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John Wayne hunted a wild boar alone: ​​what he did at 3 a.m. in the woods without anyone seeing him…

The ground soft from the last of the winter rains. A place that doesn’t care much what your name is. John Wayne had driven up alone three days before, which was unusual enough that his assistant had asked twice if he was sure. He was sure. No crew, no script pages, no one expecting him anywhere until Tuesday. He had a camp set up off a dirt access road he’d used before.

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A small tent, a fire ring, the particular silence that comes only when you’ve put enough miles between yourself and the nearest person who wants something from you. He was 59 years old. He just finished a picture that had taken longer than it should have and cost more than it needed to. Hollywood had been doing that to him lately, taking things that should have been simple and making them complicated in ways he couldn’t always name.

He didn’t talk about that with people. He went to the forest instead. Look at him here before the hunt begins. Not the movie version. Not the man on the billboard. A man in worn canvas pants and a field jacket that had seen a lot of seasons, sitting by a fire in the pre-dawn dark with a cup of coffee he’d made too strong, in no hurry to go anywhere.

The rifle was leaning against the camp table. He’d get to it when the light was right. The second morning, he was up before 4:00. By the time he left camp, it was just starting to show gray in the east. That thin cold light that comes before color arrives. He moved through the trees without a flashlight, the way a man does when he’s walked enough pre-dawn forests to trust his feet on uneven ground.

He knew the general area of the creek drainage below the south ridge where he’d seen rooting sign the previous afternoon, the turned earth and the smell of it. Wild pig country. He had a few hours at most, the morning window before the heat built and the animals move deeper into cover. After that, the drainage would go quiet, and whatever he’d come up here to leave behind would still be waiting.

A man carries more than a rifle into a forest when he goes alone. Something else, too. The specific weight of whatever he came up here to set down, at least for a few days. Wayne had been carrying it since the drive up. He hadn’t put it down yet. He was hoping the morning would help. Notice the silence he chose.

No phone, no check-in, no one who knew exactly where he was. Just a man in the dark and whatever he was trying to outpace. A hunter from a camp a quarter mile north passed him on the access road before dawn heading in the other direction. He gave Wayne a nod. Wayne nodded back. Neither of them said a word.

An hour of walking, mostly upwind. He slowed at the drainage, found a position behind a downed oak with a clear sight line to the creek bottom. Waited. The forest woke up around him. First the birds, then the squirrels, then the general settling into mourning that everything does when the temperature starts to lift.

He heard the pigs before he saw them. The sounds they make when they’re rooting, a combination of grunting and the wet sound of soil being worked, carry further than you’d think. He spotted the sounder moving along the far bank. Four, five animals, maybe more behind them in the brush. He was looking for a mature boar, ideally, but what presented itself cleanly, stepping out of the shadows into a shaft of morning light, was a large sa moving slightly apart from the others.

He made his decision the way you do when you’ve been hunting long enough that decisions are physical rather than deliberate. One shot she went down clean. The sounder scattered. That fast crashing exit that wild pigs make when something goes wrong. Four directions at once. The brush closing behind them like water. Gone in under 10 seconds.

Wayne waited the way you’re supposed to. A full 3 minutes still listening. Then he crossed the creek and climbed the near bank and crouched beside the animal. That’s when he heard it. Stop for a second and hold exactly where you are because this is the moment the whole story turns on. And from the outside, it looks like nothing.

A man crouching in the brush on a California hillside. Head turned slightly to the left. But something in what he was hearing didn’t fit. The sound was coming from a thicket 8 or 10 ft away. Small, repetitive, high-pitched. Not a bird, not anything he’d encountered before in this specific context.

He stayed still and let it come to him. piglets. He could smell the nest before he fully reached it. The warm, dense smell of newborns, something alive and clothes underneath the pine and cold soil. He stood slowly, moved toward the thicket, pushed through the outer edge of it, and looked down. A pharrowing nest, a shallow depression lined with dried grass and broken branches, the careful work of a sa that had separated from her sounder sometime in the past day or two to prepare for birth.

In it, pressed together in the instinctive huddle of newborns, five piglets, each one striped brown and tan, barely larger than a man’s hand, eyes open, looking at nothing in particular. The one closest to him was making most of the noise. Wayne stood there without moving for a long time. He understood what had happened.

A sa will leave her group before she gives birth. It’s in the nature of the thing, an old instinct. Privacy before the litter arrives. She builds the nest alone. She stays with the newborns for several days before rejoining the sounder and introducing the litter. Given the size of these piglets, they were perhaps a day old, maybe two.

They needed their mother’s milk. They needed warmth. Without her, they had hours before those needs became irreversible. He took a step back, looked up at the ridge where the sounder had vanished. Listen to what he was telling himself. Standing on that hillside, the sounder might come back. The other SOS in a group will sometimes take in orphaned piglets. It happens.

He’d heard this was true. If he left the area gave it enough time, the sound the piglets were making might draw the group back. This was possible, not impossible. He walked back across the creek and sat on a rock and waited. The rock was cold through his canvas pants. The creek made a quiet sound below him, water over gravel, continuous and indifferent to everything happening on the bank above it. An hour passed. The piglets called.

The forest returned nothing. An hour and every minute he sat on this rock was a minute those piglets had been sitting in that nest without their mother. He waited 30 more minutes. The sun was fully up, the shadows shortening, the April heat beginning to build the way it did in this country. Slow and earnest.

He watched the ridge. Nothing moved along it that was large enough to matter. He’d been out here 2 hours. The morning window was gone and up that hill. Every hour he sat on this rock was another hour. of those piglets had been sitting in that nest. He understood the other thing. His shot had pushed the sounder out of this drainage.

A rifle’s report in a confined valley carries and wild pigs learned quickly what it means. That group was likely a mile away by now. The piglet sounds, real as they were, were not going to carry a mile through this particular wind. He had been waiting for something that probably wasn’t coming. He got up.

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