Pic of root nook
@Veho, anybody else welcome too!
The sky that day had taken on an ominous tinge as banks of billowing clouds formed overhead, a stark contrast to the clear, brilliant blue of that morning. The clouds did little to quell the stifling afternoon heat, and Oula could only hope that the darkened heavens would soon let loose with cooling rains. Though her pregnancy had been rather uneventful so far, a bit of nausea and discomfort her only real complaints, just carrying around so much extra weight was quickly getting old and the warming weather was not helping the tundra-born female. Oula couldn't imagine getting any larger around the middle than she already was, and could only hope that meant the pups would soon arrive.
Knowing her cubs would be ready any day now, Oula took care to stay within the territory. It wasn't a terribly exciting prospect, and she expected today to be a rather uneventful day of tending to caches and checking scent markers. As pattering noise fell upon the forest, Oula sighed with relief. But relief turned to disappointment as she realized that rather than rain, hailstones were pelting her in the head! Growling she skulked onward, ears folded protectively against her skull.
Just as soon as it started, the hail stopped and the forest grew utterly silent, as if all the air had been sucked out of it. Oula finally stopped in her tracks, her mouth set in a hard line as she surveyed around her. Such stillness signaled nothing good, and whether it was another predator in the vicinity or something else she wasn't sure, and wasn't going to stick around to find out.
A pain pulled in her gut as Oula turned back towards the territory's heart. The quiet was short-lived as a wind kicked up behind her, seemingly urging her faster as bits of twigs and cedar needles pelted her backside. But it was the sudden, deafening roar like that of a waterfall that pushed the woman into a run. The cedar boughs overhead swayed violently, dust and debris flying freely through the air in gusts that tore through the forest in one direction then the other.
Oula broke into an all out sprint as she tried to escape the storm that was ravaging the forest behind her. A strong gale tore the ground out from beneath her paws, and for a moment she had the sickening feeling of flying before she landed heavily on the ground.
Again a pain rippled through her but she couldn't worry about it at the moment, her only goal was to find shelter. Still on the ground she rolled to her belly, hunkered down low against the squall, sage eyes desperately searching for anything she could hide beneath. The best, and perhaps only immediate option was the space beneath the roots of a fallen tree. On knees and elbows she crawled into the little crevice, wedging herself in with back facing out towards the world and bracing for the worst as the storm rumbled through the cedarwood.
The pain returned, now a deep ache that she couldn't ignore. She hoped that her fall had not injured her yet unborn children, and the worry only increased as the pain persisted. She couldn't help the whine that seeped from her maw as the roof of roots shook overhead and rained loose soil down upon her, her ears folded flat against the deafening noise of the forest being torn apart all around her.
Finally she pushed against the sensation, there was nothing else she could do, and almost all too easily she felt something slip out behind her. Of all times! Her heart hammered as she curled to check the little life that had emerged at what could possibly be the worst moment possible. The pup's little limbs waggled in protest as Oula did the best she could to clean her child off, protectively tucking the girl up against her stomach and sheltering her against the storm with her body. The second cub took a little longer, the worst of the gale having passed before he joined his sister, both hungrily nestled up against her belly.
Oula had expected the third to be just as quick as the first two, but despite her persistent pushing it seemed they would not budge. She was oblivious as the winds finally died down and some semblance of calm returned to the forest. A sharp pain lanced through her as she tried to shift into a better position, her dry tongue flapping out of her mouth as she panted.