Finley was well aware that she did not have much time before she would find out if her mistake had taken hold. She also knew that if she didn’t find someone to trick into thinking it was their baby before the scents changed she would be too late. The problem was Camden was nowhere to be found, and other strangers seemed to be few and far between and this was making her problem very hard to solve.
The landscape here seemed to almost have no rhyme or reason, a day ago she had been in rolling hills, almost mountains really, and now a tundra. Thankfully after a week or so of warmer daytime highs the snow had begun to melt, and the sparse area was not nearly as inhospitable as it had been a few weeks ago. It was not great by any means, but shrubbery had reappeared from under the snow drifts that had hidden them, and they offered some mercy from the wind.
It was afternoon now and the sun was blocked out by clouds but the air still felt warm, which bolstered Finley’s spirits a little. That was until she slipped on a patch of ice hiding beneath soft snow and slush. The woman slid a few inches and then her chin came down hard upon the ground, clicking her teeth together and sending her vision into an explosion of stars. That hurt.