Back in Bella Coola, Pip had often been alone. It was as much through choice as it was through encouragement by her less friendly packmates. But since joining the ranks of Grizzly Hollow, the mute girl had grown used to being surrounded by her loved ones and found she depended heavily on them in day to day life. It wasn't that she needed help keeping herself fed - she was turning into quite a skilled hunter - but their presence brightened her mood significantly.
However, even surrounding herself with pack could do little to stymie the ache of grief that threatened to drown her heart. The abandonment of her siblings and Tyne was the worst sort of betrayal. Nauja's initial departure had not come as a surprise to the tawny female, but she never would have expected Niq'x and Blitz to leave without even saying goodbye. And Tyne had always been so plain to read. She just hadn't seen it coming. Was it because she'd purposely blinded herself to their wants? She knew they all yearned for the ocean. For the sand between their paw pads and the sea spray in their faces. Had it been selfish of her to have no inclination to find their birth home again as they so clearly wanted?
The budding hunter trudged toward familiar ground where she was more likely to find solitude. Having discovered Frog Chirp Creek along with Tomen, she liked to think of it as something of a private place, but knew better than that. Many had come to visit the bubbling creek since then. She knew not to expect the croaks and chirps of frogs with the freezing weather, but still found herself saddened further by their absence. Their amphibian calls always seemed to brighten her.
Dejected, Pip padded through the few inches of snow to approach the widest part of the creek for a drink only to find it almost completely frozen over. Not only that, but the nearly black surface of the ice was overlaid with strange formations the likes of which she'd never seen before. They almost looked like lily pads. That brought the first hint of a smile since her siblings left; fitting to have lily pad ice here. She mused that it was as if winter wanted to acknowledge the frog's sleep and send the rest of the world a reminder that they would return.
Pawing at a thin bit of ice close to shore, she quenched her thirst before heading over to a large snow drift against a large oak's trunk. The mute dug out a hole in the snow and curled into a ball, her tail flopping over her face to protect her nose. Guilt swamped her even as she did so. There were so many other things she could be doing to benefit the pack instead of wallowing in self-pity. Still, she had no inclination to do any of those things. For a while, she promised herself. Just a while, she would let herself grieve in peace.