Marco couldn't remember her name. She had been a wisp of a girl that smelled like dead leaves burrowing into the mud of a misty Autumn and under that there had been sharp notes of panic, pain, and dried blood. He couldn't remember her too much from the night of the attack itself - his own adrenaline had spurred him to help where he could, try to pass along necessary information, and eventually people blurred from one face to another until he had been more than happy to pass out curled up with Aletha's tinier frame and into a very necessary blank sleep. He'd been a nervous ball of anxiety, something totally unheard of in the wolf, but the move had since helped him calm down again.
Marco had picked up on the other wolf's scent multiple times, following it whenever he had the chance to do so. He'd never followed her long or trailed her - getting a sight of her to let him know she was well-enough to be out and moving seemed to ease his curiosity of her health. She was a wolf, he knew that by scent alone, and he knew she'd heal as long as she didn't stress the wounds. That still didn't clear the girl from his mind and the fact that he kept running into her, without actually having a chance to talk, only made him randomly wonder if she were truly okay. It was so easy for a shifter to fake it through the pain.
As he wandered The Midway on his way back to the BAS there was her scent again, fresh and timid as ever. Without thinking he allowed himself to follow the notes of her scent until he was across the way of her booth - Face Painting, so she was an artist. He waited until she came into view, getting herself ready for the flood of patrons and again noted she seemed fine. There was still time though, before he would be needed and the gates would open - if it wasn't now he'd probably have to hunt her down eventually just to ease his mind.
"Hola," he called out when he was a few feet away but nearing her booth, "Eh...Mimi, right?" he asked, but she'd know from the tone in his voice that even he wasn't sure he was saying the right name.