The days passed one by one, each one similar to the last: lonely, wet and boring. It was raining again. Cold, relentless droplets falling from a lead heavy sky, giving everything a dark, slippery surface. A persistent wind swept through the trees, bringing with it only washed out scents of autumn and cold.
Despite his desire for new experiences, the familiarities of the mountains had drawn the dark lad, and he was now moving through the cedar wood trails of land so similar to his past home that it was hard to keep the memories at bay. In an effort to abstain from melancholia, a state of mind he utterly despised, he was running, sprinting over dirt-covered rock; paws, accustomed to this form of terrain, rarely slipping even in the heavy rain. He moved with no specific direction, no goal to his race, other than to get away from where he was, panting heavily from the exertion. Water pouring down over his fur, eyes closed and ears pressed back against the wind, he wasn't focusing on where he was going, only aware enough to stick to the worn trails and keep away from the poison ivy, clinging to the tree trunks and creeping through the underbrush.
That's why, when he threw himself around a sharp corner, onto a narrower path, he didn't notice the frail blockade, despite the water droplets shimmering in its threads. Crashing straight through the cobweb, it took the black wolf several seconds to realize what had happened, paws sliding through the mud as he attempted to break his advancement. He sat flat on his tail, shaking his head violently and scraping at it with his paws; replacing web with mud, all the while wheezing and spitting to get the strands out of his mouth.
It was when he was finished with this franticness, and had cleared most of the cobweb off his face, that he noticed movement on his snout. Crossing fire-orange eyes, the boy tried to focus on the creature, and did so just in time to identify it as the former inhabitant of the home he had just ruined, right before it slipped over the tip of his wet nose, moving in a wild panic. Surely eager to find safety, the spider attempted to hide in the first possible place, which just happened to be Drestigs nostril. Once again wheezing and shaking his head, the dark wolf backed up, spitting and snorting to get the beast out of his poor nose.
Word count: 417
My mind is my own <b style="color:#ff6600">”I'll say whatever I want to!”
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