I found the four original drops of blood easilly and without fanfare Vance and I took up the trail.
The blood I was seeing could have been arterial. It was bright red enough, but I'd seen muscle hits in the past that looked little different.
We were having little trouble finding the blood spoor, which was encouraging, but again, I'd seen muscle hit blood trails that were the same.
When after 50 yards I suspected the worst. I'd probably only gotten a muscle hit and we'd most likely not find the deer.
We tracked on.
Where the shot had been taken and the hit made was pretty open timber. Lots of low growth and scrub pine, but little down timber and more open, grassy, meadow like, areas.
The buck had immediately headed for heavy timber and jumbled blowdown. It's something I would have expected him to do and is natural for most any animal.
The blood was becoming increasingly more difficult to find and we lost the way several times in the first one hundred yards.
The buck had followed trails through the cover all the way. When we lost the blood sign at the convergence of three different travel areas we stopped to pow wow.
As we discussed the situation in low tones, a Gray Jay (or camp robber as it is commonly called)flew calling to a nearby pine.
I looked around for others and saw none, but I thought it odd that the bird, which can be associated with ofal in the high mountains, should be right here, right now.
Circling the area slowly, it was Vance who picked up blood again and we slowly made our way to a huge old forest monarch which might have fallen when Vance and I were just boys.
I hoped/suspected that the buck had gone to lay up under the limbs of the dead giant, but he was not to be found.
The trail led us in a circle here and back into the bottom of a little draw. Then we lost it.
It took more scrutiny to find two separate blood spots, one after the other, pointing the way down an indistinct trail.
Vance had circled ahead looking for more sign when I heard him call out in a low voice, "there's a deer over here."
The words came like a fist in the chest. I wasn't expecting that. I made my way over to my friend and my mule deer buck.