It was official—Cottongrass was undeniably, irrevocably, and hopelessly bored. And it only took three long weeks of what was more or less isolation for him to realize that. In the beginning he had considered hunting down Victoria, maybe convince her that they could still find an adventure somewhere in the world that didn't involve Grizzly Hollow. But then he realized that he didn't know where to even start looking for her other than the general direction of south. He had even considered finding Reyes, except he didn't know the first thing he would do if he found the older wolf. Join the pack his friend had settled in? That was... Well, he gave that idea a hard no accompanied by a pained cringe on his part.
He couldn't help but feel abandoned. After all, he had spent a whole entire month looking for Vic! And when he did find her, he discovered that she was going to run off to join some pack that he wasn't even entirely sure existed. Then there had been Reyes—Reyes that was also running off to join some random pack! It seemed like one moment he had thought everything was coming together, that maybe all three of them could go and explore and be friends. But instead he ended up alone.
Yet Cottongrass found that he could sulk for so long before it just got sad, sad and unfulfilling.
And after a week of solid sulking, he had considered all the things he could do to try and entertain himself in his newfound lonely existence. Like—he could climb a tree! But he didn't think climbing a tree and pretending to be an owl would be the same without that one girl to offer him food when he inevitably fell. Then he thought about climbing a rock and hoping it magically summoned that one boy, the quiet one with dark fur. Except he couldn't remember where the big rock was. And the big rock he did know where to find was... Well, that big rock had a cave and that cave was full of decidedly bad times. He had even tried walking into a tree! It didn't summon Cas, though, and it just left him feeling like a fool.
Which left him with nothing but one last drastic measure—he would try and make his own fun. It seemed like a good idea at the time. The sun was warm against his back, the snow was soft under his paws, and the air fresh in his lungs. He was going to scale one of the many slopes that were unique to the area, and then he was going to slide down it on his stomach. There was no way it wouldn't work. Cottongrass had accidentally found himself sliding down backwards on similar slopes plenty of times. Why wouldn't it work if he did it on purpose? Really, he prided himself on the sheer genius of his idea.
He would climb the slope, slide down the slope, and repeat until he either got bored or tired of doing it. And as he neared the top of one of many ridges, his excitement only grew. His tail swished in the air behind him as he picked up the pace, because this was it. This was the place he'd start sliding just to test the idea. It was a spot on the slope that wasn't too high but not too low either with plenty of space for him to slide without hitting a tree. He couldn't get the idea out of his that hey hey hey, he was practically a genius now! Inventing stuff and doing things!
Turning on the spot, he looked down at the slope. And with a prance in his step and a shake in his tail, he gave an excited pounce forward. He landed hard on his stomach, legs skewered in awkward angles beneath his stocky frame. Nothing... Nothing happened. There was no majestic slide down, no rush of adrenaline. No, there was just Cottongrass on his tummy in the snow. He gave a frantic wiggle forward, trying to propel himself with his hind legs because maybe he needed some more momentum—
He only sank deeper into the melting snow.
And in that moment, Cottongrass felt like the whole entire universe had come together just to say one very rude and obscene sentence to him that he wouldn't dare repeat.