perhaps, grieve in his own ways, he headed north. He went as far as to find the Swift River and crossed it where it ran thin, almost frozen solid with ice between the river stones. The boughs above creaked with the winter winds but the prince paid them no mind. They did not know him. For all they knew, nature spirits or otherwise, he posed no threat and he merely sought their company to be relieved of the wariness the Drooping Willows often subjected him to in the night.
Through the fog, he kept his head low, breathing loudly and panting as he went as he forced his frame of lean muscle and sinew to keep going. The more he walked, the better he thought, and the more he thought, the more he clarified in his head that he was not responsible for his sister Isolde's death. There was just no way; he had not even known that she had set out on an adventure on her own.
After sometime, at some nugatory muddy old den site, where a flood had reclaimed the hollowed earth, he paused. The fox tracks in the snow told of the area being recently inhabited but it was clear to the wolf that the vulpine scent that lingered had grown stale over a matter of weeks. The dark prince collapsed onto the ground, curling up in the small depression that had once been the hideaway's entrance. He touched his nose to the tip of his stark black tail, knowing all too well that the Sand Wolf would not pay him a visit no matter how much he longed for sleep.