Tonight was the night things would change. Hexamora could feel the invisible rope tied around her embodiment being tugged away from the waves lapping gently for now upon the pebble dusted shoreline. A single pine green optic shone brightly in the receding light of twilight despite the lengthening shadows and ominously approaching cumulonimbus clouds with their looming threat of another autumn downpour. Swirls of dark grey and black slowly devouring the twinkling stars who first dotted the night sky. What could possibly make for a better, untraceable, ghostly escape than having sheet after sheet of rain to wash away one's scent? Come morning only an abandoned hole in the ground with tufts of shed pearly fur would remain as evidence Hexamora ever resided here.
It was time this chapter of her life closed and a new one began. No longer did she need the wolves of the lake to protect her until she could stand on her own four paws again, nor did they need her as if they actually ever did. The Beauvau woman had come to grips with her acquired disability, learned to cope with it and now her freedom was calling like a siren on the open seas to sailors, luring her back to the vast open, unrestricted lands yet to be graced by her presence.
Skull raised high and tail swinging idly at her rump the first drops of rain began to splatter against the top of her snout, provoking a small glance upward toward the darkened sky. Another tear shaped raindrop plopping between her eyes. Now was the time to move and ivory limbs failed to hesitate in creating a rhythmic sense of travel. The hushed splash of pads striking puddles of mud the only sound loud enough to overpower the low drum of rain as it began to saturate the world below. Tendrils of ivory hair beginning to become plastered to the slender frame of the fleeing phantom with each passing moment. There was no hesitation as the invisible barrier that marked the boundaries of the lakeside estate became broken. The final cord holding her back from moving forward sliced.
Instantly shoulders felt lighter and breathing became easier as the weight of being caged dissipated into mere nothingness, phantasmal form weaving effortless between the abundance of sturdy mountain pines. Their fresh scent cleansing the stench that had come to accumulate all around her over the past few months. She was free. Hexamora Beauvau was finally free.