Friday, September 24, 2021

Rest in Peace

Laid out on a small rise just behind a shattered trunk, under the watchful eyes of forest sentinels, the skeleton rests on a bed of moss. No funeral wrappings other than the tender hemlock seedlings pushing up between disarranged bones. Hooves, their soft black sheen evidencing recent attempted flight, and a pelvis, set a bit apart, witness to the savage tearing limb from limb.

The trees gather around this fallen one of theirs. Theirs to feed, shade, protect and, after the grisly picking clean, to grieve. Mute mourners, no hint of blame…just acceptance: this is the way of things in the wild. A doe. And on the other side of a slender, moss-covered sapling, hardly further than the length of an umbilical cord, four tiny hooves and three bones; the rest of her baby small and light enough to carry off to be enjoyed elsewhere.

 

Their branches spreading overhead, spruce and hemlock shelter the gravesite that, months hence, will have disappeared under the soft blanket of the forest floor.






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