Strong legs sliced through fresh snow as if it were the warm waters she grew up in, where one could see the wind in the grass as it rippled like the river and breathe in the scent of rain that was being carried in the dark clouds above. Yet other than that, this white powder was nothing like her home and Gwendolyn for a few moments fiercely missed her home she had made with her - late - mother. And even more fiercely and deeply mourned said mother, who had been her closest friend until her death.
And for her entire life, it had just been her dear mother and her until Gwendolyn had finally pried the story of her father from her heartbroken lips only months before her passing. It had been a flighty romance, one where her father was greatly broken and lost, yearning for a place that pained him utter grief and guilt and her mother was desperately searching for something to make her feel after the fresh loss of her previous mate to a prolonged disease that she had been unable to find a cure for.
So they simply settled for each other and were as happy as a pair like them could be, bouncing from place to place. Until...until one day, after a year of slowly building each other up to heal again and there had been talk of finally settling down and starting a family, as neither of them were getting younger and wanted to at least try, he was suddenly gone.
And Gwendoyln was no fool in picking up what her mother was implying. Oh, Gwendoyn had been burning hot when it had sunk in what exactly he had done and how broken her mother had become again after his leaving, even though it did cross her mind as to why.
He’d gotten cold feet at the potential idea of binding himself to one place, to potentially never returning to some lost land and wolves that had him still racked with guilt, unbeknownst to his mate. However, unbeknownst to him, he’d left her one last gift before departing without a single word.
And that’s why Gwendolyn was in this frostbitten place, lost on some godforsaken mountain, on the search for some word of her father, even though she was almost certain he’d have passed onwards by now, as her mother had done.
Her nose twitched as the smell of something in the air, it smelled like...Well, she could smell what she thought was water but something else entirely almost engulfed the scent of it. A heavy scowl settled on her jaw, her brows switching together as she headed towards the scent. That probably meant it wasn't very drinkable but scaling this mountain had left her with quite the thirst and if she had the eat snow one more time...