Black River
thought about that as he set out at dawn to find a man who could only be found if he wanted to be found. O’Brien didn’t know if Billie was home. He never did. Billie didn’t have a phone. He didn’t own a computer. O’Brien wasn’t sure if Billie drove a car. He did own a canoe. His universe—the natural world, was larger than the World Wide Web, but far removed from social networking. The tweets he paid attention to come from birdsong in the cypress trees near the St. Johns River. Even among the Seminole Indians, Billie, full-blooded Seminole, was a mystery. He’d spend time with family on the reservation in South Florida, but he kept his distance from the casinos owned by the tribe and controlled by a select few within the tribe.
    Their paths first crossed one summer morning when O’Brien was working at the end of his dock, repairing some boards. He looked up and spotted Billie in the distance, bronze face shadowed under a wide-brimmed hat, walking in chest-deep water, tapping the river bottom with a wooden pole. Between the pole and his bare feet, Billie would find and retrieve ancient arrowheads from the river mud. He was undaunted and seemed impervious to the possibility of being pulled beneath the water by alligators, some more the thirteen feet long and weighing over a thousand pounds.
    O’Brien thought about that as he drove back in time down the winding gravel road leading to Highland Park Fish Camp. He thought about Billie’sconstant awareness of the natural presence honed from biology of survival, from a DNA helix spiraled by endurance and inherited from the collective souls of the elders, the handed-down genes of a shaman.
    The old fish camp was a throwback to Florida of the 1950’s, timeworn cabins with screened-in porches, Airstream trailers anchored beneath live oaks cloaked with pewter beards of Spanish moss. O’Brien could hear the muffled sound of a boat motor on the river in the distance. There was the scent of wood smoke, fresh pine needles, and damp moss in the still air.
    It was in the most remote section of the fish camp where Joe Billie lived, away from fishermen and families renting cabins for long weekends on the water. His trailer sat on cinderblocks beneath pines and oaks, the decades-old Airstream’s traditional polished exterior now covered in age spots from time, tree sap, and roosting birds. To the left of the trailer, a canoe was turned upside down, perched on logs a foot off the ground.
    O’Brien parked and got out, Max scampering from the Jeep’s open door, squatting to pee near a rotting tree limb covered in salmon pink mushrooms. “Max, let’s go see if Joe’s home.” She cocked her head, sniffed the mushrooms, and trotted behind O’Brien down a pine straw path to the trailer’s front door.
    O’Brien knocked. Silence coming from the trailer. There was the chortle of two ravens flying over the pines in the indigo blue sky, the birds making a half circle high above O’Brien before heading toward the river. An acorn dropped from an oak and bounced off the trailer’s roof. In the distance, rifle shot echoed across the river somewhere in the Ocala National Forest.
    “What brings you to my place in the woods?”
    O’Brien turned around and smiled. Joe Billie, six-two, notched brown face with a hawk nose, could look O’Brien directly in the eye. And he did. He wore faded jeans, black T-shirt and a wide-brim, fawn-colored hat. In his left hand he carried a paperback novel. Billie grinned and squatted as Max ran up to him, her tail wagging, eyes bouncing. He lifted her up in one large brown hand. He held her against his wide chest and said, “I will never forget the time Max had her first encounter with that big rattlesnake. She showed no fear.”
    O’Brien smiled. “I believe she thought the rattle was a toy.”
    “She’ll know better next time.”
    “How’ve you been, Joe?”
    “Okay. You?”
    “Good.”
    “I rarely see you when things are good, Sean.”

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