Spirit Wolf
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Book preview
Spirit Wolf - Mark W Holdren
Chapter One
. . . if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.
- Book of Romans
Dad, is it snowing?
Jason Quinn cried out. I can feel wet stuff on my nose.
Todd Quinn looked over his shoulder. His nine-year-old son was about twenty feet behind him, shuffling across the snow-swept parking lot.
It sure is,
he replied.
Jason smiled, but his elf-like brown eyes looked empty and cold.
It’ll be a white Christmas in Wolf River for sure,
his mother said.
Jason heard her slam the car trunk.
Abbie, make sure the car’s locked,
his father shouted back, and turn on the anti-theft alarm.
Who’ll hear it?
she asked. We passed the last signs of civilization three miles back.
Jason wiped his nose with the back of his glove, then pulled his stocking cap down over his ears, covering the five-inch crimson scar still etched across the back of his head.
He guessed from the echo of their voices that he was halfway between the car and the old railroad depot. His father was headed to the depot with their duffel bags, his footsteps puncturing the frozen snow like plate glass.
Hey, Dad,
he shouted, are there any trains?
His father kicked the snow from the depot’s steps with his boot and tossed the bags down in a heap.
There’s an old caboose, a couple of beat-up passenger cars — that’s about it.
Jason listened while his father counted the pickup trucks, vans, and SUV’s — maybe a dozen — scattered around the depot’s parking lot. Most were hitched to empty flatbed trailers.
There isn’t much left of Wolf River Station, Jason. Just the depot and five ramshackle wood-frame buildings.
His father described the Lost Moose Bed & Breakfast, right across the street, which was for sale. Its windows were boarded shut, its porch roof caved in from neglect and several feet of snow. There were long icicles hanging from the depot’s dry-rotted eaves.
They look like frozen tears,
his father mused.
There was a weather-beaten metal sign that read Whistle Stop Café; Jason could hear it groan from its rusted chains like a condemned man swinging in the wind. And there was a hand-lettered cardboard sign duct-taped to the front window:
See you Memorial Day weekend!
Molly and Lefty
What’s inside?
Jason asked.
His father looked through a window and described the interior. There was a small dining room. The walls were decorated with signal switches, old railroad posters, and faded photographs. He could see a bar at the far end of the room. There was a GENNY ON TAP sign hanging over the cash register.
Boy, could I go for a Genny now,
his father said, laughing.
Jason had found his way to the depot steps.
What’s so funny, Dad?
Nothing, Jason,
his father replied, just thinking of an old TV commercial.
He stepped off the porch. Looks like this is where those snowmobiles were headed.
What do you mean?
Jason asked.
There’s a large, official-looking sign in front of the station,
his father explained. And there’s a color-keyed map. I’m guessing the old rail bed is the main snowmobile trail. It’s marked in yellow. There are connecting green and red trails that twist around what appears to be three lakes and several smaller ponds.
Some parts of the map were marked Wild Forest, others as Wilderness and Primitive Areas. The latter was clearly restricted: NO MOTORIZED VEHICLES.
Jason was already shivering. He couldn’t remember ever being so cold. But he was glad to be out of the car.
The three-hour ride from Rochester to Old Forge, where they’d stopped for lunch, hadn’t been bad. Even the Wolf River Station Road had been kind of fun; sitting in the backseat had been like riding a roller coaster.
But with his mother constantly shouting, Slow down!
the whole way there and his father swearing at the snowmobiles that roared past them on both sides of the road, he wondered if either one of them had really wanted to come.
It was his mother’s idea.
Discover the magic of an old-fashioned Christmas at Wolf River Lodge,
she read aloud from the Sunday newspaper one morning. Explore our wilderness sanctuary — ten miles from the nearest road.
If there’s no road,
his father asked, how in hell are we supposed to get there — by dogsled?
Well, sort of,
his mother replied. They pick you up at an old railroad station and take you to the lodge in a horse-driven sleigh.
Jason knew the trip wouldn’t be easy for him. He was just learning to get around on his own, and that was at home. At the lodge, everything would be new. But he was looking forward to the adventure.
His mother thought it would be good for them all to get away, to try and put the last six months behind them somehow.
