Lost Dog Prairie

Tired and hungry, two hunters finished a long day's hunt. After the dogs were tied, the men started the chore of a campfire dinner. As twilight turned to darkness the men already slept. A cold wind blew through the cypress and they moved closer to the fire, knowing by midnight some one would have to get more wood.
 
The dog's collar was worn and the buckle had finally given out. All he had to do was pull on his tie and it would break. Exhausted from the chase he may have never known...
The glow of the camp fire alerted the young buck to danger: fire or man, both were deadly. It turned and ran, only to leave a scent that the cold wind brought to the sleeping dog. The smell of a white tail deer! Instinct took over and the weariness had left. The old hound found himself wanting the chase. The hunters were asleep and the rest of the dogs seemed not to notice the smell of a passing deer. Still the hound rose and to his surprise his collar had set him free. Suddenly the chase was on.A deep sleep had fell on the hunters and the bays of the hound were un-noticed, or passed off as a hunter's dream...
The chill of a winter's night exhilarated the hound. The cuts and bruises on the pad's of his feet weren't anything to him. Through old palmetto roughs and pine islands he had trailed the deer. The smell was getting stronger and his prey was soon to tire. A vast prairie opened in front of the old blue tick. A hint of dawn was in the night's sky as the stars were fading. Fading also, was the trail of the buck. The cuts from many saw palmettos stung his bleeding legs.
The sound of a buggy groaned in the distance. As the scent faded so did the hound's will. He was worn out. The prairie had been home to many of lost dogs and now he was one too... 
He heard the buggy from far away, but he was too give out, too hungry to care. An old man climbed down from his buggy. Faded eyes looked at a lying dog. It's skinny frame and wounded body told the story. The man took a piece of chicken and tossed it down on the buckskin colored prairie grass. Food. Worn as he was, the dog ate. Straw hat and a tooth pick... now that's living. An old man looked down, an old dog looked up. Were they both ghosts? A man whose skin, aged from the sun, eyes faded and warm, a smile that even a tired, hurting dog felt welcoming was looking down at a dog that seemed to old, to tired to be real....

 

Did it really happen? I don't know, but the last time I was in the Everglades, I thought I saw something, A vision, maybe.Sitting by the fire, as the cold winter's wind blew through the cypress, an old man looked at me. With a smile so warm and faded eyes, he bent to pet a dog. The fire sparkled in his eyes and then there was only the bright starry night.

This story provided by Randy Whidden, August 3, 2001, Written in memory of his Grandfather.

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