Nostalgia was a powerful thing. It had been nearly one and a half years since she had stopped thinking regularly about the cedarwood forest and the willows and that mountain, which, incidentally, was a lot closer than she remembered. Though she had grown up with grand ideas for herself and the Hollow, that had all changed when the Lyalls had abandoned it completely. The Reach was home now, where her heart had settled and her roots had set. She had known for a long time that she would die in its more open landscape, not among these cedars.
But it hadn't been the same for her father and mother. Their bonds were here, with the territory they had founded and built together, and it only made sense that her old man would finally find his peace in it. The news had been hard to hear, but she hadn't doubted its truth, coming from Ryvet who said that he'd witnessed it. Truthfully, she'd been waiting for it, expecting it. When they'd left to find him help - stay, she'd urged, but to no avail, and she hadn't pressed it - she knew it was her last chance to look upon her father's face. There were so many regrets, so many mistakes made in her youth which she wanted to make up for, wanted him to witness her accomplishing, but he had to go, and she had already done so much. It would never be enough. With her parents leaving the Ridge, Trisden stepped up again. Whatever ailed Borden, she didn't want worry about this pack to be another of them. She would make him proud.
Now he was gone. The news had come some time ago, not long after the event, but it had not been the right time to take a trip. With winter approaching, the Reach needed her more than ever, and while she yearned to see the home they had re-built, practicality took over, as it so often did - Trisden Lyall was nothing if not practical. Yet, despite that, with her father alive, there had always been this barrier - this belief that they could come back, could reclaim what they had made, that the Reach wasn't truly hers. Not that she wanted it badly enough to wish them gone, far from it - while they lived as a ruling pair, Trisden ever came second. She would ever bow her head at their approach. Though she was approaching five years old she was still their daughter, dutiful as the day she had decided that nothing, nothing was more important than this family.
But he wasn't coming back, and the Reach needed a replacement. Finally, after so long, it was hers, and it was bitter and sweet both.
See, it shows that the cedarwoods had long fallen from her thoughts, for when she heard the word Lyall it came synonymous with Renegade, not Grizzly, and the air she imagined was cool and clear and not full of forest, and the faces she saw were of Solva and Wicket and Torvald and the others who were not of their blood but had become family all the same, and to whom the name Relic Lore meant nothing more than the place some of the Lyalls had once lived, and who didn't have their own name like that? Sure there were members who had come with them from this place, but Relic Lore was firmly in their past as much as it was in Trisden's. So it was entirely surreal to be back here, as though she had just unwound years of her life. It was even more surreal to find out how much was familiar, the simple act of walking through the woods as powerful as walking straight through her childhood. She'd known these lands, once. Really known them, and cherished them, and imagined a future forever within them. The strength of it moved her enough that Trisden needed to stop, to just absorb it, to process it - for it was difficult to walk in a world where she was a yearling again and yet her dad was dead.
There was a weariness to her step as finally their scents wound their way into her consciousness. She couldn't have mistaken it for anything. To have Rook in her nose again was a dear relief, for she had missed his presence dearly, his light-hearted good nature a refreshing contrast to her more dour, serious manner, and she was content in the knowledge that he would've been here when it happened. But oh, her poor brother to have to cope with such a thing - at least he had not been alone. By Ryvet's account, Renier and Hocus had been there, Hocus, oh to see him again. Trisden didn't know whether the thought filled her with joy or dread.
Paws lightly kneading the ground, because even the dirt was sending pangs of memory down her spine, she gazed through the quiet trees and tried to imagine what it would have been like to stay, or to have come with them and rebuilt her childhood home. Maybe in a different lifetime.
Ears pulling back, her cry was short and succinct, the confident, effortless manner of a leader running through her tone even though she didn't have any real authority here. For a short while, Grizzly Hollow could be home again. And so Trisden was home.