Summer of the Wolves (14 page)

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Authors: Polly Carlson-Voiles

BOOK: Summer of the Wolves
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Everything felt different after that first time running free with Khan on the Big Island. It was the third week of June, and the pup was putting on a half-pound to a pound of weight a day. Although it was becoming harder to get him to hold still enough in the sling scale to get his accurate weight. Dave came to give the first vaccinations. Khan was eating mostly meat now and exploring everything, climbing and chewing. The curious pup had begun to damage things in the screen porch so Elinor had decided he should spend his nights in the larger pen from now on. The pup volunteers would bring sleeping bags and spend nights on the ground.

Keeping track of the pup's fast development, Nika rarely thought about Pasadena anymore. When she did remember, it was like a familiar video she kept in a drawer, one she knew she could play whenever she wanted. But more and more, Pasadena seemed almost like another planet. What was real was running back from the outhouse feeling the cool wet slap of dewy grass on her legs, the scents of pine and decayed wood. It was all so different from a smoggy morning in Pasadena, where the air smelled like flowers, dust, fruit, lawn mowers, air scorched by overheated car engines, and sun on pavement.

Here, everything was new and wild.

 

That week went by quickly. On Friday, Nika traveled through the kitchen and smiled at Pearl, accepting an egg sandwich to take in her backpack. She felt jittery and confident today, as if she were at the beginning of a race, or about to take a test when she knew the answers. Today would be their fifth secret jaunt together to the Big Island. Every time it was better. Khan always stayed right with her. She could hardly wait to go again today

 

One day the wolf heard scraping on the rocks. Loud men got out of a boat. After they left, she bent her legs and approached the place where they had been. Heads and parts of fish were piled on the long flat ledge of granite. Eagles dropped down to grab bits of fish. She curled her lips up from her teeth and rushed at the large birds. It was not much, but she ate.

Chapter Twelve

Will and Abby were full of tales about how Khan had slept underneath the stuffed bear again, how he didn't seem to care that most of his rangy black body now stuck out. They showed her digital pictures and reported that he hadn't eaten much, even though they had mixed his favorite ingredients together with ground moose donated by a hunter. They said they didn't get a weight because he wouldn't hold still in the sling scale. Will handed Nika the clipboard with Khan's weight chart and behavioral observations.

“See you on Monday,” called Abby as they let themselves out. “Isn't Tuesday the day Ian comes home from St. Paul?”

“Yeah,” Nika called back. “See you guys!”

Just three days until Ian was due back.

 

Khan was exploding with energy today. He ran to the lookout rock in the pen, circled it, and jetted back, his black body plunging into a full-out run. When he finally came to her, he tugged at Nika's shoelaces. She rolled him onto his back with her hand on his chest between his front legs. “No, Khan,” she said. Nika had learned to use her hand firmly, like a jaw (a feeble one, compared to a mother wolf, of course). When Khan stopped squirming and submitted, she rubbed his belly, then pulled the leg of a deer from her bag. He grabbed it, leaped to his feet, shook it, and ran with it. There was no meat on it, so it was mostly a toy. After a few minutes of running and flailing the leg, he dug a hole, placed the deer leg in it, and carefully shoveled dirt over one end with his nose, using a quick nodding motion. He looked proud, as though he'd gone to pup school and he was the best in the class at caching.

When Khan seemed to wear down a bit, Nika opened the gate. He flew down the path they always took. Today for the first time she felt a flash of fear as he disappeared from sight. He ran so fast! When she got to the sand spit, he was lying in the water drinking and dipping his nose in up to his eyes, watching a minnow.

“Good boy, Khan pup,” she said, making a click sound with her tongue to attract his attention. He bounded out, shaking off the water from head to tail tip, soaking her. Then they started up the path side by side. Each time they ran together, Nika felt as if she were in a dream, going up a trail in the middle of nowhere with a baby black wolf at her side. How could this really be happening?

When they reached the top of the path, Khan's ears shot forward, and before she could speak, he stretched his lanky body and was gone in seconds, into the heavy growth of shrubs, wildflowers, and young trees. He was more confident now and wanted to explore on his own. He was probably chasing a red squirrel. He'd be back. Nika continued on their usual route to the clearing above the beach. He'd probably get there before she did.

When she reached the rendezvous spot, Nika looked at her watch. It was nine a.m. By ten she was pacing, watching every flicker of light or change in the shadowed green of the woods. Could a baby wolf get lost? From her reading, Nika knew that wolf pups would follow their mom to a rendezvous spot when they were about eight weeks old, where an older pack member would sometimes stay with them like a babysitter. Khan was over ten weeks old. She'd assumed he would return to their spot.

But by ten-thirty she was calling his name every few minutes and talking extra loud so he could hear her voice. Icy fear sent prickles through her body. What if Khan were injured? It was time to go look for him. She pictured Ian coming home from St. Paul and finding the pup missing.

What could be dangerous to the pup on this island? She had no idea. Maybe other wolves, but she didn't know of any. The only other animal she knew of on the Big Island was a bear. Would a bear hurt a wolf pup? Maybe.

Nika decided to howl. She headed back toward the spot where Khan had disappeared, howling the loudest and longest howl she could produce. Ian had told her wolves could hear each other up to six miles away, sometimes up to ten miles over open land, depending on conditions. Was Khan's hearing developed well enough to hear her? She hoped so. Perhaps wind in the trees blocked her feeble human attempts to copy what she'd learned was a pup-locating howl—very high in pitch. She howled from the tops of rocks, from openings in the woods. She hiked in the direction of the Camerons' but didn't want to get too close. Then she headed down to the uninhabited end of the island. She bushwhacked through tangles of raspberry and serviceberry bushes, tripped on downed logs hidden in low-growing plants. When she reached a rocky point on the far end of the island, she sat down and looked across the water. Could he have decided to swim? He might have fallen into a pit. Or maybe someone had set traps on this island. Then there was Bristo and his boat and that thought made her feel worst of all.

