З життя
We Were Driving Along the Motorway When Suddenly a Massive Bear Leapt Onto the Road and Began Slowly Approaching Our Car
We were driving along the country road that skirts Epping Forest, the rain pattering steadily on the windscreen, the world outside quiet and soft with a faint morning fog. There was a lovely peace in the way the trees arched across the road, and George and I were chatting about how nice it would be to finally get home and put the kettle on. I felt safe in that cocoon of quiet and familiar English green.
Then, out of nowhere, something enormous lunged onto the tarmac before usa massive stag, antlers high and proud, drenched from the rain. George slammed on the brakes, the car jolted, and my heart thudded loudly in my chest. The stag came to a standstill just a metre or so from the front of the car and rose up on its powerful hind legs for a fleeting instant, its silhouette dwarfed against the grey morning. It looked positively majestic, and, if I’m honest, utterly terrifying.
For a moment, the stag simply stared at us, unblinking, as if sizing us up, its breath visible in the cold air. Then it took a confident step towards the bonnet, moving with slow deliberation. I was convinced it might chargeperhaps it was hungry, or perhaps cornered by something we couldnt see. The glass and steel between us felt pitifully thin.
George kept his wits about him and quietly shifted the car into reverse, inching back, both of us barely daring to breathe. I was rooted to my seat, the fear making it impossible to move, eyes glued to that powerful animal.
Then, at the very moment when I was sure disaster was about to strike, the most extraordinary thing happeneda loud crack split the air like thunder. A huge oak, old and heavy with rain, toppled with a deafening crash right beside us, missing our car by what felt like inches. We sat stunned, taking in that we were somehow still alive and unharmed.
The stag flinched, startled by the sound, and with one last glance in our direction, spun and bounded back into the depths of the forest. And just as suddenly as it began, the road was empty again, silent except for the rain and the distant echo of the fallen tree.
I keep replaying it all in my mind, wondering if the stag truly meant to attack, or if perhaps it was trying to warn usmaybe even as disoriented as we were. Or maybe it simply bolted at the noise. I suppose Ill never know for certain. But that unwavering stare will remain with me always, haunting and mysterious, a memory folded into the English countryside and attached now, indelibly, to an ordinary drive home.
