Instead of following the creek toward the mountains like she normally would have done, Fox decided to take a different route. The girl moved to the side of the peaks that were closer to Mount Apikuni and began to head into the valley where two of the small ranges met. It looked like a nice little nook, and the yearling was curious to see if there was anything interesting on the other side of the peaks that created the falls on the other side.
The Alpha traveled at a leisurely pace, allowing herself to enjoy her surroundings. It was chilly and overcast, but Fox was used to that. It seemed to be the case most days. She had come the cranny which had piqued her interest in the first place. At first, there seemed to be nothing particularly special about it. It wasn't until she drew closer that she realized there was an opening in the side of the mountains. Not only that, but there was light inside. Even more curious, Fox took a few ginger steps forward before entering the cave.
It looked like something out of a long-forgotten fairytale once she was inside. While most caves were damp, cold, and cramped, this one had ceilings that seemed to stretch on forever. And at the top, there was a hole for the light to shine in. Only seconds after Fox had stepped into the cave, the clouds broke and allowed a brilliant ray of sunshine to light up the airy cavern. A small pool of water sat on one side, and in front of her was a giant mound of mossy rocks, carved by years of rain falling through the opening above. Fox was not a sentimental being, but even she felt her breath being taken away.
The path that Fox left behind was a winding one. It led in to the crook of the mountains. The man observed the surroundings with a careful eye; seeking out erroneous scents such as cougar or lone wolf, but all he could find was Fox. As he caught up he also caught her, at least a flash of her, as she so calmly wandered. Perhaps his guarding was not necessary - but it was safer in pairs, at the very least. The mountains were not their territory and the creek wolves were each at their strongest on flat land.
With the mountains rising around him, Njal found his mind wandering. He thought of the Sunspire and how beautiful it was; of the cavern where the Walkers would commune together. Sterntooth and his little family. Njal nearly tripped as he walked, and came to his senses - in time to see the ruddy figure of Fox vanish in to a sudden wave of shadow. Pierced by a fatherly panic, the man was off after her - and was met with an abrupt spectacle that stopped him in his tracks.
He nearly walked in to the standstill Alpha, but caught himself in time. Golden eyes grew wide as they took in the great chasm and it's inner light; and he passed a glance to Fox, with his own breath taken straight out of his lungs. There were no words for this - it was beautiful, but more than he could voice. A great find indeed.
“The water tastes like this place looks,” she added, turning back to give Njal a glance. Whatever bad feelings they'd had were pushed far back in Fox's mind for the time being. Even though Fox was hot-headed, she did not linger or hold grudges. Being as young as she was, that was likely a very good thing.
"The water tastes like this place looks."
He approached and dipped his own head, sniffing at the surface but not drinking from it. This place was so old - it seemed like a holy sanctum, just like the one in Kindred. When the man lifted his head next, his eyes caught upon the glimmering sun above them. There was enough of a gap for the light to filter in, the way it had when Fox had entered initially, granted now it cast a warm glow to Njal's pelt of platinum. "What will you call it?" He queried, as a small smile appeared upon his boxy mug, "You found it after all."
“Do you sense that, too?” she asked, continuing to look behind her shoulder frequently. “Do you think maybe something is here?” Fox was not a superstitious being, but she could not help but feel whatever it was. But nothing was there. Just her, the rocks, the moss, the water, and Njal. No beast lingered nearby, and no sound was made. “I think I’m just imagining things.”
With a shake of her coat, she settled down onto her haunches. “We gotta name it something happy… but also spooky.”
"Kholodnyy svet," He murmured as a response, and for a moment Njal slipped back in to his old tongue; with the droop of his head he began to explore the area more intently, nosing about the dry rock and taking few steps as he sniffed, probed, and came up with nothing. "The light is cold but the earth is warm. It is strange." The man's tail whisked as he lifted his head again, resting it with confident poise. He looked to Fox now, finally. "It is too big to be a cave," the man remarked with a flick of his tail, "But I cannot imagine another word for it."
With a shrug, she jumped off of the boulder and back on to the main level of rock that covered the bottom. The way sounds bounced off the walls was quite strange, due to the moss. It was almost as if her voice got trapped instead of echoing as it would in a normal cave. “But a lair isn't supposed to have all this light, y’know?”
The area behind the massive boulders narrowed considerably, with forking paths naturally cut in to the rock. "I wonder what caused this." Njal mused aloud, more to himself than his companion; although a moment later he caught her comment about lairs and turned his head, pivoting his ears like radar in order to find Fox's location; he should have been paying more attention. "But a lair could be the home of a great beast. And I imagine a great beast would have to have lived here at some point. Perhaps it is still here?" Maybe only in spirit. But it was enough for the two wolves to notice something off about all the splendour and beauty around them.
