Wednesday, October 30, 2013

The Hard Year

“The Hard Year”
Daniel J. Cox (10/15/2013)
Late in the night the wind gave one last, plaintive howl and blew on across the plains, leaving three more feet of snow in a heavy blanket over the lakes and rocks and scrub of the southern Black Hills.   The Hunger Moon hung low and heavy as the next day’s sun began to fade the eastern stars.  Small birds were stirring, sending cloudy cascades of wet powder down on the hunter standing below, sniffing the still, crisp air.  With an anxious brush of his tail, Wolf moved slowly into the faint scent.
That smell was the first bit of hope for Wolf in what had been a crushing year.  Driven from his birth pack by the new Alphas after both parents had died in a rockslide the year before, he had finally found a territory to hunt.  It had been easier after he mated the female who had come proudly into the valley in the early winter, herself cast from her home.  His new mate proved to be a good hunter and the pair established themselves in their valley.  Because it was her first litter and came after a lonely winter, she had given birth to only four pups—three males and a female—at the time when the rivers rushed full with the melting snows.
By the time the coneflowers had opened that spring, their new pack numbered five adults.  Three other young outcast males had presented their throats to the leadership of Wolf and his mate and joined the hunting pack.  They, too, proved to be good providers for the pups and helped teach them the etiquette of the pack.  When the early frosts burned the edges of the aspen leaves, Wolf’s pack had established its first rendezvous and the pups were learning hunting basics.
Then the first too-early storm came raging down the valley from out of the mountains.  The wind drove sleet that stung like porcupine needles.  The pack huddled together in whatever lee shelter it could find, but the hunting had to go on because the storm did not let up.  Instead the air grew colder and the sleet changed to blinding snow.  It piled higher and higher against the rocks and deadfalls, and it came so fast and packed so hard that it all but entombed each wolf sleeping nose-to-tail.  At the height of the storm Wolf’s mate was crushed under a tree that came crashing down in the gale and heavy snow.
The pack’s howls of mourning and frustration were not the first it would sing that lean winter.  In the Wolf Moon one of the males was too weak from hunger to dodge a bull elk’s sharp hoof.  As that month waned, one of the pups simply did not made it through a cold, hungry night.  Wolf now had only two of the younger males and one of his pups left.  The snow was too deep and hard-crusted to get to the mice and rabbits.  The trees had even been stripped of edible bark by the also starving herds of elk, moose, and buffalo.  He and his pack needed meat if they were to live much longer, let alone have a chance of making it to the thaw.
That faint, tantalizing whiff in the air was either an illusion of his growling stomach or the possibility of life for his pack.  He froze in place, perked his ears, and smelled eagerly.  There.  Just a hint of blood—buffalo.  Now he heard the muffled sounds of struggle, and he picked his way quickly but carefully through the snow and around the trees toward that dream of sustenance.
Bull Buffalo had led his herd a very long time.  Year after year he had thrown back the challenges of the younger bulls.  He was still the biggest and strongest of them all, but now he knew he was in trouble.  After the storm had abated, he had begun the herd’s move farther down the foothills and out to the plains where the wind might have blown the snow from some patches of grass.  The shelter of trees and rocks and the shoulders of the hills was good in its time, but there was nothing to eat or drink.  It was time to move.
He had pushed the cows and their few new calves and the young bulls down a familiar trail and seen them safely out of the forest.  Then trotting around the stragglers, the crusted snow had given way under his right rear hoof and his leg had plunged into what was probably a badger hole.  The snow was too deep and the ice too thick.  He couldn’t get his leg out.  The herd had moved on, milling aimlessly, leaderless over the near horizon.  He could still smell them, but he couldn’t get to them.  After several hours of struggle, he was exhausted and bloody from the sharp edges of the icy rocks.  Worse than that, his last great heave had caused him great pain—he had probably dislocated his hip—and he had bellowed his agony, the first real sound he had made, and he knew that soon the wolves would come.
Wolf sat very still just back and to the side of a leafless maple tree about fifty yards downwind of the struggling bull.  It had taken only seconds for him to take in the scene and know Bull was trapped and injured.  The great buffalo was still quite a dangerous beast.  His horns were long and sharp—each one almost as long Wolf’s tail, Bull was so large!  Wolf and the pack had worried the herd often and even managed to take a weakling calf once last summer, but Bull was a formidable foe and Wolf had steered his pack clear of him most of the time.  But Wolf knew the beast was as hungry as he was and weak from his struggles.  The snow around Bull was trampled with his efforts and, near the trapped leg, stained with urine and blood.  It would not be long before he would be unable to even raise his head, let alone twist around to rip and tear and gouge with those dangerous horns.
Wolf knew that here was his pack’s salvation.  They would be able to feast here and take away meat and bones so that the poaching vultures and eagles and coyotes wouldn’t get everything.  It was time to move, however, to make that claim on the prize.
Slowly Wolf stepped toward Bull, downwind still, until he was only fifteen or twenty feet away and then sat to watch.  The Bull finally turned to see and smell Wolf.  He stopped and stared.  They knew one another.  They knew this moment.  For a few seconds they simply looked.  Bull did not cry out.  He was not afraid, and he knew there was no saving himself.  This was the way of things.  He knew which of the bulls would take his place in the herd and was satisfied.  He knew the herd was, in the long run, safe from Wolf and his pack mates.  It had been a long, hard year.
Bull looked at the jagged hills where he had spent his life, then turned to Wolf and lowered his head as if to give permission.  Rising to all fours, Wolf marveled briefly at the great mass that was Bull Buffalo.  He looked to Wolf like one of the hills, brown and snow-covered.  Bull didn’t even shudder when Wolf sang his song of life and joy and greeting, calling his little pack to join him as the sun lifted over the trees to glisten off of the new snow.