“We’ll stop up yonder by that spring,” Amos Stoddard told the six individuals who closely followed him.
Vince was third in line, behind Andrew Chapman, and he watched the VP briefly turn around with this news, a relieved grin on his sweat-stained face. They had been traveling nonstop for a good two hours. From the very start, Amos had established a blistering pace that led them almost due south through some of the most rugged and breathtaking forestland Vince had ever experienced.
During this entire hike, not another human being was encountered.
For the most part, they followed a narrow trail that appeared to be little more than an animal track. No roads, pathways, or habitations of any sort were sighted, with nothing but thick woods stretching for as far as the eye could see.
They passed through a succession of steep valleys. These hollows were thick with trees, and Vince identified several varieties of oak including scarlet, blackjack, and white. Gnarled red cedars clung to the edges of the steep bluffs, while sour gum, walnut, hickory, and maple found a foothold on the rocky slopes.
In the course of their journey they encountered a multitude of wildlife, such as dozens of gray squirrels, several foxes, a raccoon, and an abundance of birds ranging from robins and blue jays to cliff swallows and a flock of noisy turkeys. Bobwhite quail softly called from the underbrush; red-shouldered hawks angrily screeched from above.
Under different circumstances, Vince would have truly enjoyed this wilderness hike. But he found it hard to relax knowing there were three armed men following close on his heels. Both Junior, Tiny, and a scraggly-haired associate named C.J. all carried shotguns. Somewhere in their ranks was Miriam. She appeared to be unarmed, and the last Vince saw of the goodnatured redhead, she was collecting blackberries.
Vince was hungry, tired, and thirsty, and the SATCOM he had decided to lug along didn’t help matters any. He could feel the added strain of the thirty-plus-pound case on his upper arms, shoulders, and back, and several times when they were climbing up a particularly steep ridge, he considered abandoning it.
It was thus with great relief that Vince halted beside the stream that Amos and his dog, Satan, were already drinking from.
Vince thought better of joining them, and he watched as the oldtimer’s son, daughter. Tiny, and C.J. also knelt to drink from the brook.
Andrew Chapman looked longingly at Vince, licked his parched lips, and beckoned toward the clear, gurgling water.
“Sir, I really wouldn’t if I were you,” warned Vince.
“Don’t be scared of the water. This here’s a fresh spring, and I promise that you won’t get sick from it,” offered Miriam.
She scooped up a handful of water and poured it into her open mouth. Vince swallowed heavily, his mouth bone-dry. But even then he stubbornly refused to relent.
After ascertaining that the brook appeared to be emerging from a fracture in the solid rock wall of an overhanging bluff, Andrew Chapman gave in to temptation and bent down to test the water. He dipped his cupped hands into the spring and sniffed it, oblivious to Vince’s continued cautionary words.
“Sir, I was warned by the Forest Service that the fresh water in these parts was unfit to drink.”
“Balderdash!” countered Amos after slaking his thirst and sitting down on a flat boulder.
“I sure hope you don’t believe everything the government tells you. I’ve been drinking from this spring since I was a young pup, and I’ve yet to get sick from it.”
The VP dared to dip his cupped hands into the water once more, and this time he took a tentative sip. He must have liked what he tasted, because he followed this sip with a healthy gulp.
“Come on, Kellogg,” he urged.
“It’s time to start living dangerously. Besides, it’s better than dying from dehydration.”
Vince watched him kneel beside the brook and properly satisfy his thirst. As the VP gratefully soaked his face in the stream, Vince reluctantly succumbed to temptation. The water was cool and smelled fresh, and once he started drinking, it was hard to stop.
“That’s the spirit,” said Amos, who pulled a sausage from his backpack and began slicing off thick pieces with a pocketknife.
“Anyone hungry?” he asked between bites.
Both Vince and the VP hadn’t eaten a thing since an early breakfast. They were ravenous, and after drinking their fill, they readily accepted the oldtimer’s offer.
Vince found the sausage extremely tasty. It was moist and mildly spiced, with a sweet aftertaste. He ate three slices, and Chapman did likewise.
“Does that make them lawbreakers. Pa?” asked Junior, who watched them eat with a mischievous sparkle in his eye.
“What do you mean by that remark?” asked the VP.
Amos laughed.
“Junior was referring to the deer meat that made up your sausage. If you want to go and get technical, you just ate an animal harvested out of hunting season.”
“You mean to say you poached it,” clarified Vince.
Amos offered Vince another slice of sausage, and when he refused it with a disgusted shake of his head, the oldtimer fed it to Satan, saying, “You might call it poaching, but we call it survival. If you haven’t already noticed, there ain’t no grocery stores out here. And even if there were, we wouldn’t have the money to do any shopping. If we want to eat, we have to gather our food right here in the forest.”
“I’m truly sorry that times are so tough for you,” offered the VP.
“But if everyone went into the forest to live off the land as they pleased, we’d kill off all the game and use up the resources in a matter of days. We’re forced to create hunting seasons and game limits to control and preserve the number of animals in wilderness areas such as this one. Why, back in the 1920s, this entire region was an ecological disaster zone. An out-of-control lumber industry stripped these hills bare, while overgrazing, unrestrained hunting, and the use of slash-and-burn techniques for weed control all combined to make this area one of the poorest during the Depression.”
“And even with all your Federal legislation since that time, ain’t we just as poor today as we were back then?” countered Amos.
“It’s not natural for folks who aren’t from these parts to come down here and take our property, while telling us that we no longer can live off the land like our ancestors did. I bet you didn’t know that my pappy once owned a three-hundred-acre tract right off the Eleven Point near Greer Springs. It was prime real estate, and he spent his last dime to create a small canoe rental business there. Me and my kids would be running it today if it wasn’t for the Feds who came down here uninvited and stole our land for pennies on the dollar. That land was all we had, and when it was gone, we had no place to go but these woods.”
“That land was needed to preserve the Eleven Point for generations to come,” replied the VP.
“But what about preserving the rights of me and my family today?” Amos argued.
“As far as I’m concerned, it was the Federal government that illegally chased us off our property, and I’ve got the full right to take all the deer, fish, and other wildlife I might need to keep on living.”
Vince didn’t like the direction that this conversation was headed in, and he tried his diplomatic best to change the subject.
“Will we be able to reach Freeman Hollow by dark?”
“What do ya mean reach, Bubba?” answered Junior.
“We’re there.”
Vince scanned the forest surrounding them with renewed interest.
Thick stands of red oak made viewing difficult, and he dared to bring up a subject that had caught his ear earlier.
“When you were talking about this hollow back at your campsite, what did you mean by the Tater Hill swamp lights?