Okay, it had definitely taken a bit more than two days to find the perfect heart-shaped leaf, but this was a very important task, and Isidore took treasure-hunting seriously. Especially after Eros had been kind enough to let him stick around, rest, and fill his stomach before going along his merry way.
This late into autumn, it was easy to find just any leaf on the ground, but that wouldn't do at all. Those leaves had been walked on, and torn, and rotten, so it had to be a fresher one.
So Isidore walked the banks of the creek in search for some remaining leaves that lingered on tall branches, just out of his reach. And he'd found them, of course, but after several failed attempts at leaping up and climbing to get them - which once landed him directly in the river - he realized that it was not a feasible goal.
It was beginning to look like he might have to settle on one that had already fallen. The level of disappointment Issa felt in the moment was perhaps childish and Eros probably wouldn't care much if he brought a less-than-perfect leaf, but still - it was the principle of the thing.
Just when he'd been about to give up on the whole mission and bring a subpar offering, the heavens opened up and luck shone upon him. A single leaf drifted down from a tree lining the riverbank, perfectly heart-shaped and untouched. Isidore had been nearby enough to scoop it up nearly as soon as it touched the ground, taking the stem delicately in his teeth and kept his treasure close. Still, it didn't seem like enough, because it wouldn't last, and this was a gift, which was unacceptable.
It took a little longer to find pine trees, but some crept in from the Wildwood, and Isidore managed to procure a bit of bark, sticky with sap, that he could press the leaf down into. The present wouldn't last forever, but it would last longer now, even if Isidore was marginally stickier for his efforts, fur clumped a bit around his chest and paws.
With everything deemed perfect, Isidore carried the little treasure to the border and tipped his head back, howling for an audience.