30 Fall, 511 From his stance behind the thick trunk of an elm, Hess watched the yearling buck as it grazed on the scrubby grass. Silently, he drew in a deep breath, then held it as he made a minute adjustment to the angle of his bow. As silently, he drew, and waited a fraction of a second before he would release the arrow to fly across the clearing and into the deer’s side, and, hopefully, straight into its heart. In that fraction of a second, he heard a crack, and the deer reared its head, and leapt in that same moment. Hess’ eyes widened in both surprise and irritation, but his look turned to one of disbelief as he saw an arrow pierce the buck anyway, though the trajectory was more from the front, and the shaft protruded from the jumping animal’s breast. In mid-leap, it dropped in its track, the shot a near perfect one, though not from a preferred angle. At the exact same moment, another deer bounded into the clearing, and Hess, with the instincts of years of training, immediately drew a bead on the path of this second, moving animal and loosed his arrow. It flew true, but his aim was off by a fraction and the arrow lodged in the deer’s mid-drift, right behind the ribs. With a short curse, Hess jumped into the clearing, his intent being to follow the now fatally wounded, but still ambulatory, animal, as it bounded away into the trees. As he was half way across the small open space, two others appeared at the fringes of the clearing as well. One, the hunter who had shot the buck, and the other, a smallish black bear, most probably the source of both the snapping branch and the second deer’s flight. Like Hess, the bear, perhaps two years old or so, was running, right towards him. What the other vague figure was up to, Hess couldn’t tell, as it had passed out of his peripheral vision for the moment and now every fiber of his body and brain were focused on the bear that was charging at him. |