Eventually, he downed a prey animal. It was nothing like the fleet rabbit of a day prior, but a skinny old beaver was better than nothing. He'd caught it unaware at the edge of the lake in the early morning, as icy fog threatened to creep into his spine and chill him for the entire day, and he'd carried it several miles since then along the edge of a river winding north from the lake. His belly rumbled expectantly, begging him to stop and dig in to the beaver, but Mace preferred an advantage in sight lines. The lake left him vulnerable to ambush from above.
Only when he found a sufficient fallen log capable of holding his weight and tilted at a good angle did the Attaya man stop. He clambered atop the log, placed himself at a fairly high point where he could see the riverside and listen to the rush of it, then settled sphinx-like with the long-dead beaver held gingerly between his forelimbs. With a delicacy that didn't seem to suit the burly warrior wolf of the plains, he dug in to the beaver's plush belly and fed heartily, pacing himself so that he didn't promptly throw up everything he put in his belly. It had been several days since he ate something with substance, and while gorging was the wolf way, eating too quickly on an empty stomach was just asking for it.
All the while, his rounded ears twitched constantly atop his head, surveying his surroundings in rotations, and his eyes never left the bank of the river. Should a wolf seek to approach him unheard, he figured t would be from the direction of the river, where sound was most muddled and the sound of paws on the forest floor would be masked by the rumble of the rill. He kept his eyes there for good measure..