
Winters were the worst. They came early and set in deep, lasting well into what other lands might call spring. It would be many years before I'd travel away from my mountain home and learn that there are places in this world where snow rarely touches. But then, in my youth, I'd have thought it was a lie, or at least a fabrication for entertaining effect. All the augurs said that year would be worse than any in recent history and so my people spent the brief summer working extra hard to lay in what stores we could to face the weather to come. The gods perhaps took pity on us for what was to come because the harvest was bountiful and the hunting plentiful, letting us set up in the best position possible to survive the trial winter was going to be.
The first snowfall that winter took us by surprise, because it was really still autumn when it arrived. A full month earlier than even the most pessimistic expected, the snow was wet, heavy and two feet deep in the shallows. There were drifts up to three feet in some places. The trees were as surprised as the rest of us, and still bore their autumn colors. The weight of the snow on the leaves bowed branches until they nearly touched the ground, forming tunnels all through the wooded areas. More than a few branches snapped completely, but we were quick to harvest that wood for fires. We almost didn't bother to pack the snow up against the buildings, figuring it would all melt away before the real winter set in anyway, but some nagging sense - and the insistent stubbornness of the head seer - made us follow through. When another two feet of snow arrived less than a week later, we were equal parts shocked, dismayed, and grateful.
It went on like that for weeks. A major storm every five to seven days, often with a more minor storm in between to keep things fresh. Temperatures never rose enough to let any of the previously fallen snow go away before new snow joined it. It didn't take very long for all the buildings to have a thick wall of insulating snow around the outsides. That was necessary just to keep the pathways clear! The areas of the village where the snow fell even more deeply, people started making tunnels between buildings with supported bricks of snow just so they wouldn't have to clear a path after every storm.
Foragers and hunters roved out each day, looking to supplement the supplies we'd laid in with fresher materials. Grannies who couldn't leave their homes tended small pots of sprouts. Children cleared every piece of falling wood within easy reach of the village. Crews would eventually need to go out beyond that perimeter to harvest wood from the forest itself, but the insulating snow around the houses made the fires more efficient.
I was too old to be one of the kids roaming for sticks, but too young to join the hunters in ranging further and further afield looking for game. Though I was over tall for my age, I had no bulk yet and my aim with a bow was truly pitiful. Still, my fingers had none of the clumsy awkwardness of the rest of me and I put them to good work making traps for small game. I roamed out past the areas where the kids gathered sticks. Snowballs and shrieks littered the air there, chasing away any wildlife likely to be out in the winter. I knew the rules and made sure that I told one of the Granthers at the council building which direction I was going and when I intended to return.
In the summer time, there are so many leaves on the trees that you never notice how many squirrel nests that are up there. Once winter comes to claim her domain, the leaves fall away and the nests become obvious. They're everywhere. It was under the trees with the most nests that I set my traps. Squirrel may not be glamorous eating, but when fresh meat is scarce, it's mighty delicious. I'd been doing this pattern for several days, checking to see if my traps had caught anything this time. I was so used to being disappointed (and more than once certain that this was a colossal waste of time and maybe I should just be gathering sticks with the younger kids like Nan said) that at first, I didn't really register what I was seeing.
Right there, in my trap, was a squirrel - all black in color - with the fluffiest, bushiest tail I'd ever seen. A big squirrel. Well, not people big, but big for a squirrel. Definitely well fed. But that wasn't really what left me speechless. It was the little hat and scarf the squirrel was wearing. That, and the foul mouthed cursing that came in a high, squeaky voice, while it yanked on its tail to try to escape the trap I'd set. No one in the village used such language, but there'd been a trappers and traders who came through and they might even have blushed at the language coming from that squirrel.
I know, I know. You're giving me dubious looks and thinking I must've been out in the cold too long and been hallucinating or something, but I'm telling you sure as I'm sitting here across from you and drinking this ale, that squirrel was wearing clothes and cursing fit to make a sailor swoon.
When he finally noticed me, he stopped pulling on his tail and put his little paws in fists on his hip. "Well, don't just stand there. Are you going to let me out or what?" I'm afraid I must have gaped at him, because the next thing he said was, "Don't just stand there like a suffocating fish. Get my--"
I'm not going to repeat, word for word, what that squirrel said. I've been a soldier, a sailor, and a merc, and I tell you now, that squirrel's mouth still shocks me to think back upon it. Suffice it to say, he wanted my help getting his tail out from the trap.
Well, I don't mind telling you, I was in a bit of a quandary. On the one hand, this is the first animal I've caught in days of putting out traps. On the other, this was a talking squirrel! I wasn't really sure, but I somehow felt that a squirrel with that kind of potty mouth was probably not good eating. No matter how plump he was. So I eventually came down on the side of not eating him, and I approached warily, ready to snatch my hand away if it looked like he was going to bite. He snorted, a disgusted and impatient sound, and rolled his eyes.
I didn't know squirrels could roll their eyes either until that moment, but I swear on the moon that it's true.
He rolled his eyes and told me to hurry up. Not with those precise words, but the meaning was clear. I released the trap and jumped back at least a foot with a rather unmanly scream, I'm not too proud to admit, when the squirrel darted across the snow, up my arm and shoulder to launch himself off my head onto the nearest low hanging branch. Once he was well out of reach, he let me know exactly how rude it thought it was that I'd leave traps laying around on the ground where just anyone might roam into them. I thought it was prudent not to point out that was kind of the point of having the traps.
Truthfully, I put on the same meek, apologetic face I used to wear when Nan would catch me filching cookies from the kitchen table. After a long scolding - and I do mean long, I was beginning to worry that I wouldn't make it back to the village by nightfall - the squirrel, who never did offer up his name, launched himself further up the tree. With an unceremonious leap to the next tree over, he disappeared out of view. The departure happened so fast that I had almost convinced myself that it had never happened. I certainly didn't tell anyone what I'd seen - they'd lock me up as being snow sick!
Really, I'd gotten so caught up in the day to day work of just getting the village through the winter, that I had almost forgotten all about the encounter - dismissing it as a strange dream - when the first pile of nuts showed up on the door step. And then a new pile every week or so after that. Imagine trying to explain /that/ to people.
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Word Count: 1455
YTD: 7935




