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To whomever joins this there's no need to match the length. I got a bit carried away.

Quetzalcoatl gave a moment of pause, crystalline gaze staring out of her lashes as she looked about these Southern lands through heavy lidded eyes. How dearly she missed her Rise, this winter tame in comparison to the harsh terrains and winters that she was used too. In comparison this place was warmer despite the loosely packed snow that blanketed the lands. Being away from her Rise arose an instinctual unease within the reigning Queen but this ...this was important. It was necessary. A light rain had begun to fall at some point, dampening the chocolate fur that wrapped around her elegant frame, carried upon long legs. There was only one thing in the world that could ever whisk her away from her pack, from her loyal women, though this trip was hardly permanent. Her departure from Coatl's Rise was meant to be temporary, and hardly the first time a Reigning Queen had gone off on a predesignated outrider trip so far from her lands.

Him. Her spawn, her beautiful baby boy. Tezcacoatl. She had allowed him to run off on his fool's errand, allowed him to take his trip under a single condition: he take his royal guard with him. Quite the assemble of her very best so that he may never want even in the troughs of being a loner. She had never considered him a loner, he still and always would have a home within the Rise so long as she drew breath. He was to be her Successor, the Prince of the Amazons. Never had Quetzalcoatl ever thought, growing up, that she would be the one to break the traditions that had kept their Rise strong through the centuries. Yet, as she lay in the wake of giving birth, to hear Eztli hiss that the child, her only child, was a boy Quetzalcoatl had been filled with nothing but curiosity opposed to the disgust that her midwife had so obviously felt.

And when she'd first laid eyes upon him, his fur damp with the juices of the protective sack he'd been in, broken by Etzli, the color of damp earth, the silver streak under each eye — a spitting, masculine, tiny and fragile image of herself she had felt nothing but the warmth and ferocity of love for him. “I am sorry my Queen. I will take him to one of the salves' surrogates. Five will take good care of him, teach him the ways of men,” Etzli had murmured in a hushed tone, Quetzalcoatl could remember, clearly. Five, the “name” of the slave that she had chosen to be her partner to create this perfect little child, strong, handsome and strapping as Five'd been. Tezcacoatl would have been taken care of, Five would have seen to it, but when Etzli had reached for her baby Quetzalcoatl had snapped at her, teeth closing around the other woman's muzzle, scraping into flesh. “Leave!” It was the first time Quetzalcoatl had risen her voice at Etzli — whom had eventually became the Priestess of Tezcacoatl's guard, his instructor in the Gods and rituals.

Despite how very wrong it was, Quetzalcoatl had not been able to give him up. For her son, she would have readily tore down the heavens stone by stone and challenged the Gods personally. A wise woman had once told her that there was nothing more fierce and beautiful than a mother's love for her children, and Quetzalcoatl believed it, despite how readily she had scoffed at it as a mere girl.

Inhaling the crisp scent she searched for the one that, faint as it had been, led her this far. It was mixed, not nearly as discernible as it had once been to her, but everything within her told her that she was not mistaken. That it was Tezcacoatl. His journey had only been meant to be a few months at most, and when she'd heard, from the boast of a delirious swine of a Viking, Váli she believed his name was though why he had a name was beyond her. If she were his mother she'd have called him “Pig” and tossed him off the cliffs into the sea where all filthy and uncultured, arrogant men belonged, that he knew where her son was. Quetzalcoatl would not have so readily believed him if not for the fact that she had not heard from any of Tezcacoatl's guard since he'd been gone and her concern had grown more and more, festering within her like an open wound. She trusted her Prince's life in their paws, but the updates had ceased, the messengers had shown up deceased and brutally marred. The messengers were replaceable, of course, as slaves and it was not concern for their deaths that had forced her into taking action. It was concern for her most loyal and Tezcacoatl.

Her eyes had closed all together for a long while as she lingered on the memory of her son when he'd been but a suckling newborn, the memory warm and bittersweet given the gravity of what may or may not weigh like a sword above her head. She would not return to Coatl's Rise until she learned the truth, or found her son. It was her promise, not as a Queen but as a mother. Having taken a long enough break, the Amazon Queen stretched and continued forward, crossing the threshold into the place they called the Teekon Wilds, swift and alert.

