away, as if to say there might be more to the story.
âSo you followed it?â Jack asked. His fingers were still stiff and painful, and his feet still felt like slabs of frozen beef. The cold had gotten down deep inside of him, and no matter how hot the fire, he felt like he would never get warm.
âWe followed it,â Jim echoed.
âWe did nothing of the sort,â Merritt grumbled. He gave a murmur of dissatisfaction and stared at Jack. âWhen I say the wolf wasnât there, thatâs precisely what I mean. There were no tracks. No sign of the wolf at all, as ifâ¦â
He trailed off.
Jim wouldnât look at either of them. Heâd set about cleaning his glasses with the edge of his sleeve.
âThen how did you find me?â Jack asked, inching closer to the stove even as he stared at the flecks of gold and green in Merrittâs eyes.
âA shadow in the forest, thatâs all,â the big man replied. âJim will tell you it was the wolf, but I didnât see anything but its eyes and its shadow. It kept ahead of us, pausing to wait when we fell behind. It wasnât long before it led us right to you. When we saw all that blood, and the rabbits and such all torn up, we were sure youâd been mauled by a bear.â
Jim got up and dusted off the seat of his pants. âThereâd been new snow. It covered the tracks. The wolf led us to you.â He turned his back and walked away.
Jack and Merritt exchanged a glance, but they didnât talk any more about it. Neither of them had any desire to do so.
Â
The weeks passed, and Jackâs rescue seemed to mark a turning point in their fortunes. Their supplies stilldwindled to almost nothing, but hunting trips were more often successful than not. And several times when theyâd gone days without fresh meat, one of the men found a wounded rabbit or squirrel somewhere close to the cabin, leaving a bloody trail in the snow as it crawled away from whatever had wounded it. As soon as Jack felt well enough, and the cold no longer felt as though it ate at his bones, he resumed his daily walk. This time, however, he did not wander from camp in an attempt to make contact with his observer. To his great confusion, and a mixture of relief and strange sadness, the feeling of being watched had significantly abated, existing on the periphery of his mind. If the wolfâthe creature he had come to think of as his spirit guideâwas still with him, it did not deign to show itself or to make itself known in any other way. From time to time he would hear distant howls, but he felt no shiver of recognition. They were ordinary wolves trying to survive the white silence, no different from Jack, Merritt, and Jim.
Some days he walked up to the spot where his friends had discovered himâthe patch of snow-covered earth where Jack felt certain he had actually died, if only for a handful of minutes. Yet no trace remained of the event itself. New snow had long since blanked out the bright crimson of the blood, and though he tried several times to dredge up a dead rabbit, hare, or wolverine by dragginghis boots through the snow, he never came up with even a bone. Merritt and Jim had been far too superstitious to eat any of the meat on those animals, so Jack knew that his companions had not removed the carcasses. Yet the spot seemed untouched, somehow cleansed. If the others had not discovered him there and seen the dead animals for themselves, he would have thought the long winter had taken a terrible toll on his mind.
When first weeks and then months had elapsed since that day, his routine had become little more than exercise. He made his body work to keep himself limber, though as their supplies had decreased, they had all grown weaker. Now, on the day they had gauged as the first of April, he could move his teeth, loosened by scurvy, around in his mouth. They had no mirror, and for that he was glad. He wouldnât have
William Manchester, Paul Reid