She had absolutely no idea what she was doing. Her pregnancy had been rough - she'd had trouble finding enough to eat, and when she had eaten, she'd often throw it back up. She'd wanted desperately to return to Fallen Tree Cove, but she'd been too afraid to. Still, she'd stuck around, keeping herself hidden in the forest around Lost Lake for nearly the entirety of her pregnancy.
Eido had woken up that morning with stabbing pains in her gut; ripples that had her clenching her stomach muscles and whimpering in pain. The pale wolf remembered something about that meaning that pups were set to arrive that day, but she couldn't be sure. She didn't know how long gestation was supposed to last, or what was healthy, or how many puppies she had squirming inside of her. What she did know was that she didn't want to be out in the middle of the open when she did eventually have her puppies.
Something primal within her tugged her into getting to her paws and heading off to find somewhere more concealed to give birth. She didn't go too far, because the pain was only intensifying with every move she made. The young wolf ended up in a hollowed-out fallen tree that she could fit into rather easily. Her tail curled around her hock as she lay down, shaking and whimpering and waiting for the inevitable.
It wasn't long before she was pushing on impulse, attempting to rid herself of the grabbing pains inside of her stomach. Her mother had never explained any of this to her before, and she was more or less just working on instinct.
The puppy that slid out of her was pale-furred, as well, and came with a flood of fluid and blood - the umbilical cord still attached. Of course, the new mother did not know what the cord was, exactly, and her breathing picked up as she started to lick the fur of her infant. Fortunately, with the arrival of the new life - who was whimpering and crying and squirming healthily - the pain in her stomach had subsided, and she was left with a healthy little boy and a cord to deal with.
Eventually, the mother snipped the cord between her teeth and allowed her body to move on instinct and expel the afterbirth before she went back to letting her little one nurse. The boy was letting out soft, delightful little squeaks as he suckled at her side, his tiny paws kneading her teats in an attempt to get more milk. Eido was not prepared for the level of love and warmth that filled her chest as she looked at the cream-colored baby.
"Hello, Neel," she whispered, resting her muzzle on the ground beside the baby and curling around him in a protective semicircle.