Luck had brought about a meal to the ever-hungry hybrid. He didn't believe in gods - who would after living in hell for a year - but someone had blessed him this day. For he had found a bear's carcass.

It was fresh and still steaming; death had recently visited this old bear. How it had died became apparent to him as he sniffed the great grizzly bear's fur, looking for a spot to start digging into the flesh of the ursine. The bear was half crushed in its den, probably a collapse from all the snow. The cave-in gave the bear many open wounds for Audrey to rip open, but he was looking for a good spot on his stomach. That's where all the tasty bits were.

The rain made Audrey's thick coat start sticking to his ample sides, weighing him down heavily. He grunted with annoyance, his bright green eyes shifting, looking for a spot where he could later sleep off his huge meal. As he did so, the behemoth found something striding regally through the trees. A female. And beautiful no less. He stifled a wolf-whisper, for his hungry for food overcame his hunger for women as it always did. With battle-worn fangs, Audrey tore into the bear's side, his eyes flickering from the carcass to the women every so often to keep tabs on her approach.
Quetzalcoatl, the further inland she pressed, had picked up on the scent of the bear carcass, the pungent scent of blood strong and overpowering, coupled as if was with the musky sort of scent that bears carried upon them. She did not have much of a palate for bear, favoring elk and venison much more. Still, the Amazon Queen would not be picky and it was not beneath her to take a gift that the Gods had to offer. There was a time for humility and time for being humble and under a gift from the Gods one was always to be humble Queen or Slave. Her course altered in the direction, a small rumble in her stomach alerting her to the knowledge that she would take from it though it was not, by any means, an animal she had a taste for. She would not bypass the opportunity because she did not like it. Mentally marking the place where she departed her son's trail she veered slightly left in the direction of the much stronger scent.

Quetzalcoatl's steps slowed to an abrupt stop as she drew nearer, identifying something else currently gorging itself upon the carcass that she had previously believed had been intended for her. Aside from the hole in it's stomach the behemoth of a canine was feasting from she did not detect any other physical injuries upon it and was left to assume that the bear had perished from illness or simply age. The gender of the canine — clearly not a wolf, or rather not full wolf — did not fall beneath the Amazon Queen's notice and her lip lifted in clear disgust. Male. Her appetite faded rapidly as she recognized that the male's sheer size alone outmatched her long, willowy legs. If he could fight, now that was another matter all together, and though the Amazon was a seasoned warrior — as was all of her women — she was not bloodthirsty and hardly fool-hearty.

Swallowing her disgust that had rose like bile in her throat, the proud woman ghosted forward a few steps. He had something she wanted and while she could certainly try to take it by force she also recognized her appeal as a woman, and knew what her greatest weapon was. Quetzalcoatl took no thrill in using her femme wiles to get what she wanted, at least not to a man at any rate — they were, all of them, beneath her after all but she understood that she was not in Coatl's Rise and she could not force these savage beasts to do her bidding because she saw them as slaves. She was on their ground and thus had to play by their rules. Fearlessly, the Queen let out a chuff in the hopes of re-capturing the male's attention once more; his previous stare having not went unnoticed. It made her feel unclean, being stared at like that, especially by one who was not only a male but also a mutt (or worse yet, dog) but she let it go. She saw little other choice. “That's quite an impressive catch you have there,” The Amazon Queen broke her silence, gesturing to the bear he ate at with her elegant muzzle.

@Quetzalcoatl Sorry for the long wait

He paused in his gorging, his red and cream muzzle turned scarlet by the feast. The gluttonous wolf licked at his chops as he admired the female for a brief moment, impressed by her warrior-esque features. He chuckled at her words, elegant and noble as he thought. "Ain't much ova catch. More like somefin' I just found," He revealed his fangs again and tore deeper into the bear's side, pulling out intestines before chewing and swallowing.

"You're welcome to share, babe. There's more than enuff here, even for a fatass like me!" The baritone laughed heartily, stepping back to let the royal-looking woman have a bite. Even if he stuffed himself to the brim, Audrey was certain there would be a lot left for other wolves to dig into and leave with a full stomach. That was the benefits of the end of winter. The last of the weak were rooted out to make way for the new.