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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Kings in Exile, by Sir Charles George
+Douglas Roberts
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Kings in Exile
+
+
+Author: Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 7, 2009 [eBook #28530]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KINGS IN EXILE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 28530-h.htm or 28530-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/5/3/28530/28530-h/28530-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/5/3/28530/28530-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+KINGS IN EXILE
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+The MacMillan Company
+New York ˇ Boston ˇ Chicago
+Dallas ˇ San Francisco
+
+MacMillan & Co., Limited
+London ˇ Bombay ˇ Calcutta
+Melbourne
+
+The MacMillan Co. Of Canada, Ltd.
+Toronto
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "The Gray Master."]
+
+
+KINGS IN EXILE
+
+by
+
+CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS
+
+Author of "The Backwoodsmen," Etc.
+
+Illustrated
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The MacMillan Company
+1912
+
+All rights reserved
+
+Copyright by Perry, Mason & Co. (1907), The Curtis
+Publishing Co. (1908-1909), The Associated Sunday
+Magazines (1908), The Red Book Magazine (1908).
+
+Copyright, 1910,
+By The MacMillan Company.
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published February, 1910. Reprinted
+June, 1910; July, December, 1912.
+
+Norwood Press
+
+J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+ PAGE
+
+ Last Bull 1
+
+ The King of the Flaming Hoops 25
+
+ The Monarch of Park Barren 70
+
+ The Gray Master 107
+
+ The Sun-Gazer 140
+
+ The Lord of the Glass House 177
+
+ Back to the Water World 196
+
+ Lone Wolf 243
+
+ The Bear's Face 276
+
+ The Duel on the Trail 297
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ "The Gray Master." _Frontispiece_
+
+ "Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a
+ little knoll in his pasture." 6
+
+ "Only to be hurled back again with a vigor that
+ brought him to his knees." 10
+
+ "When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little
+ dark eyes glowed suddenly red." 32
+
+ "Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet
+ distant, crouched, ready to spring, the biggest
+ puma he had ever seen." 64
+
+ "He reached the tree just in time to swing well
+ up among the branches." 72
+
+ "For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was
+ able to keep up this almost incredible pace." 90
+
+ "Then the second puma pounced." 134
+
+ "He launched himself on a long, splendid sweep
+ over the gulf." 144
+
+ "After this the eagle came regularly every three
+ or four hours with food for the prisoner." 160
+
+ "And the writhing tentacles composed themselves
+ once more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting
+ the next careless passer-by." 176
+
+ "Without the slightest hesitation he whipped up
+ two writhing tentacles and seized him." 188
+
+
+
+
+LAST BULL
+
+
+
+
+LAST BULL
+
+
+That was what two grim old sachems of the Dacotahs had dubbed him; and
+though his official title, on the lists of the Zoölogical Park, was
+"Kaiser," the new and more significant name had promptly supplanted
+it. The Park authorities--people of imagination and of sentiment, as
+must all be who would deal successfully with wild animals--had felt at
+once that the name aptly embodied the tragedies and the romantic
+memories of his all-but-vanished race. They had felt, too, that the
+two old braves who had been brought East to adorn a city pageant, and
+who had stood gazing stoically for hours at the great bull buffalo
+through the barrier of the steel-wire fence, were fitted, before all
+others, to give him a name. Between him and them there was surely a
+tragic bond, as they stood there islanded among the swelling tides of
+civilization which had already engulfed their kindreds. "Last Bull"
+they had called him, as he answered their gaze with little, sullen,
+melancholy eyes from under his ponderous and shaggy front. "Last
+Bull"--and the passing of his race was in the name.
+
+Here, in his fenced, protected range, with a space of grassy meadow,
+half a dozen clumps of sheltering trees, two hundred yards of the run
+of a clear, unfailing brook, and a warm shed for refuge against the
+winter storms, the giant buffalo ruled his little herd of three tawny
+cows, two yearlings, and one blundering, butting calf of the season.
+He was a magnificent specimen of his race--surpassing, it was said,
+the finest bull in the Yellowstone preserves or in the guarded
+Canadian herd of the North. Little short of twelve feet in length, a
+good five foot ten in height at the tip of his humped and huge
+fore-shoulders, he seemed to justify the most extravagant tales of
+pioneer and huntsman. His hind-quarters were trim and fine-lined,
+built apparently for speed, smooth-haired, and of a grayish
+lion-color. But his fore-shoulders, mounting to an enormous hump, were
+of an elephantine massiveness, and clothed in a dense, curling,
+golden-brown growth of matted hair. His mighty head was carried low,
+almost to the level of his knees, on a neck of colossal strength,
+which was draped, together with the forelegs down to the knees, in a
+flowing brown mane tipped with black. His head, too, to the very
+muzzle, wore the same luxuriant and sombre drapery, out of which
+curved viciously the keen-tipped crescent of his horns. Dark, huge,
+and ominous, he looked curiously out of place in the secure and
+familiar tranquillity of his green pasture.
+
+For a distance of perhaps fifty yards, at the back of the pasture, the
+range of the buffalo herd adjoined that of the moose, divided from it
+by that same fence of heavy steel-wire mesh, supported by iron posts,
+which surrounded the whole range. One sunny and tingling day in late
+October--such a day as makes the blood race full red through all
+healthy veins--a magnificent stranger was brought to the Park, and
+turned into the moose-range.
+
+The newcomer was a New Brunswick bull moose, captured on the Tobique
+during the previous spring when the snow was deep and soft, and
+purchased for the Park by one of the big Eastern lumber-merchants. The
+moose-herd had consisted, hitherto, of four lonely cows, and the
+splendid bull was a prize which the Park had long been coveting. He
+took lordly possession, forthwith, of the submissive little herd, and
+led them off at once from the curious crowds about the gate to explore
+the wild-looking thickets at the back of the pasture. But no sooner
+had he fairly entered these thickets than he found his further
+progress barred by the steel-meshed fence. This was a bitter
+disappointment, for he had expected to go striding through miles of
+alder swamp and dark spruce woods, fleeing the hated world of men and
+bondage, before setting himself to get acquainted with his new
+followers. His high-strung temper was badly jarred. He drew off,
+shaking his vast antlers, and went shambling with spacious stride down
+along the barrier towards the brook. The four cows, in single file,
+hurried after him anxiously, afraid he might be snatched away from
+them.
+
+Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a little knoll in his
+pasture, caught sight of the strange, dark figure of the running
+moose. A spark leapt into his heavy eyes. He wheeled, pawed the sod,
+put his muzzle to the ground, and bellowed a sonorous challenge. The
+moose stopped short and stared about him, the stiff hair lifting
+angrily along the ridge of his massive neck. Last Bull lowered his
+head and tore up the sod with his horns.
+
+[Illustration: "Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a little knoll
+in his pasture."]
+
+This vehement action caught the eyes of the moose. At first he stared
+in amazement, for he had never seen any creature that looked like Last
+Bull. The two were only about fifty or sixty yards apart, across the
+little valley of the bushy swamp. As he stared, his irritation
+speedily overcame his amazement. The curious-looking creature over
+there on the knoll was defying him, was challenging him. At this time
+of year his blood was hot and quick for any challenge. He gave vent to
+a short, harsh, explosive cry, more like a grumbling bleat than a
+bellow, and as unlike the buffalo's challenge as could well be
+imagined. Then he fell to thrashing the nearest bushes violently with
+his antlers. This, for some reason unknown to the mere human
+chronicler, seemed to be taken by Last Bull as a crowning insolence.
+His long, tasselled tail went stiffly up into the air, and he charged
+wrathfully down the knoll. The moose, with his heavy-muzzled head
+stuck straight out scornfully before him, and his antlers laid flat
+along his back, strode down to the encounter with a certain deadly
+deliberation. He was going to fight. There was no doubt whatever on
+that score. But he had not quite made up his wary mind as to how he
+would deal with this unknown and novel adversary.
+
+They looked not so unequally matched, these two, the monarch of the
+Western plains, and the monarch of the northeastern forests. Both had
+something of the monstrous, the uncouth, about them, as if they
+belonged not to this modern day, but to some prehistoric epoch when
+Earth moulded her children on more lavish and less graceful lines. The
+moose was like the buffalo in having his hind-quarters relatively
+slight and low, and his back sloping upwards to a hump over the
+immensely developed fore-shoulders. But he had much less length of
+body, and much less bulk, though perhaps eight or ten inches more of
+height at the tip of the shoulder. His hair was short, and darker than
+that of his shaggy rival, being almost black except on legs and belly.
+Instead of carrying his head low, like the buffalo, for feeding on the
+level prairies, he bore it high, being in the main a tree-feeder. But
+the greatest difference between the two champions was in their heads
+and horns. The antlers of the moose formed a huge, fantastic, flatly
+palmated or leaflike structure, separating into sharp prongs along the
+edges, and spreading more than four feet from tip to tip. To compare
+them with the short, polished crescent of the horns of Last Bull was
+like comparing a two-handed broadsword to a bowie-knife. And his head,
+instead of being short, broad, ponderous, and shaggy, like Last
+Bull's, was long, close-haired, and massively horse-faced, with a
+projecting upper lip heavy and grim.
+
+Had there been no impregnable steel barrier between them, it is hard
+to say which would have triumphed in the end, the ponderous weight and
+fury of Last Bull, or the ripping prongs and swift wrath of the moose.
+The buffalo charged down the knoll at a thundering gallop; but just
+before reaching the fence he checked himself violently. More than once
+or twice before had those elastic but impenetrable meshes given him
+his lesson, hurling him back with humiliating harshness when he dashed
+his bulk against them. He had too lively a memory of past
+discomfitures to risk a fresh one now in the face of this insolent
+foe. His matted front came against the wire with a force so cunningly
+moderated that he was not thrown back by the recoil. And the keen
+points of his horns went through the meshes with a vehemence which
+might indeed have done its work effectively had they come in contact
+with the adversary. As it was, however, they but prodded empty air.
+
+The moose, meanwhile, had been in doubt whether to attack with his
+antlers, as was his manner when encountering foes of his own kind, or
+with his knife-edged fore-hoofs, which were the weapons he used
+against bears, wolves, or other alien adversaries. Finally he seemed
+to make up his mind that Last Bull, having horns and a most
+redoubtable stature, must be some kind of moose. In that case, of
+course, it became a question of antlers. Moreover, in his meetings
+with rival bulls it had never been his wont to depend upon a blind,
+irresistible charge,--thereby leaving it open to an alert opponent to
+slip aside and rip him along the flank,--but rather to fence warily
+for an advantage in the locking of antlers, and then bear down his foe
+by the fury and speed of his pushing. It so happened, therefore, that
+he, too, came not too violently against the barrier. Loudly his vast
+spread of antlers clashed upon the steel meshes; and one short prong,
+jutting low over his brow, pierced through and furrowed deeply the
+matted forehead of the buffalo.
+
+As the blood streamed down over his nostrils, obscuring one eye, Last
+Bull quite lost his head with rage. Drawing off, he hurled himself
+blindly upon the barrier--only to be hurled back again with a vigor
+that brought him to his knees. But at the same time the moose, on the
+other side of the fence, got a huge surprise. Having his antlers
+against the barrier when Last Bull charged, he was forced back
+irresistibly upon his haunches, with a rudeness quite unlike anything
+that he had ever before experienced. His massive neck felt as if a
+pine tree had fallen upon it, and he came back to the charge quite
+beside himself with bewilderment and rage.
+
+[Illustration: "Only to be hurled back again with a vigor that brought
+him to his knees."]
+
+By this time, however, the keepers and Park attendants were arriving
+on the scene, armed with pitchforks and other unpleasant executors of
+authority. Snorting, and bellowing, and grunting, the monstrous
+duellists were forced apart; and Last Bull, who had been taught
+something of man's dominance, was driven off to his stable and
+imprisoned. He was not let out again for two whole days. And by that
+time another fence, parallel with the first and some five or six feet
+distant from it, had been run up between his range and that of the
+moose. Over this impassable zone of neutrality, for a few days, the
+two rivals flung insult and futile defiance, till suddenly, becoming
+tired of it all, they seemed to agree to ignore each other's
+existence.
+
+After this, Last Bull's sullenness of temper appeared to grow upon
+him. He was fond of drawing apart from the little herd, and taking up
+his solitary post on the knoll, where he would stand for an hour at a
+time motionless except for the switching of his long tail, and
+staring steadily westward as if he knew where the great past of his
+race had lain. In that direction a dense grove of chestnuts, maples,
+and oaks bounded the range, cutting off the view of the city roofs,
+the roar of the city traffic. Beyond the city were mountains and wide
+waters which he could not see; but beyond the waters and the mountains
+stretched the green, illimitable plains--which perhaps (who knows?) in
+some faint vision inherited from the ancestors whose myriads had
+possessed them, his sombre eyes, in some strange way, _could_ see.
+Among the keepers and attendants generally it was said, with anxious
+regret, that perhaps Last Bull was "going bad." But the head-keeper,
+Payne, himself a son of the plains, repudiated the idea. _He_ declared
+sympathetically that the great bull was merely homesick, pining for
+the wind-swept levels of the open country (God's country, Payne called
+it!) which his imprisoned hoofs had never trodden.
+
+Be this as it may, the fact could not be gainsaid that Last Bull was
+growing more and more morose. The spectators, strolling along the wide
+walk which skirted the front of his range, seemed to irritate him, and
+sometimes, when a group had gathered to admire him, he would turn his
+low-hung head and answer their staring eyes with a kind of heavy fury,
+as if he burned to break forth upon them and seek vengeance for
+incalculable wrongs. This smouldering indignation against humanity
+extended equally, if not more violently, to all creatures who appeared
+to him as servants or allies of humanity. The dogs whom he sometimes
+saw passing, held in leash by their masters or mistresses, made him
+paw the earth scornfully if he happened to be near the fence. The
+patient horses who pulled the road-roller or the noisy lawn-mower made
+his eyes redden savagely. And he hated with peculiar zest the roguish
+little trick elephant, Bong, who would sometimes, his inquisitive
+trunk swinging from side to side, go lurching lazily by with a load of
+squealing children on his back.
+
+Bong, who was a favored character, amiable and trustworthy, was
+allowed the freedom of the Park in the early morning, before visitors
+began to arrive who might be alarmed at seeing an elephant at large.
+He was addicted to minding his own business, and never paid the
+slightest attention to any occupants of cage or enclosure. He was
+quite unaware of the hostility which he had aroused in the perverse
+and brooding heart of Last Bull.
+
+One crisp morning in late November, when all the grass in the Park had
+been blackened by frost, and the pools were edged with silver rims of
+ice, and mists were white and saffron about the scarce-risen sun, and
+that autumn thrill was in the air which gives one such an appetite,
+Bong chanced to be strolling past the front of Last Bull's range. He
+did not see Last Bull, who was nothing to him. But, being just as
+hungry as he ought to be on so stimulating a morning, he did see, and
+note with interest, some bundles of fresh hay on the other side of the
+fence.
+
+Now, Bong was no thief. But hay had always seemed to him a free
+largess, like grass and water, and this looked like very good hay. So
+clear a conscience had he on the subject that he never thought of
+glancing around to see if any of the attendants were looking.
+Innocently he lurched up to the fence, reached his lithe trunk
+through, gathered a neat wisp of the hay, and stuffed it happily into
+his curious, narrow, pointed mouth. Yes, he had not been mistaken. It
+was good hay. With great satisfaction he reached in for another
+mouthful.
+
+Last Bull, as it happened, was standing close by, but a little to one
+side. He had been ignoring, so far, his morning ration. He was not
+hungry. And, moreover, he rather disapproved of the hay because it had
+the hostile man-smell strong upon it. Nevertheless, he recognized it
+very clearly as his property, to be eaten when he should feel inclined
+to eat it. His wrath, then, was only equalled by his amazement when he
+saw the little elephant's presumptuous gray trunk reach in and coolly
+help itself. For a moment he forgot to do anything whatever about it.
