by sndwurks » Fri Mar 07, 2014 7:31 am
Pointed away from the needle and the work on his arm, Billy takes in a thoughtful breath. He holds it for a second, letting it out slowly through his nose. He gives a faint nod, staring towards the exit of the tent.
"This was a story told to me by an old woman about a decade ago," says Billy after a moment. "She was old, well over seventy. I was doing a job for the tribe up at the reservation in Canada, near Odanak. It was late, and the job was over, and I was sitting in the bar they have up on the rez. There was just the two of us there... it must have been... nine in the morning? She was getting some breakfast, and I was getting some dinner. You know how hours get past you, right?
"So, anyways, it's just the two of us, and it's blowing an awful winter storm out. You know those kind of storms we get in the north country? Can't see anything but white, can't hear anything by the wind, can't feel anything but cold. It's nine in the morning, and it might as well be midnight outside. And I'm just looking out into the storm, thinking about getting to my motel when she tells me to stay.
"'Don't go out there,' she says. When I ask why, she tells me that her father died in a storm like this, when she was just a girl. Back when she was eight, she and her mother were living in one of the villages on the rez, trying to make ends meet on what little aid the government sent in and what could be hunted in the winter. Her dad was a hunter, and they had run out of their last tin just as a hard storm hit. Still, he picked up his rifle, and headed out into it.
"He came back two days later, arriving after sun was down and carrying the body of a big old deer he'd managed to take down. He had gotten lost in the storm. Her mother and her helped skin it and butcher it, and it was going to be enough to get them through the winter. They packed the meat in the snow to keep it, and cooked a thick venison stew. All the while, their father sat in their cabin by the fireplace, staring at it. When they poured him a bowl he refused it, saying he had to make sure that they ate their fill first. And so they ate, and all the while her father waited by the fire. She remembers falling asleep looking up at him, and she told me about that sad sort of smile he had. She said she remembered him telling her it was all going to be alright, just before falling asleep.
"When she woke up, he was gone. They had the deer and the stew, but he was nowhere to be found. It wasn't until the spring that they found the body. He had tripped over a log no more than three miles from their cabin, fallen down a ravine and broken his neck. It was sudden, and had happened during the storm. She had tried telling people what she knew, that her father had come back to them and made sure they'd make it through the winter. But even her mother told her that she had dreamed it. Her mother never explained where the deer came from otherwise. And ever since then, she's warned people to stay out of the storms when they get that way... it's too easy to get turned around. Get turned around too much, and even if you ever find your way home... you won't be able to stay."
With that, Billy trails off, giving a faint chuckle. He glances back towards Ellie, lifting a brow to regard her progress.
"How goes the sawbonesing?"
[It's all good. Writing mods = more plot. More plot = more good. More good = hooray.]