The daughter moved softly wherever she went. She had learned to find her way in the forest well by now, and knew the paths that had been laid by the other wolves. Soon they would be a village (if they weren't already; Wilwarin did not fully understand yet what made a village).
She had been keeping close to her mother's sleeping place. It was rare for Wilwarin to spend much time with her new brother even so, but she tried to leave gifts for them. Meat (rarely fresh, as she did not hunt it herself), or pelts (which she tried her best to soften, but she was only learning), or toys found scattered among the trees.
Today she brought nothing — only herself. Wilwarin lingered outside of the sleeping place and made herself known by taking a guardian's post by the entrance, so that gradually Lote would notice her, or Fjall, and call to her if her presence was wanted.
The presence of her youngest -- no, not quite anymore, the dove thought as her gaze flickered down to Fjall -- was not immediately detected. Wilwarin was a ghostly spectre that moved through the wood, her steps light and silent. It was only when the perfume of her coat reached the mother's nose that Lótë realized Wil guarded their den. A soft noise beckoned her in.
"Would you like to meet your brother?" the cloudberry murmured gently, tail beating a muted tempo against the floor of the ulaq.
A noise came from inside the den. Wilwarin had been waiting patiently to be noticed, and was both glad and nervous when it happened. Mother dove invited her to enter, so the ghost ducked slowly inside — it still smelled of many conflicting things here and Wil was nervous.
Her ears turned towards the drumbeat of mother's tail, but it was to the bundle of fur at Lote's side that Wilwarin stared, transfixed by her curiosity. She crept closer and stayed low, eventually going as low as her belly, with a reach of her neck to sniff at the child's fine fur.
So, so small..!
She went on to mouth, and her words became a smile.
Lótë couldn't help the way her features absolutely lit up upon seeing Wilwarin's reaction, nor the tears that remained trapped at the precipice of her lashes. The latter she would have liked to blame on the emotions still swelling and crashing like waves through her body but even she couldn't deny the enormity of the moment.
"Aya," she agreed softly, "he's little for now. Soon, too soon, he will be as big as you are." Lótë turned her gleaming peridots for a moment upon the tiny boy, both wishing she could hold this one second of her existence forever and simultaneously looking forward to who her son would grow to be.