
Nobody knows how he got to the Mt.
Baker Snoqualmie National Forest. It’s a mystery. He didn’t explain. Maybe he
was sick of the animosity between Man and Hairy Man where he came from. Maybe
he swam. It’s not beyond the bounds of possibility. After all, his kind do swim
mighty distances, going from island to island up there where he was born.
It’s a good thing he was solid
black. If someone had spotted him in the water they might have assumed they were
looking at a very large sea lion, or maybe that they had seen the flash of
an Orca in the water. As it happens, we must surmise that he came ashore
somewhere remote on the coast and started walking inland and then up hill.
Did he have a name? Did he know any
human language? Maybe that will all come out as his history proceeds.
He waded upstream in rivers,
avoiding highways and houses, slipping silently always upward. Sometimes he
walked straight up the flanks of mountain sides.
One evening, he began to hear music.
He was not familiar with music, but he knew voices when he heard them. There
was also a strange sound binding the words he heard together with a kind of
cord of sound. He was curious.
As he came closer, he saw a fire
burning, and he smelled food. Cooked food such as made in the homes of humans.
But gathered around the fire were folk such as himself, however lighter in color
and somewhat smaller in stature than himself. To say that he was intrigued is
to say nothing at all.
What he saw was an upright creature
somewhat like a large wolf in form, making the sound with his mouth on a small
object he held in his hand. He had a bag tied to his waist. The voices he heard
interspersed with the music belonged to two Forest people. One was a smallish
dumpy-looking guy, and the other was a female, a grandmotherly looking female.
Watching them, seated on sections of
fallen tree trunk were a more imposing looking male, a motherly looking female,
and a small light haired child. A white wolf and two big cats completed the
group.
The strange sounds, the odd calling
nature of it seemed to be a demonstration of some sort. The people around the
fire didn’t speak over it and seemed very happy with what they were hearing. He
came closer, doing his best to stay beyond the light of the fire, and to not
make noise.
But, as we know, not much gets by
Ralph.
Ralph knew that the visitor in the
dark must be one of their own kind, or he wouldn’t have walked right up on
them.
In the old language, known in some
form all over the world, Ralph called out, “Welcome, brother, come and join us
at our fire!”
The visitor, fully a head and a half
taller than Ralph, stepped into the light, but still hung back a bit. He was
blacker than the surrounding night. His eyes were golden, reflecting the
firelight.
“I come without hatred. May I truly join
you?” he said softly in the old language.
Ramona stood up, motioning with her
hands. “Come sit by my fire, wanderer. Please, sit with us.”
He seated himself carefully on one
of the logs. The group of three making the demonstration of sounds had fallen
silent. The girl child watched him closely, with her hand on the wolf’s head. The
two cats observed him silently.
“May we have your name?” asked Ralph.
“She who bore me called me Lorik,”
said the visitor in a soft low voice. “My father is Willof.”
And so, introductions were made
between them, and they chatted the evening away. It was determined that Lorik
spoke no English, though he had heard it spoken, or rather shouted by the people
where he came from.
Ramona brought Lorik a bowl of
leftover stew, and then refilled the bowl when he was finished the first time. He
was delighted with her stew.
Maurice got sleepy, and left to find
his bed in the old house. Uncle Bob and Suzie went home next. Then Ramona and Cherry
and the animals, all went to bed in the cave, leaving Ralph and Lorik by the
fire.
The moon passed over, the stars
looked down, and sparks flew up in the darkness.
“What brings you to us?” said Ralph
at last, talking as men do together when the night is very old and truth is
spoken.
“My heart was broken, Sir. I fled a
long war. My people torment the native dwellers of my home, and those men hate
us in return, going always armed and willing to shoot,” replied Lorik.
“Just call me Ralph, we are equals
here,” said Ralph. “I see.”
“I want to see what else there is.
That hatred can’t be all between our people and them, not everywhere,” said
Lorik.
“No, not like that everywhere,” said
Ralph. “Wiser human voices have said that it’s best just to let us live in
peace, as we wish in our forests and mountains. I think it also makes sense for
we who inhabit the forests to just leave them alone too!
“Oh, sometimes friendships grow up
between special humans and very agreeable such as ourselves. But it’s rare,”
said Ralph.
“I long for peace between man and
forest man. Far be it from me, to beat on cabins, or roar at fishing camps,”
said Lorik. “Some of my brothers thought me weak.”
“To long for peace is not weak,
Lorik,” said Ralph.
“The sun will be coming up soon.
Will you thank your good Firekeeper for the food? I will keep walking. Maybe some
day I will walk this way again. All my thanks to you,” said Lorik, standing up
and stretching.
And just as he said, the sky began
to lighten just a little.
“Yes, come back and sit with us
again,” said Ralph. “Good travels to you, Lorik.”
And so, they parted as the fire died
down, and the wind blew the last of the smoke away.
Ralph, yawning, went into the cave
and sat on the side of the big bed. He reached over and patted Ramona, to let
her know he was there.
“Hi, Baby, where’s Lorik?” murmured
Ramona.
“He kept walking. He’s looking for
something,” said Ralph, reverting to English, after a long conversation in the
old language.
“He seems pretty determined. I bet
he finds it,” said Ramona.
“I’d like to hear that song again,” laughed Ralph. “They
hardly got started when Lorik snuck up on us!”
Ralph slept in a little. Ramona got
up as usual and got everything ready for the day. She and Cherry sang a little
Firekeeper song together as they worked.
When he finally woke, there was
breakfast and the sun was shining.
☀️