+But when, a few seconds later, that long, curling trunk of Bong's
+insinuated itself again and appropriated another bundle of the now
+precious hay, the outraged owner bestirred himself. With a curt roar,
+that was more of a cough or a grunt than a bellow, he lunged forward
+and strove to pin the intruding trunk to the ground.
+
+With startled alacrity Bong withdrew his trunk, but just in time to
+save it from being mangled. For an instant he stood with the member
+held high in air, bewildered by what seemed to him such a gratuitous
+attack. Then his twinkling little eyes began to blaze, and he
+trumpeted shrilly with anger. The next moment, reaching over the
+fence, he brought down the trunk on Last Bull's hump with such a
+terrible flail-like blow that the great buffalo stumbled forward upon
+his knees.
+
+He was up again in an instant and hurling himself madly against the
+inexorable steel which separated him from his foe. Bong hesitated for
+a second, then, reaching over the fence once more, clutched Last Bull
+maliciously around the base of his horns and tried to twist his neck.
+This enterprise, however, was too much even for the elephant's titanic
+powers, for Last Bull's greatest strength lay in the muscles of his
+ponderous and corded neck. Raving and bellowing, he plunged this way
+and that, striving in vain to wrench himself free from that
+incomprehensible, snake-like thing which had fastened upon him. Bong,
+trumpeting savagely, braced himself with widespread pillars of legs,
+and between them it seemed that the steel fence must go down under
+such cataclysmic shocks as it was suffering. But the noisy violence of
+the battle presently brought its own ending. An amused but angry squad
+of attendants came up and stopped it, and Bong, who seemed plainly the
+aggressor, was hustled off to his stall in deep disgrace.
+
+Last Bull was humiliated. In this encounter things had happened which
+he could in no way comprehend; and though, beyond an aching in neck
+and shoulders, he felt none the worse physically, he had nevertheless
+a sense of having been worsted, of having been treated with ignominy,
+in spite of the fact that it was his foe, and not he, who had retired
+from the field. For several days he wore a subdued air and kept about
+meekly with his docile cows. Then his old, bitter moodiness reasserted
+itself, and he resumed his solitary broodings on the crest of the
+knoll.
+
+When the winter storms came on, it had been Last Bull's custom to let
+himself be housed luxuriously at nightfall, with the rest of the herd,
+in the warm and ample buffalo-shed. But this winter he made such
+difficulty about going in that at last Payne decreed that he should
+have his own way and stay out. "It will do him no harm, and may cool
+his peppery blood some!" had been the keeper's decision. So the door
+was left open, and Last Bull entered or refrained, according to his
+whim. It was noticed, however,--and this struck a chord of answering
+sympathy in the plainsman's imaginative temperament,--that, though on
+ordinary nights he might come in and stay with the herd under shelter,
+on nights of driving storm, if the tempest blew from the west or
+northwest, Last Bull was sure to be out on the naked knoll to face it.
+When the fine sleet or stinging rain drove past him, filling his
+nostrils with their cold, drenching his matted mane, and lashing his
+narrowed eyes, what visions swept through his troubled,
+half-comprehending brain, no one may know. But Payne, with
+understanding born of sympathy and a common native soil, catching
+sight of his dark bulk under the dark of the low sky, was wont to
+declare that _he_ knew. He would say that Last Bull's eyes discerned,
+black under the hurricane, but lit strangely with the flash of keen
+horns and rolling eyes and frothed nostrils, the endless and
+innumerable droves of the buffalo, with the plains wolf skulking on
+their flanks, passing, passing, southward into the final dark. In the
+roar of the wind, declared Payne, Last Bull, out there in the night,
+listened to the trampling of all those vanished droves. And though the
+other keepers insisted to each other, quite privately, that their
+chief talked a lot of nonsense about "that there mean-tempered old
+buffalo," they nevertheless came gradually to look upon Last Bull with
+a kind of awe, and to regard his surly whims as privileged.
+
+It chanced that winter that men were driving a railway tunnel beneath
+a corner of the Park. The tunnel ran for a short distance under the
+front of Last Bull's range, and passed close by the picturesque
+cottage occupied by Payne and two of his assistants. At this point the
+level of the Park was low, and the shell of earth was thin above the
+tunnel roof.
+
+There came a Sunday afternoon, after days of rain and penetrating
+January thaw, when sun and air combined to cheat the earth with an
+illusion of spring. The buds and the mould breathed of April, and gay
+crowds flocked to the Park, to make the most of winter's temporary
+repulse. Just when things were at their gayest, with children's voices
+clamoring everywhere like starlings, and Bong, the little elephant,
+swinging good-naturedly up the broad white track with all the load he
+had room for on his back, there came an ominous jar and rumble, like
+the first of an earthquake, which ran along the front of Last Bull's
+range.
+
+With sure instinct, Bong turned tail and fled with his young charges
+away across the grassland. The crowds, hardly knowing what they fled
+from, with screams and cries and blanched faces, followed the
+elephant's example. A moment later and, with a muffled crash, all
+along the front of the range, the earth sank into the tunnel, carrying
+with it half a dozen panels of Last Bull's hated fence.
+
+Almost in a moment the panic of the crowd subsided. Every one realized
+just what had happened. Moreover, thanks to Bong's timely alarm, every
+one had got out of the way in good season. All fear of earthquake
+being removed, the crowd flocked back eagerly to stare down into the
+wrecked tunnel, which formed now a sort of gaping, chaotic ditch, with
+sides at some points precipitous and at others brokenly sloping. The
+throng was noisy with excited interest and with relief at having
+escaped so cleanly. The break had run just beneath one corner of the
+keepers' cottage, tearing away a portion of the foundation and
+wrenching the structure slightly aside without overthrowing it. Payne,
+who had been in the midst of his Sunday toilet, came out upon his
+twisted porch, half undressed and with a shaving-brush covered with
+lather in his hand. He gave one look at the damage which had been
+wrought, then plunged indoors again to throw his clothes on, at the
+same time sounding the hurry call for the attendants in other quarters
+of the Park.
+
+Last Bull, who had been standing on his knoll, with his back to the
+throngs, had wheeled in astonishment at the heavy sound of the
+cave-in. For a few minutes he had stared sullenly, not grasping the
+situation. Then very slowly it dawned on him that his prison walls
+had fallen. Yes, surely, there at last lay his way to freedom, his
+path to the great open spaces for which he dumbly and vaguely
+hungered. With stately deliberation he marched down from his knoll to
+investigate.
+
+But presently another idea came into his slow mind. He saw the
+clamorous crowds flocking back and ranging themselves along the edge
+of the chasm. These were his enemies. They were coming to balk him. A
+terrible madness surged through all his veins. He bellowed savage
+warning and came thundering down the field, nose to earth, dark,
+mountainous, irresistible.
+
+The crowd yelled and shrank back. "He can't get across!" shouted some.
+But others cried: "He can! He's coming! Save yourselves!" And with
+shrieks they scattered wildly across the open, making for the kiosks,
+the pavilions, the trees, anything that seemed to promise hiding or
+shelter from that onrushing doom.
+
+At the edge of the chasm--at this point forming not an actual drop,
+but a broken slide--Last Bull hardly paused. He plunged down, rolled
+over in the débris, struggled to his feet again instantly, and went
+ploughing and snorting up the opposite steep. As his colossal front,
+matted with mud, loomed up over the brink, his little eyes rolling
+and flaming, and the froth flying from his red nostrils, he formed a
+very nightmare of horror to those fugitives who dared to look behind
+them.
+
+Surmounting the brink, he paused. There were so many enemies, he knew
+not which to pursue first. But straight ahead, in the very middle of
+the open, and far from any shelter, he saw a huddled group of children
+and nurses fleeing impotently and aimlessly. Shrill cries came from
+the cluster, which danced with colors, scarlet and yellow and blue and
+vivid pink. To the mad buffalo, these were the most conspicuous and
+the loudest of his foes, and therefore the most dangerous. With a
+bellow he flung his tail straight in the air, and charged after them.
+
+An appalling hush fell, for a few heart-beats, all over the field.
+Then from different quarters appeared uniformed attendants, racing and
+shouting frantically to divert the bull's attention. From fleeing
+groups black-coated men leapt forth, armed only with their
+walking-sticks, and rushed desperately to defend the flock of
+children, who now, in the extremity of their terror, were tumbling as
+they ran. Some of the nurses were fleeing far in front, while others,
+the faithful ones, with eyes starting from their heads, grabbed up
+their little charges and struggled on under the burden.
+
+Already Last Bull was halfway across the space which divided him from
+his foes. The ground shook under his ponderous gallop. At this moment
+Payne reappeared on the broken porch.
+
+One glance showed him that no one was near enough to intervene. With a
+face stern and sorrowful he lifted the deadly .405 Winchester which he
+had brought out with him. The spot he covered was just behind Last
+Bull's mighty shoulder.
+
+The smokeless powder spoke with a small, venomous report, unlike the
+black powder's noisy reverberation. Last Bull stumbled. But recovering
+himself instantly, he rushed on. He was hurt, and he felt it was those
+fleeing foes who had done it. A shade of perplexity darkened Payne's
+face. He fired again. This time his aim was true. The heavy expanding
+bullet tore straight through bone and muscle and heart, and Last Bull
+lurched forward upon his head, ploughing up the turf for yards. As his
+mad eyes softened and filmed, he saw once more, perhaps,--or so the
+heavy-hearted keeper who had slain him would have us believe,--the
+shadowy plains unrolling under the wild sky, and the hosts of his
+vanished kindred drifting past into the dark.
+
+
+
+
+THE KING OF THE FLAMING HOOPS
+
+
+
+
+THE KING OF THE FLAMING HOOPS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The white, scarred face of the mountain looked straight east, over a
+vast basin of tumbled, lesser hills, dim black forests, and steel-blue
+loops of a far-winding water. Here and there long, level strata of
+pallid mist seemed to support themselves on the tree-tops, their edges
+fading off into the startling transparency that comes upon the air
+with the first of dawn. But that was in the lower world. Up on the
+solitary summit of White Face the daybreak had arrived. The jagged
+crest of the peak shot sudden radiances of flame-crimson, then bathed
+itself in a flow of rose-pinks and thin, indescribable reds and
+pulsating golds. Swiftly, as the far horizon leapt into blaze, the
+aërial flood spread down the mountain-face, revealing and
+transforming. It reached the mouth of a cave on a narrow ledge. As the
+splendor poured into the dark opening, a tawny shape, long and lithe
+and sinewy, came padding forth, noiseless as itself, as if to meet
+and challenge it.
+
+Half emerging from the entrance upon the high rock-platform which
+formed its threshold, the puma halted, head uplifted and forepaws
+planted squarely to the front. With wide, palely bright eyes she
+stared out across the tremendous and mysterious landscape. As the
+colored glory rushed down the mountain, rolling back the blue-gray
+transparency of shadow, those inscrutable eyes swept every suddenly
+revealed glade, knoll, and waterside where deer or elk might by chance
+be pasturing.
+
+She was a magnificent beast, this puma, massive of head and shoulder
+almost as a lioness, and in her calm scrutiny of the spaces unrolling
+before her gaze was a certain air of overlordship, as if her supremacy
+had gone long unquestioned. Suddenly, however, her attitude changed.
+Her eyes narrowed, her mighty muscles drew themselves together like
+springs being upcoiled, she half crouched, and her head turned sharply
+to the left, listening. Far down the narrow ledge which afforded the
+trail to her den she had caught the sound of something approaching.
+
+As she listened, she crouched lower and lower, and her eyes began to
+burn with a thin, green flame. Her ears would flatten back savagely,
+then lift themselves again to interrogate the approaching sounds. Her
+anger at the intrusion upon her private domain was mixed with some
+apprehension, for behind her, in a warm corner of the den, curled up
+in a soft and furry ball like kittens, were her two sleeping cubs.
+
+Her trail being well marked and with her scent strong upon it, she
+knew it could be no ignorant blunderer that drew near. It was plainly
+an enemy, and an arrogant enemy, since it made no attempt at stealth.
+The steps were not those of any hunter, white man or Indian, of that
+she presently assured herself. With this assurance, her anxiety
+diminished and her anger increased. Her tail, long and thick, doubled
+in thickness and began to jerk sharply from side to side. Crouching to
+the belly, she crept all the way out upon the ledge and peered
+cautiously around a jutting shoulder of rock.
+
+The intruder was not yet in sight, because the front of White Face,
+though apparently a sheer and awful precipice when viewed from the
+valley, was in fact wrinkled with gullies and buttresses and bucklings
+of the tortured strata. But the sound of his coming was now quite
+intelligible to her. That softly ponderous tread, that careless
+displacing of stones, those undisguised sniffings and mumblings could
+come only from a bear, and a bear frankly looking for trouble. Well,
+he was going to find what he was looking for. With an antagonism
+handed down to her by a thousand ancestors, the great puma hated
+bears.
+
+Many miles north of White Face, on the other side of that ragged
+mountain-ridge to which he formed an isolated and towering outpost,
+there was a fertile valley which had just been invaded by settlers. On
+every hand awoke the sharp barking of the axe. Rifle-shots startled
+the echoes. Masterful voices and confident human laughter filled all
+the wild inhabitants with wonder and dismay. The undisputed lord of
+the range was an old silver-tip grizzly, of great size and evil
+temper. Furious at the unexpected trespass on his sovereignty, yet
+well aware of his powerlessness against the human creature that could
+strike from very far off with lightning and thunder, he had made up
+his mind at once to withdraw to some remoter range. Nevertheless, he
+had lingered for some days, sullenly expecting he knew not what. These
+formless expectations were most unpleasantly fulfilled when he came
+upon a man in a canoe paddling close in by the steep shore of the
+lake. He had hurled himself blindly down the bank, raging for
+vengeance, but when he reached the water's edge, the man was far out
+of reach. Then, while he stood there wavering, half minded to swim in
+pursuit, the man had spoken with the lightning and the thunder, after
+the terrifying fashion of his kind. The bear had felt himself stung
+near the tip of the shoulder, as if by a million wasps at once, and
+the fiery anguish had brought him to his senses.
+
+It was no use trying to fight man, so he had dashed away into the
+thickets, and not halted till he had put miles between himself and the
+inexplicable enemy.
+
+For two days, with occasional stops to forage or to sleep, the angry
+grizzly had travelled southward, heading towards the lonely peak of
+White Face. As the distance from his old haunts increased, his fears
+diminished; but his anger grew under the ceaseless fretting of that
+wound on his neck just where he could not reach to lick and soothe it.
+The flies, however, could reach it very well, and did. As a
+consequence, by the time he reached the upper slopes of White Face, he
+was in a mood to fight anything. He would have charged a regiment, had
+he suddenly found one in his path.
+
+When he turned up a stone for the grubs, beetles, and scorpions which
+lurked beneath it, he would send it flying with a savage sweep of his
+paw. When he caught a rabbit, he smashed it flat in sheer fury, as if
+he cared more to mangle than to eat.
+
+At last he stumbled upon the trail of a puma. As he sniffed at it, he
+became, if possible, more angry than ever. Pumas he had always hated.
+He had never had a chance to satisfy his grudge, for never had one
+dared to face his charge; but they had often snarled down defiance at
+him from some limb of oak or pine beyond his reach. He flung himself
+forward upon the trail with vengeful ardor. When he realized, from the
+fact that it was a much-used trail and led up among the barren rocks,
+that it was none other than the trail to the puma's lair, his
+satisfaction increased. He would be sure to find either the puma at
+home or the puma's young unguarded.
