by Sally » Wed May 07, 2014 2:52 am
Kicking back the last swig of the TRDC beer, Sally will stretch out in the camp chair and tilt over towards Alice, "My dear Chickadee, JD ain't wrong, I know a thang er two 'bout a thang er two, 'specially 'bout thangs er two that make they home in them there woods."
Sally stares into the mouth of the bottle for a long moment, his brow furrowed and said, "Firs' things firs', 'cause JD's got the right of it- they ain't no single such thing as a Sasquatch." He looks back up and catches Alice cool, even eyes, and grins, "That ain't to say they ain't no Squatch- jus' callin' all the thing that go troddin' thru the underbrush on feets bigger 'n mine all the same thing is like callin' all Spanish-speakin' folk 'Mex-i-cans.'" Sally's furrowed brow comes back and he levels a finger at no one in particular- "Don't do that. They get right pissed at that."
Shaking his head, Sally says, "Some Canadian newspaper man in the twenties started usin' Sasquatch as a catch-all. Easier that way, since jus' bout ev'ry Indian folk, an' ev'ry other backwoods bubba all 'round the country's got they own bigfoot. From the ass-end of A-las-ka to the over yonder in Maine, 'n ev'ry stretcha woods betwixt 'em. All of 'em. Some of 'em peaceable, some of 'em is ornery, and some of 'em..."
Leaning in to the point that the camp chair starts to groan some, Sally says "I'm named fer a fella back home called Sally the Spaniard, who was really Salleh the Shawnee- an Indian, ya get? When I was just a shit-kickin' trouble maker two-heads taller than ev'ry one else in my grade, he'd sit a buncha us down, light up one of his big fat pipes, and talk about 'trail stories.' He'd sprinkle some tobacca on the ground, and tell us 'bout the Wiindigoo- that is ta say, the Wend-i-go. He had kinfolk that married into the tribes up north- Wisconsin, the Yuu-Pee, Sault Ste. Marie, and they all just about got stories of the Wendigo. They ain't peaceable."
Drumming his fingers against his scarred knee, Sally will glance over to JD, "JD's got the right of it - they's all sortsa things people call Sasquatch- huntin' spirits n' lost hunters... but a Wendigo? Issa _hunger_ spirit, at best. Somethin' glutt-in-ous, somethin' that'll eat an' eat an' eat an' eat an' never get full. They come in on the wind in some stories, and others, they plod through the snow, whisperin' fer help in the voice of folks that gone missin'. In some stories, they come about when the winter's at its coldest, the night at its darkest, and when people at they most desperate. Desperate people might do somethin' best left undone. Turnin' cannibal is to call fer that beast- call fer it right inside yousself."
Looking back to Alice, Sally says, "But in some stories, the Wendigo's always been 'round. Always loomin' in the shadows, waitin' fer cold wind to blow in and bring it back with the winter. Of all the stories ol' Sally the Spaniard told, that was one that never got stale."
Shaking his head, Sally will say, "Iffin' they's somethin' in them woods other than moths and gas-suckers and Big Fuckin' Butchers, maybe it's just an ornery local-type Sasquatch. Maybe it's jus' an old re-tarded crank, 'or a spirit of the Wild Hunt, or maybe it's a large-footed apeman with a bad temper. Givin' that every other local here's an ornery shit head, that would make some sorta sense. I wouldn't bet that somethin' with a trackin' tag round its ankles is a Windigo- since a good number of the stories point out that a Wendigo ain't got much below the knee. But, all the same..."
Sally's voice drops low, "We got more demons stalkin' through these parts than can be healthy for a local soul. We got vampers. We got ghosts choppin' off school girls' paws. We got a bunch prisoners executed by Napalm just over on that island. They's a lot of dead, dark things in these parts now, and we just come through one long, hard winter. We on Indian land. And, I don't think I need to point out that more 'n one of our fellow out-side-ers chaws down on dead folk ev'ry now and then. This here is a bad fuckin' place we in. Like calls to like."
Hopping to his feet, Sally says, "But that ain't our prollum, not yet. Our prollum is flesh and blood. An' most things flesh n' blood is allergic to lead, like anything else. So, if folks want to go wanderin' through the woods lookin' fer Big Feetses, who better to lead 'em than this crew?"
Last edited by
Sally on Wed May 07, 2014 7:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Salvador "Sally" Lautner
GySgt., USMC (ret.)
"All you have is your fire
And the place you need to reach."
LL: Shaw LaMont
5G: Landry Saulteaux
Mad3: Luther Soren Wysen!
IRL: Scott LaTour