It took a full day just to reach the Sunspire, and another series of unremarkable hours to scale it. Even with his prowess across the mountains, Njal was no longer adept at moving amongst them; but the order had been issued to him, so he did as he was told. It meant leaving Tuwawi alone in Swiftcurrent for a period of a week. The pack as a whole was tired after the cougar attack, and even their alpha's attempt to raise their spirits had not gone well - so it was with a deep and refreshing sigh that Njal had crossed the mountains. Some part of him was satiated by this wandering, even if it wasn't as eccentric as his own whims may have allowed. He had a purpose, and he had a time limit - eager to return to the creek as soon as he was able, but prompted onwards by his duty to Fox and the creek wolves.
The man rested at the base of some cliffs. He had scented sheep in the area but was unsure of their true proximity; it was likely that the creatures were scared off by his strong scent or burdensome marching, as Njal was not inclined to hunt at the moment. His goal was to move in to the north-west, to the doorstep of a plateau pack which he had no knowledge of. All he knew was that they were north, and that they were ruled by a pair of mated wolves; strong individuals that Fox was aware of, and wanting to update on the status of the pack and her own ranking. Njal shuffled along through the dripping weather and then, when he grew too tired, nestled down in the crook of the cliffs; keen to move on but knowing his own limits. He would get there in time. And then, eventually, he'd be permitted to return home.
Wary of crossing paths with a Vale wolf, she chose to circumvent Sunspire Mountain to the south and drop into the flatlands. It was a straight run from there, and Bazi took full advantage; the witch-doctor's salt baths and a few healthy meals had already restored her health, and with it came the boundless energy that was standard issue among yearlings. It fuelled her sprint along the western border of the range and subsequent conquering of bountiful cliff's southern tail. By the time she reached Sheepeater Cliff proper, Bazi was tired - content to sniff around in the dampness for traces of the local populace, and not so stupid that the relationship between wet weather and steep cliffs was lost on her.
It wasn't long before her assessment of rock and round pellets of poop was interrupted by the smell of wolf. She recognized it from the Creek, and that calmed her fluttering heart somewhat - they were very close to the Vale now, and chances of running into one of their disgruntled neighbours were high. The little white Mu lowered her head and made a low, questioning noise, scanning the crags for any sign of life. Wherever this wolf was, he was well camouflaged.
The cliffs were a dangerous place to be, but not so harsh when one was looking up at them. From the mountain's base they looked like wide cuts of stone. Paths that could lead to all sorts of places, but vanished in to the tree-line or the creeping clouds. His eyes were not on the sky or the stones above him. Njal focused on the task of manoeuvring around the large boulders and through the crags of the landscape; things he was not wholly adapted to, which swiftly sucked away his energy. He was the opposite of the yearling who appeared so suddenly - lacking in vigour and freedom. Njal was free to an extent, of course. The man was attentive to his duty and pleased enough to be away from home performing it - but spring was just around the corner. It was practically upon them all. He was eager to return home to his wife, with one thing plainly upon his mind.
The plain call of a wolf piqued his interest and Njal was lifted from a pseudo-fugue state; shifting around some rocks to catch a better glimpse of the stranger. Initially he was hesitant, blundering, and his fur spiked along his scruff and shoulders. The stranger was pale like Jinx, yet their size revealed that they were not Jinx; few could boast such a beastly figure. He held back from a greeting at first. It would be a better idea to get a visual on the stranger - a close up if possible - so he moved to intercept. With his peppered body closing in, Njal caught the scent of the creek and naturally relaxed; there was only so much leeway he could give the other wolf, as they were indeed close to the vale's edge. Anything could happen here.
Njal chuffed a response, finally. His head lifted with ears pricked forwards, roaming a moment later to both sides and then back. He was listening for others - friend or foe - but approached with a wholeheartedly gleeful gait. "You are far from the creek," he stated, dipping the still healing head of his in a small nod, and as his silver figure passed by Bazi's pale one, he took a good look at her. Young, yes, but able. Strong. A new face he had not seen yet. Fox must have trusted her if she was outside of the borders doing scout work. Another thought occurred to him, which he was swift to voice: "Are you here to check up on me?"
