The temperature was still low, but Sagacity plowed on through the snow which, she noticed with as much satisfaction as she could muster, was beginning to melt. The rains had helped with this but given the fact that the rains had subsided and the temperature had not gone above zero, the process of winter changing to spring seemed to have ground to a halt. It was morning and there was a slight chill in the air, but within the Sacred Grove the air was still, so in the very least, there was no wind to bite at her cheeks and ears. The sunlight filtered down through the leafless branches to the ground below which was still coated in white, unblemished and smoothe. Sagacity left behind a perfect set of pawprints as she moved along, her main task was her focus- she needed to find her son.
Not long ago she thought she'd had his trail, she was almost sure of it. But it wasn't in a part of the Lore that he would have known and his scent had been faint. Too faint for her to follow it very far. Still, it was enough to convince her that he was alive- and Aponi as well. It meant they had not been kidnapped by the wolves of Cut Rock River, which meant that she would not have to confront them. It was the last thing that she wanted to do- but if it brought her closer to finding her son and the alpha's heir, she would do it. She had informed Naira of her newest scouting goals and had set off to fulfill them.
In the still air, she found herself wishing desperately for spring to come. Her body ached for warmth, to be able to stretch out in the sunlight at the end of a scouting mission and absorb the warmth without a care in the world. Winter was the time for curling up in a den and hoping the temperature didn't drop too low, for snuggling up with other wolves and hoping that the combined body heat would be enough to keep them warm. Sagacity preferred isolation, rather than sleeping alongside others, but for her survival she could put her wants aside and focus on her needs.
She called out for Mercy every so often, and for Aponi as well, knowing that her job meant bringing them both home. She was faintly aware that Chulyin was also scouting as well, trying to find his niece and the bastard boy. She could only hope that she would find them before another storm hit, or before starvation claimed them.