Archive

Archive for the ‘Fiction’ Category

Chapter 2 – MOONLIGHT DUCK HUNT

March 15th, 2011 Peter Walker No comments

by Peter Walker

 

It was 8:30 p.m. on Thanksgiving Eve. Colorado District Wildlife Manager Betsy Robinson was heading home from Iliff in Logan County an hour’s drive northeast of her home district of Fort Morgan. She was the on-call game warden for the Sterling and Akron Districts this weekend as well as her own.

 Three hours ago a farmer had witnessed someone shooting at running deer from a pickup truck on a county road close to the river. The Logan County Sheriff’s Office had relayed his call to her. She contacted the farmer and got a description of the truck but no plate number. Using a flashlight she found no sign of blood in the area where the farmer had seen the deer. It was a dead end investigation.

The heavy duty tires on her Ford Super Duty hummed loudly as she cruised southwestward on Highway 6 through Atwood, then the village of Merino. The night was crisp and clear and the glow of the sunset had lingered a long time on the western horizon. Meanwhile an almost full moon had risen in the northeast and now made it possible to see trees and round hay bales and cattle quite clearly. The highway made a rising sweep to the left over the railroad tracks, then across the South Platte River. Just ahead were the three access roads to Prewitt Reservoir State Wildlife Area. As she approached the first turn-off, on a spur-of-the-moment decision, she put on her blinker and took the turn. Half a mile down the dusty county road she turned right onto a gravel access road that led to the base of the dike at the northeast end of Prewitt. The lot was empty. Read more…

Categories: Fiction Tags:

CHAPTER 1 – INCIDENT ON THE PRAIRIE

February 6th, 2011 Peter Walker 1 comment
 
 by Peter G. Walker

            

  It was the end of an early fall day on the eastern Colorado prairie. The sun, dulled by a layer of dusty haze, had settled onto the western horizon as if resting for a moment before sinking out of sight. The temperature was on the warm side and belied the rapid drop that would occur once the sun deserted the cloudless sky. The still air was nearly silent except for the distant pop-pop-pop of a single cylinder diesel engine on an oil well somewhere to the northeast and the occasional clackety-rattle of an orange-winged grasshopper changing locations in hopes of one last mating as the day came to a close. The shadows had been longer and darker of late, the product of shortening days and bone dry air. The same air was spice scented with sand sage, prairie dog weed, and the countless other aromatic herbs of the shortgrass prairie at the end of summer.

            On a low ridge facing the distant western horizon sat a woman with her knees drawn up to her chest. Betsy Robinson was a District Wildlife Manager, the unique form of game warden-biologist employed by the Colorado Division of Wildlife. She came here on occasion to be alone and to think. Read more…

Categories: Fiction Tags: