By Andy
Kerr
I'd just crossed the Grande Ronde
River on a warm summer night, headed home after a
long day driving and a week on the road. An hour
from home and bed, I could see a waving
flashlight beam and it soon turned into a man
directing traffic around a deer lying on it side
and some car parts in the middle of my lane.
As I pulled over and backed up to
his van parked on the road's edge, I'd thought
he'd hit the animal.
"You okay?" I asked as
I opened my door.
"Yah, fine," he said.
"I didn't hit it. You wouldn't happen to
have a pistol or something, would you?"
I knew instantly what he meant.
The deer was damaged and dying, but not yet dead
and needed to be destroyed. I sighed a deep
"yes" as I reached for my 9-mm pistol.
Sometimes things happen and you have to do what
you have to do.
My mind flashed back 15 years to
a trip in a VW bug across the Oregon Coast Range.
This little bird swooped down close to our
speeding car. It came from the high left and the
driver had no time to swerve or slow. She asked
me if we hit it, as I was looking out the back
and rear left-side for a clue. I didn't see
anything outside, but I then focused on the tiny
feathers floating slowly downward toward the
backseat.
"I think you better pull
over and get out," I said.
I walked with some dread around
the car, and looked in the backseat from her open
door. The window was rolled down just enough to
let a little bird in, but not comfortably. On the
floor was said bird, looking stunned, breathing
rapidly and minus some feathers. I pondered just
scooping it out of the car on a near-empty box of
Wheat-Thins and laying it along the side of the
road in hopes that it would recover and fly off,
having learned an important lesson about
automobiles. But then I noticed a little blood
coming from the mouth. It didn't take an avian
internist to know that the bird would soon die of
internal injuries.
The cracker box became the bird's
euthanasia chamber and tomb. I scooped the bird
into the box and set it by the side of the road.
I took a deep breath and stomped it firmly with
my left foot. We got in the car and left.
The traffic that night in this
part of the Grande Ronde Valley was light and the
light from the moon wasn't bad, so we could see
each other.
"I know you," he said.
"You're Andy Kerr. No wonder you have a gun.
Hell I know people who want to kill you."
I inferred from his last
utterance that he didn't, which gave me a small
sense of relief. I felt the need to explain that
I was in possession of not only a pistol, but a
State of Oregon concealed handgun permit, which
allows me and a half million others at last
count, to pack iron. To do so legally, one only
has to have not been convicted of a felony or
have been committed to a mental institution, have
taken a rudimentary safety course, and have
forked over $50.
"You must know my dad,"
he continued. "He was with ODFW"
(Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife).
"What's the name?"
"Don Leckenby. I'm Kevin
Leckenby."
"Donvan Leckenby? The elk
researcher? How is he? And where is he?"
"He doing fine. Retired in
Aloha." Aloha is a small part of the west
Portland sprawl pronounced
"ah-low'-ah."
We shook hands. "Do you know
what time it is? I'm late for work."
"About 10:30. Where do you
work?"
"At the mill in Elgin. I've
had two mills shut down on me." He offered
this information in a factual, not hostile, way,
since the reason he knew who I was is that I have
been quite prominent in the Pacific Northwest
forest wars, on the side of leaving the last of
the big trees standing.
"We just cut too damn
much," I said.
"Can't disagree," he
said, exhausting that topic for the moment.
We couldn't put it off any
longer. We walked over to the wounded animal. The
doe had been hit square on by a car and had take
a few pieces of chrome off the car. However, the
vehicle didn't stop and left the poor dying deer
as a hazard to navigation. She was lying there
and breathing heavily. She couldn't move.
Kevin and I had a brief
conversation to establish us both as having
experience in the killing of large mammals and we
both concluded she was dying, but not fast enough
for either of us. I briefly reviewed in my mind
the statutes I would soon violate: shooting on a
public right-of-way, killing a deer out of
season, without a hunting license, without a
proper animal tag, etc.
Standing between the deer and the
his van, and waiting for no cars to be in sight
(more importantly, earshot), I pulled out my
weapon, carefully aimed, and shot her in the head
a point blank range. The blood poured out of the
latest wound.
She didn't die. "Shit! Don't
let anyone ever tell you that point-blank to the
head is a sure kill," I groaned.
"Hell, I've seen an elk
still alive with 11 shots in it." This did
not comfort me, although I had a seven-bullet
clip in the weapon and another close by.
We waited a bit, desperately
hoping she'd die. He went around to look her in
the eyes (something I, as executioner, felt no
desire to do) and said, "she's following my
movements". I muttered more profanity, Kevin
moved from the line of fire, I glanced up and
down the road looking for lights and then I shot
her point blank in the head again.
She still didn't die.
He again looked in her eyes.
"Come on girl, die!" he
spoke softly to her.
Seconds passed, but they seemed
like minutes. Some cars came by. Several stopped
and offered to help, but we waived them on, I'm
sure we were both thinking that there was no need
to involve others in our dirty duty. I'd waive
them on with my right hand, while my left hid the
gun behind my back.
I would have preferred to shoot
her below the shoulder in the heart/lung region
where all hunters aim for the cleanest kill, but
to do so would have meant moving to the other
side and putting Kevin's rig in the line of fire.
"Fuuuuuccccccckkkkk," I
said in a moanful sigh and I shot her again. I
don't remember where.
Kevin moved in and looked her in
the eyes again. I was relieved when he said that
they had glazed over; a sure sign. She had
finally died. But we were both worried about
death throes, having seen or heard stories of
hunters getting the ever-livin' shit kicked out
of them in the animal's last living act. We
nudged her a few times and then pronounced her
dead.
He had a nylon cord which he
fashioned into a slip noose and he slipped it
over her hind legs and, with little ceremony, we
dragged her off the pavement and well onto the
gravel shoulder.
Kevin and I exchanged
pleasantries, joked about what a story it would
make during the lunch break at the mill, and got
in our vehicles and went our respective ways. In
another hour I was home, told my tale to my wife
and fell asleep. In the morning I cleaned the
pistol and reloaded the clip and put the weapon
back in it's usual place.
Four days later, I had occasion
to pass by the scene going the other way and in
daylight. Since I knew where to look, I could
still see the pool and stream of dried blood in
the other lane. The body had been removed.
Four months later, the stain was
still visible to the knowing eye. We'll see next
year when the pavement again is clear and dry and
the sun is bright, whether the stain can still be
noticed.
NOTE: Took place July 25, 1996, 2
miles south of Elgin.
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