With nothing else to do but wait, I climbed from my perch and headed out to the road.
Russ and Clyde were scheduled to pick me up after dark, so I might just as well head back to camp. It would be a long walk, but the bear needed time.
I'd no sooner stepped out into the road than I could hear a vehicle approaching. Turned out to be Russ and Clyde heading for town.
I don't know what they thought I was doing, but I'm sure they didn't think I'd shot a bear already.
When I told them what had happened they were all about going in to look for the bruin.
They were both dressed way too nice for tracking wounded bears, but I figured that was up to them. We made the short walk to the bait.
I'd looked for a blood trail before I left the woods and had found one. We went immediately to it.
Much more than what I would have expected from a high hit with no exit, the trail led off into the spooky places in great crimson splashes. There was no problem seeing the trail from 5 or even 10 yards in some places.
We'd barely gotten out of sight of the stand when there in the moss at the base of a huge fallen tree lay my bear. He'd been dead in seconds after the hit.
A post mortem exam would reveal that the big broadhead had sliced down alongside the spine, shearing away bone and lodging in the heart but missing the spinal chord.... or he'd have dropped on the spot.
There was much laughing and backslapping with several finger crunching handshakes from both my excited duddies. We live for moments like those, don't we?
About the time we were calming down, Clyde's testosterone levels must have been spiking. He declared he'd carry the bear out on his back, whole with innards in tact.
I questioned the wisdom of that, but let what was gonna happen, happen. I knew these guys and there would be no denying an expression of there vitality and maleness.
So I watched as Clyde, with a little help from Russ and respendant in his best jeans, clean shirt and a spanking new satin windbreaker, hoisted the bear over a brawny shoulder.
The only way to manage a dead bear like that is to put his back on your shoulder. As the bear settled in place the gaping hole made by the big Magnus released the contents of a blood filled chest cavity and drenched Clyde from head to toe.
Nothing was said at the time, but it was obvious Clyde was having a "hears your sign" moment.
Like a trooper, Clyde carried the bear all the way to the truck without uttering a single complaint.