+
+[Illustration: "When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little dark eyes
+glowed suddenly red."]
+
+When the puma, at last, saw him emerge around a curve of the trail,
+and noted his enormous stature, she gave one longing, wistful look
+back over her shoulder to the shadowed nook wherein her cubs lay
+sleeping. Had there been any chance to get them both safely away, she
+would have shirked the fight, for their sakes. But she could not carry
+them both in her mouth at once up the face of the mountain. She would
+not desert either one. She hesitated a moment, as if doubtful whether
+or not to await attack in the mouth of the cave. Then she crept
+farther out, where the ledge was not three feet wide, and crouched
+flat, silent, watchful, rigid, in the middle of the trail.
+
+When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little dark eyes glowed suddenly
+red, and he came up with a lumbering rush. With his gigantic, furry
+bulk, it looked as if he must instantly annihilate the slim, light
+creature that opposed him. It was a dreadful place to give battle, on
+that straight shelf of rock overhanging a sheer drop of perhaps a
+thousand feet. But scorn and rage together blinded the sagacity of the
+bear. With a grunt he charged.
+
+Not until he was within ten feet of her did the crouching puma stir.
+Then she shot into the air, as if hurled up by the release of a mighty
+spring. Quick as a flash the grizzly shrank backward upon his haunches
+and swept up a huge black paw to parry the assault. But he was not
+quite quick enough. The puma's spring overreached his guard. She
+landed fairly upon his back, facing his tail; but in the fraction of
+a second she had whirled about and was tearing at his throat with
+teeth and claws, while the terrible talons of her hinder paws ripped
+at his flanks.
+
+With a roar of pain and amazement the grizzly struggled to shake her
+off, clutching and striking at her with paws that at one blow could
+smash in the skull of the most powerful bull. But he could not reach
+her. Then he reared up, and threw himself backwards against the face
+of the rock, striving to crush her under his enormous weight. And in
+this he almost succeeded. Just in time, she writhed around and
+outward, but not quite far enough, for one paw was caught and ground
+to a pulp. But at the next instant, thrust back from the rock by his
+own effort, the bear toppled outward over the brink of the shelf.
+Grappling madly to save himself, he caught only the bowed loins of the
+puma, who now sank her teeth once more into his throat, while her
+rending claws seemed to tear him everywhere at once. He crushed her in
+his grip; and in a dreadful ball of screeching, roaring, biting,
+mangling rage the two plunged downward into the dim abyss. Once, still
+locked in the death-grip, they struck upon a jutting rock, and bounded
+far out into space. Then, as the ball rolled over in falling, it came
+apart; and separated now, though still very close together, the two
+bodies fell sprawlingly, and vanished into the blue-shadowed deeps
+which the dawn had not yet reached.
+
+Upon this sudden and terrible ending of the fight appeared a bearded
+frontiersman who had been trailing the grizzly for half an hour and
+waiting for light enough to secure a sure shot. With something like
+awe in his face he came, and knelt down, with hands gripping
+cautiously, and peered over the dreadful brink. "Gee! But that there
+cat was game!" he muttered, drawing back and sweeping a comprehensive
+gaze across the stupendous landscape, as if challenging denial of his
+statement. Obviously the silences were of the same opinion, for there
+came no suggestion of dissent. Carefully he rose to his feet and
+pressed on towards the cave.
+
+Without hesitation he entered, for he knew that the puma's mate some
+weeks before had been shot, far down in the valley. He found the
+kittens asleep and began to fondle them. At his touch, and the smell
+of him, they awoke, spitting and clawing with all their mother's
+courage. Young as they were, their claws drew blood abundantly.
+"Gritty little devils!" growled the man good-naturedly, snatching
+back his hand and wiping the blood on his trouser-leg. Then he took
+off his coat, threw it over the troublesome youngsters, rolled them in
+it securely, so that not one protesting claw could get out, and
+started back to the camp with the grumbling and uneasy bundle in his
+arms.
+
+Three months later, the two puma cubs, sleek, fat, full of gayety as
+two kittens of like age, and convinced by this time that man was the
+source and origin of all good things, were sold to a travelling
+collector. One, the female, was sent down to a zoölogical garden on
+the Pacific coast. The other, the male, much the larger and at the
+same time the more even-tempered and amenable to teaching, found its
+way to the cages of an animal-trainer in the East.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+"King's kind of ugly to-night, seems to me; better keep yer eyes
+peeled!" said Andy Hansen, the assistant trainer, the big,
+yellow-haired Swede who knew not fear. Neither did he know impatience
+or irritability; and so all the animals, as a rule, were on their good
+behavior under his calm, masterful, blue eye. Yet he was tactful with
+the beasts, and given to humoring their moods as far as convenient
+without ever letting them guess it.
+
+"Oh, you go chase yourself, Andy!" replied Signor Tomaso, the trainer,
+with a strong New England accent. "If I got to look out for King, I'd
+better quit the business. Don't you go trying to make trouble between
+friends, Andy."
+
+"Of course, Bill, I know he'd never try to maul _you_," explained
+Hansen seriously, determined that he should not be misunderstood in
+the smallest particular. "But he's acting curious. Look out he don't
+get into a scrap with some of the other animals."
+
+"I reckon I kin keep 'em all straight," answered the trainer dryly, as
+he turned away to get ready for the great performance which the
+audience, dimly heard beyond the canvas walls, was breathlessly
+awaiting.
+
+The trainer's name was William Sparks, and his birthplace Big
+Chebeague, Maine; but his lean, swarthy face and piercing, green-brown
+eyes, combined with the craving of his audiences for a touch of the
+romantic, had led him to adopt the more sonorous pseudonym of "Signor
+Tomaso." He maintained that if he went under his own name, nobody
+would ever believe that what he did could be anything wonderful.
+Except for this trifling matter of the name, there was no fake about
+Signor Tomaso. He was a brilliant animal-trainer, as unacquainted with
+fear as the Swede, as dominant of eye, and of immeasurably greater
+experience. But being, at the same time, more emotional, more
+temperamental than his phlegmatic assistant, his control was sometimes
+less steady, and now and again he would have to assert his authority
+with violence. He was keenly alive to the varying personalities of his
+beasts, naturally, and hence had favorites among them. His especial
+favorite, who heartily reciprocated the attachment, was the great
+puma, King, the most intelligent and amiable of all the wild animals
+that had ever come under his training whip.
+
+As Hansen's success with the animals, during the few months of his
+experience as assistant, had been altogether phenomenal, his chief
+felt a qualm of pique upon being warned against the big puma. He had
+too just an appreciation of Hansen's judgment, however, to quite
+disregard the warning, and he turned it over curiously in his mind as
+he went to his dressing-room. Emerging a few minutes later in the
+black-and-white of faultless evening dress, without a speck on his
+varnished shoes, he moved down along the front of the cages,
+addressing to the occupant of each, as he passed, a sharp,
+authoritative word which brought it to attention.
+
+With the strange, savage smell of the cages in his nostrils, that
+bitter, acrid pungency to which his senses never grew blunted, a new
+spirit of understanding was wont to enter Tomaso's brain. He would
+feel a sudden kinship with the wild creatures, such a direct and
+instant comprehension as almost justified his fancy that in some
+previous existence he had himself been a wild man of the jungle and
+spoken in their tongue. As he looked keenly into each cage, he knew
+that the animal whose eyes for that moment met his was in untroubled
+mood. This, till he came to the cage containing the latest addition to
+his troupe, a large cinnamon bear, which was rocking restlessly to
+and fro and grumbling to itself. The bear was one which had been long
+in captivity and well trained. Tomaso had found him docile, and clever
+enough to be admitted at once to the performing troupe. But to-night
+the beast's eyes were red with some ill-humor. Twice the trainer spoke
+to him before he heeded; but then he assumed instantly an air of
+mildest subservience. The expression of a new-weaned puppy is not more
+innocently mild than the look which a bear can assume when it so
+desires.
+
+"Ah, ha! old sport! So it's you that's got a grouch on to-night; I'll
+keep an eye on you!" he muttered to himself. He snapped his heavy whip
+once, and the bear obediently sat up on its haunches, its great paws
+hanging meekly. Tomaso looked it sharply in the eye. "Don't forget,
+now, and get funny!" he admonished. Then he returned to the first
+cage, which contained the puma, and went up close to the bars. The
+great cat came and rubbed against him, purring harshly.
+
+"There ain't nothing the matter with _you_, boy, I reckon," said
+Tomaso, scratching him affectionately behind the ears. "Andy must have
+wheels in his head if he thinks I've got to keep my eyes peeled on
+_your_ account."
+
+Out beyond the iron-grilled passage, beyond the lighted canvas walls,
+the sharp, metallic noises of the workmen setting up the great
+performing-cage came to a stop. There was a burst of music from the
+orchestra. That, too, ceased. The restless hum of the unseen masses
+around the arena died away into an expectant hush. It was time to go
+on. At the farther end of the passage, by the closed door leading to
+the performing cage, Hansen appeared. Tomaso opened the puma's cage.
+King dropped out with a soft thud of his great paws, and padded
+swiftly down the passage, his master following. Hansen slid wide the
+door, admitting a glare of light, a vast, intense rustle of
+excitement; and King marched majestically out into it, eying calmly
+the tier on climbing tier of eager faces. It was his customary
+privilege, this, to make the entrance alone, a good half minute ahead
+of the rest of the troupe; and he seemed to value it. Halfway around
+the big cage he walked, then mounted his pedestal, sat up very
+straight, and stared blandly at the audience. A salvo of clapping ran
+smartly round the tiers--King's usual tribute, which he had so learned
+to expect that any failure of it would have dispirited him for the
+whole performance.
+
+Signor Tomaso had taken his stand, whip in hand, just inside the cage,
+with Hansen opposite him, to see that the animals, on entry, went each
+straight to his own bench or pedestal. Any mistake in this connection
+was sure to lead to trouble, each beast being almost childishly
+jealous of its rights. Inside the long passage an attendant was
+opening one cage after another; and in a second more the animals began
+to appear in procession, filing out between the immaculate Signor and
+the roughly clad Swede. First came a majestic white Angora goat,
+carrying high his horned and bearded head, and stepping most daintily
+upon slim, black hoofs. Close behind, and looking just ready to pounce
+upon him but for dread of the Signor's eye, came slinking stealthily a
+spotted black-and-yellow leopard, ears back and tail twitching. He
+seemed ripe for mischief, as he climbed reluctantly on to his pedestal
+beside the goat; but he knew better than to even bare a claw. And as
+for the white goat, with his big golden eyes superciliously half
+closed, he ignored his dangerous neighbor completely, while his jaws
+chewed nonchalantly on a bit of brown shoe-lace which he had picked up
+in the passage.
+
+Close behind the leopard came a bored-looking lion, who marched with
+listless dignity straight to his place. Then another lion, who paused
+in the doorway and looked out doubtfully, blinking with distaste at
+the strong light. Tomaso spoke sharply, like the snap of his whip,
+whereupon the lion ran forward in haste. But he seemed to have
+forgotten which was his proper pedestal, for he hopped upon the three
+nearest in turn, only to hop down again with apologetic alacrity at
+the order of the cracking whip. At last, obviously flustered, he
+reached a pedestal on which he was allowed to remain. Here he sat,
+blinking from side to side and apparently much mortified.
+
+The lion was followed by a running wolf, who had shown his teeth
+savagely when the lion, for a moment, trespassed upon his pedestal.
+This beast was intensely interested in the audience, and, as soon as
+he was in his place, turned his head and glared with green, narrowed
+eyes at the nearest spectators, as if trying to stare them out of
+countenance. After the wolf come a beautiful Bengal tiger, its
+black-and-golden stripes shining as if they had been oiled. He glided
+straight to his stand, sniffed at it superciliously, and then lay down
+before it. The whip snapped sharply three times, but the tiger only
+shut his eyes tight. The audience grew hushed. Tomaso ran forward,
+seized the beast by the back of the neck, and shook him roughly.
+Whereupon the tiger half rose, opened his great red mouth like a
+cavern, and roared in his master's face. The audience thrilled from
+corner to corner, and a few cries came from frightened women.
+
+The trainer paused for an instant, to give full effect to the
+situation. Then, stooping suddenly, he lifted the tiger's
+hind-quarters and deposited them firmly on the pedestal, and left him
+in that awkward position.
+
+"There," he said in a loud voice, "that's all the help you'll get from
+me!"
+
+The audience roared with instant and delighted appreciation. The tiger
+gathered up the rest of himself upon his pedestal, wiped his face with
+his paw, like a cat, and settled down complacently with a pleased
+assurance that he had done the trick well.
+
+At this moment the attention of the audience was drawn to the
+entrance, where there seemed to be some hitch. Tomaso snapped his whip
+sharply, and shouted savage orders, but nothing came forth. Then the
+big Swede, with an agitated air, snatched up the trainer's pitchfork,
+which stood close at hand in case of emergency, made swift passes at
+the empty doorway, and jumped back. The audience was lifted fairly to
+its feet with excitement. What monster could it be that was giving so
+much trouble? The next moment, while Tomaso's whip hissed in vicious
+circles over his head, a plump little drab-colored pug-dog marched
+slowly out upon the stage, its head held arrogantly aloft. Volleys of
+laughter crackled around the arena, and the delighted spectators
+settled, tittering, back into their seats.
+
+The pug glanced searchingly around the cage, then selecting the
+biggest of the lions as a worthy antagonist, flew at his pedestal,
+barking furious challenge. The lion glanced down at him, looked bored
+at the noise, and yawned. Apparently disappointed, the pug turned away
+and sought another adversary. He saw King's big tail hanging down
+beside his pedestal. Flinging himself upon it, he began to worry it as
+if it were a rat. The next moment the tail threshed vigorously, and
+the pug went rolling end over end across the stage.
+
+Picking himself up and shaking the sawdust from his coat, the pug
+growled savagely and curled his little tail into a tighter screw.
+Bristling with wrath, he tiptoed menacingly back toward the puma's
+pedestal, determined to wipe out the indignity. This time his
+challenge was accepted. Tomaso's whip snapped, but the audience was
+too intent to hear it. The great puma slipped down from his pedestal,
+ran forward a few steps, and crouched.
+
+With a shrill snarl the pug rushed in. At the same instant the puma
+sprang, making a splendid tawny curve through the air, and alighted
+ten feet behind his antagonist's tail. There he wheeled like lightning
+and crouched. But the pug, enraged at being balked of his vengeance,
+had also wheeled, and charged again in the same half second. In the
+next, he had the puma by the throat. With a dreadful screech the great
+beast rolled over on his side and stiffened out his legs. The pug drew
+off, eyed him critically to make sure that he was quite dead, then
+ran, barking shrill triumph, to take possession of the victim's place.
+Then the whip cracked once more. Whereupon the puma got up, trotted
+back to his pedestal, mounted it, and tucked the pug protectingly away
+between his great forepaws.
+
+The applause had not quite died away when a towering, sandy-brown bulk
+appeared in the entrance to the cage. Erect upon its hind legs, and
+with a musket on its shoulder, it marched ponderously and slowly
+around the circle, eying each of the sitting beasts--except the
+wolf--suspiciously as it passed. The watchful eyes of both Signor
+Tomaso and Hansen noted that it gave wider berth to the puma than to
+any of the others, and also that the puma's ears, at the moment, were
+ominously flattened. Instantly the long whip snapped its terse
+admonition to good manners. Nothing happened, except that the pug,
+from between the puma's legs, barked insolently. The sandy-brown bulk
+reached its allotted pedestal,--which was quite absurdly too small for
+it to mount,--dropped the musket with a clatter, fell upon all fours
+with a loud _whoof_ of relief, and relapsed into a bear.
