The sun that had greeted her this morning was still bright and intense. The pale tawny and gray wolf lifted her head, eyes lidded, to the rays to feel the warmth on her face. She was laying on a blown-over mat of dry grass. Such warmth this late into fall was rare and Iopah soaked in it like a sun-bathing turtle. The only thing better would have been a wide granite stone set on a mountain peak. But those days were in her past. The Black Hills were a thing of memory. She'd never see or feel the southern sun again.
There were a great many wolves here. Some she felt a common spark with, their thought-process so similar as to be unnerving. Others she had just puzzled over. She shifted, kicking her legs out from under her with a contented grumble and felt the heat against her side. Hours ago she'd eaten her fill and come here to laze and digest. The multitude of new faces had gotten to be overwhelming. She was used to the few trusted faces from home and had seized upon the excuse to step away. The bison meat had long since been broken down.
Yet she remained. She was mildly anti-social. Loyal, yet reserved around most. Able to accept new faces and situations in her laconic way, but unsure how to initiation a converse with a stranger. Just walk right up and say her name? What if she didn't care about what they wanted to talk about? Nah, it was much better to just stay here and appreciate the sun.