When the grizzly cubs were caught, collared, and taken away— relocated they call it— their mother ran back and forth on the road screaming. Brutal sound. Torn from her lungs. Her heart, twisted knot, hot blood rivering to the twenty-six pounding bones of her feet. Just weeks before I watched a bear and her cubs run down a mountain in the twilight. So buoyant, they seemed to be tumbling to the meadow, to the yarrow root they dug, rocking to wrest it from the hard ground, fattening for winter. They were breathing what looked like gladness. But that other mother . . . Her massive head raised, desperate to catch their scent. Each footfall a fracture in the earth’s crust. |
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