+
+The stage now set to his satisfaction, Signor Tomaso advanced to the
+centre of it. He snapped his whip, and uttered a sharp cry which the
+audience doubtless took for purest Italian. Immediately the animals
+all descended from their pedestals, and circled solemnly around him in
+a series of more or less intricate evolutions, all except the bear,
+who, not having yet been initiated into this beast quadrille, kept his
+place and looked scornful. At another signal the evolutions ceased,
+and all the beasts, except one of the lions, hurried back to their
+places. The lion, with the bashful air of a boy who gets up to "speak
+his piece" at a school examination, lingered in the middle of the
+stage. A rope was brought. The Swede took one end of it, the
+attendant who had brought it took the other, and between them they
+began to swing it, very slowly, as a great skipping-rope. At an
+energetic command from Signor Tomaso the lion slipped into the
+swinging circle, and began to skip in a ponderous and shamefaced
+fashion. The house thundered applause. For perhaps half a minute the
+strange performance continued, the whip snapping rhythmically with
+every descent of the rope. Then all at once, as if he simply could not
+endure it for another second, the lion bolted, head down, clambered
+upon his pedestal, and shut his eyes hard as if expecting a whipping.
+But as nothing happened except a roar of laughter from the seats, he
+opened them again and glanced from side to side complacently, as if to
+say, "Didn't I get out of that neatly?"
+
+The next act was a feat of teetering. A broad and massive teeter-board
+was brought in, and balanced across a support about two feet high. The
+sulky leopard, at a sign from Tomaso, slouched up to it, pulled one
+end to the ground, and mounted. At the centre he balanced cautiously
+for a moment till it tipped, then crept on to the other end, and
+crouched there, holding it down as if his very life depended on it.
+Immediately the white goat dropped from his pedestal, minced daintily
+over, skipped up upon the centre of the board, and mounted to the
+elevated end. His weight was not sufficient to lift, or even to
+disturb, the leopard, who kept the other end anchored securely. But
+the goat seemed to like his high and conspicuous position, for he
+maintained it with composure and stared around with great
+condescension upon the other beasts.
+
+The goat having been given time to demonstrate his unfitness for the
+task he had undertaken, Tomaso's whip cracked again. Instantly King
+descended from his pedestal, ran over to the teeter-board, and mounted
+it at the centre. The goat, unwilling to be dispossessed of his high
+place, stamped and butted at him indignantly, but with one scornful
+sweep of his great paw the puma brushed him off to the sawdust, and
+took his place at the end of the board. Snarling and clutching at the
+cleats, the leopard was hoisted into the air, heavily outweighed. The
+crowd applauded; but the performance, obviously, was not yet perfect.
+Now came the white goat's opportunity. He hesitated a moment, till he
+heard a word from Tomaso. Then he sprang once more upon the centre of
+the board, faced King, and backed up inch by inch towards the leopard
+till the latter began to descend. At this point of balance the white
+goat had one forefoot just on the pivot of the board. With a dainty,
+dancing motion, and a proud tossing of his head, he now threw his
+weight slowly backward and forward. The great teeter worked to
+perfection. Signor Tomaso was kept bowing to round after round of
+applause while the leopard, the goat, and King returned proudly to
+their places.
+
+After this, four of the red-and-yellow uniformed attendants ran in,
+each carrying a large hoop. They stationed themselves at equal
+distances around the circumference of the cage, holding the hoops out
+before them at a height of about four feet from the ground. At the
+command of Tomaso, the animals all formed in procession--though not
+without much cracking of the whip and vehement command--and went
+leaping one after the other through the hoops--all except the pug, who
+tried in vain to jump so high, and the bear, who, not knowing how to
+jump at all, simply marched around and pretended not to see that the
+hoops were there. Then four other hoops, covered with white paper,
+were brought in, and head first through them the puma led the way.
+When it came to the bear's turn, the whip cracked a special signal.
+Whereupon, instead of ignoring the hoop as he had done before, he
+stuck his head through it and marched off with it hanging on his neck.
+All four hoops he gathered up in this way, and, retiring with them to
+his place, stood shuffling restlessly and grunting with impatience
+until he was relieved of the awkward burden.
+
+A moment later four more hoops were handed to the attendants. They
+looked like the first lot; but the attendants took them with hooked
+handles of iron and held them out at arm's length. Touched with a
+match, they burst instantly into leaping yellow flames; whereupon all
+the beasts, except King, stirred uneasily on their pedestals. The whip
+snapped with emphasis; and all the beasts--except King, who sat eying
+the flames tranquilly, and the bear, who whined his disapproval, but
+knew that he was not expected to take part in this act--formed again
+in procession, and ran at the flaming hoops as if to jump through them
+as before. But each, on arriving at a hoop, crouched flat and scurried
+under it like a frightened cat--except the white goat, which pranced
+aside and capered past derisively. Pretending to be much disappointed
+in them, Signor Tomaso ordered them all back to their places, and,
+folding his arms, stood with his head lowered as if wondering what to
+do about it. Upon this, King descended proudly from his pedestal and
+approached the blazing terrors. With easiest grace and nonchalance he
+lifted his lithe body, and went bounding lightly through the hoops,
+one after the other. The audience stormed its applause. Twice around
+this terrifying circuit he went, as indifferent to the writhing flames
+as if they had been so much grass waving in the wind. Then he stopped
+abruptly, turned his head, and looked at Tomaso in expectation. The
+latter came up, fondled his ears, and assured him that he had done
+wonders. Then King returned to his place, elation bristling in his
+whiskers.
+
+While the flaming hoops were being rushed from the ring and the
+audience was settling down again to the quiet of unlimited
+expectation, a particularly elaborate act was being prepared. A
+massive wooden stand, with shelves and seats at various heights, was
+brought in. Signor Tomaso, coiling the lash of his whip and holding
+the heavy handle, with its loaded butt, as a sceptre, took his place
+on a somewhat raised seat at the centre of the frame. Hansen, with his
+pitchfork in one hand and a whip like Tomaso's in the other, drew
+nearer; and the audience, with a thrill, realized that something more
+than ordinarily dangerous was on the cards. The tiger came and
+stretched itself at full length before Tomaso, who at once
+appropriated him as a footstool. The bear and the biggest of the lions
+posted themselves on either side of their master, rearing up like the
+armorial supporters of some illustrious escutcheon, and resting their
+mighty forepaws apparently on their master's shoulders, though in
+reality on two narrow little shelves placed there for the purpose.
+Another lion came and laid his huge head on Tomaso's knees, as if
+doing obeisance. By this time all the other animals were prowling
+about the stand, peering this way and that, as if trying to remember
+their places; and the big Swede was cracking his whip briskly, with
+curt, deep-toned commands, to sharpen up their memories. Only King
+seemed quite clear as to what he had to do--which was to lay his tawny
+body along the shelf immediately over the heads of the lion and the
+bear; but as he mounted the stand from the rear, his ears went back
+and he showed a curious reluctance to fulfil his part. Hansen's keen
+eyes noted this at once, and his whip snapped emphatically in the air
+just above the great puma's nose. Still King hesitated. The lion paid
+no attention whatever, but the bear glanced up with reddening eyes and
+a surly wagging of his head. It was all a slight matter, too slight to
+catch the eye or the uncomprehending thoughts of the audience. But a
+grave, well-dressed man, with copper-colored face, high cheek-bones
+and straight, coal-black hair, who sat close to the front, turned to a
+companion and said:--
+
+"Those men are good trainers, but they don't know everything about
+pumas. _We_ know that there is a hereditary feud between the pumas and
+the bears, and that when they come together there's apt to be
+trouble."
+
+The speaker was a full-blooded Sioux, and a graduate of one of the big
+Eastern universities. He leaned forward with a curious fire in his
+deep-set, piercing eyes, as King, unwillingly obeying the mandates of
+the whip, dropped down and stretched out upon his shelf, his nervous
+forepaws not more than a foot above the bear's head. His nostrils were
+twitching as if they smelled something unutterably distasteful, and
+his thick tail looked twice its usual size. The Sioux, who, alone of
+all present, understood these signs, laid an involuntary hand of
+warning upon his companion's knee.
+
+Just what positions the other animals were about to take will never be
+known. King's sinews tightened. "Ha-ow!" grunted the Sioux, reverting
+in his excitement to his ancient utterance. There was a lightning
+sweep of King's paw, a shout from Hansen, a _wah_ of surprise and
+pain from the bear. King leaped back to the top of the stand to avoid
+the expected counter-stroke. But not against him did the bear's rage
+turn. The maddened beast seemed to conclude that his master had
+betrayed him. With a roar he struck at Tomaso with the full force of
+his terrible forearm. Tomaso was in the very act of leaping forward
+from his seat, when the blow caught him full on the shoulder,
+shattering the bones, ripping the whole side out of his coat, and
+hurling him senseless to the floor.
+
+The change in the scene was instantaneous and appalling. Most of the
+animals, startled, and dreading immediate punishment, darted for their
+pedestals,--_any_ pedestals that they found within reach,--and fought
+savagely for the possession of the first they came to. The bear fell
+furiously upon the body of Tomaso. Cries and shrieks arose from the
+spectators. Hansen rushed to the rescue, his fork clutched in both
+hands. Attendants, armed with forks or iron bars, seemed to spring up
+from nowhere. But before any one could reach the spot, an appalling
+screech tore across the uproar, and King's yellow body, launched from
+the top of the stand, fell like a thunderbolt upon the bear's back.
+
+The shock rolled the bear clean over. While he was clawing about
+wildly, in the effort to grapple with his assailant, Hansen dragged
+aside the still unconscious Tomaso, and two attendants carried him
+hurriedly from the stage.
+
+Audience and stage alike were now in a sort of frenzy. Animals were
+fighting here and there in tangled groups; but for the moment all eyes
+were riveted on the deadly struggle which occupied the centre of the
+stage.
+
+For all that he had less than a quarter the weight and nothing like a
+quarter the bulk of his gigantic adversary, the puma, through the
+advantage of his attack, was having much the best of the fight. Hansen
+had no time for sentiment, no time to concern himself as to whether
+his chief was dead or alive. His business was to save valuable
+property by preventing the beasts from destroying each other. It
+mattered not to him, now, that King had come so effectively to
+Tomaso's rescue. Prodding him mercilessly with his fork, and raining
+savage blows upon his head, he strove, in a cold rage, to drive him
+off; but in vain. But other keepers, meanwhile, had run in with ropes
+and iron bars. A few moments more and both combatants were securely
+lassoed. Then they were torn apart by main force, streaming with
+blood. Blinded by blankets thrown over their heads, and hammered into
+something like subjection, they were dragged off at a rush and slammed
+unceremoniously into their dens. With them out of the way, it was a
+quick matter to dispose of the other fights, though not till after the
+white goat had been killed to satisfy that ancient grudge of the
+leopard's, and the wolf had been cruelly mauled for having refused to
+give up his pedestal to one of the excited lions. Only the pug had
+come off unscathed, having had the presence of mind to dart under the
+foundations of the frame at the first sign of trouble, and stay there.
+When all the other animals had been brought to their senses and driven
+off, one by one, to their cages, he came forth from his hiding and
+followed dejectedly, the curl quite taken out of his confident tail.
+Then word went round among the spectators that Tomaso was not
+dead--that, though badly injured, he would recover; and straightway
+they calmed down, with a complacent sense of having got the value of
+their money. The great cage was taken apart and carried off. The stage
+was speedily transformed. And two trick comedians, with slippers that
+flapped a foot beyond their toes, undertook to wipe out the memory of
+what had happened.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+The show was touring the larger towns of the Northwest. On the
+following day it started, leaving Tomaso behind in hospital, with a
+shattered shoulder and bitter wrath in his heart. At the next town,
+Hansen took Tomaso's place, but, for two reasons, with a sadly maimed
+performance. He had not yet acquired sufficient control of the animals
+to dare all Tomaso's acts; and the troupe was lacking some of its most
+important performers. The proud white goat was dead. The bear, the
+wolf, and one of the lions were laid up with their wounds. And as for
+the great puma, though _he_ had come off with comparatively little
+hurt, his temper had apparently been quite transformed. Hansen could
+do nothing with him. Whether it was that he was sick for Tomaso, whom
+he adored, or that he stewed in a black rage over the blows and
+pitchforkings, hitherto unknown to him, no one could surely say. He
+would do nothing but crouch, brooding, sullen and dangerous, at the
+back of his cage. Hansen noted the green light flickering fitfully
+across his pale, wide eyes, and prudently refrained from pressing
+matters.
+
+He was right. For, as a matter of fact, it was against the big Swede
+exclusively, and not against man in general, that King was nursing his
+grudge. In a dim way it had got into his brain that Hansen had taken
+sides with the bear against him and Tomaso, and he thirsted for
+vengeance. At the same time, he felt that Tomaso had deserted him. Day
+by day, as he brooded, the desire for escape--a desire which he had
+never known before--grew in his heart. Vaguely, perhaps, he dreamed
+that he would go and find Tomaso. At any rate, he would go--somewhere,
+anywhere, away from this world which had turned unfriendly to him.
+When this feeling grew dominant, he would rise suddenly and go
+prowling swiftly up and down behind the bars of his cage like a wild
+creature just caught.
+
+Curiously enough--for it is seldom indeed that Fate responds to the
+longing of such exiles from the wild--his opportunity came. Late at
+night the show reached a little town among the foothills. The train
+had been delayed for hours. The night was dark. Everything was in
+confusion, and all nerves on edge. The short road from the station to
+the field where the tents were to be set up was in bad repair, or had
+never been really a road. It ran along the edge of a steep gully. In
+the darkness one wheel of the van containing King's cage dropped to
+the hub into a yawning rut. Under the violence of the jolt a section
+of the edge of the bank gave way and crashed down to the bottom of the
+gully, dragging with it the struggling and screaming horses. The cage
+roof was completely smashed in.
+
+To King's eyes the darkness was but a twilight, pleasant and
+convenient. He saw an opening big enough to squeeze through; and
+beyond it, beyond the wild shouting and the flares of swung lanterns,
+a thick wood dark beneath the paler sky. Before any one could get down
+to the wreck, he was out and free and away. Crouching with belly to
+the earth, he ran noiselessly, and gained the woods before any one
+knew he had escaped. Straight on he ran, watchful but swift, heading
+for the places where the silence lay heaviest. Within five minutes
+Hansen had half the men of the show, with ropes, forks, and lanterns,
+hot on the trail. Within fifteen minutes, half the male population of
+the town was engaged in an enthusiastic puma hunt. But King was
+already far away, and making progress that would have been impossible
+to an ordinary wild puma. His life among men had taught him nothing
+about trees, so he had no unfortunate instinct to climb one and hide
+among the branches to see what his pursuers would be up to. His idea
+of getting away--and, perhaps, of finding his vanished master--was to
+keep right on. And this he did, though of course not at top speed, the
+pumas not being a race of long-winded runners like the wolves. In an
+hour or two he reached a rocky and precipitous ridge, quite impassable
+to men except by day. This he scaled with ease, and at the top, in the
+high solitude, felt safe enough to rest a little while. Then he made
+his way down the long, ragged western slopes, and at daybreak came
+into a wild valley of woods and brooks.
+
+By this time King was hungry. But game was plentiful. After two or
+three humiliating failures with rabbits--owing to his inexperience in
+stalking anything more elusive than a joint of dead mutton, he caught
+a fat wood-chuck, and felt his self-respect return. Here he might have
+been tempted to halt, although, to be sure, he saw no sign of Tomaso,
+but beyond the valley, still westward, he saw mountains, which drew
+him strangely. In particular, one uplifted peak, silver and sapphire
+as the clear day, and soaring supreme over the jumble of lesser
+summits, attracted him. He knew now that that was where he was going,
+and thither he pressed on with singleness of purpose, delaying only
+when absolutely necessary, to hunt or to sleep. The cage, the stage,
+the whip, Hansen, the bear, even the proud excitement of the flaming
+hoops, were swiftly fading to dimness in his mind, overwhelmed by the
+inrush of new, wonderful impressions. At last, reaching the lower,
+granite-ribbed flanks of old White Face itself, he began to feel
+curiously content, and no longer under the imperative need of haste.
