On a crisp November morning, Lena received a call from the ranch’s owner, seventy-three-year-old Walt Heston. His voice was thin, frayed at the edges.
Lena grabbed her bag. In twenty years, she’d heard “trying to kill” applied to stallions, roosters, and one memorable pet raccoon. Never a llama. The Heston ranch was quiet when she arrived. Too quiet. Normally, ranch dogs barked, goats bleated, and somewhere a tractor cougued to life. Today, the air hung still and heavy.
“Margaret took over the morning feed.”
Lena smiled and saved the photo to a folder she kept for cases like this—the ones that reminded her why she’d chosen this strange, beautiful intersection of science and soul. Animal behavior wasn’t about fixing broken creatures. It was about listening to the stories they couldn’t tell, and translating them into kindness.
Margaret’s eyes filled with tears. “She hasn’t let me near her in six weeks.” Back at the truck, Lena explained. “Llamas are creatures of routine and social bonding. Your son wasn’t just a feeder—he was Pele’s secondary attachment figure after you. When he left, you stepped into his role. But you smell like you, not like him. You move like you, not like him. To Pele’s mind, a familiar routine was being performed by a stranger. That’s terrifying for a prey animal.”