The cabin keys rested on the table beside my notepad. An hour earlier, they’d represented freedom. Now they represented something entirely different.
I picked them up, registered their weight, set them down with careful deliberation.
For forty years I’d been the reasonable one, the family peacemaker, the man who swallowed inconvenience to maintain domestic harmony.
Not anymore.
Dawn arrived through the small kitchen windows and discovered me still seated at the table. Empty coffee cups formed a semicircle around my notepad, which had accumulated dense lists, diagrams, questions written and rewritten multiple times.
I hadn’t slept. I didn’t feel like I needed sleep. My mind operated with unusual clarity, focused and crystalline, running on something cleaner than rest. Purpose.
I brewed fresh coffee and studied my accumulated notes. Then I cleaned up, loaded necessary items into my truck, and drove back toward Cody.
Twenty minutes west of town, positioned just off the highway tourists used to reach Yellowstone’s East Entrance, the Yellowstone National Park ranger station occupied a low profile against the landscape. The modern building featured stone and timber cladding designed to blend with the surrounding foothills.
Inside, educational displays illustrated wolf pack territories, bear activity patterns, elk migration routes across detailed maps of Wyoming and Montana.
A ranger, perhaps forty years old, with the weathered complexion and sun-creased eyes characteristic of someone who spent more time outdoors than inside office buildings, glanced up from his desk. An American flag patch adorned his uniform sleeve.
“Help you with something?”
“I just relocated up from Denver,” I explained. “Bought property off County Road 14.”