+
+Here it was good hunting. Yet, though well satisfied, he made no
+effort to find himself a lair to serve as headquarters, but kept
+gradually working his way onward up the mountain. The higher he went,
+the more content he grew, till even his craving for his master was
+forgotten. Latent instincts began to spring into life, and he lapsed
+into the movements and customs of the wild puma. Only when he came
+upon a long, massive footprint in the damp earth by a spring, or a
+wisp of pungent-smelling fur on the rubbed and clawed bark of a tree,
+memory would rush back upon him fiercely. His ears would flatten
+down, his eyes would gleam green, his tail would twitch, and crouching
+to earth he would glare into every near-by thicket for a sight of his
+mortal foe. He had not yet learned to discriminate perfectly between
+an old scent and a new.
+
+About this time a hunter from the East, who had his camp a little
+farther down the valley, was climbing White Face on the trail of a
+large grizzly. He was lithe of frame, with a lean, dark, eager face,
+and he followed the perilous trail with a lack of prudence which
+showed a very inadequate appreciation of grizzlies. The trail ran
+along a narrow ledge cresting an abrupt but bushy steep. At the foot
+of the steep, crouched along a massive branch and watching for game of
+some sort to pass by, lay the big puma. Attracted by a noise above his
+head he glanced up, and saw the hunter. It was certainly not Tomaso,
+but it looked like him; and the puma's piercing eyes grew almost
+benevolent. He had no ill-feeling to any man but the Swede.
+
+Other ears than those of the puma had heard the unwary hunter's
+footsteps. The grizzly had caught them and stopped to listen. Yes, he
+was being followed. In a rage he wheeled about and ran back
+noiselessly to see who it was that could dare such presumption.
+Turning a shoulder of rock, he came face to face with the hunter, and
+at once, with a deep, throaty grunt, he charged.
+
+The hunter had not even time to get his heavy rifle to his shoulder.
+He fired once, point blank, from the hip. The shot took effect
+somewhere, but in no vital spot evidently, for it failed to check,
+even for one second, that terrific charge. To meet the charge was to
+be blasted out of being instantly. There was but one way open. The
+hunter sprang straight out from the ledge with a lightning vision of
+thick, soft-looking bushes far below him. The slope was steep, but by
+no means perpendicular, and he struck in a thicket which broke the
+full shock of the fall. His rifle flew far out of his hands. He
+rebounded, clutching at the bushes; but he could not check himself.
+Rolling over and over, his eyes and mouth choked with dust and leaves,
+he bumped on down the slope, and brought up at last, dazed but
+conscious, in a swampy hole under the roots of a huge over-leaning
+tree.
+
+[Illustration: "Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet distant,
+crouched, ready to spring, the biggest puma he had ever
+seen."]
+
+Striving to clear his eyes and mouth, his first realization was that
+he could not lift his left arm. The next, that he seemed to have
+jumped from the frying-pan into the fire. His jaws set themselves
+desperately, as he drew the long hunting-knife from his belt and
+struggled up to one knee, resolved to at least make his last fight a
+good one. Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet distant,
+crouched, ready to spring, the biggest puma he had ever seen. At this
+new confronting of doom his brain cleared, and his sinews seemed to
+stretch with fresh courage. It was hopeless, of course, as he knew,
+but his heart refused to recognize the fact. Then he noted with wonder
+that not at him at all was the puma looking, but far over his head. He
+followed that look, and again his heart sank, this time quite beyond
+the reach of hope. There was the grizzly coming headlong down the
+slope, foam slavering from his red jaws.
+
+Bewildered, and feeling like a rat in a hole, the hunter tried to slip
+around the base of the tree, desperately hoping to gain some post of
+vantage whence to get home at least two or three good blows before the
+end. But the moment he moved, the grizzly fairly hurled himself
+downwards. The hunter jumped aside and wheeled, with his knife lifted,
+his disabled left arm against the tree trunk. But in that same
+instant, a miracle! Noiselessly the puma's tawny length shot out
+overhead and fell upon the bear in the very mid-rush of the charge.
+
+At once it seemed as if some cataclysmic upheaval were in progress.
+The air, as it were, went mad with screeches, yells, snarls, and
+enormous thick gruntings. The bushes went down on every side. Now the
+bear was on top, now the puma. They writhed over and over, and for
+some seconds the hunter stared with stupefaction. Then he recovered
+his wits. He saw that the puma, for some inexplicable reason, had come
+to his help. But he saw, also, that the gigantic grizzly must win.
+Instead of slipping off and leaving his ally to destruction, he ran
+up, waited a moment for the perfect opportunity, and drove his knife
+to the hilt into the very centre of the back of the bear's neck, just
+where it joined the skull. Then he sprang aside.
+
+Strangely the noise died away. The huge bulk of the grizzly sank
+slowly into a heap, the puma still raking it with the eviscerating
+weapons of his hinder claws. A moment more and he seemed to realize
+that he had achieved a sudden triumph. Bleeding, hideously mangled,
+but still, apparently, full of fighting vigor, he disengaged himself
+from the unresisting mass and looked around him proudly. His wild
+eyes met those of the hunter, and the hunter had an anxious moment.
+But the great beast looked away again at once, and seemed, in fact, to
+forget all about the man's existence. He lay down and commenced
+licking assiduously at his wounds. Filled with astonishment, and just
+now beginning to realize the anguish in his broken arm, the hunter
+stole discreetly away.
+
+After an hour or two the puma arose, rather feebly, passed the body of
+his slain foe without a glance, and clambered up the slope to the
+ledge. He wanted a place of refuge now, a retreat that would be safe
+and cool and dark. Up and up he followed the winding of that narrow
+trail, and came out at last upon a rocky platform before a
+black-mouthed cave. He knew well enough that he had killed the owner
+of the cave, so he entered without hesitation.
+
+Here, for two days, he lay in concealment, licking his wounds. He had
+no desire to eat; but two or three times, because the wounds fevered
+him, he came forth and descended the trail a little way to where he
+had seen a cold spring bubbling from the rocks. His clean blood, in
+that high, clean air, quickly set itself to the healing of the hurts,
+and strength flowed back swiftly into his torn sinews. At dawn of the
+third day he felt himself suddenly hungry, and realizing that he must
+seek some small game, even though not yet ready for any difficult
+hunting, he crept forth, just as the first thin glory of rose light
+came washing into the cave. But before he started down the trail he
+paused, and stood staring, with some dim half memory, out across the
+transparent, hollow spaces, the jumbled hilltops, misty, gray-green
+forests, and steel-bright loops of water to which he had at last come
+home.
+
+
+
+
+THE MONARCH OF PARK BARREN
+
+
+
+
+THE MONARCH OF PARK BARREN
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+From the cold spring lakes and sombre deeps of spruce forest, over
+which the bald granite peak of Old Saugamauk kept endless guard, came
+reports of a moose of more than royal stature, whose antlers beggared
+all records for symmetry and spread. From a home-coming lumber cruiser
+here, a wandering Indian there, the word came straggling in, till the
+settlements about the lower reaches of the river began to believe
+there might be some truth behind the wild tales. Then--for it was
+autumn, the season of gold and crimson falling leaves, and battles on
+the lake-shores under the white full moon--there followed stories of
+other moose seen fleeing in terror, with torn flanks and bleeding
+shoulders; and it was realized that the prowess of the great moose
+bull was worthy of his stature and his adornment. Apparently he was
+driving all the other bulls off the Saugamauk ranges.
+
+By this time the matter became of interest to the guides. The stories
+gathered in from different quarters, so it was hard to guess just
+where the gigantic stranger was most likely to be found. To north and
+northeast of the mountain went the two Armstrongs, seeking the
+stranger's trail; while to south and southeastward explored the
+Crimmins boys. If real, the giant bull had to be located; if a myth,
+he had to be exploded before raising impossible hopes in the hearts of
+visiting sportsmen.
+
+Then suddenly arrived corroboration of all the stories. It came from
+Charley Crimmins. He was able to testify with conviction that the
+giant bull was no figment of Indian's imagination or lumberman's
+inventive humor. For it was he whose search had been successful.
+
+In fact, he might have been content to have it just a shade less
+overwhelmingly successful. That there is such a thing as an
+embarrassment of success was borne in upon him when he found himself
+jumping madly for the nearest tree, with a moose that seemed to have
+the stature of an elephant crashing through the thickets close behind
+him. He reached the tree just in time to swing well up among its
+branches. Then the tree quivered as the furious animal flung his bulk
+against it. Crimmins had lost his rifle in the flight. He could do
+nothing but sit shivering on his branch, making remarks so
+uncomplimentary that the great bull, if he could have appreciated
+them, would probably have established himself under that tree till
+vengeance was accomplished. But not knowing that he had been insulted,
+he presently grew tired of snorting at his captive, and wandered off
+through the woods in search of more exciting occupation. Then,
+indignant beyond words, Charley descended from his retreat, and took
+his authoritative report in to the Settlements.
+
+[Illustration: "He reached the tree just in time to swing well up among
+the branches."]
+
+At first it was thought that there would be great hunting around Old
+Saugamauk, till those tremendous antlers should fall a prize to some
+huntsman not only lucky but rich. For no one who could not pay right
+handsomely for the chance might hope to be guided to the range where
+such an unequalled trophy was to be won. But when the matter, in all
+its authenticated details, came to the ears of Uncle Adam, dean of the
+guides of that region, he said "_No_" with an emphasis that left no
+room for argument. There should be no hunting around the slopes of
+Saugamauk for several seasons. If the great bull was the terror they
+made him out to be, then he had driven all the other bulls from his
+range, and there was nothing to be hunted but his royal self. "Well,"
+decreed the far-seeing old guide, "we'll let him be for a bit, till
+his youngsters begin to grow up like him. Then there'll be no heads in
+all the rest of New Brunswick like them that comes from Old
+Saugamauk." This decree was accepted, the New Brunswick guides being
+among those who are wise enough to cherish the golden-egged goose.
+
+In the course of that season the giant moose was seen several times by
+guides and woodsmen--but usually from a distance, as the inconsiderate
+impetuosity of his temper was not favorable to close or calm
+observation. The only people who really knew him were those who, like
+Charley Crimmins, had looked down upon his grunting wrath from the
+branches of a substantial tree.
+
+Upon certain important details, however, all observers agreed. The
+stranger (for it was held that, driven by some southward wandering
+instinct, he had come down from the wild solitudes of the Gaspé
+Peninsula) was reckoned to be a good eight inches taller at the
+shoulders than any other moose of New Brunswick record, and several
+hundredweight heavier. His antlers, whose symmetry and palmation
+seemed perfect, were estimated to have a spread of sixty inches at
+least. That was the conservative estimate of Uncle Adam, who had made
+his observations with remarkable composure from a tree somewhat less
+lofty and sturdy than he would have chosen had he had the time for
+choice.
+
+In color the giant was so dark that his back and flanks looked black
+except in the strongest sunlight. His mighty head, with long, deeply
+overhanging muzzle, was of a rich brown; while the under parts of his
+body, and the inner surfaces of his long, straight legs, were of a
+rusty fawn color. His "bell"--as the shaggy appendix that hangs from
+the neck of a bull moose, a little below the throat, is called--was of
+unusual development, and the coarse hair adorning it peculiarly
+glossy. To bring down such a magnificent prize, and to carry off such
+a trophy as that unmatched head and antlers, the greatest sportsmen of
+America would have begrudged no effort or expense. But though the fame
+of the wonderful animal was cunningly allowed to spread to the ears of
+all sportsmen, its habitat seemed miraculously elusive. It was heard
+of on the Upsalquitch, the Nipisiguit, the Dungarvan, the Little
+Sou'west, but never, by some strange chance, in the country around Old
+Saugamauk. Visiting sportsmen hunted, spent money, dreamed dreams,
+followed great trails and brought down splendid heads, all over the
+Province; but no stranger with a rifle was allowed to see the proud
+antlers of the monarch of Saugamauk.
+
+The right of the splendid moose to be called the Monarch of Saugamauk
+was settled beyond all question one moonlight night when the surly old
+bear who lived in a crevasse far up under the stony crest of the
+mountain came down and attempted to dispute it. The wild kindreds, as
+a rule, are most averse to unnecessary quarrels. Unless their food or
+their mates are at stake, they will fight only under extreme
+provocation, or when driven to bay. They are not ashamed to run away,
+rather than press matters too far and towards a doubtful issue. A bull
+moose and a bear are apt to give each other a wide berth, respecting
+each other's prowess. But there are exceptions to all rules,
+especially where bears, the most individual of our wild cousins, are
+concerned. And this bear was in a particularly savage mood. Just in
+the mating season he had lost his mate, who had been shot by an
+Indian. The old bear did not know what had happened to her, but he was
+ready to avenge her upon any one who might cross his path.
+
+Unluckily for him, it was the great moose who crossed his path; and
+the luck was all Charley Crimmins's, who chanced to be the spectator
+of what happened there beside the moonlit lake.
+
+Charley was on his way over to the head of the Nipisiguit, when it
+occurred to him that he would like to get another glimpse of the great
+beast who had so ignominiously discomfited him. Peeling a sheet of
+bark from the nearest white birch, he twisted himself a "moose-call,"
+then climbed into the branches of a willow which spread out over the
+edge of the shining lake. From this concealment he began to utter
+persuasively the long, uncouth, melancholy call by which the moose cow
+summons her mate.
+
+Sometimes these vast northern solitudes seem, for hours together, as
+if they were empty of all life. It is as if a wave of distrust had
+passed simultaneously over all the creatures of the wild. At other
+times the lightest occasion suffices to call life out of the
+stillness. Crimmins had not sounded more than twice his deceptive
+call, when the bushes behind the strip of beech crackled sharply. But
+it was not the great bull that stepped forth into the moonlight. It
+was a cow moose. She came out with no effort at concealment, and
+walked up and down the beach, angrily looking for her imagined rival.
+
+When the uneasy animal's back was towards him, Crimmins called again,
+a short, soft call. The cow jumped around as if she had been struck,
+and the stiff hair along her neck stood up with jealous rage. But
+there was no rival anywhere in sight, and she stood completely
+mystified, shaking her ungainly head, peering into the dark
+undergrowth, and snorting tempestuously as if challenging the
+invisible rival to appear. Then suddenly her angry ridge of hair sank
+down, she seemed to shrink together upon herself, and with a
+convulsive bound she sprang away from the dark undergrowth, landing
+with a splash in the shallow water along shore. At the same instant
+the black branches were burst apart, and a huge bear, forepaws
+upraised and jaws wide open, launched himself forth into the open.
+
+Disappointed at missing his first spring, the bear rushed furiously
+upon his intended victim, but the cow, for all her apparent
+awkwardness, was as agile as a deer. Barely eluding his rush, she went
+shambling up the shore at a terrific pace, plunged into the woods, and
+vanished. The bear checked himself at the water's edge, and turned,
+holding his nose high in the air, as if disdaining to acknowledge that
+he had been foiled.
+
+Crimmins hesitatingly raised his rifle. Should he bag this bear, or
+should he wait and sound his call again a little later, in the hope of
+yet summoning the great bull? As he hesitated, and the burly black
+shape in the moonlight also stood hesitating, the thickets rustled and
+parted almost beneath him, and the mysterious bull strode forth with
+his head held high.
