I never even saw it coming. I had spotted a big Buck across the valley, and spent the better part of a day trying to get closer.
The wind was wrong, but I knew the wind would die down later, it always did in these remote canyons. That would give me a chance, if I could just get within a couple of hundred yards and get a clear shot the trophy would be mine.
This fellow was big, I had spotted the rack first, huge. As Whitetail went I knew this was a record or darn close to it.
The record meant nothing to me, I was thinking of the meat. My provisions were getting low, and I was tired of the small fish from the area creeks.
I had left the 4 wheel ATV behind, too noisy. In fact way behind, I was a good 6 to 8 miles deeper into the area and I had ridden it for close to 30 miles. I covered it well, no one would ever find it.
I reached down and felt the compass in my pocket, comforting. Even without that, I would have been completely at ease in the wilderness. It's hard to get lost when there is nothing to go back to.
I spent most of my time making do in the woods, the farther out, the better. I carried a backpack, good gear. I could stay out here for weeks on end, and did quite often.
More than one hunter had gone into this region and never came out. That didn't worry me. What bothered me was pavement, noise. Everybody rushing everywhere, all of them trying to get in front of each other. I tried to fit into that, I really did. But my father took me on his hunting trips, two solid weeks every year as I was growing up.
I learned quickly that I fit in much better as far away from everything as I could get.
I had quit my last job months before, no way could I stand the guy giving orders, telling me to move one box here and another there. I did last three weeks at that one, though.
There were no women in my life. The few that had been were just like ghosts, there for a few days and then gone.
When my Dad passed away, I got the house and his truck, I just sold the house, bought a little ATV. I kept his rifle and gear, found a bank to store the capital and I left.
Nothing was in the city for me, just noise and irritation. Sometimes I would come out, rent a room for a few weeks, just to hunker down for the worst part of the winter. I would then clean up and go find me a woman, another face and name, just passing by.
More ghosts.
Then back to the wilderness.
Now I was sitting behind a rock, scanning the far side of a draw with my scope. There was a small creek down at the bottom that I knew would be a late evening draw. I snugged my heavy jacket close around me to ward off the biting cold and waited.
Then I saw him. He stepped out from some bushes, froze, inspecting the world around him carefully. I could see that huge rack, part of his head and neck.
I held my breath, waiting. He stepped out further, froze again.
Perfect. I sighted, aiming for a spot just below his ear on the side of his neck.
The big animal's head came up, alarmed. I had just started to squeeze the trigger when my head exploded.
I have no idea how long it was before I woke up, my head felt like I had been on a six day drunk.
I tried to look around but my eyes were blurry, finally I managed to focus. There was a plain wooden wall and a beat up old door. Some light was coming in through a filthy window off to the side.
I started to get up but couldn't all the way, something was holding me back by my left arm. I looked down.
What the hell?
There was a strap on my wrist, a chain attached to it. I sat there and stared at that, confused.
Then I realized my other arm was strapped, too, another chain going to the opposite wall.
I tried to reach one wrist with the other hand to pull it loose, the chain drew taut just before I could.
I looked down at my feet, they were bare. My heavy walking boots were gone.
I took in my surroundings, sparse would be too much of a description. The room was small, perhaps no more than ten feet square. There was one door, one window, and a dirt floor. I was sitting on what looked like a pile of hides.
I heard a noise then, someone coming. The door opened, a huge man stood there, the light behind him allowed me to see just his outline.
"Awake, huh?" He stepped in and sat down a bowl of water, turned and started back out.
"Hey, wait! What is this, what the hell is going on?"
"You was trespassing."
Then he was gone.
Trespassing? I knew I was on government property.
I yelled for several minutes to no avail.
I must have slept, because I woke up to the shock of cold water on my face.
It took a few seconds, then I realized a woman squatted there, she was washing my face. I glanced at the rag she had in her hand, it was coming away bloody. I looked at her, she was skinny, her hair stringy and dirty looking. She looked to be perhaps 20 or so.
"Pa sure bonked you a good one." She said.
"Wonder he didn't kill you."
"I have to go to the bathroom."
"OK." She reached down and undid my pants, jerked them down.
"Slide over and go."
"What? Don't you have a...."
"Do it or just mess your pants, up to you."
I had no choice.
She went and got a shovel, scraped some dirt from the floor I had messed, simply tossed it out the open front door.
Then she reached for a wet rag and washed at me some.
She dabbed at me some more, then seeming to be satisfied, she pulled up my clothing.
Then she reached behind her and picked up a bowl.
"Here." She said, shoving what looked like a carved spoon filled with some kind of grey mush at my mouth.
"Eat."
"I don't want that, let me loose."
"Pa won't want you let loose, eat some." She poked the stuff at me again.
I finally opened my mouth, whatever it was was some kind of mashed vegetable and bits of meat. It tasted all right.
She sat and fed me several spoonfuls of the stuff, then picked up the bowl of water and tipped it for me. I sipped some, then drank. I was horribly thirsty.
"What is going on, why am I tied up?" I demanded.
"You was trespassing."
"I was not. This is all federal property around here."
"Not no more." She said.
"Pa and Mom, we staked a claim."
"You can't claim Federal land!"
"Well, we did. Been here for years, nobody ever comes around."
"Except trespassers now and then."
She pushed the bowl of water over closer to me to where I could reach it with one hand.
"You are cuter than the others." She grinned at me as she stood up.