It was biting cold as she set out, and the only way to tell the sun had risen was the slight lightening of the overcast sky. Spieden's ears and nose tingled, but with her thick coat and heavy build it didn't bother her much. It seemed to her as good a day as any to get the lay of the land, and if she was lucky perhaps she would find something edible. Action was the best distraction, and rather than grapple with the devastating turn of events that had landed her here, and the even stranger circumstances that had lubricated the gears that got her into this pack. She wasn't even sure how she felt about it... Almost like her mother had a second life that she'd never known about. Spieden didn't believe in ghosts per se, but it was hard to not feel that her mother was still looking out for her.
Spieden planned on earning her keep, but the pressure was on even more now that it wasn't her own merits, but her mother's reputation that helped her into the Monadnock. Hunting was the most practical way she knew to do this. She was still figuring out the dynamics of the pack, but wolves always needed food.
She wasn't even sure what else lived all the way up here, whether deer and rabbits were as plentiful as they were in the forest, or if the northern wolves fed on other beasts. Rather than the close, intimate forests in the Vale, the land here was open and rolling. She felt exposed in a way, it wouldn't be so simple to skirt behind the trees or through a ravine to hide from predator or prey.
Spieden came across some interesting things as she explored. She found a pair of strange, long antlers on the ground beside a huge boulder. She'd never seen anything like them before, were they from some sort of deer? She continued on, finding in the divot between two hills a warren some little rodents dug in the snow, the openings much too small to be that of a rabbit. She waited a bit, and though she could hear scratching and scurrying under a crust of hoarfrost, nothing dared exit while she watched. As she poked about she found a set of fox prints leading to and away from the tiny burrows. She set her nose to the ground, snuffing the edges of the pawprints. Still soft and powdery, they had been left recently. She licked her lips, rodents were barely a snack, but a fox on the other hand.