+
+He had come in answer to what he thought was the summons of his mate;
+but when he saw the bear, his rage broke all bounds. He doubtless
+concluded that the bear had driven his mate away. With a bawling roar
+he thundered down upon the intruder.
+
+The bear, as we have seen, was in no mood to give way. His small eyes
+glowed suddenly red with vengeful fury, as he wheeled and gathered
+himself, half crouching upon his haunches, to meet the tremendous
+attack. In this attitude all his vast strength was perfectly poised,
+ready for use in any direction. The moose, had he been attacking a
+rival of his own kind, would have charged with antlers down, but
+against all other enemies the weapons he relied upon were his gigantic
+hoofs, edged like chisels. As he reached his sullenly waiting
+antagonist he reared on his hind-legs, towering like a black rock
+about to fall and crush whatever was in its path. Like pile-drivers
+his fore-hoofs struck downwards, one closely following the other.
+
+The bear swung aside as lightly as a weasel, and eluded, but only by a
+hair's breadth, that destructive stroke. As he wheeled he delivered a
+terrific, swinging blow, with his armed forepaw, upon his assailant's
+shoulder.
+
+The blow was a fair one. Any ordinary moose bull would have gone down
+beneath it, with his shoulder-joint shattered to splinters. But this
+great bull merely staggered, and stood for a second in amazement. Then
+he whipped about and darted upon the bear with a sort of hoarse
+scream, his eyes flashing with a veritable madness. He neither reared
+to strike, nor lowered his antlers to gore, but seemed intent upon
+tearing the foe with his teeth, as a mad horse might. At the sight of
+such resistless fury Crimmins involuntarily tightened his grip on his
+branch and muttered: "That ain't no _moose_! It's a--" But before he
+could finish his comparison, astonishment stopped him. The bear,
+unable with all his strength and weight to withstand the shock of that
+straight and incredibly swift charge, had been rolled over and over
+down the gentle slope of the beach. At the same moment the moose,
+blinded by his rage and unable to check himself, had tripped over a
+log that lay hidden in the bushes, and fallen headlong on his nose.
+
+Utterly cowed by the overwhelming completeness of this overthrow, the
+bear was on his feet again before his conqueror, and scurrying to
+refuge like a frightened rat. He made for the nearest tree, and that
+nearest tree, to Crimmins's dismay, was Crimmins's. The startled guide
+swung himself hastily to a higher branch which stretched well out over
+the water.
+
+Before the great bull could recover his footing, the fugitive had
+gained a good start. But desperately swift though he was, the doom
+that thundered behind him was swifter, and caught him just as he was
+scrambling into the tree. Those implacable antlers ploughed his
+hind-quarters remorselessly, till he squealed with pain and terror.
+His convulsive scrambling raised him, the next instant, beyond reach
+of that punishment; but immediately the great bull reared, and struck
+him again and again with his terrible hoofs, almost crushing the
+victim's maimed haunches. The bear bawled again, but maintained his
+clutch of desperation, and finally drew himself up to a safe height,
+where he crouched on a branch, whimpering pitifully, while the victor
+raged below.
+
+At this moment the bear caught sight of Crimmins eying him steadily.
+To the cowed beast this was a new peril menacing him. With a
+frightened glance he crawled out on another branch, as far as it could
+be trusted to support his weight. And there he clung, huddled and
+shivering like a beaten puppy, looking from the man to the moose, from
+the moose to the man, as if he feared they might both jump at him
+together.
+
+But the sympathies of Crimmins were now entirely with the unfortunate
+bear, his fellow-prisoner, and he looked down at the arrogant tyrant
+below with a sincere desire to humble his pride with a rifle-bullet.
+But he was too far-seeing a guide for that. He contented himself with
+climbing a little lower till he attracted the giant's attention to
+himself, and then dropping half a handful of tobacco, dry and powdery,
+into those snorting red nostrils.
+
+It was done with nice precision, just as the giant drew in his breath.
+He got the fullest benefit of the pungent dose; and such trivial
+matters as bears and men were instantly forgotten in the paroxysms
+which seized him. His roaring sneezes seemed as if they would rend
+his mighty bulk asunder. He fairly stood upon his head, burrowing his
+muzzle into the moist leafage, as he strove to purge the exasperating
+torment from his nostrils. Crimmins laughed till he nearly fell out of
+the tree, while the bear forgot to whimper as he stared in terrified
+bewilderment. At last the moose stuck his muzzle up in the air and
+began backing blindly over stones and bushes, as if trying to get away
+from his own nose. Plump into four or five feet of icy water he
+backed. The shock seemed to give him an idea. He plunged his head
+under, and fell to wallowing and snorting and raising such a
+prodigious disturbance that all the lake shores rang with it. Then he
+bounced out upon the beach again, and dashed off through the woods as
+if a million hornets were at his ears.
+
+Weak with laughter, Crimmins climbed down out of his refuge, waved an
+amiable farewell to the stupefied bear, and resumed the trail for the
+Nipisiguit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+For the next two years the fame of the great moose kept growing,
+adding to itself various wonders and extravagances till it assumed
+almost the dimensions of a myth. Sportsmen came from all over the
+world in the hope of bagging those unparalleled antlers. They shot
+moose, caribou, deer, and bear, and went away disappointed only in one
+regard. But at last they began to swear that the giant was a mere
+fiction of the New Brunswick guides, designed to lure the hunters. The
+guides, therefore, began to think it was time to make good and show
+their proofs. Even Uncle Adam was coming around to this view, when
+suddenly word came from the Crown Land Department at Fredericton that
+the renowned moose must not be allowed to fall to any rifle. A special
+permit had been issued for his capture and shipment out of the
+country, that he might be the ornament of a famous Zoölogical Park and
+a lively proclamation of what the New Brunswick forests could
+produce.
+
+The idea of taking the King of Saugamauk alive seemed amusing to the
+guides, and to Crimmins particularly. But Uncle Adam, whose colossal
+frame and giant strength seemed to put him peculiarly in sympathy with
+the great moose bull, declared that it could and should be done, for
+he would do it. Upon this, scepticism vanished, even from the smile of
+Charley Crimmins, who voiced the general sentiment when he said,--
+
+"Uncle Adam ain't the man to bite off any more than he can chew!"
+
+But Uncle Adam was in no hurry. He had such a respect for his
+adversary that he would not risk losing a single point in the
+approaching contest. He waited till the mating season and the hunting
+season were long past, and the great bull's pride and temper somewhat
+cooled. He waited, moreover, for the day to come--along towards
+midwinter--when those titanic antlers should loosen at their roots,
+and fall off at the touch of the first light branch that might brush
+against them. This, the wise old woodsman knew, would be the hour of
+the King's least arrogance. Then, too, the northern snows would be
+lying deep and soft and encumbering, over all the upland slopes
+whereon the moose loved to browse.
+
+Along toward mid-February word came to Uncle Adam that the Monarch had
+"yarded up," as the phrase goes, on the southerly slope of Old
+Saugamauk, with three cows and their calves of the previous spring
+under his protection. This meant that, when the snow had grown too
+deep to permit the little herd to roam at will, he had chosen a
+sheltered area where the birch, poplar, and cherry, his favorite
+forage, were abundant, and there had trodden out a maze of deep paths
+which led to all the choicest browsing, and centred about a cluster of
+ancient firs so thick as to afford covert from the fiercest storms.
+The news was what the wise old woodsman had been waiting for. With
+three of his men, a pair of horses, a logging-sled, axes, and an
+unlimited supply of rope, he went to capture the King.
+
+It was a clear, still morning, so cold that the great trees snapped
+sharply under the grip of the bitter frost. The men went on snowshoes,
+leaving the teams hitched in a thicket on the edge of a logging road
+some three or four hundred yards from the "moose-yard." The sun
+glittered keenly on the long white alleys which led this way and that
+at random through the forest. The snow, undisturbed and accumulating
+for months, was heaped in strange shapes over hidden bushes, stumps,
+and rocks. The tread of the snowshoes made a furtive crunching sound
+as it rhythmically broke the crisp surface.
+
+Far off through the stillness the great moose, lying with the rest of
+the herd in their shadowy covert, caught the ominous sound. He lurched
+to his feet and stood listening, while the herd watched him anxiously,
+awaiting his verdict as to whether that strange sound meant peril or
+no.
+
+For reasons which we have seen, the giant bull knew little of man, and
+that little not of a nature to command any great respect.
+Nevertheless, at this season of the year, his blood cool, his august
+front shorn of its ornament and defence, he was seized with an
+incomprehensible apprehension. After all, as he felt vaguely, there
+was an unknown menace about man; and his ear told him that there were
+several approaching. A few months earlier he would have stamped his
+huge hoofs, thrashed the bushes with his colossal antlers, and stormed
+forth to chastise the intruders. But now, he sniffed the sharp air,
+snorted uneasily, drooped his big ears, and led a rapid but dignified
+retreat down one of the deep alleys of his maze.
+
+This was exactly what Uncle Adam had looked for. His object was to
+force the herd out of the maze of alleys, wherein they could move
+swiftly, and drive them floundering through the deep, soft snow, which
+would wear them out before they could go half a mile. Spreading his
+men so widely that they commanded all trails by which the fugitives
+might return, he followed up the flight at a run. And he accompanied
+the pursuit with a riot of shouts and yells and laughter, designed to
+shake his quarry's heart with the fear of the unusual. Wise in all
+woodcraft, Uncle Adam knew that one of the most daunting of all
+sounds, to the creatures of the wild, was that of human laughter, so
+inexplicable and seemingly so idle.
+
+At other times the great bull would merely have been enraged at this
+blatant clamor and taken it as a challenge. But now he retreated to
+the farthest corner of his maze. From this point there were but two
+paths of return, and along both the uproar was closing in upon him.
+Over the edge of the snow--which was almost breast-high to him, and
+deep enough to bury the calves, hopelessly deep, indeed, for any of
+the herd but himself to venture through--he gave a wistful look
+towards the depths of the cedar swamps in the valley, where he
+believed he could baffle all pursuers. Then his courage--but without
+his autumnal fighting rage--came back to him. His herd was his care.
+He crowded the cows and calves between himself and the snow, and
+turned to face his pursuers as they came running and shouting through
+the trees.
+
+When Uncle Adam saw that the King was going to live up to his kingly
+reputation and fight rather than be driven off into the deep snow, he
+led the advance more cautiously till his forces were within
+twenty-five or thirty paces of the huddling herd. Here he paused, for
+the guardian of the herd was beginning to stamp ominously with his
+great, clacking hoofs, and the reddening light in his eyes showed that
+he might charge at any instant.
+
+He did not charge, however, because his attention was diverted by the
+strange action of the men, who had stopped their shouting and begun to
+chop trees. It amazed him to see the flashing axes bite savagely into
+the great trunks and send the white chips flying. The whole herd
+watched with wide eyes, curious and apprehensive; till suddenly a tree
+toppled, swept the hard blue sky, and came down with a crashing roar
+across one of the runways. The cows and calves bounded wildly, clear
+out into the snow. But the King, though his eyes dilated with
+amazement, stood his ground and grunted angrily.
+
+A moment more and another tree, huge-limbed and dense, came down
+across the other runway. Two more followed, and the herd was cut off
+from its retreat. The giant bull, of course, with his vast stride and
+colossal strength, could have smashed his way through and over the
+barrier; but the others, to regain the safe mazes of the "yard," would
+have had to make a detour through the engulfing snow.
+
+Though the King was now fairly cornered, Uncle Adam was puzzled to
+know what to do next. In his hesitation, he felled some more trees,
+dropping the last one so close that the herd was obliged to crowd back
+to avoid being struck by the falling top. This, at last, was too much
+for the King, who had never before known what it was to be crowded.
+While his followers plunged away in terror, burying themselves
+helplessly before they had gone a dozen yards, he bawled with fury and
+charged upon his tormentors.
+
+[Illustration: "For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was able to
+keep up this almost incredible pace."]
+
+Though the snow, as we have seen, came up to his chest, the giant's
+strength and swiftness were such that the woodsmen were taken by
+surprise, and Uncle Adam, who was in front, was almost caught. In
+spite of his bulk, he turned and sprang away with the agility of a
+wildcat; but if his snowshoes had turned and hindered him for one half
+second, he would have been struck down and trodden to a jelly in the
+smother of snow. Seeing the imminence of his peril, the other woodsmen
+threw up their rifles; but Uncle Adam, though extremely busy for the
+moment, saw them out of the corner of his eye as he ran, and angrily
+ordered them not to shoot. He knew what he was about, and felt quite
+sure of himself, though the enemy was snorting at his very heels.
+
+For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was able to keep up this
+almost incredible pace. Then the inexorable pull of the snow began to
+tell, even upon such thews as his, and his pace slackened. But his
+rage showed no sign of cooling. So, being very accommodating, Uncle
+Adam slackened his own pace correspondingly, that his pursuer might
+not be discouraged. And the chase went on. But it went slower, and
+slower, and slower, till at last it stopped with Uncle Adam still just
+about six feet in the lead, and the great moose still blind-mad, but
+too exhausted to go one foot farther. Then Uncle Adam chuckled softly
+and called for the ropes. There was kicking, of course, and furious
+lunging and wild snorting, but the woodsmen were skilful and patient,
+and the King of Old Saugamauk was conquered. In a little while he lay
+upon his side, trussed up as securely and helplessly as a papoose in
+its birch-bark carrying-cradle. There was nothing left of his kingship
+but to snort regal defiance, to which his captors offered not the
+slightest retort. In his bonds he was carried off to the settlements,
+on the big logging-sled, drawn by the patient horses whom he scorned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+After this ignominy, for days the King was submissive, with the sullen
+numbness of despair. Life for him became a succession of stunning
+shocks and roaring change. He would be put into strange box-prisons,
+which would straightway begin to rush terribly through the world with
+a voice of thunder. Through the cracks in the box he would watch trees
+and fields and hills race by in madness of flight. He would be taken
+out of the box, and murmuring crowds would gape at him till the black
+mane along his neck would begin to rise in something of his old anger.
+Then some one would drive the crowd away, and he would slip back into
+his stupor. He did not know which he hated most,--the roaring boxes,
+the fleeing landscapes, or the staring crowds. At last he came to a
+loud region where there were no trees, but only what seemed to him
+vast, towering, naked rocks, red, gray, yellow, brown, full of holes
+from which issued men in swarms. These terrible rocks ran in endless
+rows, and through them he came at last to a wide field, thinly
+scattered with trees. There was no seclusion in it, no deep, dark,
+shadowy hemlock covert to lie down in; but it was green, and it was
+spacious, and it was more or less quiet. So when he was turned loose
+in it, he was almost glad. He lifted his head, with a spark of the old
+arrogance returning to his eyes. And through dilating nostrils he
+drank the free air till his vast lungs thrilled with almost forgotten
+life.
+
+The men who had brought him to the park--this bleak barren he would
+have called it, had he had the faculty of thinking in terms of human
+speech, this range more fitted for the frugal caribou than for a
+ranger of the deep forests like himself--these men stood watching him
+curiously after they had loosed him from his bonds. For a few minutes
+he forgot all about them. Then his eyes fell on them, and a heat crept
+slowly into his veins as he looked. Slowly he began to resume his
+kingship. His eyes changed curiously, and a light, fiery and fearless,
+flamed in their depths. His mane began to bristle.
+
+"It's time for us to get out of this. That fellow's beginning to
+remember he has some old scores to settle up!" remarked the Director
+coolly to the head-keeper and his assistants; and they all stepped
+backwards, with a casual air, towards the big gate, which stood ajar
+to receive them. Just as they reached it, the old fire and fury surged
+back into the exile's veins, but heated seven fold by the ignominies
+which he had undergone. With a hoarse and bawling roar, such as had
+never before been heard in those guarded precincts, he launched
+himself upon his gaolers. But they nimbly slipped through the gate and
+dropped the massive bars into their sockets.
