One summer when fewer salmon than in past times were again laboring to lift their heavy bodies up the rock strewn creek beds, Baylee did not come back to fish in the cove. The lodge visitors did no see bears roaming the hills around the lake or fishing in the many steams pouring into Big River Lake. The bears were gone. People at the lodge wondered why the bears did not return to fish as they had for years. A biologist said perhaps a disease had spread through the tribe of brown bears around Big River Lake. Baylee was seen with a sick cub last season. Perhaps she too, had died from the infection. But Baylee was a strong and resourceful mother, experienced in the ways of the wild. Except for one chink in the armor of fang and claw nature gave her: she had lost her dislike of humans. Their strong order no longer caused her to flee. The truce of fifteen years had dulled the instincts protecting her from danger.
The human hunters of the moose tribe complained that the bears were eating all the moose. They could no longer mount the great antlers on the wall to prove their prowess, or dine on the
flavorful meat. "We must kill the bears!", they demanded to their chiefs. No hunter talked of the countless number of antlers hanging on the walls of the city, or the thick stacks of moose loin laying in the freezers. So the truce ended, and once again the thundersticks of man roared with fire and pain. Snares designed to cripple and maim an unsuspecting bear were laid down. Now Baylee is gone, and so are eighty five other brown and black bears in man's so-called "wildlife management unit" around Big River Lake. The loons still call at dusk, but their cry is even sadder now, as if morning the loss of brother bear.