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That’s not very helpful, Touchwit. Your Uncle Wily died a noble death. Now go back to sleep. If you wake up, you’ll be hungry. And then what? The river’s frozen and it’s not garbage night.”

“I’m hungry.”

“We can eat Bandit. He’s full of Delissio pizza.”

“Sssh! The Idiot behind the wall is listening. I can hear him breathing.”

Silence.

Thus intimations of spring come to the Eastern Woodlands – in chance breaks in the Arctic cold, hapless stirrings and false awakenings.

2

As far as I can tell, the raccoons haven’t left the chimney. The snow has stayed, and now it is raining – bad weather for animals with heavy fur coats. But I can hear a rapid thumping: someone is scratching fleas. They’re awake and must be hungry after a long hibernation. I press my stethoscope against the wall and overhear them chittering …

“Mother, why can’t we go out and pop organic waste bin lids?”

“We require a clear sky and a warm Spring night” is the answer.

“When are we going to get a clear sky and a warm Spring night? The rain has been pattering on the roof forever.”

“You will get a clear Spring night when the Great Raccoon Ancestor has left his den and is high above the southern horizon.”

“He is aloft now, yet we see him not on account of the excess of clouds.”

That was the older brother speaking. At the mention of the Great Spirit he had spoken in the High Tongue.

“Time is truly askew if the Ancestor beckons his clan out of their burrows, yet the clouds contradict him.”

That was Touchwit. I’m coming to tell them apart now. The elder brother seems to be the one called Clutch. The younger brother is Bandit. Then the sister is Touchwit. Their mother is called Slypaws. They don’t talk about their father.

“The Great Raccoon Spirit withholds himself from our gaze,” Clutch said solemnly, “so as to keep us sheltered and warm, thereby sparing us the grumes, running gleet, the mumbles, and suchlike afflictions.”

“I’m not really up to theology first thing in the evening,” Mother Slypaws said.

“Theology isn’t the issue,” Touchwit said, returning to the vernacular. “The issue is that we are in a new time on Earth, and theology is as useless as plastic wrap.”

“Watch your speech, Touchwit. It is foolhardy to be heedless of the One in the Sky who eternally holds us in his paws.” That was Clutch. As elder brother he was surrogate family head.

“He’s not in the sky, is he? He’s not anywhere. Like Dad,” Touchwit said.

“Perhaps he reveals himself not because of the Abuses we have heaped upon his shoulders.”

“The Great Raccoon isn’t going to get us out of this mess. Have you smelled the scent of crab apple blossoms lately? No. That’s because they withhold themselves from gaze and reveal themselves not.” I can imagine Touchwit glaring savagely at her big brother.

“Touch is right, Mom. We’re living proof that time is broken. We were born out of season,” Bandit pointed out.

“That is true, children. You were born at the wrong time of year, when the leaves fall. I had little opportunity to street-proof you. So I stuffed you with Delissio pizza crusts for the hibernation and hid you in this chimney.”

“Street-proof us now, Mom. If the Ancestor can’t be bothered to guide us, then we’ll have to survive by our fingertips.”

The mother raccoon sighed. It was so like Touchwit to think she could face the world armed only with cunning and hand-eye coordination.

“Why were we born out of the love-season?” Bandit asked suddenly.

Tense silence.

Elder brother deflects the question: “We should ask, rather, where do Raccoons come from in the first place?”

Noise of shuffling. Mistress Slypaws is straightening her back and folding her paws in her lap. The cubs tuck their tails around their feet, arranging themselves for a story.

“It was the time of beginnings, and the Great Raccoon lay dreaming,” she said. “And he lay dreaming in his hollow. So vast is his hollow that it fills the southern sky, and its entrance is marked by the path of the Moon. And all that time it was winter, and rain fell upon the Earth.”

The cubs huddled closer together. Their chimney didn’t feel so small now, nor their time in it so long.

“And feeling lonely, the Great Raccoon Spirit said: ‘I think I’ll find a companion to warm my side.’ And he dreamed he was foraging in a stream, they say, and a clam was glowing furiously in the moonlight. The clam caught his eye. So he took it in his hands and he scraped the mud of the stream bottom and the tiny snails off the shell. Ever since that first night, Raccoons are careful to rub off the matter adhering to their food, though they appear to be washing their hands.”

At the mention of the Hand Acknowledgment, the three cubs automatically made washing motions with their hands.

“Then he blew upon the Radiant Clam, and cast it upon the stream. And it bounced once, and it bounced twice, and it opened and out of its shell stepped the first Woman. A Woman Raccoon! The Great Raccoon Spirit wondered at her. Now, all Raccoons are fluent and tactile, but of all the Raccoons in the land, none was more elegant of speech nor dexterous of paw than she.”

“Did he jump her, Ma?” Bandit said, breaking in.

“Oh, really, I don’t know where you get these vulgar thoughts,” Slypaws said.

“We get them from the Idiot behind the wall,” Touchwit said, giggling.

“I shall resume the story: Then they did … mingle, and lo! The first litter was born. Three smart cubs.” At this, Slypaws glanced lovingly at Clutch, her first born. There wasn’t a green bin lid in the neighbourhood he couldn’t pop. So wondrous a son who can so astonish a mother!

Are sens

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