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Everyone Laughed When He Built a Bunker Into His Cabin — Until It Stayed Warm All Winter

The boy sat at the edge of the hatch with his dog while snow piled three feet high against the cabin walls and the temperature outside dropped to 40 degrees below zero. Inside the chamber beneath his feet, where everyone said he had wasted an entire summer digging his own grave, the air held steady at 52° without a single log burning.

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Before we begin, let us know where you’re watching from. And if stories of frontier survival move you, hit that subscribe button because tomorrow’s tale is even more impossible than this one. The fire had gone out sometime after midnight. Kadak Pritchard woke to his own breath hanging visible in the darkness of the cabin.

Each exhale a small cloud that disappeared into the frozen air. He was 14 years old, and in the 3 seconds it took him to fully wake, he knew something was terribly wrong. The cold was absolute. It pressed against his face like a physical thing, sharp and merciless. He reached for the extra bare skin his father always kept at the foot of the bed and found it already pulled up over both of them.

That was when he realized his father had not been snoring. Kaddock sat up. The movement took effort. His muscles were stiff from the cold that had seeped into the cabin during the night. He reached across the narrow space between their sleeping platforms and touched his father’s shoulder.

The body beneath the bare skin was rigid and cold in a way that had nothing to do with the temperature of the room. Kaddock pulled his hand back. He did not call out. He did not shake his father. He simply sat there in the darkness, understanding with terrible clarity what had happened. Griffith Pritchard had survived 16 winters in the Rocky Mountains.

He had trapped beaver from the Yellowstone to the Snake River. He had survived encounters with grizzlies, faced down hostile war parties, weathered blizzards that killed other men, and crossed frozen rivers that had claimed the lives of trappers with twice his experience. He had been competent, careful, and respected among the scattered community of mountainmen who worked the Northern Territories.

And he had died because a fire went out on a cold night in February of 1836. Katak climbed down from his sleeping platform and moved to the fireplace. The coals were completely dead, not even a hint of warmth remaining in the ash. He knelt and reached into the cold hearth, feeling for any ember that might have survived. Nothing.

He had banked the fire himself before bed, exactly as his father had taught him. He had used the right wood, arranged the coals properly, left adequate ventilation. Everything had been done correctly. But fires were not machines. They were living things that sometimes simply died. And when they died in the deep cold of a mountain winter, people died with them.

The cabin was small, perhaps 12 ft x 14 ft, built in the standard fashion of frontier construction, logs notched at the corners, chinkedked with mud and moss, a single door, one small window covered with oiled rawhide, and a dirt floor. It had been adequate for his father and himself. It had kept out wind and rain. It had seemed sturdy enough, but now, standing in the pre-dawn darkness, with his father’s body cooling under bare skins, and the temperature inside the cabin perhaps 20°, Katak understood something he had never fully grasped

before. The cabin was not protection. It was just wood and mud arranged in a shape that slowed death down, but could not stop it. Katak buried his father on a hillside overlooking the creek where they had run their trap line together for three seasons. The ground was frozen 18 in down and it took him two days to dig deep enough. He worked alone.

The nearest trapper was Emmeris Powell, whose cabin sat 7 mi downstream, and Kaddock did not want company for this. He wrapped his father’s body in the best blankets they owned, placed Griffith’s rifle and knife beside him as was the custom, and covered the grave with stones to keep animals from digging. He marked the site with a wooden cross made from split pine and carved his father’s name with a knife.

Griffith Pritchard, born 1793, died February 1836, 43 years old. a good man who had done everything right and still died because warmth was more fragile than anyone wanted to admit. Kadock stood at the grave for a long time after the work was finished, not praying exactly, but thinking about fire and cold and the thin margin that separated living from dying in the mountains.

When he returned to the cabin, he found it exactly as he had left it. His father’s traps hung on the wall. His tools lay on the workbench. his spare clothes hung from pegs driven between the lies. The physical evidence of a life, all of it now belonging to a 14-year-old boy who had never run a trap line alone or spent a winter without his father’s guidance.

Katak sat at the smalls table and considered his options with the methodical thinking Griffith had taught him. He could leave. There was a settlement at Fort Union, 3 weeks travel east. He could sell his father’s equipment, take whatever money it brought, and apprentice himself to a trader or merchant.

It was what most people would expect. Mountain life was hard enough for grown men. A boy alone had almost no chance of surviving, particularly a boy who had just lost his father to the very conditions he would face. He could seek help from the scattered trapping community. Emoris Powell might take him on as a partner, though Emmeris had made it clear on several occasions that he worked alone by preference.

Idrris Beavenon, a former coal miner from Wales, who had come west 5 years earlier, lived another 15 miles up river and might be willing to teach him. Resead Wallader, the eldest trapper in the region, at 57 years, had a large enough operation that he sometimes hired seasonal help. Or he could stay. He could run his father’s trap line, maintain the cabin, and prove that he was capable of surviving what had killed a better man.

The third option was probably foolish. It was certainly dangerous. But as Kadak sat in the cold cabin surrounded by his father’s possessions, he realized the choice had already been made. He was not leaving. He was staying. And he was going to solve the problem that had taken his father’s life. He was going to make sure that a failed fire would never kill anyone in this cabin again.

Katak had been 7 years old when his family left Wales. The memories of that life were fragmentaryary now. images without complete context, but some moments remained vivid. He remembered his father coming home from the mines, face black with coal dust, coughing into a rag that never came clean. He remembered the smell of the mining town, sulfur and smoke and damp stone.

He remembered his mother, Branwin, who had died of fever the winter before they left for America, buried in ground so crowded with graves that the dead lay shoulderto-shoulder beneath the chapel yard. But the memory that came to him now, sitting in the cold cabin 3 days after burying his father, was of the day Griffith had taken him down into the mine.

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