+
+They were just in time. The next instant the King had hurled himself
+with all his weight upon the barrier. The sturdy ironwork and the
+panels on either side of the posts clanged, groaned, and even yielded
+a fraction of an inch beneath the shock. But in the rebound they
+thrust their assailant backward with startling violence. Bewildered,
+he glared at the obstacle, which looked so slender, yet was so strong
+to balk him of his vengeance. Then, jarred and aching, he withdrew
+haughtily to explore his new domain. The Director, gazing after him,
+nodded with supreme satisfaction.
+
+"Those fellows up in New Brunswick told no lies!" said he.
+
+"He certainly is a peach!" assented the head-keeper heartily. "When
+he grows his new antlers, I reckon we will have to enlarge the park."
+
+The great exile found his new range interesting to explore, and began
+to forget his indignation. Privacy it had not, for the trees at this
+season were all leafless, and there were no dense fir or spruce
+thickets into which he could withdraw, to look forth unseen upon this
+alien landscape. But there were certain rough boulders behind which he
+could lurk. And there were films of ice, and wraiths of thin snow in
+the hollows, the chill touch of which helped him to feel more or less
+at home. In the distance he caught sight of a range of those high,
+square rocks wherein the men dwelt; and hating them deeply, he turned
+and pressed on in the opposite direction over a gentle rise and across
+a little valley; till suddenly, among the trees, he came upon a
+curious barrier of meshed stuff, something like a gigantic cobweb.
+Through the meshes he could distinctly see the country beyond, and it
+seemed to be just the country he desired, more wooded and inviting
+than what he had traversed. Confidently he pushed upon the woven
+obstacle; but to his amazement it did not give way before him. He eyed
+it resentfully. How absurd that so frail a thing should venture to
+forbid him passage! He thrust upon it again, more brusquely, to be
+just as brusquely denied. The hot blood blazed to his head, and he
+dashed himself upon it with all his strength. The impenetrable but
+elastic netting yielded for a space, then sprang back with an
+impetuosity that flung him clear off his feet. He fell with a loud
+grunt, lay for a moment dismayed, then got up and eyed his
+incomprehensible adversary with a blank stare. He was learning so many
+strange lessons that it was difficult to assimilate them all at once.
+
+The following morning, when he was feasting on a pile of the willow
+and poplar forage which he loved, and which had appeared as if by
+magic close beside the mysterious barrier, he saw some men, perhaps a
+hundred yards away, throw open a section of the barrier. Forgetting to
+be angry at their intrusion on his range, he watched them curiously. A
+moment more, and a little herd of his own kind, apparently quite
+indifferent to the men, followed them into the range. He was not
+surprised at their appearance, for his nose had already told him there
+were moose about. But he was surprised to see them on friendly terms
+with man.
+
+There were several cows in the herd, with a couple of awkward
+yearlings; and the King, much gratified, ambled forward with huge
+strides to meet them and take them under his gracious protection. But
+a moment later two fine young bulls came into his view, following the
+rest of the herd at a more dignified pace. The King stopped, lowered
+his mighty front, laid back his ears like an angry stallion, and
+grunted a hoarse warning. The stiff black hair along his neck slowly
+arose and stood straight up.
+
+The two young bulls stared in stupid astonishment at this tremendous
+apparition. It was not the fighting season, so they had no jealousy,
+and felt nothing but a cold indifference toward the stranger. But as
+he came striding down the field his attitude was so menacing, his
+stature so formidable, that they could not but realize there was
+trouble brewing. It was contrary to all traditions that they should
+take the trouble to fight in midwinter, when they had no antlers and
+their blood was sluggish. Nevertheless, they could not brook to be so
+affronted, as it were, in their own citadel.
+
+Their eyes began to gleam angrily, and they advanced, shaking their
+heads, to meet the insolent stranger. The keepers, surprised, drew
+together close by the gate; while one of them left hurriedly and ran
+towards a building which stood a little way off among the trees.
+
+As the King swept down upon the herd, bigger and blacker than any bull
+they had ever seen before, the cows shrank away and stood staring
+placidly. They were well fed, and for the time indifferent to all else
+in their sheltered world. Still, a fight is a fight, and if there was
+going to be one, they were ready enough to look on.
+
+Alas for the right of possession when it runs counter to the right of
+might! The two young bulls were at home and in the right, and their
+courage was sound. But when that black whirlwind from the fastnesses
+of Old Saugamauk fell upon them, it seemed that they had no more
+rights at all.
+
+Side by side they confronted the onrushing doom. At the moment of
+impact, they reared and struck savagely with their sharp hoofs. But
+the gigantic stranger troubled himself with no such details. He merely
+fell upon them, like a blind but raging force, irresistible as a
+falling hillside and almost as disastrous. They both went down before
+him like calves, and rolled over and over, stunned and sprawling.
+
+The completeness of this victory, establishing his supremacy beyond
+cavil, should have satisfied the King, especially as this was not the
+mating season and there could be no question of rivalry. But his heart
+was bursting with injury, and his thirst for vengeance was raging to
+be glutted. As the vanquished bulls struggled to recover their feet,
+he bounded upon the nearest and trod him down again mercilessly. The
+other, meanwhile, fled for his life, stricken with shameless terror;
+and the exile, leaving his victim, went thundering in pursuit,
+determined that both should be annihilated. It was a terrifying sight,
+the black giant, mane erect, neck out-thrust, mouth open, eyes glaring
+with implacable fury, sweeping down upon the fugitive with his
+terrific strides.
+
+But just then, when another stride would have sufficed, a strange
+thing happened! A flying noose settled over the pursuer's head,
+tightened, jerked his neck aside, and threw him with a violence that
+knocked the wind clean out of his raging body. While his vast lungs
+sobbed and gasped to recover the vital air, other nooses whipped about
+his legs; and before he could recover himself even enough to struggle,
+he was once more trussed up as he had been by Uncle Adam amid the
+snows of Saugamauk.
+
+In this ignominious position, his heart bursting with shame and
+impotence, he was left lying while his two battered victims were
+lassoed and led away. Since it was plain that the King would not
+suffer them to live in his kingdom, even as humble subjects, they were
+to be removed to some more modest domain; for the King, whether he
+deserved it or not, was to have the best reserved for him.
+
+It was little kingly he felt, the fettered giant, as he lay there
+panting on his side. The cows came up and gazed at him with a kind of
+placid scorn, till his furious snortings and the undaunted rage that
+flamed in his eyes made them draw back apprehensively. Then, the men
+who had overthrown him returned. They dragged him unceremoniously up
+to the gate, slipped his bonds, and discreetly put themselves on the
+other side of the barrier before he could get to his feet. With a
+grunt he wheeled and faced them with such hate in his eyes that they
+thought he would once more hurl himself upon the bars. But he had
+learned his lesson. For a few moments he stood quivering. Then, as if
+recognizing at last a mastery too absolute even for him to challenge,
+he shook himself violently, turned away, and stalked off to join the
+herd.
+
+That evening, about sundown, it turned colder. Clouds gathered
+heavily, and there was the sense of coming snow in the air. A great
+wind, rising fitfully, drew down out of the north. Seeing no covert to
+his liking, the King led his little herd to the top of a naked knoll,
+where he could look about and choose a shelter. But that great wind
+out of the north, thrilling in his nostrils, got into his heart and
+made him forget what he had come for. Out across the alien gloom he
+stared, across the huddled, unknown masses of the dark, till he
+thought he saw the bald summit of Old Saugamauk rising out of its
+forests, till he thought he heard the wind roar in the spruce tops,
+the dead branches clash and crack. The cows, for a time, huddled close
+to his massive flanks, expecting some new thing from his vast
+strength. Then, as the storm gathered, they remembered the shelter
+which man had provided for them, and the abundant forage it contained.
+One after the other they turned and filed away slowly down the slopes,
+through the dim trees, towards the corner where they knew a gate would
+stand open for them, and then a door into a warm-smelling shed. The
+King, lost in his dream, did not notice their going. But suddenly,
+feeling himself alone, he started and looked about. The last of the
+yearlings, at its mother's heels, was just vanishing through the windy
+gloom. He hesitated, started to follow, then stopped abruptly. Let
+them go! They would return to him probably. Turning back to his
+station on the knoll, he stood with his head held high, his nostrils
+drinking the cold, while the winter night closed in upon him, and the
+wind out of his own north rushed and roared solemnly in his face.
+
+
+
+
+THE GRAY MASTER
+
+
+
+
+THE GRAY MASTER
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Why he was so much bigger, more powerful, and more implacably savage
+than the other members of the gray, spectral pack, which had appeared
+suddenly from the north to terrorize their lone and scattered
+clearings, the settlers of the lower Quah-Davic Valley could not
+guess. Those who were of French descent among them, and full of the
+old Acadian superstitions, explained it simply enough by saying he was
+a _loup-garou_, or "wer-wolf," and resigned themselves to the
+impossibility of contending against a creature of such supernatural
+malignity and power. But their fellows of English speech, having no
+such tradition to fall back upon, were mystified and indignant. The
+ordinary gray, or "cloudy," wolf of the East they knew, though he was
+so rare south of Labrador that few of them had ever seen one. They
+dismissed them all, indifferently, as "varmin." But this unaccountable
+gray ravager was bigger than any two such wolves, fiercer and more
+dauntless than any ten. Though the pack he led numbered no more than
+half a dozen, he made it respected and dreaded through all the wild
+leagues of the Quah-Davic. To make things worse, this long-flanked,
+long-jawed marauder was no less cunning than fierce. When the
+settlers, seeking vengeance for sheep, pigs, and cattle slaughtered by
+his pack, went forth to hunt him with dogs and guns, it seemed that
+there was never a wolf in the country. Nevertheless, either that same
+night or the next, it was long odds that one or more of those same
+dogs who had been officious in the hunt would disappear. As for traps
+and poisoned meat, they proved equally futile. They were always
+visited, to be sure, by the pack, at some unexpected and
+indeterminable moment, but treated always with a contumelious scorn
+which was doubtless all that such clumsy tactics merited. Meanwhile
+the ravages went on, and the children were kept close housed at night,
+and cool-eyed old woodsmen went armed and vigilant along the lonely
+roads. The French _habitant_ crossed himself, and the Saxon cursed his
+luck; and no one solved the mystery.
+
+Yet, after all, as Arthur Kane, the young schoolmaster at Burnt Brook
+Cross-Roads, began dimly to surmise, the solution was quite simple. A
+lucky gold-miner, returning from the Klondike, had brought with him
+not only gold and an appetite, but also a lank, implacable, tameless
+whelp from the packs that haunt the sweeps of northern timber. The
+whelp had gnawed his way to freedom. He had found, fought, thrashed,
+and finally adopted, a little pack of his small, Eastern kin. He had
+thriven, and grown to the strength and stature that were his rightful
+heritage. And "the Gray Master of the Quah-Davic," as Kane had dubbed
+him, was no _loup-garou_, no outcast human soul incarcerate in wolf
+form, but simply a great Alaskan timber-wolf.
+
+But this, when all is said, is quite enough. A wolf that can break the
+back of a full-grown collie at one snap of his jaws, and gallop off
+with the carcass as if it were a chipmunk, is about as undesirable a
+neighbor, in the night woods, as any _loup-garou_ ever devised by the
+_habitant's_ excitable imagination.
+
+All up and down the Quah-Davic Valley the dark spruce woods were full
+of game,--moose, deer, hares, and wild birds innumerable,--with roving
+caribou herds on the wide barren beyond the hill-ridge. Nevertheless,
+the great gray wolf would not spare the possessions of the settlers.
+His pack haunted the fringes of the settlements with a needless
+tenacity which seemed to hold a challenge in it, a direct and insolent
+defiance. And the feeling of resentment throughout the Valley was on
+the point of crystallizing into a concerted campaign of vengeance
+which would have left even so cunning a strategist as the Gray Master
+no choice but to flee or fall, when something took place which quite
+changed the course of public sentiment. Folk so disagreed about it
+that all concerted action became impossible, and each one was left to
+deal with the elusive adversary in his own way.
+
+This was what happened.
+
+In a cabin about three miles from the nearest neighbor lived the Widow
+Baisley, alone with her son Paddy, a lad under ten years old, and
+little for his age. One midwinter night she was taken desperately ill,
+and Paddy, reckless of the terrors of the midnight solitudes, ran
+wildly to get help. The moon was high and full, and the lifeless
+backwoods road was a narrow, bright, white thread between the silent
+black masses of the spruce forest. Now and then, as he remembered
+afterwards, his ear caught a sound of light feet following him in the
+dark beyond the roadside. But his plucky little heart was too full of
+panic grief about his mother to have any room for fear as to himself.
+Only the excited amazement of his neighbors, over the fact that he had
+made the journey in safety, opened his eyes to the hideous peril he
+had come through. Willing helpers hurried back with him to his
+mother's bedside. And on the way one of them, a keen huntsman who had
+more than once pitted his woodcraft in vain against that of the Gray
+Master, had the curiosity to step off the road and examine the snow
+under the thick spruces. Perhaps imagination misled him, when he
+thought he caught a glimpse of savage eyes, points of green flame,
+fading off into the black depths. But there could be no doubt as to
+the fresh tracks he found in the snow. There they were,--the
+footprints of the pack, like those of so many big dogs,--and among
+them the huge trail of the great, far-striding leader. All the way,
+almost from his threshold, these sinister steps had paralleled those
+of the hurrying child. Close to the edge of the darkness they
+ran,--close, within the distance of one swift leap,--yet never any
+closer!
+
+Why had the great gray wolf, who faced and pulled down the bull moose,
+and from whose voice the biggest dogs in the settlements ran like
+whipped curs--why had he and his stealthy pack spared this easy prey?
+It was inexplicable, though many had theories good enough to be
+laughed to scorn by those who had none. The _habitants_, of course,
+had all their superstitions confirmed, and with a certain respect and
+refinement of horror added: Here was a _loup-garou_ so crafty as to
+spare, on occasion! He must be conciliated, at all costs. They would
+hunt him no more, his motives being so inexplicable. Let him take a
+few sheep, or a steer, now and then, and remember that _they_, at
+least, were not troubling him. As for the English-speaking settlers,
+their enmity cooled down to the point where they could no longer get
+together any concentrated bitterness. It was only a big rascal of a
+wolf, anyway, scared to touch a white man's child, and certainly
+nothing for a lot of grown men to organize about. Some of the women
+jumped to the conclusion that a certain delicacy of sentiment had
+governed the wolves in their strange forbearance, while others
+honestly believed that the pack had been specially sent by Providence
+to guard the child through the forest on his sacred errand. But all,
+whatever their views, agreed in flouting the young schoolteacher's
+uninteresting suggestion that perhaps the wolves had not happened, at
+the moment, to be hungry.
+
+As it chanced, however, even this very rational explanation of Kane's
+was far from the truth. The truth was that the great wolf had profited
+by his period of captivity in the hands of a masterful man. Into his
+fine sagacity had penetrated the conception--hazy, perhaps, but none
+the less effective--that man's vengeance would be irresistible and
+inescapable if once fairly aroused. This conception he had enforced
+upon the pack. It was enough. For, of course, even to the most
+elementary intelligence among the hunting, fighting kindreds of the
+wild, it was patent that the surest way to arouse man's vengeance
+would be to attack man's young. The intelligence lying behind the
+wide-arched skull of the Gray Master was equal to more intricate and
+less obvious conclusions than that.
