They Killed a Bigfoot

They Killed a Bigfoot

WE PULLED THE TRIGGER—AND THE FOREST NEVER FORGOT

I still don’t know which moment doomed us.

Was it when we crossed that rusted logging gate and locked it behind us?
Or when the first footprint appeared in the mud and no one suggested turning back?

Maybe it was the moment my friend whispered, “We’ll be famous,” and raised his rifle.

Three years have passed, yet every night I smell it again—wet fur, rot, and pine needles soaked in blood.

That was the last hunt I ever went on.

I wasn’t a hunter like the others. I tagged along because I wanted to belong. They were veterans—men who spoke in calibers and wind direction, who treated the wilderness like a chessboard they’d mastered. I trusted them.

That trust buried three of them.

The forest we entered wasn’t empty. It was ancient. The kind of place where sunlight struggled to reach the ground and every tree looked older than memory itself. Even during the day, it felt like dusk. The birds were quiet. Too quiet.

When we found the tracks, my stomach dropped.

They weren’t bear. They weren’t human. Five toes. Deep impressions. Stride too long, too purposeful. Something heavy had walked there—something that knew where it was going.

We followed them.

That was our first mistake.

The deeper we went, the more wrong everything felt. Animal bones appeared in neat piles, cracked open with surgical precision. Berries sorted by type. Branch shelters arranged against wind direction. This wasn’t instinct.

This was intelligence.

When we reached the clearing, we saw it.

Eight feet tall. Broad shoulders. Dark fur matted with dirt and pine sap. It stood with its back to us, calmly arranging stones into patterns I couldn’t understand. Its movements were careful. Thoughtful.

Peaceful.

No one breathed.

I remember thinking we were witnessing something sacred—something never meant for human eyes.

Then my friend lifted his rifle.

I tried to stop him. We all did. But that look had already taken hold—the one hunters get when the world narrows to a single target.

The shot shattered the forest.

The creature roared—not in pain alone, but in shock. Blood sprayed across the needles. It turned, eyes locking onto us with something far worse than rage.

Understanding.

It charged.

We fired. Again and again. Bullets tore through fur and muscle, yet it kept coming, fueled by something deeper than survival. When it finally collapsed, the silence that followed was unbearable.

Up close, the truth crushed me.

Its hands were shaped like ours. Its face—wrong, yet familiar. Its eyes still held awareness even as life drained from them.

We didn’t kill an animal.

We executed a thinking being.

That’s when the forest screamed.

A sound rose from the depths—grief so raw it vibrated through bone. Not a roar. A mourning call. A cry that carried love and loss and fury all at once.

Something else was coming.

Heavier footsteps. Faster. Angrier.

The second one emerged larger, darker, scarred. It looked at the body of the first creature and made a sound that broke something inside me. Then it looked at us.

And chose vengeance.

What followed wasn’t a fight.

It was punishment.

One man died in seconds—lifted, crushed, discarded like refuse. Another tried to run and didn’t make it ten steps. The forest swallowed his scream.

I fired until my rifle clicked empty. It didn’t matter.

This creature didn’t rush. It hunted with intention, herding us apart, forcing us into panic. It understood fear.

When it turned toward me, I dropped my weapon and ran.

I don’t call it bravery. I call it cowardice.

I ran while my friends died behind me.

I don’t remember how long I fled—only the pain, the burning lungs, the certainty that something was always just behind me. Eventually, the footsteps stopped.

The forest went silent again.

It let me live.

Three days later, half-starved and broken, I found a ranger station. I told them I got lost. That my friends disappeared. They searched for weeks.

They found blood. Shell casings. Destroyed trees.

They called it a bear attack.

No bodies were ever recovered.

No one asked why there were no bears in that region anymore.

Life moved on.

Mine didn’t.

I can’t enter forests now. Can’t smell pine without shaking. Therapy didn’t help. Pills didn’t help.

Because guilt doesn’t fade when it’s earned.

Lately, the dreams have changed.

I wake to motion lights flickering. To massive footprints pressed into the mud outside my house. To deep scratches in the wood siding—eight feet off the ground.

Last night, I smelled it again.

Wet fur. Rot. Pine needles.

Something is outside as I write this.

It’s walking slowly from window to window, learning the shape of my home the way I learned its forest. My dog is hiding, whimpering.

I understand now.

It didn’t kill me because death would’ve been too easy.

It let me live with what I did.

And now, years later, it has come to collect what the forest is owed.

If someone finds this, learn from us.

There are beings in this world older than our laws, stronger than our weapons, and bound by a justice we don’t understand.

We went into the forest as hunters.

We left as prey.

And the forest never forgets.

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