A shadow of movement zipped across the forest floor. Peter
tried to convince himself it was his imagination. He stared at that spot for
thirty more seconds. Nothing. He listened. If the turkey had indeed quietly
closed the distance as his father said, he might hear it rustling. His father
had stopped calling and his quiet stillness seemed impossible for Peter to
mimic. The boy tried, but caught himself fidgeting every few minutes. The stern
reprimand he expected never came. His father did not make a sound. His father
did not move.
Finally,
Peter heard a whisper. “Get ready.”
Peter gently
lifted his shotgun to peer down the barrel and a turkey gobbled so close it
seemed he could feel his veins vibrate. Peter jerked back in surprise and had
to stop himself from calling out to his father. He wanted to ask where it was.
He wanted to tap his father on the shoulder, but he was afraid to move. His father
had told him not to.
Peter
listened to the silence. He knew birds had to be chirping. He knew squirrels
were probably chattering somewhere. He knew the breeze must be rustling the
leaves overhead, but he wanted to hear the turkey and in his focus on that, it
was only the silence that registered in his ears.
He tried to look at his father
beside him without moving his head, but could only tell for sure that he was
there. He could not tell which direction his father was looking in. Peter had
been told that a turkey might see him blink, so he sat there listening, staring
into the brush ahead of him, and trying to subdue his trembling with slow
breaths. It was not working.
He heard a rustle. There was
movement to his right. At least, he thought there was.
“Shoot,” his father whispered.
Peter pulled his head away from the
stock just long enough to see the turkey strutting to his right. He swung the
barrel and fired too quickly. The turkey slapped its wings into the dirt and
stumbled, but in a moment was up and running.
Peter’s father grabbed the boy’s
sleeve near the shoulder and pulled him up. “We have to get him before he gets
away. Don’t reload and stay close.” His father ran after the wounded bird.
Excited, startled and a bit
confused, Peter hesitated before opening the chamber to verify his 20-gauge was
unloaded. Then he jump to his feet and sprinted after his dad, making sure to
keep the shotgun pointed in a safe direction.
His father had increased the
distance between them and was now entering the brush line. Just as Peter was a
ready to crash head first into the bushes, he saw a turkey rush by through a
small opening into the woods to his left. It looked to Peter as if it were
limping.
“Dad,” he half-whispered, half-yelled.
His dad could not have heard him running through the brush. If he chased down
his father, they would surely lose the tom. But if he chased down and finished
off the wounded bird, his father would be proud of him. His father hated
wounding game. Peter could imagine his father’s reaction when he realized they
had lost the turkey. Following the turkey would be a direct disobedience to his
father’s direction. But he had seen the turkey go into the woods. His father
was leading him in the opposite direction. Peter had to get the turkey. It was
important. And just like that, he chose to follow the wild bird. His father
would soon realize what happened and be right behind him. If not, Peter could
find him later.
After
five minutes running in the direction the turkey had led him, Peter stopped to
listen for it. He heard nothing, but was certain the turkey went in the
direction he was headed. How far could it actually go if it was wounded? He
pressed on a bit further but at a slower, more cautious pace.
If he
could just get the turkey. His father would be proud. He would finally be a
true turkey hunter. His bird would be the one his father smoked for all the
neighbors to enjoy. And he would be sure to tell them it was his when they commented
on how it tasted. It would be his turkey, his success, his glory. He just had
to get that turkey. He had to find it. He had to.
After
another ten minutes chasing shadows and rustling sounds, Peter’s stomach began
to burn with nervousness. He had not seen or heard the turkey at all since
chasing after it. Now, what he saw or heard seemed only half-real. He realized had
no idea where he was. Worse than all of that, he had no idea where his father
was. His father—whom he had disobeyed.
Fear, confusion, and shame seemed
to consume him from the inside.
As he
stood there wanting to cry, he realized he was chasing a shadow. He should have
never left his father. He should have never went his own way. What if he could
not find his way back? What if his father could not find him in time? What if
he had to spend the night alone in the woods? His father would be angry. Peter
was afraid of being found. But he was more afraid of not being found.
The
woods no longer held the promise of adventure. Now, the shadows seemed to move
toward him—a creeping darkness threatening to engulf him. What had he done? He
fell to his knees and shouted. “Dad! Dad! I need you!”
There
was no answer. How far had they run apart from each other? Peter searched for a
clue to where he was. Each tree was different, but contained a sameness Peter
could not decipher. And the brush was like an unending tangle of branches and leaves and thorns.
Which way had he come from? Which way was the road? Which way was his father?
Peter
took off running in the direction he thought was right. After a few branches
slapped him in the face, he stopped. Was this the right direction? How could he
know? His father had mentioned something about going to the west. That would be
toward where the sun had just set. He ran a few yards, but the branches seemed
to be reaching out for him, so he slowed down. A few minutes later, darkness
had overwhelmed everything.
Peter
called for his father again. Then he dropped to his knees and began to whimper.
A cold crept around the edges of his neck. It felt as if it slithered around
his shoulders. All he could think was that he did not want to die. “Daddy,
where are you?” he said more to himself than anything else.
He
heard it first through his own sniffling, but it was so quiet he thought he
must have imagined it. Had someone actually said his name? He tried to subdue
his breathing and listen to the silence.
For some time, it seemed he could only hear the sound of his own breath.
Something
rustled to his right. It sounded like a growl at first, but ended in something like
a hiss. He knew coyotes hunted at night. He imagined snakes and spiders and monsters
from nightmares he thought he had forgotten.
Peter closed his eyes and started
to weep. “I’m sorry, Daddy,” he whispered. “I’m so sorry.”
From
the opposite direction, he heard something else.
“Peter!” This time it was loud and
familiar. He opened his eyes to see a light shining toward him. “I’m here,
Peter. It’s okay.”
A
moment later, his father consumed him in an embrace. Peter’s fear and shame and
confusion evaporated. In that moment, nothing else in the world existed for
Peter but his father’s love.
That
knowledge, that clarity, changed everything.
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