Recovery came slow for the magpie in the passing month since her return home, but what was there to really expect given the circumstances she faced? Time had zapped the former youthfulness from her bones leaving travel acquired wounds like sore muscles and paw pads to heal slower than usual and weight harder to put on despite the tender caregiving her daughter and fellow packmates bestowed upon her.
And not to mention the lurking depression that clung to her heart and soul since discovering the news of her mate's passing. The heaviness of a broken heart still grieving only hindered her progress, but it didn't stop it completely. Deep down she knew he wouldn't want his love to stop living because he couldn't continue to, but in truth it was hard. So very hard.
Dark, heavy lids lifted themselves to allow amber eyes to face the world once more, the edge of her scar painted muzzle protruding from the den her late husband and herself shared. Small tufts of his fur still remained scattered about seemingly untouched although his cologne had long since faded from the hole beneath a shady willow. It was a foolish wish to hope it would still be present to this day, but Enoki would have given nearly anything for one more whiff of his scent that lulled her peacefully to sleep each and every night. The warmth of his frame pressed alongside her own and the weight of his head on her shoulders, his light snores tickling her ears.
How easily one took such simple things for granted until they were gone.
Aching limbs groaned in protest as the piebald hoisted herself up to slither out from the darkness and embrace the light however painful it was on her shielded eyes not yet ready for the blindness they were forced to endure until they adjusted accordingly. A small brush of her paw pushed aside a breakfast delivery of fresh squirrel that did nothing to stir the elderly woman's appetite. Little by little her exposed ribcage receded, but her weight gain was still a work in progress. Those surrounding her often times had to force the former matriarch to eat, refusing to leave her side until they witnessed something enter her stomach. But that didn't stop her from wandering off to hurl the contents back up behind a bush when nobody was looking. Some days her stomach just couldn't handle the heaviness of anything other than her sadness.
Today like every day since her return, slender limbs slowly padded their way along the trail that led toward the old willow once sunlight banished the navy blanket of night. Only ceasing to gingerly lower herself into the same seat she took the day before, a paw outstretched to rest at the highest point of his grave while smoldering amber irises already glistening with moisture watched the weeping branches sway in the breeze above.
"Hello again, my love." Her words fell softly like the petals of a wilted rose, a saddened smile etching itself onto her maw.