The newcomer mirrored and extended his nod, tail whipping close to the ground as he conducted his assessment. "Scouting," she confirmed smilingly, but her expression turned fearful at his question. She knew that he was out on official business, and it hadn't been her intention to doubt his capacity to do the job. "Oh! Not at all! I - Fox didn't send me, I'm just cautious around here, because.. because it's so close to the Vale. I was going to find out those low clouds in the east is," she pointed her muzzle in that direction, meaning the steam that amassed above Firestone Hot Springs when the conditions favoured it, "But there are goats around here somewhere, and I got distracted. Where are you heading? Oh, and - I'm Bazi. Newcomer."
A moment or so later, when the girl appeared to have eased out of her amusing state of panic, Njal finally responded to her questions. "I am paying a visit to a plateau pack." He stated rather plainly, intending to put forth his best effort at being an outrider and a proper messenger (not knowing at this point that his visit would be brief, and his view on the position embittered). He shifted his weight and began to walk, prompting with a wave of his tail for Bazi to follow with him. "It is safer to travel in groups if you are worried. I can escort you if you would like?" He questioned with a little quirk to his brow, flicking ears towards her for an answer. "Or if you are hungry, we could seek out one of those goats," The man turned to look at the rocks around them then, and gave a small shrug without turning back to the pale girl. "Although I am more adept with fish."
She hadn't visited the plateau pack, but had a vague sense of where their borders were. There was a river to their west, she knew, and from there it was a straight run to the source of the steam clouds. "Yes please - it'd be nice to have some company. I'll go west before we reach the plateau.. oh, but there's a river there!" The mention of fish undid a good portion of Njal's calming effect on the youth, whose tail was now whipping dust and fragments of rock into a cloud, "And I'm really good at fish, too!"
"Oh, you fish?" He posited with a spreading smirk; now unable to hold back his amusement fully. It would be nice to take a break from navigating - especially if Bazi did know where a river sat. They could show one another some tricks. But I know them all, Njal thought with another bat of his tail. "Then let us head for the river! I always have time for a little fishing -" He watched her with a sharp eye, gold and glowing with a pale mischief. "Perhaps we can make a game of it."
"Yes, always," she babbled, moving her small muzzle like a diving rod in a northwesterly direction. Something clearly went 'ping', because she stopped at a point on the internal compass that she judged would take them close enough to the river without impinging on the plateau. Now they just needed to navigate diagonally down towards the plains.
"And I preserve them, too," she went on. "Works really well with any fatty fish - like salmon, or trout - I just bury them with some salty rocks. They're hard to find, though. I've been scouting for caves, but I haven't found anything yet." The youngster had spent half of her time at the Creek thus far travelling beyond its borders, desperate to prove her claim to Fox and Jinx that she would make a good outrider. She threw a hesitant glance between Njal - whose injuries were healing, but lent a certain stiffness to his gait - and the way down. "Like a competition?" she asked, and began to started to feel her way down without bringing it up. He was older than here, and more than capable of judging whether or not it was safe to venture out alone.
"Yes." was all he said at first. Caught by the concept of preserving fish, he loped alongside the girl with his heavy strides, and kept his thoughts internalized for a few moments. It did not take long for him to come to some conclusions. "We can do a timed trial. See how many fish we can catch in.. Oh, twenty minutes?" An arbitrary number. Njal was not prone to keeping track of time. He only really wanted to get close to the river and it's bounty. There was always the chance that his competitive nature would take over, even in the name of fun - but Bazi didn't need to know that yet. "Perhaps keep a few for eating, but toss the rest back in once they've been counted. I do not like taking more than what is needed." Especially if it wasn't from their own river - Njal was not spiteful in such a manner, he would not take another pack's food source no matter how natural the thought may have been.
20 minutes? The corners of Bazi's lips itched to form a grin, but she managed to keep her smile respectable (though unlike Njal, she was utterly unable to disguise her thoughts fully, especially when she was happy). The mountain and the snowflake travelled down and down on deft paws, and it wasn't long before they were well clear of the Vale's most accessible hunting ground. This relaxed Bazi, who slowed her gait to draw breath and enjoy the feel of soft ground beneath her feet.
"That's a good idea. I'm really hungry, but I always think I want twenty fish when two is enough," she told him chattily, keeping an eye on their course. The river betrayed its location with sound, and they would come upon it if they continued to walk northwest from their current position. The distant plateau looked like a fuzzy, dark pancake topped with a generous helping of broccoli.
"Where is Lecter from?" Bazi asked suddenly, incredibly curious to know but trying very hard to make it sound casual. She failed, by quite some margin.
