The salt of the sea tempted him, for he did not know what it was. Tiarnan had never seen the ocean before - his home had been deep inland, within untamed forests and atop vibrant green glens. He could smell water but the salted sharpness of it made him cringe. The boy was curious, but also afraid to some extent. It wasn't like him to baulk at exploration. It wasn't like him to wander alone either - but here he was. He took to striding along the base of the mountain, doing laps to warm his bony limbs and get his blood flowing; his thoughts inevitably led back to how lonely he was, and how much he wished someone could be with him. Khatera, maybe. Or that pale girl that he had caught in the dark.
With a grumpy huff at the dark sky, Tiarnan turned his attention to the forest around him and the mountain just beyond - it loomed above, and from his vantage point at the base there was no knowledge of a greater mountain beyond. He stared in to the abyss of shadows and tangled wood for a few moments before finally plodding towards it, and in to the depths.
She was a creature who stalked the sun in the dawn and danced under dusk's rising moon. Her rest periods came in the middle of the day and the dead of night, so seeing Jinx out and about and energetic at the crack of dawn wasn't uncommon. She had left her mountain again, albeit she had whispered to Lecter her intent to test Ravensblood for any resident herds. Those herds no doubt belonged to Horizon Ridge, but Jinx didn't believe in ownership unless it was her own, and had no qualms fighting any of the beachcombers for it.
Several hours of walking in the dark hadn't revealed any sign of a herd, but she had found something much more interesting. Lingering in one location of the forest toward the smaller mountain nestled against hers was a collection of scents produced by two or three wolves. Jinx might have passed it by or chosen to ignore it, but one of those scents was familiar, and only after racking her brain for a moment did she realize it was Bazi's. This had brought a hard grimace to her face. She wished no ill toward the girl, and was entirely unaware that the other judged her and blamed her for a variety of things, but blatantly getting close to Silvertip Mountain afforded the ire of the wolves there, no matter who it was.
That scent seemed to wind back toward the Creek eventually, leaving the other scent for the Alpha female to investigate. This scent carried with it the same youthful tang, but went in the opposite direction, which was to say it went even closer to the mountains. With a huff, the female swung herself in the direction the unidentified wolf had gone and diligently began to follow his trail. She was led to a hollow in a tree that was practically drowning in his scent, and then further around the back of Gyrfalcon's Keep, toward the sea.
There she found him, a gangly thing in shades of molten chocolate and jet that was just slipping into the trees. Nothing about his figure gave away that he was a male. In fact, Jinx assumed from looking at him that he wasn't a male at all. With an expression that had maintained a set jaw and hard glare from the moment she identified Bazi's scent, the female strode boldly in his direction, smashing through undergrowth and cupping her ears and stiffening her shoulders as she called out, "you're kind of close to my mountain, bitch."
Oh, "she" wasn't close enough to warrant her outright aggression... But that didn't mean she wouldn't pretend that "she" was, just to get a kick out of it.
His first thought was plateau and he was made more nervous when the heavy scent of rock and pine struck him; they were similar scents to the plateau wolves due to their similar habitat. The sight of the massive creature caught him off guard the most - at first he imagined it to be a giant from his father's pantheon, a Jötun or one of their goliath children. He saw a flash of white and heard the rumbling thunder of her voice, striking terror within him. If it was a plateau wolf he would know to avoid the mountains -- all of the mountains - and keep to the trees as he was naturally inclined to. The stranger's words were curt and hostile, but Tiarnan did not know that they were particularly insulting; he heard them and bowed down, grovelling in the dirt with hopes that it would calm the raging God.
"Déithe dheonú dom a chosaint," The boy spewed forth the liturgy which had been taught to him, butchering it somewhat in the process, but he had never truly known the protective prayers that well; it was this moment that made him realize how desperate he was in his loneliness, and how out-of-place he was within these wilds. "Agus i gcosaint, neart. I neart ... I-I neart, tuiscint," He swallowed dryly as he recite the words, muddying them with his nerves and yet gaining resolve. The boy raised his head and stood as tall as he could, defiant against the stranger who had come upon him. Unable to remember the rest of the Druidic prayer, Tiarnan grew quiet - his jaw clenching as he watched her.
It was the strange, warbling, spidery words that caused Jinx to draw to a halt before she could rudely shove her snout into the other's face with a whispered, "boo"! Her intentional stomping through the brush ended abruptly, allowing her last few steps to fall naturally before she stopped outright with a frown knitted on her face. It was a male. Whatever he'd said, it sounded like some kind of freakish incantation reaching for help from the underworld... And suspicious Jinx didn't like that very much at all.
"Call off your curse," she grumbled, "or whatever demons you just summoned." She hesitated there, held at bay by not only the belief that he was some kind of warlock, but also the way he straightened himself to stare challengingly at her. She narrowed her eyes on him with a rumble of warning, but dared not to take a step forward. Jinx's loa were the spirits of all the living things in the world, but a demon was something born of total chaos. She did not wish to dance with devils.
The woman reminded him of the pale girl he had met only hours previous - pale and shining despite the murk of the forest, and with eyes as bright as the hot sun. This wolf was indeed more imposing than Bazi, and Tiarnan was not taken in by the newness of her features. He was not charmed by her the way he was by the phantasm-girl; growing stiff-legged and resistant even with the forest sitting idle around him. Tiarnan tried to relax but it was difficult, even with the faith he placed within his parent's gods; they were not his gods, not yet. He did not pray to the witch his mother followed nor the river god of his father. One day Tiarnan would have to make a choice and follow his own path, but that was not today.
