The world looked different when it wasn't covered in snow. And he knew that was a well established fact. One that he witnessed firsthand when he was nothing more than a puppy experiencing his first winter and the subsequent spring. But he felt like something about those memories were a gross understatement. Like they all paled in comparison to the startling reality of present day.
Because he knew Stonewatch Timbers like the back of his paw. And even if he couldn't admit that he knew the forested highlands by name, he could say he knew it by heart. How could he not?
He used to call the place home.
There was probably a den that was now decrepit but once well loved hidden somewhere among the trees and rounded peaks.
He was tempted to find it. Because as far as he knew—nostalgia never hurt anybody. He didn't have his own personal den back in Wild Rye Fields. There was only the main den and the forest that made up the territory's southernmost edges. And maybe on some days he could include the den Askan and Reyes had made. But otherwise? He slept in the open. Impulse told him to bow down and search for what used to be his only meager possession. He felt compelled to follow his brain's rushed demands. But even as he gazed into the surrounding woods he realized that he didn't recognize anything.
As the last time he was around it was during the middle of winter. Snow and ice had blanketed the ground and slopes. Frost had clung to bare and frozen branches. There was nothing like that now covering the land. Instead withering leaves littered the ground while many still clung to the stretching branches overhead. The forest floor beneath his paws was cold and damp. Everything smelled foreign and indistinct.
There was no Victoria or Tumblebelly forever hiding just out of sight.
Somewhere below his paws stumbled to a halt and his tail hung limp between his back legs. He wondered if this was a mistake. It was starting to feel like one. Maybe he should have stayed away. There was nothing important waiting for him among the densely packed trees and seemingly endless peaks. But his paws had a mind of their own.
He remained rooted on the spot even as the sun started to set somewhere beyond the canopy hanging overhead. Something in the branches above rustled. An owl took off in almost silent flight. He was too caught up in his own mind to notice.