"BOY!"
Crap! Pa's in a bad mood. Since mama left, I'm his punching bag. I should run away and join mama.
"Boy, get dressed and git after that gray wolf scaring the chickens. Damn thing comes around every night, and I miss having eggs for breakfast."
"Are you coming with me, Pa?"
"Went hunting yesterday, boy. You're nineteen; grow a pair."
Once dressed for the cold, I grabbed my rifle off the wall. On the back porch, I tied on my snowshoes.
Heading down the path toward the woods, I followed wolf tracks on six inches of fresh snow covering a foot of slush.
I mumbled, "These paw prints are huge. I best keep my wits about me."
I tried to be vigilant, but my thoughts wandered to mama.
Since Pa was fired last year for drinking on the job, he's been a bastard. Beating mama with his belt was probably the last straw for her. What she said while I carried her suitcase to the car scared me.
"I'd take you with me, but he'd probably follow and kill us both. Bide your time and run when you can."
A branch snapped ahead of me, and I froze.
Silence.
Nothing moving.
"Damn, I need to focus."
By my watch, an hour had passed, but with the meandering trail and wearing snowshoes, I probably hadn't walked a mile yet.
I continued following the wolf tracks, and they veered onto a smaller path to the left. It was a tight squeeze, but I could push through them easily.
A small meadow opened up, maybe fifty feet across, with five paths branching off in different directions. I followed the wolf down the second trail to the right. A thicket of vines with small thorns filled the path, scratching my face and sticking to my jacket. My breathing was labored, and I was sweating. Pausing, I unzipped my outer coat and continued moving forward.