The lodge came into view just beyond the bend, anchored into the bank and rising from the water in thick layers of cut timber and packed mud.
Bracken slowed in the current, murmuring to himself, “Still buildin’ tight.”
A ripple broke the surface near the lodge, then another. A large, broad-backed beaver rose from the water and climbed onto the bank. Droplets slipped from his fur as he studied the three visitors. His gaze was fixed on Bracken. Recognition came at once.
ALDER: “Well, if it ain’t Bracken Beaver. Surprise seein’ ya this far upriver.”
A low tail-thump followed from Bracken, who remained in the water a moment longer before pulling himself onto the bank, followed by Wiley and Quinn.
BRACKEN: “Been too long, Alder.”
Alder’s gaze moved from Bracken to Wiley and Quinn, curious but not unwelcoming.
ALDER: “Looks like you’ve brought more than a visit.”
BRACKEN: “These two come with reason. This here’s Wiley Weasel. Knows the river in ways most don’t. And Quinn… well, Quinn keeps a record of what’s all happenin’.”
ALDER: “Then I’m right, this ain’t just a visit. The river’s been off. Not how it runs above, somethin’ different goin’ on under.”
BRACKEN: “You’re feelin’ it, right! There’s a line under this stretch, long and hollow and fixed in place where it oughtn’t be.”
ALDER: “How so?”
BRACKEN: “Land men put it there. It’s a line, alright, a pipeline carryin’ stuff called methane. Sends it downriver to a place called Hell’s Bells, where they make plastic out of it. The stuff don’t break down and don’t go back to the earth.”
Alder’s gaze sharpened slightly, listening as Wiley and Quinn stepped forward.
WILEY: “Some call it the Black Snake. Heard the old stories myself. They say when it comes, it’ll poison the water, split the land, and set the world out of balance. Story or not, this one’s real. And it depends on the river staying steady… So we aim to change that.”
ALDER: “Wadya mean steady? How? Rivers don’t stay still. Never have.”
QUINN: “Not still. Just even. Same pull, same pressure, day after day. No sudden rise. No shift in the bed. Ya see, that line under there, it’s set as if the river won’t change.”
ALDER: “But you know rivers don’t do that.”
WILEY: “Exactly. And that’s where the beavers come in. You can’t fight the river; you let it be what it is, but make slow and careful changes. The river only needs to be a little different from what it’s been to stop the methane flow.”
Alder glanced between Wiley and Quinn.
WILEY: “Ya need to spread the work. Lodge by lodge; bend by bend going up the river towards Hell’s Bells.”
Bracken gave a firm nod.
BRACKEN: “Yup, slow n’ careful… but we’ll get it done. Jist enough to unsettle what shouldn’t be there.”
Alder studied the current again, longer this time. The surface looked no different, but he could feel it, that faint wrongness beneath.
ALDER: “You’re askin’ us to change the flow.”
WILEY: “Just enough. Not all at once. Never in one place.”
BRACKEN: “Add those extra dams, and let the river do the rest.”
Alder’s ears flicked slightly.
ALDER: “That’ll take more builders than we’ve got. Your lodge lendin’ any?”
Bracken’s expression tightened.
BRACKEN: “Truth is, Alder, we’re stretched as it is. My lodge can’t spare builders. Not now. We’re already layin’ double dams back our way. Gettin’ ready for the spring thaw.”
ALDER: “Double dams?”
BRACKEN: “Water’ll rise fast when the thaw comes. Faster than it used to. If we don’t build up now, we lose the whole bank.”
Alder gave a slow nod. He understood that kind of work.
Wiley stepped forward, tail low, voice steady.
WILEY: “That’s why we need you.”
Alder’s gaze shifted to him.
ALDER: “Me?”
WILEY: “Not just you. The others … upstream, downstream, across the tributaries. You know ’em. They’ll listen to you. We don’t need all of ’em, just a few from each lodge. Enough workers to place extra dams where they’ll matter most.”
Bracken stepped closer, his voice firm now.
BRACKEN: “If we set it right, we can dam up the works; change the flow enough to unsettle that line without breakin’ it and causin’ a fire on the river. But we’ve only got till the Beaver Moon to get it done.”
A long moment passed.
Then Alder lifted his tail and brought it down once, firm and deliberate.
ALDER: “I’ll call ’em.”
Stay Tuned For My Next Blog Post
Applause, Applause.
You are fighting the good fight!
Geraldine