The trail Barclay was following was so cold it may well have turned to ice, but he was stubbornly set on following it anyway. He had to find his niece. He just had to.
He tried not to dwell on what he'd found, when he finally realized that his sister wasn’t picking up her phone - hadn’t been for months, why hadn’t he noticed? - and made his way back to her little cabin in Oregon. He tried not to blame himself, for being too wrapped up in his ‘journey of self discovery’ and too late to do anything except bury the bodies of his little sister and her stupid, brave, kind husband. He does anyway. He’s certainly not going to blame his niece, wherever she is - and she must be somewhere, she must be alive, because there were only two bodies, and neither of them were Adelyn.
But she wasn’t in the woods around their cabin, wasn’t in the town, wasn’t anywhere he could find her in two years of searching. Two years, and she was just a little girl, last he saw her. Could she even run this far? He wondered, day after day, stone after overturned stone, sacrificing more of himself to the Beast every week so that he might have sharper ears, a more sensitive nose, less time wasted on cooking his food.
There were so many cracks that one little girl could fall down and get lost in, in the unforgiving wilderness. Adelyn was so young… but she had her own Beast, he knew, that power that ran through the heart of their family tree, that kept them safe when the world turned against them. She was strong, even though she shouldn’t ever have been forced to be. She would survive, until he could find her. He just had to find her. He owed at least that much to his sister, though in truth he owed so much more than that, more than he could ever repay.
Those were the thoughts consuming his mind as Barclay roamed the woods, his nose turned to the air to scent for any sign of his wayward kin. His ears were pricked, now that he’d gotten far enough away from the lodge to stop picking up on the chatter from the residents there.
That was how a voice caught his attention, faint and raspy though it was. His heart didn’t have the chance to leap, his hopes staying right where they were; it wasn’t a girl’s voice, wasn’t the sweet patter that he remembered hearing in the background of so many phone calls, so long ago. He still moved towards the sound, wrapping his scarf around his face and pulling a hat from his pocket to shove down over his ears. It wasn’t much of a disguise, but hopefully it’d be enough to fool whatever lost hiker had gotten his foot stuck under a rock this time.
“Don’t worry, I hear ya,” he rumbled, voice low and a little hoarse but as kind as he could make it as he looked around for the man. He didn’t see him right away, looking at his eye level, but his eye caught the yawning hole off the side of the path and he made his way over. “Ah, how’d you wind up down there?”
He knelt, and extended his hand. His arms were long. He should be able to reach the man, if he stood up and put his arms above his head. Then he could haul him up, and get him out of this… weirdly sized pit trap.