Sahalie was pacing back and forth along the edge of the pool that lay collecting the mist of the waterfall with great agitation. She was taking huge, gulping breaths of air, trying not to panic. Trying to be cool but also unable to keep down the loud internal monologue in her head that she had lost her daughter! Her approach with Arcus from the start had been very laissez-faire (a bold move in particular for a pair of loners squatting in pack territory during a summer of coyote infestation) in the hopes that her daughter would develop some precocious self-sufficiency, that their daughter would love and appreciate her parents for her independence, that it meant that they could leave Charred Ash Draw sooner. In reality, though, the result was that she was often on the edge of freaking out almost all the time and regularly stalking or tracking down her daughter to make sure she was doing okay. She wasn't sure how much Alastor approved of this method of raising because she did not ask him. She didn't want him to freak out because she was freaking out enough right now.
Sahalie had no idea that Arcus would be able to walk this far, and she had not expected to find a WATERFALL of all things. Her scent was gone, scrubbed away by the heavy dampness in the air. There was no real saying which way she went. And if Arcus had gone into the water at some point Sahalie honestly would have no way of knowing which direction she went next. This was literally the worst possible scenario she could have encountered, and one of the worst things about it was that the idea that her daughter could lose her scent somehow had never occurred to her as she had weighed the pros and cons of her parenting style.
Forlornly she stared at the waterfall. Her gaze twitched and moved up to the outcrop from which the water fell, then left and right. She tried to think about what she knew: Arcus had come this way and Treyah's son had followed her. Which was just great because it made it look like she had lost her half-sister's kid, too, on top of everything. Like she had just said, "oh yeah kids go play wherever the hell you want it will be FINE there are only wild coyotes lurking on the other side of every tree!" How stupid could she have been?