More than anything else in that moment, Undertow missed having someone to curl around, or to have curled around her. Shared warmth seemed so, so nice, as the snow piled higher and the wind continued howling. She was becoming more certain, as well, that the terrible fever that had taken her before really was making its reappearance. Maybe the storm didn't exist at all; maybe she'd lost more than her senses. There were voices reassuring her that she would survive through the storm, a feeling like nuzzling in the back of her neck, but Undertow couldn't see anything, couldn't smell anything, and she knew, she
knew it wasn't there. She took comfort in it anyway.
The figure bounding through the snow in front of her couldn't possibly be real, either. For one thing, her eyes could barely lock onto them--they were too busy rolling in her head, twitching involuntarily towards darker shadows and following the curve of swirling snow--and he made no sound as he approached, not that could be heard over the voices. The green mist wafting off of him didn't help at all, as much as the wind snatched it away before it could become a cloud; before her nose could properly scent him. When his approach continued past the point she'd expected, however, and he stopped only a yard away, she managed to force her eyes to focus on him and him alone for a few moments. Long enough to register pale tawny fur and a smaller frame than her own before they were rolling in her head again.
The tremors wracking her body were barely felt but quite visible from an outside perspective, and she stared at him in short intervals, looking at him and away again and again, almost
maniacal as it finally began to register that he was real. That he'd spoken, even, though her ears barely registered it over the wind and...everything else.
Warm; oh, moon above, she would love to be warm.
It took an effort to shuffle a little to the side in a sort of 'making room' invitation, turning her head away slightly so that her gaze could roam over the snowy hills behind the stranger, as though he could take or leave the invitation. If he knew she cared maybe he would disappear into the ether once again; better to give him space, in case he wasn't real. It had been a while since she'd last talked to anyone--or...had it? Either way, she immediately regretted her first words, ears flattening a moment after they escaped.
"I'll only bite you if you start it."
Her mate would be ashamed. She'd been civilized, once; she could do better than that.
"Uhm. Undertow."
Better...?