Winter was starting to drag. Without plants to harvest, Oleander’s assigned duty as the pack’s Healer was slow to start. While Clover was recovering from her injury he reorganized the Infirmary. Anything that was still of use, he kept in the furthest reaches of the den. Everything else, wilted or otherwise, he carried out into the forest and buried. It would return to the earth as easily as it had come from it. In some ways, he believed that if he gave back to the Lore, it would continue to give in kind.
The rest of the morning he spent digging up the floor of the Infirmary. Hard-packed mud and cold slush were no match for mature nails and strong forepaws. What excess he removed was flung out behind him into the open, later packed down into the clearing.
When the Valle was done with his task, he set out for the river to clean the mud from the white of his pelt. Riverbank gravel crunched underfoot and nails clicked on the broken sheets of ice. Oleander didn’t mind blood, but mud… that was something that had to come out. A quick drink and he dipped his forelimbs into the freezing stream.
In the silence of the mid-morning, he watched as the snow really started to come down. All four limbs planted in the creek with his head tilted upwards to the sky, Oleander was but a lone wolf.
His head leveled as a sigh rose from him in a cloud of moisture. He rubbed his forepaws against one another, the rest of the dirt washed away by the current. A shift of his paw and he saw something loosen from between the silt and riverbed rocks. Attention recaptured, he pawed at the brown rock then plunged his head below the surface. The thing landed in the snow with a soft thud. Oleander’s eyes narrowed, his forepaw raised to turn it over again. He shook the water from his cheeks, realization slow to dawn on him.
Brown coloration, weird bumps… were those…legs? And… toes?
A frog!
The Valle’s eyebrows rose. He actually caught another one! Curiosity aside, he jabbed the thing without response. Hibernation was something he had very limited knowledge about thus far. Was it dead? There was no way to be sure; he had no idea if it was sleeping or if it had frozen to death beneath the surface. He nosed it for good measure, the creature remaining in its deep sleep.
Back into the river he went, sifting through the currents and weirs until he found another one. He had to move a couple of waterlogged branches to find it, but he found it. Prized frog-sicle between his teeth, he went to set it with the first one. What he would do with them next, he would decide later…