She was in a galloping panic as she tried another route back to the rendezvous area. Her howl was now thin and scared-sounding. Trembly. Smells of sweet fern erupted as she crushed them with her boots. She howled and walked, howled and walked. She began to feel fear shutting down her muscles. She stopped to calm herself, then she howled again.

Suddenly, from beyond the trees, she heard an answering howl. She cupped her ears with her hands. Another howl. Khan! But it wasn't Khan, no high-pitched puppy howls and yips—it was too long and low. Then there was a yodel at the end. A person. She heard it again, closer. Could Elinor be looking for them? She decided to walk toward the sound. Even Elinor would be a happy sight right now. She might be mad, but she would help.

Suddenly there was a snapping of branches, and a small dog shot out of the bushes and ran wildly up to her. Zeus! She squatted down to ruffle the little dog's fluffy coat but kept her eyes on the woods where he'd come from.

More crashing, and Thomas emerged, holding a walking stick in one hand, his backpack hanging loosely from one shoulder.

“Thought you might need the cavalry,” he said with a lopsided smile. “So I went to Pearl's and borrowed Zeus.”

He stood gazing at her, his lean tan body relaxed but seeming ready to move. Dressed in blue jeans and a white T-shirt, he looked at her from under the visor of his red baseball cap.

“I can't believe this, Thomas! I really messed up.” Nika sat back in the undergrowth and held her hands over her eyes.

Thomas remained very still, waiting. Zeus nuzzled her arm.

“How did you know?” Nika asked, uncovering her eyes and patting the small dog.

“Well, let's guess.” Thomas took his baseball cap off and slapped it back on again. “Wild howling all over the island. I could even hear it over the wind. And, no offense, not like real wolf howling. More like human-pretending-to-be-wolf howling. I was trying to sneak up on that bear to catch a photo. I was trying to be very, very quiet. Then, howling. On and on. An hour of howling like that, and it didn't take a nuclear physicist to figure out that you'd lost Khan.”

“But how did you know I even had him here?”

“I've seen you before. I figured it was kind of a secret, so I just stayed away.”

“Can you help me find him?”

“Sure. But next time you bring him, want my advice?”

“Yeah. Well, what?” She felt a little edgy. He was rubbing it in.

“Bring me. More is better.”

“So what do you think happened?” Nika smiled at Thomas.

“Probably he ran into something that scared him, like a porcupine, or maybe the bear, and just hunkered down. Maybe Zeus can find him.”

Thomas whistled, then called to Zeus, “Where's the pup, Zeus? Find the pup! Find Khan!”

The little dog looked up at the word “find” and immediately did a nosedive into the undergrowth. A wagging black tail above the carpet of green signaled his progress. They scrambled to keep up.

Zeus climbed higher on the island, over lots of downed trees and steep rock hills.

“I never even go up here,” Thomas said, breathing hard. “Hold up,” he said, “I smell something.” He stopped. “Skunk. Now, that is one animal I'd like to avoid.”

Even Zeus sat down as if he were saying to himself,
Been there, done that, no way.

Up higher above the crest of a bare rock face, leaves and branches were shaking. The gurgling croak of a raven came from a tree nearby.

“Uh-oh. Get ready to run,” Thomas said, looking downhill at the tangled way they'd come.

“I don't think running is one of our options. Flying, maybe,” said Nika, her eyes following his.

Just then Zeus leaped forward into the undergrowth in the direction of the movement.

“No, Zeus, leave it!” shouted Thomas.

But Zeus didn't. There was a stirring of leaves and rustling just out of their sight. Holding their noses, they braced themselves.

“This could be bad,” said Thomas.

Zeus came romping out of the undergrowth with Khan right behind him. The smell of skunk floated around Khan in a balloon of tainted air.

“Khan! Khan-boy!” exclaimed Nika, excited at first, then forced to hold her nose. “Oh, brother.” She knelt down to briefly greet Khan, wanting him to feel welcome but not wanting to spend a lot of time up close and personal. Her eyes burned from the stench. “It seems to be mostly on his back end, like he decided to get out of there, but too late.” Khan whimper-whined and whirled in greeting.

“Pearl knows what to do,” Thomas said, beginning the steep descent, hurrying away from the stinky pup.

Nika followed quickly, with Zeus and Khan falling into line.

 

And Pearl did. She had dealt with this problem many times over the years. She made a mixture of peroxide, baking soda, and dog shampoo and carried it up to the hill pen.

“Better let me do this.” She put Khan between her legs with his back end sticking forward, dumped the solution on the smelliest spot, and rubbed it in. “Okay, Nika, look how he loves to grab the water coming out of the hose. Keep spraying him, let him play, then spray him some more, aiming at his backside. If we need to, we'll do it again.”

Two hours later the smell was mostly gone, but a trace shadowed Khan, hovering where he rested like a swarm of gnats.

Pearl returned to the house to start dinner. During the whole process she had not asked one word about why Khan had encountered the skunk. While Khan rolled in the dirt and dug in his cooling spot, Thomas and Nika sat across the pen from him, side by side, swatting at mosquitoes.

“Thanks, Thomas,” Nika said. Thomas was her first new friend in forever. In some ways she had always felt more comfortable with boys as friends. Olivia felt that way, too. It was one thing they had in common. Boys were more matter of fact, not always thinking about other people's business. And it was nice how they didn't need to talk every minute.

“Thanks for helping,” she repeated, tearing up some weeds.

Then as if the idea had dropped from the sky, she said, “Do you think I could ever keep Khan, you know, as a pet, sort of? “ It was a question she hadn't dared ask anyone.

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