The young billy goat stepped out onto a ledge below her, and Bennet smiled, pleased with herself.
Instinctively she lowered herself, already advantaged by her dark coat when stood in the shade of the trees overhead. The goat was utterly oblivious, searching for tufts of grass revealed by the patches of melting snow. By all accounts, it wasn't having much luck, the beast wandering around with its head to the ground, nosing at the snow in search of treasure, grumbling with each disappointment. Bennet watched it silently, without moving, fascinated by its singular goal - not to starve. Were all animals other than wolves this simple, or did they talk to each other of Good and Evil and all matters spiritual? Did they even have those same concepts? If only she could talk to them, could communicate other than with her body language - and even then, all she would want to be able to say is 'I want to eat you'.
Even to Bennet, that seemed like a rather rude thing to say to someone.
She knew what her job was now, which was to backtrack and report her find to her father. Taking the goat down by herself - even a young one - incorporated too much unnecessary risk, and was very likely to result in not only failure, but also injury. That would help absolutely nobody. Better to go home to her mother with nothing than with a limp, which would make their already hard-earned survival even more difficult, for she wouldn't be able to contribute on their hunts until she recovered.
So as much as her stomach growled with need, a rational mind won out, and Bennet began to shift her weight to move backwards... but then the goat lifted its head, and Bennet froze.
It happened remarkably fast, and yet it felt as though Bennet were the only one out of the loop, because the goat reacted to some invisible presence and had twitched and skittered away before she even knew what was happening. Bennet moved not a single muscle as she stared, wide-eyed, as a fully grown cougar landed almost in the exact spot that the goat had been only a heartbeat earlier, but rather than pursue... it stopped, and watched its quarry flee. Some part of her was indignant at having her goat stolen, but far more important was the rising urge to not become the next victim. She knew that cougars didn't eat wolves, but that didn't mean one would happily abide a young rival lurking nearby after witnessing a failed hunt. Feeling her blood pulse all the way up in her ears, each pump coming a little quicker than the next, the young dragon had to decide on the best way to extract herself from this suddenly perilous situation. If she had been risk-adverse before, now the rules of the game had changed entirely. Now, to make a clean getaway and go home with nothing was suddenly the best possible option.
Swallowing her rising panic, fighting to keep composure despite the incredible danger, the girl instinctively took solace in the one thing which she could always rely on to bring her strength; the sky. Glancing up, she sought out any soaring and swooping shapes, but was too distracted to look too hard, and saw nothing to draw strength from, and so her eyes dropped back down.
And met with the sharp, slanted irises of the cougar, nestled in two pools of hard brown which were staring right back.
The child staggered backwards, struck by fear, ears falling flat even as her lip curled back to reveal smallteeth in a confused display of both submission and aggression. The cougar blinked at her, those large round eyes calculating and cold, and turned its body towards her, almost casually, and such a nonchalant gesture of hostility was more frightening than if it had bared its teeth and snarled at her. Because - because it knew she was no threat, because it knew she was outmatched, because it knew that all the power belonged to it and the outcome of this situation rested entirely on its own decision.
A few heartbeats later and Bennet honestly believed that it might consider her not worth it. It watched her with a haughty indifference as she was unable to move, but she had to move, to get back to her father, to get out of here - and taking another step back broke the spell.
There came the low hiss, the display of terrifyingly long teeth, the bristling of fur, and Bennet ran out of options.
Tension bursting into energy, she whipped about and fled, paws scrambling over familiar rocks and earth and elevation as she sought to find her only salvation: her father. Whether or not it was a good idea to bring a cougar right to him hadn't yet made it into her consciousness as her world became one of running, hearing the most terrifying sound in the mountains of the echoing yowl of an antagonised cougar behind her, and then she could feel it behind her, feel it in her guard hairs, in her nerve endings, and she yapped in wild panic between bounds, desperate for him to hear -
anyone to hear - with the frustrated killer on her tail and gaining ground, fast.