It was empty.
The branches of the undergrowth that riddled the forest still drug across her side as she wandered, and the shadows cast by the thick canopy still stole the warmth of the sunshine that, now and again, danced over her face and back. The ground beneath her paws was still damp, and the smell of the dirt - lost upon her for years- was still able to rouse that bittersweet sense of home in her heart. Physically, Secret Woodlands remained, but everything she'd once loved about it was gone. Gone with the wolves who had left it behind, her included. Gone with the family she'd known and loved once upon a time. Gone with time, as all things were.
She had travelled for weeks before finally crossing into Relic Lore for the first time since she was a child. She'd spared little time getting there, for she knew just how dangerous lands unknown could be to a wolf alone. But just after dawn the previous day she'd made her way back to Secret Woodlands in time to see the mysteriously beautiful forest cloaked in the light of a rising sun. From the border it was still as alluring as she'd remembered, but it wasn't until she forged her way in, pushing deeper and deeper into a place that was known to her and foreign all the same, that the disenchantment set in. This wasn't home anymore. But for the life of her, she still needed to see it for herself. At least one more time. After spending several hours seeing the sights - the old pack den where Nina had nursed her, the hollow beneath an ancient tree next to a trickling creek where Mirren had raised her, and all of the special places only she knew where she'd played and learned as a pup - Lyanna resigned to make the most of her solitary return and move on. As she crossed the southernmost border and paused to glance over her shoulder, she knew somehow that the visit there wouldn't be her last.
Today had been a new day, one that she's spent traveling just a litter further. As the sun began its descent, its light waning behind sheets of darkening clouds, it was the sound of trickling water that made her feel inclined to find somewhere safe to hunker down for the night. She and the land were cloaked in twilight as the winding Heartleaf Creek came into view. Its waters appeared dark, but the crests of its tiny waves were lined in silver and it was here on a modest bank that she finally came to rest. Her golden eyes took in every sight, her red-tipped ears angling forward and backward as she listened intently for any sign of life nearby. There was none, save for the trees and the birds that would flutter by now and again. With an easy sigh, the girl circled about a soft patch of grass beside the trunk of an old cedarwood until it was rustled to her liking before sliding to her belly in a moment of relief and peace.
The darkened clouds that had been looming for hours opened up, releasing the rain they'd promised. Drops of it splattered harmlessly on the tip of her nose, between her soft amber eyes, on the tips of her ears and on down her back. Lyanna welcomed this, inclining her muzzle just so as what penetrated her coat slid effortlessly down along her skin. Just enough to wash her restlessness and exhaustion away. Shifting herself closer to the tree that offered her shelter, she laid her muzzle upon her dirtied paws, closed her eyes and drifted easily to sleep.