Wren had seen these trees before that much he was certain of. He was beginning to realize he’d made it back, that he’d found parts of his homeland… and the best part was that he knew where to go from there. He was in the final leg of his journey, just a few more days… and yet why did he feel so numb about it? He’d insisted that he needed to make this migration; he had been convinced that he needed to see it again. His mother had never abandoned him – she’d fought to her last breathe to protect them and the rest of the pack from an evil wolf who wanted nothing more than to crush others under her paws. He needed to shake it off, right now, because there were rabbits to catch. He was following the trails and could smell them on the wind.
The bad memories should have stirred up emotions, whether they be negative for the hard times and the status of outcast he felt his family had been labelled… or the good memories, the good times with his Aunt Tani, with Erebos, with Kyna before all of them had given him reasons to walk away and never look back… before they’d left themselves, leaving him alone in the dust. He had intentionally left everyone behind, and he’d prospered for it… he found that hard to regret with a sister who’d distanced herself from him, refusing to so much as speak to him and a father who’d walked away from his mate and pups right before she died…
No, he was spiteful, and bitter, and angry at the world… and that was why he didn’t say anything. The world didn’t need to know his strife with it. He let his fur lie flat, trying to keep his outward appearance calm and he pressed through the forest, snow crunching under his paws. He was certain this was the forest that had been red when he first left home – the one with the strange red leaves no matter the season… and that meant if he headed southwest, following the constellation Lyra he could most certainly return to his mountain home.
It wasn’t much of a home now… it never really had been… the only thing that stood out was the site that use to be marked with rocks and flowers that he’d found in his adventured, nestled in the heart of the heights that warded away storms and wind from the body of the figure that had given birth to him. That was where he was going… and after that? Well, he wasn’t sure where he was going to go after that.
He’d figure it out though… right? He had to, because he was the one who kept pushing on despite what cards he might have been dealt. He might not always take the news the best… but he was strong. He knew that and his mentor had seen it in him too. Roman and Valentina both had never stopped believing in him, pushing him to be the best that he could be, rather than being the weak one… the orphan that was easy to overlook and kill.
No, he needed to focus. He was on the hunt. He closed his eyes for only a second, pulling everything back together as he exhaled, the loudest sound he’d made in probably weeks as he crouched lower on his haunches and hackles as he started to creep along the snow-covered forest floor. His eyes narrowed as he relied on the power stored up in his muscles to propel him across the terrain, the rabbits spooking as he approached, but not becoming aware of his presence fast enough. Soon enough he was pouncing, just like Valentina had taught him, landing on the rabbit as he securely wrapped his jaw around its neck, clamping down and draining the life from its features as blood stained his maw. He was quick to lick it off before picking up the prey and carrying it in his jaws to find a place to settle down so he might be able to enjoy his meal in some semblance of privacy. That… that wasn’t too much to ask… right?
Apparently privacy had been too much to ask the last time around. He had a feeling that as long as he didn’t run into Askan again, he’d be fine and free from the trauma that was attempting to socialize with wolves he had no interest in getting to know.