Anaconda.1997

First light revealed a sight that would be burned into their memories. The lake’s surface was a slick of olive-green lily pads and floating grass. And there, half-submerged along the far bank, was the anaconda. It was not coiled in a defensive posture. It was digesting. The massive bulge in its midsection, three feet behind its skull, was the size of a compact car. That bulge was the capybara.

They lost everything. The radio, the sedatives, half their food. They had to walk four days back to the village, through flooded forests and swarms of bullet ants. Ronaldo, humiliated and furious, wouldn’t speak to Lena for two of those days. anaconda.1997

“Anacondas don’t coil and push like a python,” Lena said, her voice tight with excitement. “They move in straight lines. Their weight does the work. This animal is old. And heavy.” She estimated the width of the impression. “This snake’s girth is greater than my thigh.” First light revealed a sight that would be