Her pace dragged onward and upward, her chin tucking itself automatically as her legs strained up the steepening grade. She hardly paid attention to whence she placed her feet, her chipped and broken nails digging in among the rocks and scree to propel her wearily onward. She no longer quite consciously knew why she toiled so, her thoughts preoccupied with wistfulness and sorrow. How, how had it ever come to this? She knew not where she was going any longer, nor where her life’s companions had gone; one by one they had floated away, like ghosts, and only gradually had it dawned upon her that even her last trailing pup had drifted off elsewhere, wearied by their endless toiling journey even as she herself was. It was probably for the best, she reflected, before sinking back down into the murky swamps of misery within her head. She was in no position to keep him from mischief now; she was hardly even in a position to care for her own broken body and heart. If she let herself pause for more than the merest moment, she suspected that she might simply sit down and stop there forever.
As the skies darkened, the stars bedecked its blued expanse with glittering points that resembled scintillating diamonds, with hardly a cloud present to mar the sight. The night’s beauty was lost upon her, however, as she trailed upward still, taking note of its majesty only long enough to deepen her mourning. It was tragic, truly tragic, that such beauty was so lost upon her! She would have wept over it if only her wretched eyes had any tears to spare. Tragic. Her feet stuttered to a halt and she looked around herself, blinking and bewildered, as it dawned slowly upon her that the slope had given up its own endless climb, and the wide span of gravel before her had given way to an infinite span of sky. She hesitated, and ventured another timorous pace forward, raising her eyes slowly to the heavens above, and feeling very small against their black extent lit only by those innumerable starry pinpricks gazing coldly back down at her. Ophelia stared apprehensively back at them, as her lower lip and jaw started to tremble. Then, unable to bear her own silent company one moment longer, she threw back her head and howled wildly, recklessly, without any regard for the intrusive rudeness of her action, her preoccupation-dulled nose not even having bothered to check if these lands already had a claimant. “Here I am still!” she cried, overwhelmed by theatrical levels of emotion, and playing them for all they were worth. “How could you have left me behind, my beloved?!” She threw back her nose, hyperextended her rearmost leg, and gazed long and sorrowful up, up at the blazing darkness of the skies and wished to lose herself in its beckoning embrace. Yes, save for those terrible sparkling bits of starry brightness (which she chose at the moment to selectively ignore), it was just as dark and empty as her very soul, she decided. …Her carefully overwrought stance and moue of distress, meantime, were just a little too artfully posed to be fully believed.
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Muirrin slumbered within one of the rocky caverns, at the edge of where the grassy slope met the harsh wall of stone. It was a good place, sheltered from the weather—dark and warm. "Ohhhhh-oh-ohh-ohhh," the wind sighed, though it was not the soothing call of ancestors... but the high-pitched shriek of banshees. Muirrin, now wakened, growled and moved to her paws. They foretold of death, she knew, and though there was little one could do to stop it (at least, according to legend), the Blackthorn fully intended to try.
Her sleek form moved down the slope, her pace swift and solid. “How could you have left me behind, my beloved?!” came the wind's next cry, and Muirrin paused, her golden eyes scanning the dusk for the source. A ghost? But that could not be right; she had heard ghosts before, but had never known them to speak words that she could comprehend. More voices followed, but they did not carry the same hysterical intensity as the voice before, and Muirrin could not make out the words. For a moment, she pondered returning to her cave—but no. My mountain, she thought, and resumed her swift pace until she came upon the culprits.
She had arrived in time to hear the last syllables of the child's question, and rather than speak, Muirrin remained still—her posture tall, tail high—to observe and assess the situation unfolding on her front lawn.
To speak of the matter wrenched at her heart anew, and the slight swaying of her willowy frame was not entirely feigned. She threw back her head with the smallest and softest of wretched moans, and allowed her hindquarters to dip, catching herself in an uncomfortable half-sit which she allowed to slump into a half-recline. The child’s eyes seemed as hard and cruel as those unforgiving stars above, such that Ophelia could not bear to look at them. She gazed off into the night, her eyes dulled with sadness as they slowly traversed the landscape with its moon-etched silhouettes. They came at last to the more authoritative figure who had now entered the scene, a wolf-gray bitch who stood watching them with her tail held assertively high. Ophelia’s eyes were almost cartoonishly large and sad, and her head gave a slight cant as she gazed with wretched desperation at this second stranger. Her voice was soft and breathless, her words like to be snatched away at any moment by an errant wash of wind. “Have you too come to mock my words, foreigner, or rather to offer comfort in my trials of distress?” She surmised there was a passing chance the two were related, or that the elder was at least here to check up on the wayward youngster; as the elder of the two held her tongue, confirmation of this thought would have to wait until speech was elicited and the presence of a similar accent either confirmed or denied. Ophelia’s own muzzle tilted upward an anxious fraction of an inch, a pose aping that of a loyal supplicant and baring the pearly-white fur of her throat a little more. Her neck kinked a little and grew stiffer, sitting there like that, but she sat and suffered these physical pangs silently, in favor of voicing the more painful and emotion-charged notion that had just crossed her mind. “Or are you of the silent footsteps,” (for she hadn’t heard the other’s arrival—could she be a ghost, or potentially a reaper? Or another of those creatures she had once heard tales told of,) “perhaps here to take me to the other world whence the spirit of my beloved has crossed? Oh, to be reunited with him now! ’Twould be the most welcome of mercies, if it were so.” Agony and hope warred in her expression, as if she dared not let one or the other win for fear it would overcome her entirely.
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Her eyes narrowed, then turned to the child who's laughter made the fur raise along the her back. Were the fey playing tricks on her this night? For the events unfolding did not seem natural in Muirrin's perception; still, she remained quiet, calculating her interaction with these creatures precisely. If they were of the Otherworld, it would be their intention to capture her—for a night or for a week, it would not matter, for when she would be allowed to return to this world a hundred years would have passed.
The child moved towards her, then, with an older woman close behind her steps. Muirrin stood taller, tensing—how could a babe command a grown wolf in such a way? No, there was something notably off about this encounter, and the Blackthorn did not like it. "Come no closer," she warned the pair, for the moment ignoring the wails of the third stranger. Again, the child laughed, before beckoning her chaperone to come away. Muirrin did not move until they were a considerable distance away, and then even as she approached the grief-stricken woman her eyes never quite left their retreating forms.
"What happened, exactly?" she queried, doing her best to use soothing tones. Regardless of the current melodrama, if there was something dangerous near her territory, Muirrin wanted to know of it. Wildcats, perhaps? They had been known to attack wolves when desperate, and without a pack a wolf would be lucky to come away unharmed.
"I am sorry for your losses," the woman told the other with sincerity; to lose a mate and children in one fell swoop (as was implied) was a grievous event indeed. It seemed to Muirrin that asking bluntly how Fate had taken them from the woman would only invite more hysterics and unintelligible words, so she ventured with, "What was your brave knight protecting you from?" This, at least, would encourage more of the story to come forth (at least, this was her hope) and might even clue her in on what danger might be afoot.