It should have only taken them two days to make it to the Heights, not two weeks. But, the small group was exhausted from the recent events and though they didn’t know it - smoke inhalation. Not only that but the mother forcing them to move slowly and take an unreasonable amount of breaks was a desperate attempt to let Serach and the others catch up to them. Everytime they stopped Aponi had blindly hoped that she would see them lopping in to join them, but that moment never came. Eventually she would grow hopeless and once again force everyone to their paws and onwards.
A few days ago she had allowed Mabel to break away from them to head towards the Edge to check that their pack was okay. She hadn’t wanted to, but Aponi knew that even if she had said no that the yearling would have done it anyways and at least this way Mabel had promised to come to the Heights after and reunite with them. Now it was only herself, her teenaged son and her youngest daughter. Throughout it all she tried to keep them positive, reassuring them that everything would be okay once they got to the mountain and to their sister’s pack. Most of her even believed it.
Maybe Serach and the others weren’t moving so slowly, maybe they had been there for days waiting for them. Maybe the fire had avoided most of the territory and they could go back in the spring. Maybe this wasn’t as bad as it seemed. Maybe the Heights had grown smaller as the Bend had and that’s why they weren’t smelling their markers. Or, maybe their noses had been damaged by the smoke and they were about to waltz over the lines uninvited.
All foolish hope of this was dashed as they had reached the crest of the mountain, where the borders had stood. Aponi could no longer lie to herself, she didn’t know what had happened to the Heights, but, they weren’t here now. Steely blue eyes swept over the cold expanse of stone critically, no signs of struggle but also no signs of life. Unwilling to show her children that this was the last straw holding her resolve together she announced matter of factly, ”We wait here for your father.” There would be no questions asked, this was an order not a suggestion.