Also - this is to be backdated by a week or so, I'm not too particular on details so we can just say the beginning of September. It'll be set before the imminent pack meeting, too. Marsh wouldn't have waited too long to get a hunt going but I wasn't here to see it through. There'll be no particular posting order unless it becomes necessary, but I hope this thread doesn't take too long!</i>
<blockquote>Just because he was home didn't mean it was time to relax. Life might have been hard on his own while he had been searching for Indru, but that was going to be nothing compared to the efforts he would have to make to ensure that his place in this pack was earned. Corinna had been gracious in allowing him to return, and Marsh was determined to deserve it.
First on his agenda was feeding the mother he had abandoned. Swift River was a little more depleted than he would have liked, but, having tallied up all available and well-bodied wolves, he couldn't say that he disliked his allies. Triell was a fine young beast, as was Ruiko, one of the Tainns he had never met. Marsh had not spent much time around Indru's brother, but had only positive impressions. It was almost a blessing that they had lost the whiney and reclusive Borlla, for that was one less mouth to feed and one less problem to keep in line. It was fortunate that Marsh was such a silent wolf, or he may have felt inclined to voice this sentiment, and that would be unlikely to go down well.
Indru wasn't in the right shape to hunt, but would recover in time. Corinna was coping well, but Marsh didn't want her to attend; his whole motivation was for her to understand that she didn't have to worry anymore. So their hunting party was thin, but efficient, and Marsh had high hopes. The pack was too needy to fail.
The copper wolf stopped at the river's edge, near to the boundary of Swift River territory, and waited. Dusk was approaching; the air was cool and the light fading, though the latter wouldn't hinder them. He had already called before making his way here, his intentions and demand for attendance clear. It was in everybody's incentive to kick-start the pack's productivity and settle into becoming a whole, functioning unit again.</blockquote>