He takes it with him out of the grass, lying down under a
spruce at the edge of the forest. With his paws he pins the
vole against a root, tearing at it with his front teeth until the
fur rips open.
He's not especially hungry. The pasture is full of voles and
he's become skilled at finding them, though he's still somewhat
clumsy when he pounces. But after a few hours of
hunting in the morning he's no longer so eager that he gobbles
them up right away. He carries off his prey, tears at the
fur for a long time, leaves bits and pieces.
The strong wind blowing off the lake creates a little tempest
in the crown of the spruce. The sound makes him
sleepy. He dozes, eyelids heavy. The pasture rustles in the
wind and blades of grass gleam when it combs them apart.
The tiny birch leaves shimmer, too, catching the sun. Birch
saplings sprout up here and there in the heavy grass, an invasion
from the forest.
White flecks swirl across his field of vision. He knows
what they are. Butterflies don't have much taste. Bumblebees
sting in your mouth. He knows.
THE DOG
In his drowsiness he gazes out across the familiar pasture.
The grey fluttering of birds. The flecks of butterflies. The
grass is fragrant and the air is filled with pollen.
In the mornings he sees the vixen. She's usually there
before he is, hunting for voles, surrounded by a haze of powerful
scent. Ifhe he rushes her she vanishes, running low in the
grass, which closes above her.
They've never approached each other but he's lain on a
hill above the inlet, looking down on her den. Her cubs
often come out in the sun. Growling, they squabble over
bird wings. Though there are sometimes food scraps outside
the den he never goes down there. There's something
between the foxes and him, something that keeps them
apart.
The pasture is his. It billows under his drowsy gaze, humming
and whirring.
Catching the young hare brought about a change in him. So
much blood and warmth at once. Such extended pleasure,
along with the lingering sense of surprise.
It had happened quickly. The hare popped up in the grass,
rustling in a clump of ferns. With a single leap he had him;
the smell of blood merged with the smell of broken ferns.
The rustling of stiff fronds and their bittersweet fragrance
excited him long afterwards.
The full-grown hares kept their distance. Not so long ago
he'd thought of them as huge. As a pup he'd kept still by the
root of a spruce when they bounded by on the crust of the
snow. He hadn't felt safe.
It was the same with the large birds, the black or brown
speckled ones that flapped up from the thicket. For a long
time he didn't dare hunt them, remembering the hard wing
of the owl, the reprimand in his own pasture.
But now there were others like those hares, only smaller
and more afraid. The fine hairs of fur so erect the downy
undercoat caught the light. The eye. The smell of death even
before his fangs sank in. The stench of terror.
Prey.
There were wood grouse chicks in the grass. Cheeping,
scurrying in the same glassy-eyed terror of being caught.
The dog was changing, growing into his muscular body.
Inside him, something was evolving: a purpose. Filling his
mouth with blood and warmth, keeping it filled. Pouncing
when he heard a rustling noise. Sinking in his fangs. What
was there to be afraid of in the shadows? His body was nearly
full grown now. It hardened around this awareness: can
strike. Am stronger than the rustling and the shadows.
The warm nights brought gnats and black flies. They
plagued him and he never got used to it; the torment didn't
become part of him. He tried to flee but there was nowhere
the insects didn't catch up with him. The flies crept into his
eyes, the gnats settled in his belly fur. He licked the swellings
they left. Only the wind brought relief.
The voices were also part of the warm nights. He avoided
them. Now he was sleeping up in the woods, on windy
mountain slopes where the gnats and flies were swept away,
but the unfamiliar terrain made him uneasy. The wind was
blowing too hard for him to hear properly. He was on edge.
In the mornings, when he came down to the pasture to
hunt, the voices were gone. The smell of smoke hung in the
air. Gusts of wind brought other enticing smells, thick and
unfamiliar. He began going down to the shore and searching.
There was fish blood on the stones. If he got there
before the vixen he might come across a tiny, stiff fish that
had been left. He found rubbery sausage skins. Although
they were salty and hard to chew, he couldn't resist then;. He
was thirsty after going through the scraps the fishermen had
left by the cold campfire, and his mouth burned. He lay at
the edge of the lake by the boat landing, licking his paws
clean from grease and soot. Then he took a long drink of
cold lake water.
From the bramble down by the shore a surge of living
creatures makes its way toward the pasture. The air is humming
and sticks in his throat when he breathes. Everything
warm-blooded is fair game. There are swellings on his hide
from the stings. The more he licks the more it burns. He
wants to escape to a cool breeze, but the wind has completely
died down. During the white nights of summer the
water is smooth.
He spends his days stretched out motionless under a
spruce, as close to the water as he can get without being
seen. There are often boats on the lake now. The voices
make him uneasy. He wants to get away from them but the
heat in the clearing is so intense he's forced to turn back.
There's no escaping them by the shore; the voices even
punctuate the night.'
He hunts in the early morning when there's still a trace of
cool night air, going down to the lake to drink while it's still
quiet along the shore. The goldeneyes dive for food, pulling
up strips of vegetation that quiver on the smooth surface. He
listens for the sound of the beavers.
Everything is familiar. He hears the same sounds he always
does, but beyond them are the voices. They're present even
when they can't be heard. The activity along the shore has
scared off the otter and her young. Their scent gradually
fades away. The fox enters their den and roots around. Soon
his own scent has wiped out every memory of the timid
otters.
