She had trekked northward, toward an intangible landmark, biding her time until a familiar scent finally wafted through her sinuses and triggered long-begotten memories stirring restlessly in her brain. They were vivid, albeit she would claim overly so, and they proved to be a painful thorn in the back of her mind. Her mate, her family… their hodge-podge band of rogues and strays. She sighed from deep within her aching chest. She and Rowen had been eager for the new Spring-- pups rolling about, yipping, annoying the elders. Pups of her own. Something she had vowed to never entertain until, that is, she fell in love with Rowen.
The she-wolf shook the thought from her mind. Now was not the time to lose herself.
Day one of her arrival had been spent in desperation-- back-tracking her steps until she realized there were no steps to back-track. It was as if she just… landed here.
Day two was a day of recovery. Not rest, recovery, she would remind herself. Her father had taught her that whenever she got lost, it was more important to find food and shelter than meander without intention. After all, it was far easier to find someone near a rotting, stinking corpse than in a featureless storm. So, naturally, Takala found miscellaneous vermin as her prey of choice. Wherever she had been misplaced proved plentiful enough in food sources, at least.
Now, day three. With a full belly, thirst began to set in. She had been descending a rather large mountain toward the valley below, toward what looked like a frozen lake. While snow proved… somewhat satiable, despite the miscellaneous pebbles strewn within, what she really craved was a source of moving water.
Finally, after a graceless descent, she had made it to the lake’s edge. Clawing at the edge, thin fragments of ice began to fragment and break under the weight of her paw until eventually a hole large enough to stick her nose in surrendered itself. Wasting no time, she began to lap at the glacial melt, its frigid grip piercing her tongue. But she didn’t care. It was running water at last.


