He tread across open land for quite some time before discovering another forest. The trees afforded a protective cover - one that he welcomed - but he caught the scent of more wolves as soon as he passed in to the dark confines of the tree line. Immediately Tiarnan was stiff-legged and unsure; he stalked along as a corporeal shadow with senses tingling. The boy moved in an uncharted arc - first north, then west through the trees. The terrain became more mountainous in the process, and the air soon grew dark and chilled with the passage in to evening. He stopped only when the forest thinned and the earth began to roll heavenward; implying that he had reached the distant mountain opposite to the plateau. The boy was hungry and on edge in this environment, and now such feelings of inadequacy increased with the fall of darkness around him.
By the time she reached the outskirts of Ravensblood Forest, it was late, and she tired, cranky, and beginning to question her motives for straying so far from the pack without a chaperone. Ferdie’s warnings whispered in the background of every thought, and she was becoming painfully aware of how ill-suited she was to the backdrop. The failing light did nothing to camouflage her - even in the faintest moonlight, the Creek wolf glowed like a beacon.
Tiarnán had the opposite problem. His scent betrayed him long before the sight of him did, and had he not stepped out from the cover of the trees, Bazi might have walked right into him. The stranger leggy and long, and there was a certain air of anxiety about the way he moved. He hadn’t come from the Creek, and she wondered if this was Jinx’s newest recruit (which would give her reason to be cautious, given the sort of company the former Beta seemed to attract).
”Hello?” Bazi woofed softly, stepping out from behind the cover of foliage. She kept her tail low and swaying softly, muscles tensed for flight.
And at first he didn't know what to do. She was clearly young like himself, and by the sound of her voice he determined she was surprised upon finding him. Her scent was somewhat of a mystery as well - clean, crisp, not at all woody like the plateau wolves; Tiarnan was struck dumb for a moment. When he regained his senses, ears fell back against his skull and he ducked his head in a submissive gesture, hoping that he was right and this ghost of a girl wasn't one of the plateau guardians. "Duit dia," He murmured softly, for he was tired and taken aback by the appearance of such a beautiful phantom.
Losing himself for a moment or two, he slipped a question in to the gaping silence, oblivious to the language gap. "An é seo do foraoise?"
”Oh!” she murmured, putting two and two together, ”You must think the forest claimed.. No, it’s not mine. .. erm… ” Bazi quelled the urge to raise her voice and repeat the exact same words a second time, because what good would that do? Instead, she copied his bow and posture, patted the ground with a forepaw and shook her head a few times. ”Not mine.”
The charade continued with a long look in a southeasterly direction and an in-air doggie paddle. When that seemed ridiculous, she scratched two parallel lines into the ground and performed an energetic montage of drinking, fishing, and paddling. ”Swiftcurrent Creek,” she told him, patting her drawing, and turned to look in the direction of home a second time. With any luck, he would at least understand that she meant him no harm.
"Teer-non." He tried to enunciate the sounds of his name, figuring it would help things if he tried an introduction - but he remained stock still, making the sounds somewhat useless. The boy clued in to that a moment later, realizing that the language barrier was indeed a real thing. Swallowing some nerves, he tried to ignore the creeping darkness and the weariness that began to set in with it - motioning with a bow of his head as he spoke again, "Teer-non." But what good would that do? With a worried glow to his dark eyes, the boy held a dim hope that she would understand - and lifted his head. The next thing he did was approach her, and he did this slowly, without the usual confidence or boastful flourish in his movement; "Tiarnan," he repeated, this time a bit quieter, and motioned to himself - then he carefully poked his nose against her shoulder, with a lilting question. "Ainm?"
For someone that seemed so intent on communicating through interpretive dance, it took Bazi quite some time to figure out this most basic gesture. "Oh!" she breathed, looking smilingly into Tiarnán's warm, brown eyes. "Bazi," she returned, "Baa-zee. 'Ainm' Bazi. My name is Bazi." She paused there. The darkness was physically pressing in on them now. Following the loner's example, she restricted herself to a single word: "Sleep?" Bazi's head drooped to the side and she shut her eyes, faking snores. Ferdie would probably disagree with this flattering demonstration of how she slept, but Tiarnán wasn't to know - yet.
"Baa-zee," She stated, sounding out the short word which he assumed was her name - and then the pale girl clarified, imitating the ainm he had huffed in her direction; "Name," the boy parroted and as the sounds rolled from his tongue he gave a nod, energized by her understanding. With a happy hop the youth moved around her - only to catch a rock or some sort of debris and nearly trip upon his own legs. Clumsy fool. He was halfway to the ground when Bazi spoke again, and after a short scramble to get properly upright he witnessed her display.
Sleep seemed like a good idea.
But then he realized she was asking... To sleep with him. Now, Tiarnan wasn't a dirty minded individual; if he was, he'd have caught upon the innuendo there instantly. No, he was far too dim for that; however, the boy was a bit doe-eyed at the thought of bedding with a stranger at all. He swallowed a lump in his throat and gave a little shrug, "Sleep." Tiarnan wheezed softly, nervously, but stood rigid and still beside her. What was he supposed to do.