The shore belongs to those who dare to live with the
voices of human beings. The dog is one of them, but he's on
edge, his body tense from the plague of gnats and from listening.
There's no restfulness in the light, warm nights, no
deep sleep. In the pasture the valerian shines so brightly that
the opaque bells of the flowers seem to contain a white light.
The sickly smell reaches him in little bursts. Nothing is forgotten.
One
morning he was out at the point, digging for mouse
nests under the spruces. He let down his guard for a
moment, not listening around him, attuned only to faint
sounds under the moss. Then the voices swept over him.
There was barking and a creaking noise. He heard a smack
and water splashing, then wood scraping against stones. He
was so close to the shore he could glimpse the boat and all
the people in it through the alders.
They came ashore without noticing the dark mask in the
speckled shadow of the alders, but he couldn't escape from
the point. Their sharp voices and careless movements were
all around the cabin. He crouched in the blueberry brush.
No matter how hard he listened he wasn't sure where they
were. They tramped around the pasture and slammed the
cabin door. Windows flew open. Rugs and tablecloths
snapped in the air. None of these noises were familiar. He
was completely bewildered by them, lying with his head
cocked, ears perked to pick up the sounds. Even if he'd been
able to see what they were doing he couldn't have made
sense of it. Axes chopping. The screech of a saw on wood.
The clattering of a bucket. Last of all the smell of smoke
pouring out.
Lying there in this chaos of sounds and insistent scents, he
waited for a chance to get away, but the people were unpredictable.
The smallest ones hollered and flattened the grass,
throwing an object that kept landing near him. When they
fetched it he could pick up their smells, which were very
concentrated and seemed to burn and sting.
He withdrew farther out on the point. Although he was
lying still, he was agitated. All other creatures were in
motion at specific times. They hunted and searched and
then they looked for a den or a branch. But the people at
the cabin didn't leave, allowing him to sneak away. It was
impossible to outwait them. When they'd been quiet for a
few minutes the noise and activity started all over again,
without warning or respite. Their chaos was between him
and the forest. Each time they came in among the trees on
the point he grew more terrified. He was prepared to
defend himself.
Towards dawn he broke out. By then it had been calm for
quite a while after the last one had returned from the fishing
spots by the narrows and gone inside. The dog crossed his
tracks in the damp grass when he fled.
Belly close to the ground, he followed the shore of the
shallow inlet and then ran in among the scrubby birches
by the pasture. Without bothering to look for the easiest
path, he bounded across the wet area below the barn. It
was covered with meadowsweet, which left a dense,
honey-like smell when it broke off, making him dizzy. He
ran through the marsh, black mud splattering around his
legs. When he reached the spruce forest he had to slacken
his pace. He loped along until exhaustion dulled the tension
in his muscles. The memory faded. The throbbing
sensation in his throat and lungs let up and his heartbeat
grew steadier.
He was extremely thirsty; all day and all night he'd been
too afraid to drink. As he started looking for water his body
began to relax. Weariness came over him in the chill before
dawn. He discovered a brook and drank for a long time. As
he wound down he just lapped sporadically, standing with
hanging head, letting the murmuring of the brook clear his
head and drown out the loud surge of blood in his ears.
Then he pushed on through the forest. Dawn awakened
all the creatures that had perched on twigs to sleep. There
was a soft flutter quite nearby: the bold Siberian jays. He was
accustomed to them and kept going.
Exhaustion made him increasingly sluggish and empty
inside. Once the sun was up he came upon a boulder to rest
by. The warmth of the sun found him there; it penetrated
through his furry coat to his tired, tingling body. He slept in
fits and starts while the warmth took over, healing and calming
him. Only when the jays came too close did his paws
twitch.
That day he didn't hunt. He didn't recognise the forest
around him. He was searching, but not for food; it was
familiar places he was after, and the smell of his own markings.
He left no drops of urine, merely stayed on guard and
kept on searching. He didn't empty his bladder until it was
painfully full. Towards evening he started covering longer
stretches at a time, loping at a steady pace, stopping once in
a while to listen. But even the blend of sounds in the air had
changed. Everything was different.
He headed uphill. Sharp rocks protruded and he had to
climb. He was frightened of stones that might shift under his
weight but he had to get across the rocky area. Inside him
was a cavity that could only be filled by familiar things. No
matter where he stopped, listening and sniffing, the wind
brought only the unfamiliar, and it was vast.
The unfamiliar was hunger and stone. It was gravel and
debris he'd never seen before, blasted-out strips of new logging
roads, blotches of diesel oil in the gravel. It was rusty
iron, plastic containers, mouldering cloth, beer bottles and
jagged rocks. The pads of his paws got cut. Eventually he
retreated from the strip; it had seemed easy to walk on but it
exacted a price on his paws.
He drank from a brook, standing in the water for a long
time. It soothed the pain in his paws. The running water
cleared his nose but he still couldn't pick up any scents he
recognised. The only relief from fear and confusion was to
keep going.
The farther up he got the sharper the air became. The
cleared area was huge. He tried to avoid piles of twigs and
woodchips but there was no way round. Tractor ruts, deep
as ditches, cut into the ground. Above him a buzzard
sailed on outspread wings, screeching. It wanted him to
leave. He would have been glad to escape the horrible
noise and the circling overhead, but there was no forest to