With a lift of the eye, Njal could see the shifting and dusty light from over the hill-like rocks; particulate floated through it, like dust through the open mouth of a fresh den. "It is the lair of the sun." And for a moment, as his comment registered fully within his own mind and was sucked in to oblivion by the muffling moss, Njal thought of Kindred - and he felt absolutely content.
Refocusing her attention on Njal, she addressed him more directly. “Did you follow me here?” she asked. Fox had not asked him to come along, and she wondered if he had simply stumbled across the lair as she had. Or perhaps he had been looking for her to speak about something in particular. Whatever the reason, she was glad he had shown up. While she still lacked trust in him, as long as he remained a valuable asset to the pack, he would regain it in time.
"Did you follow me here?" Fox queried towards him, and Njal sank to a precarious laying position atop the high rocks. He was quiet at first, suddenly nervous about the topic that lingered within his mind; yes, he had followed her. He had pursued her out of a sense of care, but when the two wolves were secluded here in the lair, his mind ticked away about other things. As Njal watched Fox he did not see her - instead, her features briefly shifted to the figure of Tuwawi. The shadows played tricks, warping bits of the girl so that she resembled his wife. Yes, he had ulterior motives.
The man shrugged with a small motion of his shoulders, and then began to explain.
"I was on patrol and saw you wandering. I thought to follow for your own protection, since you are our leader now," His voice rumbled quietly, slowly, as he tried to pick out the right words to use. Njal did not want the girl to feel weak or inferior. He had only been looking out for her. "And, well.." How hesitant and silly he was being now! Was he really so afraid of asking a simple question? Given how close they had started out, he and Fox, did he really ruin everything with that stupid stunt days ago, when he brought Tuwawi in to the territory?
Perhaps now was not the time to ask. But he had started, and now he had to finish. "Tuwawi and I have been thinking about.. Building a family." He carefully outlined, and lifted his head with a glimmer of pride in his eyes; the sunlight casting him in a warm glow. Njal was tentative. "We would like to try in the spring, but only with your blessing." There, he said it. Now all he had to do was sit and hope Fox would understand their wish.
But it seemed there was more than just his desire to protect. Njal began speaking once more, and Fox perked her ears forward to listen. It was no surprise to her that he and Tuwawi would want children. Njal (and perhaps Tuwawi as well) had a few years on her, and she imagined their urge to procreate was one that could not simply be willed away. That was assuming they wanted to will it away in the first place. “Hmm,” she mumbled, contemplating on how best to answer him. On one hand, there was a pang of jealousy that she would not be able to continue her own line this year. It was yet another two or three seasons before her body would be ready for such things.
“Let me think on that one,” she replied, neither giving him a yes or a no. Swiftcurrent still felt marginally unstable since the loss of Lethe, and Fox did not want new life coming into the pack until she was certain it was steady. Not only that, but she was hesitant to give permission due to Njal's ranking. Sure, he was among her most trusted and respected, but she felt she wanted more than that out of those who wished to be parents. Perhaps if he stepped up into more of a leadership role... when she decided it was time, of course. Then again, she had those same plans for Jinx. It was hard for her to determine which of the two she saw as a better fit for helping her rule the creek.
"Thank you." He commented next, although there was a lacklustre quality to the man's usual timbre. "Just to have our desires considered is.. Good." There was no ignoring the fact that Njal was dissuaded by her response, depressed by it, but he knew it would take time. Work had to be done, and the man would happily prove his worth - and Tuwa's worth - to the rufus girl. The happiness of their growing family was tantamount to the Delta.
Taking on a more pleasant expression, Njal began to climb down the rest of the way from his perch. He stumbled awkwardly, but managed to reach the bottom without harm; and then began to scout out the rest of the cavern. It was dark and deep, with few trails of light to help him where the boulders naturally blocked it. In an effort to move past the topic of children, the grey man poked his head over some of the smaller boulders and watched Fox, chuffing playfully. "Do you think there are beasts in here? Maybe I should root them out."
“Not sure if there are, but if so, I don’t want to be the one to find them.” If the lair had been in her domain, Fox would have explored it to the fullest and "rooted out" all the creatures within it. However, she was unwilling to put herself in that kind of danger for neutral territory. If some beast did still live here, she did not want to be the one to awaken it.
“So, you want to escort me back to the creek, Mister Bodyguard?” she asked, grinning as she did so. Obviously she did not need a body guard, but she welcomed his company anyway.
[exit]