Today he was only trying to get out of this situation without harm. If it meant praying to the Jotun woman before him, so be it. And it had worked. Idly, the youth slid in to a seated position and assumed a more submissive posture, his ears jutting out on either side of his black-marked head, and his dark eyes trailing across the ice woman's stout limbs and black toes. Despite his physical agreement to her prowess, to her dominance, there was a shine in his dark eyes which would not be abated; a candle light that would not be snuffed out just yet.
The warlock seated himself, and though ordinarily she would have been pleased with the way he planed his ears to the sides, today it made her uneasy. She shifted her paws beneath her and looked about, clearly growing more nervous by the minute. In his eyes burned a defiance that she didn't like. She refused to move either toward him or away from him, as there was no telling when his demons would strike.
"Call them off!" she said again, loud and distraught this time. Her ears flicked toward her rear as if to appease him, though in her heart she was a leader. This display was solely in hopes he would revoke his incantation. "If you call them off, I will not harm you," she swore, with her tail swishing timidly behind her.
Still, he felt his own power swell. An energy imbibed him that he enjoyed fully, a boost to a child's ego. The boy's eyes fell away from her, no longer eager for a fight. He muttered to himself - "Tá sé seo dúr." - and huffed a soft sigh as he stood up. At full height he was still not nearly as intimidating as the white creature. He carefully stepped towards her, wishing to slip around her massive figure and head deeper in to the forest - testing the limit and seeing if Jinx would allow him passage. As he moved he threw a sharp word her way, assuming she would not understand since so many others failed at hearing him - "Tú féin agus do chineál iad ar fad ar mire. Ní raibh mé chiallaíonn aon dochar."
Still, when he stood up and began to draw closer to her, Jinx visibly stiffened once more. She thought the warlock would approach her directly and hold his evil sway over her, but when he had come close enough, she realized he sought to get past her. Gyrfalcon Keep certainly didn't belong to Jinx, and she had no business blocking his way, yet she remembered Bazi's scent in this one's vicinity and acted quickly.
Roughly, she spun on her heels and shoved her way into Tiarnan's path, staring piercingly back at him. Her ears shivered uncertainly toward her skull when he again weaved his foreign incantations, but this time her eyes held both fear and determination. "My home," she enunciated, as if the warlock would cease his magic just because of that, "lies beyond here. I cannot let you near it. You and your demons can work whatever fell magick you wish upon me, but you cannot pass. You cannot harm them."
Still, if there was any way to figure out what he was... What his intentions were... She could see immense value in adding a warlock to her ranks, if she wasn't busy thinking he he was hell-bent on cursing her mountain. Never mind the fact that Tiarnan was actually a lonesome, uncertain, druidic type wolf, and the furthest thing from a warlock imaginable.
When Jinx spoke her heated words, he was once again corrected. Whatever the reason for her hostility it was not because she had been offended by his speech - not in the manner he thought. Quick words were thrown his way and he shrank from them, as he shrank from her. Easing himself low and serpentine, as if smothering the earth would save him from whatever wrath he had summoned from the stranger. His ears did cup the sound of her voice and he heard her enunciate one word, and though he did not understand it, the woman's intentions became somewhat less muddy.
He responded with a sudden blurt - "Name." - which actually came as a surprise to himself; Tiarnan had forgotten all about the sparse bits and pieces he had collected in his wandering, but it came flooding back to him now in his moment of need. "Name," he implored as he rose up again, fierce on the outside while internalizing his fear and doubt. Perhaps if he could label this stranger as something more than a great white bear, he would have something to work with.
Finally, a word fell between them that both wolves could understand. She pricked up her ears, a bemused expression stealing across her face as she marvelled, "so you can speak in something other than tongues." She was much too dense to realize that Tiarnan actually couldn't understand her at all, because obviously everyone could understand her even if she couldn't understand them. Jinx failed to realize her words fell on ears that could not decipher her meaning.
"My name is Jinx." Her nape prickled as pride swept through her. "Alpha of Silvertip Mountain." After a pause, in which she appraised his fierce exterior with a mixture of trepidation regarding his craft and approval regarding his breed, she returned the question: "Your name?"
The newly dubbed Jinx posed a question to him, demanding a name more than asking. The boy was willing enough to share. "Tiarnan," he stated for her, unwilling though he was to enunciate the way he had with the nice girl. He found himself comparing this Jinx with Bazi - their size, their demeanor, every little thing. This wolf was older and stronger but nowhere near as nice (or beautiful, he thought with a flick of the ears). To detract from the thoughts that flit through his mind, the boy turned a careful eye upon Gyrfalcon Keep just beyond; motioning with his nose. "Silver-tip?" Is this your home, behemoth?
He would be sure to avoid it in the future.
He gestured to the mountain of the gyrfalcons, and Jinx shook her head. “No. Beyond that, another mountain.” By now, she had realized his ability to comprehend her words was lacking. She imagined it was because he was uneducated, which was grossly wrong. She gestured with her own muzzle, probably confounding him further by pointing in the same direction he had, but she flicked up her nose tip in hopes he would understand. “Silvertip, on the other side.”
Though he was a lone wolf, there was always a burning desire in Jinx to draw others into the fold. The only friends she would keep were those who lived on the same turf and breathed the same air, and making friends with a warlock would be extremely beneficial. Perhaps Tiarnan could become one of these friends. “Show you?” she offered. Jinx would never walk him into her home, but perhaps a look at the grand mountain would spark his curiosity, and then she could draw him in permanently... Before one of the other tribes discovered his power and took them for themselves.