Fire Red Squirrels 1636 Instant

Behind them, the pine grove exploded. The heat was a physical hand, shoving them. A wave of cinders rose into the sky like evil fireflies. Rust’s whiskers singed. His tail felt aflame. But the river was now in sight—a brown ribbon of salvation.

That autumn, when the rains finally came, the people of Oakhaven returned to find their own homes half-destroyed. But they also found something strange: a colony of red squirrels living in the surviving black oaks near the river bend, their coats the color of the fire they had outrun.

Fire, his ancestors' memory whispered. Run. fire red squirrels 1636

But Rust did not run. He had seen the deer bolt and the birds flee. He had seen the panicked scattering of his own kind—siblings and cousins chittering, stuffing their cheeks with last-minute stores. They did not understand. This was not a storm or a fox. This was the mountain waking up.

Rust did not have words. He had action.

They stayed submerged until the worst passed—perhaps an hour, perhaps a day. Time had melted.

He reached the muddy bank and dove into a shallow pool choked with ash. One by one, the other squirrels tumbled in after him, plunging into the water until only their noses showed. Above, the world burned. The roar was now a continuous thunder. Oaks that had stood for two hundred years burst like torches. Behind them, the pine grove exploded

When they emerged, the forest was a smoking skeleton. But the river had saved the outcrop and the meadow beyond. Rust shook the water from his fur. The russet female touched her nose to his. Around them, the other squirrels began, cautiously, to dig for wet tubers and unburned acorns.