Ainm, ainm, ainm, ainm Bazi repeated internally, determined to remember the word. The exchange had established a tiny thread between their two languages, and given them a tool to expand each other's vocabulary. Everything had an ainm, after all.
Tiarnán seemed positively elated by their progress. Bazi wondered if he had attempted to communicate with anyone else, and how well that had gone down. Judging by the fact that he was alone, she guessed badly - otherwise they might have offered him shelter against the darkness. Packs in the Teekon Wilds were made up of stragglers, and this one was both healthy and handsome (something she had most definitely not been when Fox had welcomed her into the Creek).
Tiarnán's attempt at showing her the dance of his people ended in the most spastic dance move Bazi had ever seen. She stifled a chortle, and waited until he stood solidly on all four beside her. "Sleep," he repeated, less enthused this time. Bazi couldn't for the life of her figure out why. It was late, wasn't it? And without a pack, how long would it have been since this guy ate? It didn't even occur to her that sharing a stranger's warmth was anything but normal. It was cold - neither of them wanted to be alone - they had exchanged ainms now - it only made sense to bunk together.
But Bazi was the wolf equivalent of the type of human that flings their clothes off in the changing room and struts around; Tiarnán was the kind that changed in the a bathroom stall or awkwardly inside a towel. She gave him a quizzical look, then - without invitation - pushed her muzzle under his chin and offered a few comforting licks. He must just be scared of the dark, she reasoned, ignorant of the fact that it was a puff of white, not the all-encompassing black, that had Tiarnán on his toes.
As he wandered, Tiarnan thought about what had just happened. The sound of her voice being so confused, but the feeling of her tongue sliding against his face. He was smitten for sure, lusting after the connection he once had with Khatera and also desperate for company. He wasn't sure about what the ghost wanted, but he would give her anything if it meant she would stay. Desperation was a pithy beast indeed. The path he followed led through some low branches which smelled lightly of rodent, and as he tracked the smell the boy found a ruined depression in the earth. It was likely that rabbits had once lived here, when there was a hollow in the ground. Someone had uprooted it, leaving a bowl of dirt which was rather large. He lifted his head and called out, "Bazi!" and then set his eyes upon the surrounding shadows, hoping she had not abandoned him too.
He was.. sweet. But so was Ferdie - and Bones, and neither of them made her blood rush through as though it were late for something. As frustrating as it was, there was something wonderfully mysterious about the language barrier. Even if Tiarnán had wanted to answer her question, he couldn't - and she was equally incapable of telling him about the strange feelings he had roused in her.
Her own name rang out in the darkness, startling the ghostly female out of her thoughts. Without a word, she loped into the trees, reflecting even the dimmest ambient light as though it were the full glare of the moon. She tracked Tiarnán's now instantly recognizable scent to a dip in the ground, sheltered by the roots of the fallen tree that had created it. She would need to bathe in the morning, but it would do as a temporary refuge. "Thank you," she told him smilingly, and stepped delicately into the bowl. "Sleep?"
With that explained (even briefly) Tiarnan fell quiet again and paced backward, thumping down on to his rear so that he was sitting before Bazi. A stark black silhouette next to her ivory perfection. With a slip of one bony limb he plopped to his chest and then to his side, bracing himself against one of the naturally formed walls of dirt; roots arched above his head, reminiscent of thick spider legs. He watched her for a few moments, unsure of what she would do, but he was tired and the comfortable spot made his eyelids begin to droop.
Gently, she lowered her lithe little body next to his, curling into a loose ball with her nose pressed against one dark foreleg. With Ferdie, she took liberties - the daylight would often find her splayed unladylike across her adoptive father's body, legs pointing in all directions. Here, she was suddenly conscious of every limb. They were complete strangers, cuddled up in a forest that belonged to neither of them, in the shadow of a viscous wolf's domain.
"Bazi and Tiarnán codlata," she murmured, finally allowing exhaustion to dull her mind.
She muttered something but Tiarnan wasn't listening closely. He was more taken in by the lull of her breath as she began to drift to sleep. While he was very tired, her closeness kept him from truly falling away in to a restful state; he watched her quietly, lowering his chin to the ground below in case she was still awake and watching, but Tiarnan would remain coherent even as the deep dark of night wrapped about them. The darkness was a great blanket, and Bazi the only light. He guarded her in part to protect her, and in part because he was greedy. Tiarnan did not have many friends in the wilds. Bazi had become one, but he couldn't know for how long.
Gradually (and against his own desires) Tiarnan did begin to slow in his breathing. He groggily pressed himself closer to Bazi, adjusting a chocolate limb in to a fold so that he could rest upon it. As he fell in to a thin sleep, the boy's head slid off of it's perch and nestled in to the ghost's scruff, where his breath would steadily slide across her skin.
[fade!]