As snappy as he could be, Askan was not one for arguing with Drestig. There were times in which he disagreed with the old man- oh that happened plenty- but he never disobeyed, not outright anyway. Like he'd said all those months back, if Drestig told him to jump, Askan would ask how high. So even though the Yukon wolf was in no mood for being friendly, he pursed his lips into a thin line and simply watched. Ready to spring into action if need be, at his alphas call.
His gaze flickered between the two wolves. One was dark like the night and the other was pale as though it had been bleached by the sun. Askan liked to think he had the area figured out, but he did not recognise these strangers. He had no way of knowing whether they were a threat or not. He hoped not, for the sake of simplicity, but even he knew that being too optimistic was dangerous. You could never be too friendly , as it was easy to mistake it for weakness. And with things as they were, hanging in the balance, it was a risk Askan could not allow.But he had to have faith in his alpha, the man he had chosen to follow. Drestig was no fool, there was a sharp mind ticking away behind his bright eyes. Like Askan, he had to be sizing them up, putting together theories as to how and why they were here.
But there was one thing that bothered Askan, enough to make his frown more prominent than usual.
"You heard?"
His wording was strange, the meaning difficult to put together, but Askan assumed that he meant that someone had told him there were wolves nearby. They hadn't been that noisy after all, it wasn't as though they were advertising their presence. They'd been careful.
"Who told you?" Askan asked, doing his best to keep his tone neutral, casual even. It worked somewhat. At that Askan sent his alpha a quick glance, he was certain Drestig did not have a hand in this. He would have told him otherwise, or at least he should have.