Charmed by the familiarity of the water, Njal took a careful step beyond the rocky edge to test the current's strength, and felt the chill of the fluid as it wrapped and warped around his forelimbs. In the time it took for him to withdraw, Bazi was speaking again - this time there wasn't a mention of fish, but a name. Surprised by this forthright query, Njal shrugged and had little to say. "I do not know. I have never really dealt with him." the man commented with a tiny shrug, before moving on to things that truly interested him.
Carefully creeping along the wet river stones, he positioned himself where a mediocre ledge sat; it was mostly dirt held in place by tree roots and grass, clearly being worn away by the river beneath it. After a few lunges to test it's stability, Njal roosted there - all the while keeping an eye on Bazi, but saying little. When he was prepared he spoke. "Alright, it is time to fish! Take your positions!" With his accented voice booming over the water, Njal sounded quite foolish; but he was being silly on purpose. With his metallic body looming in place above the water, now it would only be a few moments before Bazi was prepared.
In the meantime, he reeled off some rules.
"Twenty minutes, as many fish as you can catch - and only keep what you want to eat!"
They were well matched for this competition. Njal took the spot Bazi had been eyeing, and she made a jealous but playful noise in his direction. She settled for a large, flat rock that stood proud against the rushing current, leaping onto it and settling at the edge, both eyes glued to the shimmering mixture of water and life. The only water she had ever known was cold, and she did not bother testing the temperature.
"Ready!" she not so much boomed as yelped back, and started the battle of the fishermen with an equally high-pitched "Go!"
At first there was stillness from him. Energy bubbled through his body as he waited for a target, although Njal was adept at keeping himself composed - especially when fishing. This was his vocation; this was what he did every day of his life. There was a darkness motioning beneath the surface, but it was quick. A fat and slick dart moved beneath his waiting muzzle, and he dived in to grab at it. Teeth were shocked with cold as they connected with the water and Njal tasted the river; silt tickled his tongue, but only for a moment.
His head was up again, and down again. Bobbing and snapping, pulling and tossing; the body of one writhing fish suspended briefly, then returned to it's habitat despite the great effort it posed to fight instinct. Five minutes? Maybe it had been so long. Sucked in to the world of fish, Njal paid no attention to the time at all.
With his tongue sliding across his lips, Njal took a moment to peer across to Bazi; he watched her move, eyeing the writhing creatures that she caught. A brief look to the bank soured his mood - for there were scant fish to be seen. It looked as if he would fail in this endeavor, and be tossed aside as the King of Fish.
Caught: 2
By the time their twenty minutes were up, Bazi was ahead by three. She ceased her frantic movement and flashed her competitor a thrilled smile, leaping back to the banks of the Creek to inspect her catch.
As instructed, she pushed three lucky bodies back into the rushing water and kept the two fattest specimens for herself. Scooping lunch up between her jaws, she moved closer to Njal's catch. "Yours are bigger," she admitted through a mouthful of fish.
Caught: 5
"Yours are bigger," The girl commended, her voice slick from the morsels held between her teeth. Njal looked up at her then and witnessed a small line of diluted blood dribble along her chin. He rumbled a pleased note and scooped up the fish by their tails, then moved to intercept Bazi. Walking alongside her for a few moments, he paused and abruptly dropped the fish by her side.
With a small nudge he abandoned his two catches, implying that Bazi could take them if she wished. He had lost his appetite. "You have fine fishing skills," the man's accented voice lilted, rumbling and low. "It was a surprise. A good surprise." Perhaps they could challenge one another again in the future. For now, he would get back to work.
"I must continue my journey." He stated softly, and in an off-handed manner. A remark on why he was slowly adding distance between them - the fish still sitting near the girl. "Farewell for now, Bazi." Ears flicked towards her, turned to catch any comments the pale one may speak; he lingered for a few more moments, but his strides did lengthen the distance as the moments passed.
Bazi dropped her two fish into the same pile, misunderstanding his intention to move on and looking a bit perplexed when he announced it. Wasn't he ravenous after all that? He probably was - but for his wife, not fish, but that was a kind of yearning that Bazi did not yet know of. Her eyes fell on the plateau, then drifted west to her own destination. Opposite directions.
"Thank you," she twinkled, eyeing the meal at her feet. Four fish was a bit much for one small girl, but she probably needed the energy after the day's climb. When she looked up, Njal had already began to lumber off towards his destination. Bazi woofed a less refined farewell, tail wagging. "Bye! See you at home!"