As the green leaves turned red as blood on the creaking branches of trees, and the days grew short and dark, Howl found himself becoming increasingly restless. Some animal instinct in the primal backwaters of his brain was telling him to find shelter before the snow began falling, and the frost bore into his bones. Perhaps as a result of this, he began to notice a little white body in the very corners of his eyes; however, this impression was always fleeting and always left him quite doubtful of his sanity. One grey day, as he wandered through a seemingly endless field skirted by a snow-capped mountain range, Howl heard a song echoing through his psyche as if it was a wind rattling through a narrow berth in trees. Concern twisting his pale features into a grimace, the silver stag stopped dead in the middle of whatever path he followed today, wondering if this incessant wandering was driving him mad. His lion's tail gave a feeble flick.
Suddenly, he was compelled to go towards the mountain-range, which was somehow crowded by a very pleasant and very sunny wood. For hours, it seemed, he went through this quaint forest, filled with wonder at how lovely and spacious it was. He traced a well-worn path, cloven hooves sinking comfortably into the soft loam. After what felt like miles, a sunlit glen glittered between the long bodies of trees ahead of him, beautiful and enticing—in fact, he hadn't been so interested in anything ever before. His lean legs clattered into a lumbering canter, tearing through the underbrush until his previously shadow-spotted body gleamed with the warm afternoon sunlight of the clearing.
All four of his hooves dug into the ground, dragging his body into an unceremonious halt—his eyes boggled; his lips drew back in an absurd expression of surprise. Before him, bathed in perfect angelic light, was a pale mare accompanied by some sort of strange green bird. Howl blinked hard several times, attempting to gain control of his rapidly throbbing heart. Aisling's question was left unanswered for several moments as he scrambled to make sense of the situation. Was she a goddess? A fairy? Could she be the Many-Faced Witch, finally luring him to his fate? The hair on his neck went on end when he thought if this—he thought the anonymity of his foreign land granted him safety from the crone, but he knew that she had as many spies as she had faces. At any rate, there was no use in being impolite, so he haphazardously gathered whatever was left of his wits and attempted a forced smile, eyes still gleaming with both wonderment and suspicion. "Howl," he answered, referring to his name. "Are you going to eat me?"
[how thoughtful <33 sorry for the wait - exams have been kicking my butt!]
@Aisling