Aponi had taken the Bend pups on a trip up the mountain, going to see her daughter Kyna—the daughter who left shortly after Ice joined. He didn't have any clear memories of her, but he thought she was black, like the rest of them, and had, probably, been opinionated. As far as Ice knew, she had gone on to found a pack up on the Serpent, and that was why they had gone on their little field trip. Ice had weighed his options. Either he did what he should've done, and accompanied Aponi, keeping them safe, or, he did what he could do: go visit Kisla and Jessie, because the pups were safe and the packlands almost emptied, so he had no reason to stay and hunt.
It hadn't been a choice, really. He couldn't do anything but go north, so a couple of days after Aponi had left, Ice did, too.
He couldn't wait much longer. He was trapped between not wanting to bother Kisla, and wanting to show her that he still cared, that he meant it, that he wanted to know how she was. It didn't matter who the father of her children were—they were hers. They had been hers right from the start, at least, on his part. It wasn't about the cubs. It was about her.
It took a couple of days, but then the now familiar, painfully so, redwood forest rose around him. It started slowly, a giant of a tree here, another there, but before long he walked the silent spaces between them. His heart was hammering in his throat. Last time, he hadn't exactly received a warm welcome, but he wouldn't let fear keep him away any longer.
The pack's borders came close, and he stopped. He could barely smell Kisla on them, but that wasn't strange—she was probably busy nursing and caring for her young. Ice took a couple of minutes to catch his breath, then tipped his pale head back and called out for her.