I committed my first murder at the age of
twelve. I had killed before, but before
there were always
motives such as self defense and protection of property. On December
25, 1991, however, I killed for the carnal
sake of killing. Taking this life did not feel
wrong until the
fraction of a second after it was too late. I remember vividly the pride I
felt in my steady
aim, the rifle-sights barely moving from the tiny target I had chosen, and
then the crushing
suffocation which replaced pride as soon as I squeezed my right index
finger. I was
told that it was alright. My father said, "good job." The government
said that
I was acting
within the limits of the law. Strangely, I felt no comfort in knowing I had my
father and the
government on my side. I still suffered prosecution, not from any judge or
jury, but from
myself.
I am sure that by now you are appalled (a
little anyway) with me. It may not
change your
feelings any, but at least let me explain that I did not kill any human being.
The life which I
took belonged to a squirrel, and squirrel was in season. some would call it
a rodent, too
stupid to get out of the path of their Goodyears. On the other hand, I as well
as many others
would call the squirrel and most other animals a dignified and noble
creature. Anyway,
the life was a squirrel's and the weapon was a Crossman pellet rifle.
The weapon was a
Christmas present, the squirrel was not included.
Upon reaching my grandparents' farm for
Christmas dinner (lunch for those of you
not raised in the
country), I set out after my adversary. Any adversary would have
sufficed, but it
was the squirrel's bad luck that I found it first. Actually, I really was not
the
one to find the squirrel.
Accompanying me on my brief safari was my father and Lady, a
lassie-looking
collie and God-knows-what-else mix who fancied herself a terrier. Lady
found the
squirrel, which proved a much-debated theory: one can be anything one wants if
one sets one's
mind to it. Lady would have beaten any terrier to that squirrel.
The squirrel chattered angrily and threw acorns
at Lady. This seemed to enrage
Lady and she
commenced trying to climb the tree. Realizing that she would never get that
squirrel, Lady
took off after another one to repeat the scenario. After a couple of minutes,
the squirrel
forgot the insane, slobbering beast and left the security of its hiding place.
It
paused on a
branch to dine on an acorn. Little did it know that a very eager and blood-
thirsty
twelve-year-old was keeping the sights of his brand new and
fully-loaded-with-the-
safety-off pellet
rifle trained on its head. Calmly, I drew in a breath and held it. My aim
was steady, the
only movement of the sights coming from my suddenly deafening
heartbeat. I
gently squeezed the trigger and made a change. I changed my life and ended
the squirrel's.
Before it fell, I wished that I had not fired. My father said, "good
job." I
said,
"what?" He said, "I said it was a good shot." Somehow, I
did not think it was a very
good shot. as I
went down and plucked this creature from the creek, its once-fluffy fur
matted and the
heat of its tiny body waning, I knew that I had made a very bad shot.
The walk back to the house was long, and I
carried the squirrel as one might carry
a piece of
antique china, as though I might damage it if I dropped it. My father carried
the
rifle. Somehow I
had lost interest in my Christmas present; I suppose I was preoccupied
with my shame.
When we finally reached the house, my father said, "come on and I'll show
you how to clean
it." It was then that I began to cry. How could any minute aspect of that
whole incident be
cleaned?
Perhaps if I had set out with the notion of
killing the squirrel for food, I would not
have felt so
terrible, but I had not. I had merely set out to kill something, or rather
anything, just to
see if I could. Even now, I look back and believe that I deserved to feel
as badly as I
did. I learned a very valuable lesson that day. I saw the barbarian in me and
knew that I did
not want to see him again.
I do not wish to debate hunting, nor do I feel
I should write an epitaph to a
wronged squirrel.
Hunting animals is not something I feel very strongly about. I realize
now that we as
humans kill to eat, and there is nothing wrong with that. However, I do
feel very
strongly about killing for no reason other than the "sport" of
killing. I have never
understood why
people travel to far and exotic places to kill magnificent beasts or why
people adorn
their walls with the heads of animals. I did not kill a lion or a deer that
day,
but no one can
convince me that the squirrel I killed was any less majestic. That squirrel
was my one and
only trophy, and I have yet to find a reason to seek another
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