The trek up the mountainside had been arduous and long, a challenge for the Psychopathic Flirt, but one that he could easily overcome any day. Going up a steep mountain? Easy. His six months straight of constantly travelling had kept him fit and in shape, strengthening his muscles from the never ending trail, unlike all these pack wolves who sat on their asses all day. But there was always a time when a wolf needed to join a pack, and that was winter. Now it was winter; the snow was falling, cold winds were blowing, food was becoming scarce. He knew he needed to join a pack to have the best chance of survival, and that was exactly what he was going to do. Once he found the right pack, of course. A smaller one was preferable, less wolves meant less contesting over the smallest of things and less sucking up to the wolves. in charge "Aren't ordinary wolves adorable," he murmured to himself, a smug smirk lifting up the corners of his lips.
Stopping at the edge of a steep yet small cliff, he stared down at the depths, brows raising slightly at the sight of the smooth surface of a lake. From this distance he couldn't be sure if it was frozen already, and he gazed down from the very edge of the cliff, looking for a way down, just to see if it was accessible. He doubted that he would go down there just to see if it was frozen. It wasn't as if it would be able to support his weight anyway. Goldenrod eyes picked out the slightly hidden form of a path that was well-trodden, like wolves lived nearby. Lifting his muzzle into the air the Psychopathic Flirt inhaled deeply, but found no scent of a pack. Well, there could be a pack close by, but the powdery snow covered almost all of the traces of scent markers, so he couldn't be sure. Letting out a gruff bark, he backed away from the edge of the cliff, shaking out his fur like he didn't have a care in the world, which was true. He had no reason to fear anything or anyone. "You could say that I'm King," he said to himself as he stood on the mountainside, looking out over the paleness of the wintery land.