Each morning her eyes would glue themselves to the gentle luster of dawn, the sky blossoming into muted pinks and soft peaches. The air would steadily grow tepid, losing the nightly bite of frigidity. It was the one time Akira could feel peace in her situation, the single time she could let the muscles in her body relax and her mouth lift into the gentle smile it usually would. Any other time, she would be busy fretting over her little companion or saddened by the loss of her lover.
Lodgepole.
It weighed on her. She missed him—his scent, his soft voice, his gentle demeanor. The way he would shed his saturnine frown when he saw her, the whimsy she was able to revitalize from spending time with him—
Lodgepole.
His name fits him so eloquently; he stood with the towering height harbored by a coniferous tree, refusing to relinquish his mannerisms—each and every idiosyncrasy that she'd come to know and love—even in the perilous times of midwinter, like a pine withholding their needles.
She hadn't felt his body against hers for months. Hadn't seen those smoldering eyes, harboring the color of a cloudburst, nestled her nose against the tuft of unruly fur on his head. Akira tried to be strong. She had to be, for Trygve's sake. For her own sake—but she could only handle so much. Bonded to him, heart and soul—a piece of herself had shattered, and no matter how much plaster she used or what sort of replacements she could find, it would never be restored. The shape of him was not one that could ever be replicated, and her frame would never fit against another's with the same comfort as his—a missing piece of a puzzle.
Akira stepped through the entrance of the burrow with a low huff. Outside was crisp, but not too much to leave her unable to travel. Still, the cold air nipped at her nose and it was not a pleasant feeling. There was no choice but to ignore it—she needed to eat, and so did Trygve.
Her steps were diligent, carrying herself through the woodlands with the silence of an owl's flight. Amber eyes scanned the scenery for even a slight movement; her nostrils lowered toward the ground and took a short whiff—
The woman's body froze. There was a scent along the ground that was undeniably similar to balsam. Sweet, slightly spicy... eyes narrowed.
Aster.
She could recognize the smell of aster anywhere. She adored the flowers, blooming so vibrantly against the dulling colors of autumn...
But in such weather, that would be asinine—No aster would bloom in late winter. No... her hunt abandoned, she followed the sweet smell of the blossoms with ears pricked sharply forwards.
There was a wall of trees in full bloom—which Akira could swear was never there before, not in the several weeks she'd spent in Briar's Veil. They were beautiful, yet their presence aroused a sense of unease in Akira's mind. Still, the allure of asters was alluring. Her lithe frame pressed past the trees and into the strange tunnel.
Emerging from the exit, the girl could see a scene ever so familiar.
She was home... with trees all shades of vibrant reds and golds, the air a tender feel that spoke of autumn.
She was home.
Akira could cry. She felt tears well up in her eyes as the strength left her limbs in sheer relief. She was home. Home. Where she belonged. A modicum of disbelief was still present, but the soil was so palpable, the atmosphere too real...
... where was he?
Lodgepole?she tentatively called, scrutinizing the area for a familiar shade of umber,
Lodgepole... I'm home, my love!She trotted over the ground with her ears sharply pointed forward.
There was that smell—the smell of the river, of the top of the mountain.
Lodgepole!She picked up her pace into a canter, then a sprint. She was desperate, following the sweet, inviting aroma of her lover.