Yeah, I know not all wolves actually live and hunt in packs, but that example seemed the most applicable in the context the term was used in the IC, namely for it to be unusual for lone wolves to form a group, which is actually what lone wolves normally want. And even in cases where wolves don't form packs, they still usually don't stay alone by preference. It happens, of course; there are lone wolves that fit the definition of the term when used about people, but they are rare, and for most part the term is used about wolves that are simply in temporarily solitude rather than intentionally and perpetually alone. Rodlins bear the impression of an eagle with folded wings on one side, sized so that it fits on the coin from the chest up, its head turned outward toward the world outside the coin (there as an homeage to the least known of Roland the Ambitious' companions, namely his tame steppe eagle) and the image of a surprisingly simple and relatively humble coronet with three jewels - one in diamond-shape (an elongated rhombus, that is, not the actual gemstone), one round and one oval - distributed in the only three... uh... okay, I have no clue what the spikey extremities on top of a coronet are called, but those (to symbolize Roland's humble origins and the three peoples that came together to name him king: the penin and deigan of Wegam Fermos, and Golerin). And I know it's my turn, and I'm sorry; I'll get to it as soon as I can.