You could see the signs which said that possums came at night and fed upon this tree, they left their mark in fruit discards and broken twigs and shredded leaves spread randomly in careless piles beneath its ravaged canopy.
Our father ground his teeth, his frown a sentence to the pests, such waste he said, you’d think they’d eat the best and leave the rest for us, but no, they have to have a taste of every one. He cleaned his gun with dour intent, tonight they’ll pay, he said.
We could already see their furry pelts stretched tight upon the drying boards at 2/6d each, hardening in the springtime sun, bleaching to a silvered grey, a fair reward to pay for widespread wanton waste these delinquent possums wreaked.
Brush-tailed possums, trichosurus vulpecula, or sons of Satan by any other name whose personal claim to fame was their devious invasion of our orchard every year; we were fortunate they didn’t seem to care for plums as near as much as peaches or nectarines.
But they wasted so much more than ever was consumed. The moon is right tonight, full and fair, our father reasoned, we’ll see them in the branches clearly set against the moonlit sky, they’ll wonder why we point out torches and peer intently at us before we shoot them there.
Have you ever seen the brightness of a possum’s eyes at night when handheld light pins them in the night’s suspense? Heard the high-pitched crack of the bullet which despatches them? Ever heard the weary grunt, or softly fluid thump of their corpses bumping to the ground, or worse, the sound of panicked urine voiding down the trunk of a tree which gave no sanctuary?