One morning in October 2009, Scott O'Konek sat in a tree in Camp Ripley, the military training base near Little Falls, Minn.
In one hand he held a bow with an arrow nocked, prepared to shoot a doe, if it came to that.
A buck would be better, to be sure.
But the trophy O'Konek primarily sought was the peace that accompanied his perch high in a tree, the autumn air chilled, leaves falling.
"Bow hunting is important to me," he would say later. "It makes me calm. If I see a red squirrel or a bird fly by, it makes my day."
About 9 a.m., O'Konek, of South Haven, Minn., saw something grander still: a 32-point buck.
Standing about 44 yards away, beneath a dark sky, the big whitetail shook snow from its back.
The animal didn't know it was being watched.