Either that or give his enclosure a den/box/thingy and cleverly angle it so that nobody can see into it from behind the fences. I remember a show about a guy working with wolves in the wild demonstrating that wolves won't come when called, so a tour guide could theoretically go by the empty enclosure, call to the tenant who is supposed to be inside the den, and explain away his lack of an appearance as the wolf simply being shy, stubborn and/or a heavy sleeper.PariahPoet wrote:I'd also think that putting your official enclosure in the back and off the tour route so people would also not notice if you were missing.
Also. . . I hope I'm not beating a dead horse or anything, but there's a world of difference between: "I like werewolves" and "I am a werewolf." The latter is a pretty heavy statement that absolutely nobody should ever be expected to take in stride. There are people out there who could, but what are the odds of a bunch of those people and absolutely no "normies" all working at the same conveniently nearby wolf sanctuary?
I'm not saying it's impossible. Just that if a werewolf was smart enough and cautious enough to know how to live undetected before he had to go feral, the odds of such should be further than he should be willing to leap.