When Hunter becomes Prey
Copyright 2024 PostScriptor
Comments at the end.
~~~*~~~
Pete Pearson was never happier than when he was hunting in some remote wilderness area, alone, or with a guide or companion. There was something primeval about the very act of tracking, stalking and finally harvesting a wild animal. Although in the 'civilized' world of the 21st century there was no longer a strict necessity for a man to venture into the forest and bring home meat for the family, the hunt reminded Pete of how the world had been -- for many people, even into the 20th century.
Those who distain and belittle the hunter, he reflected, misunderstand the close connection between the man and his prey. The hunter studies and observes the ways of the animals he hunts, more closely than the city dweller would think possible, and he holds nature in a special awe. Looking at the trophies on his walls, Pete felt an almost atavistic urge to pay homage to the animal spirits. He had knelt beside these animals in the field, wishing their souls good speed putting a sprig of a tree branch into the mouth.
Pete looked up, leaving his musings behind, to see his wife and the twentyish young man with lanky dirty blond hair, dressed in faded camouflage clothing, entering the great room in his lodge at the foot of the mountains in northern Colorado.
"Are you 'bout ready, Mr. Pearson?" the young man asked.
"Almost, Randy," Pete replied, "I just need to pop into town to pick up another box of ammunition. Won't take but forty minutes. Why don't you just wait here for me."
Pete turned and kissed his wife, not a deep lover's kiss, but not just a perfunctory peck, either.
"You hold the fort here, Jean?" he teased, looking at his wife's face, framed by the shoulder length brown hair. He smiled at her, and she smiled back.
"I can 'hold the fort', but if you don't get going, you sure won't bring home that trophy elk you've wanted!" she teased back.
"Okay, Okay, I'm going," he said laughing and turning towards the kitchen, leaving by the back door of the cabin into the pre-dawn darkness.
"Anyway, I have my trophy elk already; I'm just going for meat this year. To my taste, there is no better game meat than elk."
He was about half-way to the meadow where he parked his old 4-wheel drive utility vehicle, when a thought struck him. He was suddenly sure that he had picked up some ammo in the Spring that would do for his hunt. Instead of continuing, he turned towards the barn, which had once-upon-a-time been painted bright red, but now looked more like a faded rust color. He didn't have any livestock on his small place, the remnant of what had at one time been a large ranch, so the barn was used for storage and as a workshop. And in one corner, he kept his shooting supplies in a set of old cabinets that had been in the kitchen of the ranch house before he remodeled the place.
Sure enough, when he opened the doors on the cabinet that held his various ammunition and reloading supplies, there was a box of twenty.300 Winchester Magnum (typically called "300 win mag") cartridges that he'd purchased earlier in the year. At the time, he'd picked up two identical boxes of the ammo, but had used part of one up sighting in the scope for the lighter weight bullet.
In Africa and Alaska, he'd shot 300 grain bullets; for elk in Colorado, he was going down to a 270 grain bullet. Even that was a little bit of overkill for an elk. He thought that he should dig out his.30-'06 and a box of 180 grain ammo, which would be more than enough.
He'd grown fond of his.300 win mag during his African safari. It had more recoil than his.30-'06--even with a muzzle brake and recoil pad--and it cost a fortune to shoot. On the plus side, if he found himself face-to-face with a bear rushing towards him, one who wanted to contest ownership of his elk, the rifle would take care of the situation.
He had a Kodiak Brown Bear rug on the bedroom floor of the cabin that would attest to that. They'd had a disagreement over a moose, and knowing that he couldn't outrun a charging bear, Pete had stood his ground relying on his rifle. Luckily, he'd had a bear tag in addition to the moose on the hunt, so he ended up with a moose head and shoulder mount on the wall, looking down on the bear rug on the floor.
Still, after debating the merits of the.30-'06 and the.300 win mag with himself, he'd had decided to take his lightweight.300 win mag instead. It was an effective round further out; with it's flat trajectory, 500-yard shots weren't uncommon.
Pete was pretty pleased with himself as he walked briskly back up to the cabin, having saved himself an additional trip into town, and taking less than five minutes instead of forty.
He was about to open the kitchen door and walk back into the cabin when he chanced to glance through the glass window next to the door. He was taken aback, sure that he was seeing things, that his eyes had deceived him.
He looked again, this time carefully peering into the window to reveal as little of himself as possible, and it confirmed what he'd seen the first time.
His wife, Jean, was standing in the great room, visible through the kitchen, with her flannel shirt open, her breasts exposed, allowing that pissant Randy to fondle them.
As Pete watched, they disappeared from view, and he took the opportunity to remove his boots and silently slip into the kitchen. From there he could hear them as they spoke.
"Oh, you like those don't you, Randy?" came Jean's voice. Randy made a muffled sound.
"Yes, suck on my titties, I just love that," she continued.
Pete found himself frozen into immobility, unable to believe what he was hearing.
"Okay, now lean back and let me take care of that fine tool of yours," she declared, followed by the sounds of clothing rustling.
Pete took a chance and peeked out enough to see a reflection in the opposite window, revealing his wife and Randy sitting on the couch, his wife's shirt still open with her breasts exposed, and Randy with his pants down, as his wife was using her hand on the young man's cock.
Pete shook his head because there was something wrong with this whole scene, but then Jean began talking to Randy, as she stroked his tool.
"Now remember, this hunt is just right for the little 'accident' we've been talking about. If Petey doesn't come back from this trip, then you and I can be together. Then you'll fuck my pussy anytime you want to. I'll suck your cock and even swallow, when you want me to. Forever. Do you understand?"
"Jean," Randy asked, although thinking was increasingly difficult for him as he approached his climax, "why don't you just divorce him? Why do I have to kill him? Pete's not a bad guy."
"I've explained all of this before, you silly man. If I divorce Petey, he will keep all the money. There is this paper, called a 'Prenuptial Agreement' that lets Pete put me out into the cold with nothing. But if there is an 'accident', then WE get his money, and WE get to be together. Do you understand now?" she explained as if to a five-year old. "We can't be together unless we have the money. And you want to be together with me, don't you, honey? And we'll need the money to set up your guide business."
"Yes, yes, yes," Randy exclaimed, although whether he was answering Jean's question, or because he was climaxing all over Jean's hand wasn't clear.
"Good," Jean replied, choosing to take his words as an affirmative answer.
Pete retreated, once again silently slipping through the door, this time to go back outside, where he slipped his boots back onto his feet, ran to his 4X4, and drove into town. Although he didn't need the ammo for his rifle, he did need to make a private call from his office.
On the drive into town, he was still in shock, but as always, he was a realist. The woman who he thought he was so lucky to have found had suddenly revealed herself. She was not the soulmate that he had thought she was. She was a gold digger, an evil pretended. A grifter.
His whole world shifted in an instant.
~~~*~~~
Pete was physically an average man--in looks, in coloring, in weight and height. Neither a superstud, nor a loner or nerd, Pete was, on the other hand smart, hardworking, loyal, and, in most things he ever tried, successful.
Pete Pearson had grown up in a middle-class home, his father an aerospace engineer, his mother stayed at home. Not truly rural, they lived in what one might call a 'sparse suburban' area, made up of two- and three-acre plots with houses, which would allow some limited farm animals. Most of the neighborhood was filled to people devoted to horses, well enough off, as it were, not to be worried about raising more practical livestock such as cattle or pigs. His father accepted the hour-long commute to work every day as a reasonable price to pay for the life experience that it allowed his family.