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PAThe Rescue on the Blue Ice
The Alaskan wind howled across the tundra, carrying a bite that could freeze breath mid-air. Yamato, a seasoned local hunter wearing thick caribou furs, was trekking across the vast plains when he heard a strange, high-pitched cry. It wasn’t the howl of a wolf or the bark of a fox.
He followed the sound toward the edge of a jagged, frozen lake. There, trapped in a break in the ice, was a Pallas’s cat (also known as a Manul). The small, round cat was struggling desperately, its thick, grey fur soaked and heavy with freezing slush. It had likely tried to cross the "invisible" thin ice and fallen through.
"Easy there, little warrior," Yamato whispered, his voice steady despite the cold.
Yamato knew the ice was unstable. He couldn't walk directly to the hole. Instead, he lay flat on his stomach to distribute his weight and crawled slowly toward the shivering animal. The ice groaned beneath him, a terrifying sound like breaking glass.
When he reached the edge, he saw the cat’s golden eyes wide with panic. Its energy was fading. Yamato reached out with his sturdy moose-hide glove. The cat, usually wary of humans, seemed to understand this was its only hope. It dug its claws into the leather, and with a powerful heave, Yamato pulled the soaked, heavy ball of fur onto the solid ice.
Back to Warmth
Yamato didn't waste a second. He tucked the freezing cat inside his oversized parka, right against his chest to share his body heat. He rushed back to his nearby cabin, where a fire was already crackling in the hearth.
Inside the cabin, he wrapped the Pallas’s cat in a dry wool blanket. As the cat began to dry, its fur puffed out into its signature round shape. It looked at Yamato with a grumpy, yet grateful expression before falling into a deep, warm sleep. In the harsh wild of Alaska, an unlikely bond had been formed over the ice.
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