But even he knew that was impossible. Everything had changed for him. For all of them. His mother cried a lot. Oh, she tried to hide it, but he could hear her. And he could sense his father blamed himself for the accident; if he’d been there, it wouldn’t have happened.
No one was to blame, but Jason was beginning to feel like he was a burden his parents couldn’t handle.
Todd Quinn watched his wife carry their last bags from the car. Her thick wool slacks and long black leather coat disguised her finch-like frame.
Thank God for Abbie, he thought. She’s handling it better than I ever will. Sure, she’s overly protective, practically hovering over him. But hey, she’s his mother.
He tried to smile, but all he could do was bite his lip.
Better give her a hand, he thought.
He drew the collar of his coat around his bulldog neck and spun into the snow that swirled in a ghostlike tango across the deserted parking lot.
Jeez, it’s cold,
he muttered.
He recalled how warm it had been the second Saturday in April. How could he ever forget?
He was in the garage that morning, trying to start the damn lawn mower. He’d never had to cut the grass so early in the spring.
Maybe there is something to this global warming nonsense, he thought.
He was about to head for Home Depot in search of a new spark plug when the phone rang. It was a Monroe County Sheriff’s Deputy. Your son’s been hurt,
Sgt. Glenn Michaels said matter-of-factly. Jason’s in an ambulance. You should get to Rochester General.
That damn skateboard.
Todd had muttered as he hung up. He’d seen Jason heading down the street with the rainbow-colored board over his shoulder earlier that morning. He didn’t have his helmet.
Kick flipping his board in the high school parking lot, Jason had simply lost it. The back of his head struck the edge of the concrete curb first. A friend said it sounded like a rifle shot.
When Todd and Abbie arrived at the hospital, doctors had already begun to put Jason into what they called an induced coma, to rest the brain, they said. A day later they removed a portion of Jason’s skull to reduce the brain’s swelling. It would be three traumatic weeks before he regained consciousness. Doctors would later replace his skull section. It would heal completely. Jason’s brain was another matter. The neurologist called it a cortical condition. He said the occipital lobes of Jason’s brain were severly damaged. Surgery was not an option.
Jason’s eyes are fine,
Dr. Robert Kerr explained, but the sight center of his brain no longer functions.
What are you trying to tell us, doctor?
Todd asked, with Abbie crying at his side.
I’m sorry. Jason is blind.
My God, he’s only nine,
Abbie screamed.
Over time, some healing may occur,
Dr. Kerr said, trying to calm her. But I can’t make any promises. Injuries like this have a mind of their own.
Todd hadn’t noticed that Abbie was beginning to share his doubts about the trip. She met him in the middle of the parking lot, where she dropped the duffel bags at his feet.
I hope this is the right place,
she muttered, rolling her saucer-like brown eyes and laughing.
The cold was clawing hard on her husband’s blade-like nose. It was wet and pink, like a slab of salmon hanging between his icy blue eyes. He was wearing a thick green wool cap tied beneath his chin. She thought he looked like the world’s tallest gnome. She watched him trudge back toward the station.
Maybe this trip will be too much for all of us, she worried. It’s been just seven months since Jason’s accident. He’s made extraordinary progress, thanks to therapist Bill Robinson. But there will be strangers, new surroundings, problems for sure.
She hoped Todd’s office would leave him alone. This was supposed to be their Christmas vacation. But there was no place to hide with a cell phone and pager clipped to his belt.
Todd R. Quinn, eastern regional sales manager for the country’s largest medical equipment marketer, was always on call. The Cleveland Clinic, one of his largest accounts, had already tracked him down this morning via the car phone. One of their cardiac surgeons needed two of Todd’s new mechanical heart valves -- in six hours. Todd had worked the phone as they drove east from Rochester on the New York State Thruway. He solved the crisis somewhere between Geneva and Weedsport.
His job had always involved travel, but since Jason’s accident he’d been staying out longer, attending more so called symposiums -- a euphemism adopted by the medical supply industry for sophisticated sales pitches to doctors and hospital purchasing agents. He said weekend travel came with the territory, but his wife suspected he was beginning to run from the cruel hand they’d been dealt. He was drinking more. It wasn’t a problem, yet.