Nina doesn't have to show, I just needed a way to get Io over here. Also, I didn't expect this to be huge, no obligation to be as long.
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Iopah grasped the now-limp body and started for the nearest trail, blinking as cool water ran the length of her muzzle. She snorted, not bothered enough by the dampness to consider cleaning it off. The spring-fed stream where she'd caught the woodchuck was pure and clear. Even a bit of dirt wouldn't have mattered. As her thinning coat dried it would have blown away. Up ahead the trail split and her feet automatically veered left. The fat woodchuck in her jaws was destined to be someone else's meal, she was headed for the cache. She drifted further left and awkwardly dangled the woodchuck so she could smell the shrubs bordering the path. Trail intersections were common places for pack wolves to leave scent markers, akin to notes stuck on a refrigerator. Her lips pulled further back in mild displeasure.
There are so many wolves here now.
Everyone of them bore the scent of acceptance and her lips fell back as much as the chuck would allow. A small handful of faithful members remained, but nearly all the new-comers were nothing more than a scent, paired with a name if she knew it. Ashanti had returned, but Iopah didn't know of her mental state yet, and felt inclined to give her space to adjust. And Aideen? Well, she was probably still getting over her first meeting with the opinionated Second. There was no one she cared to seek out and introduce herself to.
There was one wolf whom she knew well enough to be comfortable around. And, incidentally, Nina would appreciate the meal more than the rest. She turned and left the trail completely, headed directly for the main den. With the pups so young they would need constant supervision. Iopah hoped that Nina would welcome the opportunity to eat and stretch her legs. Her path took her through a particularly dense patch of thicket and by the time she came out the other side her coat -and the woodchuck- was studded with torn leaves and bark. In earshot of the den now, she slowed and let her tail fall farther to trail loosely between her hind legs. All the protectiveness Iopah felt toward the new thicket pups would be magnified in their mother. Iopah wanted to give no reason to suspect her. Once the den came in sight, Iopah whined loudly, indicating her submission as much as her presence. Ears flat and shoulders hunched she cautiously entered the clearing, hastily dropping the woodchuck in case Nina demanded her retreat. The clearing was empty, she called out softly,
"Nina?"
Quiet movement caught her eye and her head turned to the pup watching from the den's entrance. Iopah was like many wolves in regards to pups. Whereas she would grudgingly accept a new adult wolf, pups were
embraced. She whined again, this time eagerly, and settled down to study him. Her pose mimicked his. Front legs stretched out long before her, muzzled placed directly over her large paw pads. Behind her her tail flounced back and forth, smacking against the ground softly.
(This post was last modified: Jun 03, 2014, 03:41 AM by Iopah.)