Being pregnant sucked, and it was the most terrifying, exhausting thing that Asha had ever experienced. She was always hungry and yet she was also always sick, and even though she could hardly keep food down anymore, her stomach had grown. An abnormal, balloon-like form had taken to her usually-thin belly, and she had lost weight off of other areas. It was hard enough being a loner in the winter and the frigid early spring without having two or three other creatures inside of you to feed. Especially when you puked up almost everything you ate.
The damn snow had taken over absolutely everything again - even the beautiful flowers that had been growing on the forest floor had frozen and died. The colorless creature sighed as she brushed through the frost-colored willows, stepping over wilted underbrush along the way. She was aware that she was relatively close to a pack's borders, but she didn't care at the moment. In fact, a part of her wanted someone in that pack to just run out and end her right then and there.
It wasn't like it would matter if she lived or died. No one on this earth cared for her - no one would miss her if she were to be killed. Eirian was in and out of her life, and she knew that she did not love him and he did not love her. He probably felt some sort of responsibility to her or the puppies she carried; that was all. She often wondered if she had trapped him in some way by getting pregnant - she hadn't meant to. She didn't even want children in the first place. She would be a horrible mother, to say the least. If she had kids, they'd want her dead, as well.
She had no friends, no family, no-
Green eyes popped into her memory and she tucked her tail, lowering her head in shame. Once, she might have had a chance with Eskil, because he had liked having her around for whatever reason, but now... now, he wouldn't care less what became of her.
On cue, at that last thought, Asha's paw caught on a root. She yelped as she fell forward, landing awkwardly on her stomach and cringing in pain. She almost stood; almost picked herself up and continued walking aimlessly, but her entire body felt sore and heavy, and there would be no point in continuing on. Not right that moment, anyway. The pale-furred wolf pressed her side against the bark of the willow tree she'd fallen under, and rested her head on one of the roots that was sticking up above the snow. Her ice-colored eyes closed, and then opened one more, looking over the dead flowers that had been killed by the freezing temperatures around them.