Isaiah honestly had not taken the time to approach the new sector of their family. It wasn't that he was blaming the puppies, or Archon's mate. He was wildly angry with his brother, and that sort of hurt took a repetitive barrage when it came to the slights he felt. The other part, the bigger part, the screaming part of him, did not know if he could bear being near another mother. The loss of his own mother had hurt him in ways that he could not truly handle - it was still a raw wound that rubbed and rotted.
Isaiah had to steel himself, though, as the months crept on, and he heard whispers from some of the girls about things - the Blushed Meadows had been where he had come into the world even, which had to be some part of some cosmic nod that he should be being a better person. He should have been nurturing some relationship with the rest of his family, given what had happened with his parents.
He still didn't want to address that even as it hurt him, so he pointed away from those thoughts and pressed on. It always gave him some comfort to run down prey, following the scent of what he thought might be a lone doe out amongst the scarce foliage. He had never truly understood why the scarce distance between their homelands and here made that much of a difference. If he'd known anything about the mechanics of plate tectonics, about the potential for there to be hot springs miles beneath the soil, well - it would have been interesting, but Isaiah didn't parse it out that far. He knew he liked things of the earth when it came to the trinkets he gathered, but what he spent his morning focused on was the live trail. The doe itself wasn't too big - this was probably her first winter, but when he'd struck her down, it didn't take too long. He was getting significantly better at consciously fighting the bouts of his exhaustion and the fog it rolled over his mind, which was probably due in part to the many, many small boxes that he shoved his feelings into and then shoved those small boxes into slightly larger boxes, and then shoved them into a forgotten closet full of off-season decorations to be dealt with approximately never.
So it became easier as the blotted wolf drug the doe by the neck, awkwardly stiff in his gait, approximately to the doorstep of his extended family. He dropped the kill and then backed up before calling out - hopefully Fable would hear him.