It was her first time returning to the place at Cut Rock River where the beaver had first attacked her. By now, her leg was fully healed, though her hock would always bear the ugly scars from the encounter. Only on particularly cold mornings did she have a barely perceptible limp, but it wasn't slowing her down any at the moment. The recent rains had filled the rivers to the brim, bringing with it large fish that she couldn't wait to catch.
As she approached the river, however, she saw the rough surface of it. There were downed trees still in parts of the river. Pip assumed they must be the source of the white caps as the water was forced over new obstacles. Having grown around the ocean, she was no stranger to waves. How bad could waves in a river be? Certainly nothing she couldn't handle. The little wolf lacked confidence in many areas, but around water was not one of them.
Of course, this river had surprised her before.
She stepped in at a more shaded area where an outcropping of land created a calm pool. Pip's ears flicked back against her head as water immediately closed over her back - it was much deeper than before, too. While less than ideal, she still felt confident enough in her paws to be able to handle it. The agouti female waded farther out towards where the white caps raged and she could see large fins even through the water from farther off. Yes! Perfect time to fish! The prey were out and huge and she would shock everyone with her enormous catch!
The fisher didn't have to wait long at all. With her paws planted firmly in the still part of the river, she drove her muzzle into a white cap to snag at the body of thick-skinned sturgeon. It wasn't a fish she had encountered before, and had she, she would have known better than to attempt to take one on her own. Easily as long as she was, the sturgeon gave a mighty thrash as her teeth sunk into its flesh and pulled her right off her paws and directly into the path of the powerful current.
To her credit, she was able to hold on to the thrashing fish for quite a while despite the warning signs screaming in her brain to get her paws back on solid ground. But self-preservation finally won out over the need to catch the fish and she let go, her head finally breaking above the rapids to suck in air and realize she was already washed downriver. Panic hadn't set in just yet, though it should have as her legs weren't strong enough to fight the swift tug of undertow.
Just stay calm and get to shore, she told herself. A task far easier said than done, even for one who could not speak at all. Pip's breaths came faster as fatigue washed through her quickly. Trees on the shoreline were flying by faster than she ever thought possible, but it was ahead in the water that gave her heart a fearful pause.
There was a dip in the river. Between two large rocks, water surged up angrily, frothing like a rabid animal and roaring like the sea on a stormy night. Pip put in another round of effort despite her exhaustion, striving with panicked kicks to find any amount of purchase. Her efforts were in vain and the little wolf was pulled down under the water. For a moment, it was impossible to tell which way was up. She found her legs were frozen and she simply floated beneath the river's surface until the rapids forced her back up. As soon as her muzzle broke free, she sucked in a violent breath, shuddering on the exhale. Her chirp of alarm for her packmates was drowned out by the roar of the river around her. Another attempt to force her tired limbs into action was in vain as her small body was slammed into a broken tree hidden beneath the water. A moment of pain flared in her side before her head, too, connected.
Cathedral where you cannot breathe
No need to pray, no need to speak
Now I am under all
The little wolf's limp body washed up along shore as the rapids died down. Above her, a willow trees drooping branches brushed along her soaked fur.