The Forest of my Mind
by
Wayne F. Burke
I was hiking the Long Trail.
It
was late afternoon when I descended Mount Greylock in the northwest corner of
Massachusetts and nearly dusk when I arrived at my campsite, a sturdy lean-to
in a forest clearing.
Tired to the
point of exhaustion, I lay my sleeping bag out on the shelter floor and
immediately fell asleep.
I was awoke some
time later, by the sound of something, some creature, seemingly eating its way
through the floor of the shelter, gnawing bites out of the wooden structure.
A rabbit?
Beaver? I rapped the floor with my walking stick and the gnawing ceased. I
returned to sleep and was awoke, again, in pitch-black night, by a different
sound: the barking, yip-yapping, of what sounded like dogs. What would dogs be
doing in the middle of the forest? I asked myself. I turned my flashlight on.
Along the lip of
the shelter floor sat a row of lumpish creatures: porcupines! Half a dozen of
them equally spaced along the floor. I stood and lashed the floor with my
stick. The porkies slowly took indifferent notice of me, glancing over their
shoulders before leisurely standing, then slowly ambling, their quills rattling
as they stepped, and dropping down over the floor’s edge.
I turned my light
beam ahead. The sight beyond the shelter shocked me. My blood ran cold. A
congregation of porcupines packed together like spectators at a football
match—as far and wide as my light could reach. A porcupine assembly: whole
families, communities, frolicking, yip-yapping in higher and lower decibels,
some of huge size, the girth of hogs. Their pinhole eyes reflected like stars
in the light’s beam. I would they move, I wondered, en masse, onto the lean-to
floor?
If so, how would I stop
them? I
would be pinioned by their reed-like quills—like a human pin cushion!
I determined to
remain awake the rest of the night. But I was tired—so tired. My eyelids
insisted on closing. I dozed, heavily, for some time. When I came to, I
discovered my flashlight, which I foolishly failed to shut off, had dimmed
considerably. It barely showed the outline of a giant porcupine sitting at the
foot of my sleeping bag, its back to me. The back resembled a bull’s eye of
dark center and dark concentric rings in a circular design.
I beat the floor
furiously. The huge porky slowly took notice of me. Would I have to lash the
thing to move it? What kind of reaction would follow the lash? An attack? A
call to its fellows out front to begin a siege of the shelter? (I knew almost
nothing of porcupines—not even if they could threw their quills or not. (Not.))
The big guy
finally moved, swaying as he walked, a mountain of quills rattling and clicking
together as he sauntered to the floor edge and dropped off.
Starlight had lessened
the eeriness of the black sky by then, but an eerie sight overhead greatly
disturbed me: along the topmost shelter beam, some twenty feet above, a row of
star-y-eyed porcupines, looking down upon me, lined the width of the beam,
their heads side by side. A packed gallery!
Adding to my
disturbance were more porcupine heads along the perpendicular sides of the
shelter. Peeping in at me from the wings!
My flashlight
went dead, leaving me alone in the dark with my prickly audience.
More sleep was
out of the question. I held vigil, lashing the stick down whenever the shadow
of a porky appeared on the floor.
I had a vision
of a porcupine crowd thick as commuters on a big city subway platform. The
crowd inched up onto the shelter floor, moving as one, and ever so slowly,
slowly, quills clicking with each movement, coming closer, closer. . . . The
huge porky who had sat by my feet stood in the crowd’s center: “Fellow
porcupines!” he orated, “Do you wish to be free? Then follow me! Drive this
intruder from our woods!”
I shuddered
awake. The first light of dawn shone—a dull white smear far off over the
mountains.
The yip-yapping
out front slowly lessened, then ceased. The silence was beautiful. The world
had righted itself—so I felt.
In the morning
light I discovered the area around the shelter had been used as a dumping
ground for trash and garbage—the reason, no doubt, for the large gathering of
the porcupine tribe I had slept with and shared the night.
Wayne F. Burke's short stories
have appeared in Punk Noir, Dumpster Press, Bardball,
SAVA Press, The Daily Dope Fiend, Horror Sleaze and Trash,
and elsewhere. He lives in Vermont (USA).