Tempered Magazine December 2013 // January 2014 // Issue 01 | Page 8

Maurice was the first to go hunting From the top he looked down, hair with Daddy, and he came back poking out the sides of the baseball saying only, “It was cool.” The cap our daddy used to wear. next year Sandry went too, and “Come on,” he said. the next year Kayle, my daddy saying, “Those deer better cross the county line while they can, before you three get ahold of that gun.” And my brothers laughed like they understood something private and special, and I built a ramp for When I reached the top he told me to sit, and we stared into the white air. Our jackets soaked through and our cheeks got damp and I said, “We forgot the bullets.” Maurice said, “The bullets stay in my bike and skidded off the top and the truck.” fell to the ground over and over, groaning, until they came home. The next year my daddy had a heart attack that kept him in bed until New Year’s, and the year after that he wasn’t there at all. So it was Maurice who took me hunting. Him nineteen, me thirteen, fog I waited. “But if the bullets stay in the truck – ” “We don’t shoot.” “We don’t?” He shook his head. “We never have.” hanging like ghosts between the I watched the ghosts of my daddy trees. He climbed up the stand and all the deer we never ate, their first, gun over his shoulder, tugging children together in the fog. each wet board before continuing. 8