October 30th; Early afternoon; Cloudy, light drizzle; 45° F/7° C
Keeping close to the scent markers he had re-established in the past few days, Mapplethorpe meandered along the invisible fences using both sight and smell to ensure he had taken every inch of his territory into account. If the cubs were going to continue to test their superiors' borders, the least he could do was at least establish just where and how far they had wandered. Beside a dead tree and along a flat rock, up against a crooked scrub pine tree and across a flat expanse of chilled, dame grass and hard-packed mud, the Queen's Consort left his mark: scent gland secretions, urine, pockmarks in the ground from his nails and paw pads, and even bits of tawny fur. Anything to make sure that rogue wolves and wanderers from distant places, were not welcome here.
Once along his path, he stopped to catch a breath, to survey the land and find comfort in knowing that the stretch of land he was examining was void of larger predators. He lowered his head to the dying grass at his feet at the foot of the mountain range, his leathery nostril flaring as he inhaled deeply. Nothing. At the back of his head he began to wonder if heavily marking the pack's borders were keeping the migratory deer herds well away from utilizing the Pass as a thoroughfare to the other side of the Mountain of Dire. Absentmindedly, he wiped a paw against the sod, not that it helped (he was more than aware that all four of the bottoms of his paws carried his signature cologne) but it would be the only other prominent marker he would make along his beat.
He straightened up again quietly, lifting his tail and ears in utmost vigilance. His goldenrod irises fled to the side upon thinking he had heard a deer nearby, his gaze settling on a cluster of yellowing hedges that was just as still as the rest of the foliage around him. Perhaps it was just the wind picking up or the rain picking up in intensity. He couldn't be sure, but one thing was for certain, everything that had happened and realized in the past week - the rains steadily falling, the maturity level of the cubs under the pack's care, the wintery chill in the air, and the scarcity of the prey he usually caught for the pack's numerous caches - had him on edge.