+
+Among all the scattered inhabitants of the Quah-Davic Valley there was
+no one who devoted quite so much attention to the wonderful gray wolf
+as did the young school-teacher. His life at the Burnt Brook
+Cross-Roads, his labors at the little Burnt Brook School, were neither
+so exacting nor so exciting but that he had time on his hands. His
+preferred expedients for spending that time were hunting, and
+studying the life of the wild kindreds. He was a good shot with both
+rifle and camera, and would serve himself with one weapon or the other
+as the mood seized him. When life, or his dinner, went ill with him,
+or he found himself fretting hopelessly for the metropolitan
+excitement of the little college city where he had been educated, he
+would choose his rifle. And so wide-reaching, so mysterious, are the
+ties which enmesh all created beings, that it would seem to even
+matters up and relieve his feelings wonderfully just to kill
+something, if only a rabbit or a weasel.
+
+But at other times he preferred the camera.
+
+Naturally Kane was interested in the mysterious gray wolf more than in
+all the other prowlers of the Quah-Davic put together. He was quite
+unreasonably glad when the plans for a concerted campaign against the
+marauder so suddenly fell through. That so individual a beast should
+have its career cut short by an angry settler's bullet, to avenge a
+few ordinary pigs or sheep, was a thing he could hardly contemplate
+with patience. To scatter the pack would be to rob the Quah-Davic
+solitudes of half their romance. He determined to devote himself to a
+study of the great wolf's personality and characteristics, and to
+foil, as far as this could be done without making himself unpopular,
+such plots as might be laid for the beast's undoing.
+
+Recognizing, however, that this friendly interest might not be
+reciprocated, Kane chose his rifle rather than his camera as a weapon,
+on those stinging, blue-white nights when he went forth to seek
+knowledge of the gray wolf's ways. His rifle was a well-tried
+repeating Winchester, and he carried a light, short-handled axe in his
+belt besides the regulation knife; so he had no serious misgivings as
+he trod the crackling, moonlit snow beneath the moose-hide webbing of
+his snowshoes. But not being utterly foolhardy, he kept to the open
+stretches of meadow, or river-bed, or snow-buried lake, rather than in
+the close shadows of the forest.
+
+But now, when he was so expectant, the wolf-pack seemed to find
+business elsewhere. For nights not a howl had been heard, not a fresh
+track found, within miles of Burnt Brook Cross-Roads. Then,
+remembering that a watched pot takes long to boil, Kane took
+fishing-lines and bait, and went up the wide, white brook-bed to the
+deep lake in the hills, whence it launches its shallow flood towards
+the Quah-Davic. He took with him also for companionship, since this
+time he was not wolf-hunting, a neighbor's dog that was forever after
+him--a useless, yellow lump of mongrel dog-flesh, but friendly and
+silent. After building a hasty shelter of spruce boughs some distance
+out from shore in the flooding light, he chopped holes through the ice
+and fell to fishing for the big lake trout that inhabited those deep
+waters. He had luck. And soon, absorbed in the new excitement, he had
+forgotten all about the great gray wolf.
+
+It was late, for Kane had slept the early part of the night, waiting
+for moonrise before starting on his expedition. The air was tingling
+with windless cold, and ghostly white with the light of a crooked,
+waning moon. Suddenly, without a sound, the dog crept close against
+Kane's legs. Kane felt him tremble. Looking up sharply, his eyes fell
+on a tall, gray form, sitting erect on the tip of a naked point, not a
+hundred yards away, and staring, not at him, but at the moon.
+
+In spite of himself, Kane felt a pricking in his cheeks, a creeping of
+the skin under his hair. The apparition was so sudden, and, above all,
+the cool ignoring of his presence was so disconcerting. Moreover,
+through that half-sinister light, his long muzzle upstretched towards
+the moon, and raised as he was a little above the level on which Kane
+was standing, the wolf looked unnaturally and impossibly tall. Kane
+had never heard of a wolf acting in this cool, self-possessed,
+arrogantly confident fashion, and his mind reverted obstinately to the
+outworn superstitions of his _habitants_ friends. But, after all, it
+was this wolf, not an ordinary brush-fence wolf, that he was so
+anxious to study; and the unexpected was just what he had most reason
+to expect! He was getting what he came for.
+
+Kane knew that the way to study the wild creatures was to keep still
+and make no noise. So be stiffened into instant immobility, and
+regretted that he had brought the dog with him. But he need not have
+worried about the dog, for that intelligent animal showed no desire to
+attract the Gray Master's notice. He was crouched behind Kane's legs,
+and motionless except for his shuddering.
+
+For several minutes no one stirred--nothing stirred in all that frozen
+world. Then, feeling the cold begin to creep in upon him in the
+stillness, Kane had to lift his thick-gloved hands to chafe his ears.
+He did it cautiously, but the caution was superfluous. The great wolf
+apparently had no objection to his moving as much as he liked. Once,
+indeed, those green, lambent eyes flamed over him, but casually, in
+making a swift circuit of the shores of the lake and the black fringe
+of the firs; but for all the interest which their owner vouchsafed
+him, Kane might as well have been a juniper bush.
+
+Knowing very well, however, that this elaborate indifference could not
+be other than feigned, Kane was patient, determined to find out what
+the game was. At the same time, he could not help the strain beginning
+to tell on him. Where was the rest of the pack? From time to time he
+glanced searchingly over his shoulder towards the all-concealing fir
+woods.
+
+At last, as if considering himself utterly alone, the great wolf
+opened his jaws, stretched back his neck, and began howling his
+shrill, terrible serenade to the moon. As soon as he paused, came
+far-off nervous barkings and yelpings from dogs who hated and trembled
+in the scattered clearings. But no wolf-howl made reply. The pack, for
+all the sign they gave, might have vanished off the earth. And Kane
+wondered what strong command from their leader could have kept them
+silent when all their ancient instincts bade them answer.
+
+As if well satisfied with his music, the great wolf continued to
+beseech the moon so persistently that at last Kane lost patience. He
+wanted more variety in the programme. Muttering, "I'll see if I can't
+rattle your fine composure a bit, my friend!" he raised his rifle and
+sent a bullet whining over the wolf's head. The wolf cocked his ears
+slightly and looked about carelessly, as if to say, "What's that?"
+then coolly resumed his serenade.
+
+Nettled by such ostentatious nonchalance, Kane drove another bullet
+into the snow within a few inches of the wolf's forefeet. This proved
+more effective. The great beast looked down at the place where the
+ball had struck, sniffed at it curiously, got up on all fours, and
+turned and stared steadily at Kane for perhaps half a minute. Kane
+braced himself for a possible onslaught. But it never came. Whirling
+lightly, the Gray Master turned his back on the disturber of his song,
+and trotted away slowly, without once looking back. He did not make
+directly for the cover, but kept in full view and easy gunshot for
+several hundred yards. Then he disappeared into the blackness of the
+spruce woods. Thereupon the yellow mongrel, emerging from his shelter
+behind Kane's legs, pranced about on the snow before him with every
+sign of admiration and relief.
+
+But Kane was too puzzled to be altogether relieved. It was not
+according to the books for any wolf, great or small, to conduct
+himself in this supercilious fashion. Looking back along the white
+bed of the brook, the path by which he must return, he saw that the
+sinking of the moon would very soon involve it in thick shadow. This
+was not as he wished it. He had had enough of fishing. Gathering up
+his now frozen prizes, and strapping the bag that contained them over
+his shoulder, so as to leave both hands free, he set out for home at
+the long, deliberate, yet rapid lope of the experienced snowshoer; and
+the yellow dog, confidence in his companion's prowess now thoroughly
+established, trotted on heedlessly three or four paces ahead.
+
+Already the shadow of the woods lay halfway across the bed of the
+brook, but down the middle of the strip of brightness, still some five
+or six paces in breadth, Kane swung steadily. As he went, he kept a
+sharp eye on the shadowed edge of his path. He had gone perhaps a
+mile, when all at once he felt a tingling at the roots of his hair,
+which seemed to tell him he was being watched from the darkness. Peer
+as he would, however, he could catch no hint of moving forms; strain
+his ears as he might, he could hear no whisper of following feet.
+Moreover, he trusted to the keener senses, keener instincts, of the
+dog, to give him warning of any furtive approach; and the dog was
+obviously at ease.
+
+He was just beginning to execrate himself for letting his nerves get
+too much on edge, when suddenly out from the black branches just ahead
+shot a long, spectral shape and fell upon the dog. There was one
+choked yelp--and the dog and the terrible shape vanished together,
+back into the blackness.
+
+It was all so instantaneous that before Kane could get his rifle up
+they were gone. Startled and furious, he fired at random, three times,
+into cover. Then he steadied himself, remembering that the number of
+cartridges in his chamber was not unlimited. Seeing to it that his axe
+and knife were both loose for instant action, he stopped and
+replenished his Winchester. Then he hurried on as fast as he could
+without betraying haste.
+
+As he went, he was soon vividly conscious that the wolves--not the
+Gray Master alone, but the whole pack also--were keeping pace with him
+through the soundless dark beyond the rim of the spruces. But not a
+hint of their grim companioning could he see or hear. He felt it
+merely in the creeping of his skin, the elemental stirring of the hair
+at the back of his neck. From moment to moment he expected the swift
+attack, the battle for his life. But he was keyed up to it. It was not
+fear that made his nerves tingle, but the tense, trembling excitement
+of the situation. Even against these strange, hidden forces of the
+forest, his spirit felt sure of victory. He felt as if his rifle would
+go up and speak, almost of itself, unerringly at the first instant of
+attack, even before the adversary broke into view. But through all the
+drawn-out length of those last three miles his hidden adversaries gave
+no sign, save that once a dead branch, concealed under the snow,
+snapped sharply. His rifle was at his shoulder, it seemed to him,
+almost before the sound reached his ear. But nothing came of it. Then
+a panic-mad rabbit, stretched straight out in flight, darted across
+the fast narrowing brightness of his path. But nothing followed. And
+at last, after what seemed to him hours, he came out upon the open
+pastures overlooking Burnt Brook Settlement. Here he ran on a little
+way; and then, because the strain had been great, he sat down suddenly
+upon a convenient stump and burst into a peal of laughter which must
+have puzzled the wolves beyond measure.
+
+After this, though well aware that the Gray Master's inexplicable
+forbearance had saved him a battle which, for all his confidence,
+might quite conceivably have gone against him, Kane's interest in the
+mysterious beast was uncompromisingly hostile. He was bitter on
+account of the dog. He felt that the great wolf had put a dishonor
+upon him; and for a few days he was no longer the impartial student of
+natural history, but the keen, primitive hunter with the blood-lust
+hot in his veins. Then this mood passed, or, rather, underwent a
+change. He decided that the Gray Master was, indeed, too individual a
+beast to be just snuffed out, but, at the same time, far too dangerous
+to be left at liberty.
+
+And now all the thought and effort that could be spared from his daily
+duties at the Cross-Roads were bent to the problem of capturing the
+great wolf alive. He would be doing a service to the whole Quah-Davic
+Valley. And he would have the pleasure of presenting the splendid
+captive to his college town, at that time greatly interested in the
+modest beginnings of a zoölogical garden which its citizens were
+striving to inaugurate. It thrilled his fancy to imagine a tin placard
+on the front of a cage in the little park, bearing the inscription--
+
+ CANIS OCCIDENTALIS.
+ EASTERN NORTH AMERICA.
+ PRESENTED BY ARTHUR KANE, ESQ.
+
+After a few weeks of assiduous trapping, however, Kane felt bound to
+acknowledge that this modest ambition of his seemed remote from
+fulfilment. Every kind of trap he could think of, that would take a
+beast alive, he tried in every kind of way. And having run the whole
+insidious gamut, he would turn patiently to run it all over again. Of
+course, the result was inevitable, for no beast, not even such a one
+as the Gray Master, is a match, in the long run, for a man who is in
+earnest. Yet Kane's triumph, when it blazed upon his startled eyes at
+last, was indirect. In avoiding, and at the same time uncovering and
+making mock of, Kane's traps, the great wolf put his foot into
+another, a powerful bear-trap, which a cunning old trapper had hidden
+near by, without bait. The trap was secured to a tree by a stout
+chain--and rage, strain, tear as he might, the Gray Master found
+himself snared. In his silent fury he would probably have gnawed off
+the captive foot, for the sake of freedom. But before he came to that,
+Kane arrived and occupied his attention fully.
+
+Kane's disappointment, at finding the splendid prize in another trap
+than his own, was but momentary. He knew his successful rival would
+readily part with his claims, for due consideration. But he was
+puzzled as to what should be done in the immediate emergency. He
+wanted to go back home for help, for ropes, straps, and a muzzle with
+which he had provided himself; but he was afraid lest, in his absence,
+the trapper might arrive and shoot the captive, for the sake of the
+pelt and the bounty. In his uncertainty he waited, hoping that the
+trapper might come soon; and by way of practice for the serious
+enterprise that would come later, as well as to direct the prisoner's
+mind a little from his painful predicament, Kane began trying to lasso
+him with a coil of heavy cord which he carried.
+
+His efforts in this direction were not altogether successful, but the
+still fury which they aroused in the great wolf's breast doubtless
+obscured the mordant anguish in his foot. One terrific leap at his
+enemy, resulting in an ignominious overthrow as the chain stopped him
+in mid-air, had convinced the subtle beast of the vanity of such
+tactics. Crouching back, he eyed his adversary in silence, with eyes
+whose hatred seemed to excoriate. But whenever the running noose at
+the end of the cord came coiling swiftly at his head, with one
+lightning snap of his long teeth he would sever it as with a knife. By
+the time Kane had grown tired of this diversion the cord was so full
+of knots that no noose would any longer run.
+
+But at this point the old trapper came slouching up on his snowshoes,
+a twinkle of elation in his shrewd, frosty, blue eyes.
+
+"I reckon we'll show the varmint now as how he ain't no _loup-garou_!"
+he remarked, lightly swinging his axe.
+
+But Kane hastily intervened.
+
+"_Please_ don't kill him, Dave!" he begged. "_I_ want him, bad!
+What'll you take for him?"
+
+"Just as he stands?" demanded the old trapper, with a chuckle. "I
+ain't a-goin' to deliver the goods to yer door, ye know!"
+
+"No," laughed Kane, "just as he stands, right here!"
+
+"Well, seein' as it's you, I don't want no more'n what his pelt'ld
+fetch, an' the bounty on his nose," answered the trapper.
+
+"All right," said Kane. "You wait here a bit, will you, an' keep him
+amused so's he won't gnaw his paw off; an' I'll run back to the
+Cross-Roads and get some rope and things I guess I'll be needing."
+
+When he got back with rope, straps, a big mastiff-muzzle, and a
+toboggan, he found Dave in a very bad humor, and calling the
+watchful, silent, crouching beast hard names. In his efforts to amuse
+himself by stirring that imperturbable and sinister quiet into action,
+he had come just within the range of the Gray Master's spring. Swift
+as that spring was, that of the alert backwoodsman was just swift
+enough to elude it--in part. Dave's own hide had escaped, but his
+heavy jacket of homespun had had the back ripped clean out of it.
+
+But now, for all his matchless strength, courage, and craft, the Gray
+Master's game was played out. The fickle Fates of the wild had
+pronounced against him. He could not parry two flying nooses at once.
+And presently, having been choked for a few moments into
+unconsciousness, he awoke to find himself bound so that he could not
+move a leg, and his mighty jaws imprisoned in a strange cage of straps
+and steel. He was tied upon the toboggan, and being dragged swiftly
+through the forest--that free forest of which he had so long felt
+himself master--at the heels of his two conquerors. His only poor
+consolation was that the hideous, crunching thing had been removed
+from his bleeding paw, which, however, anguished cruelly for the
+soothing of his tongue.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+During the strenuous and dangerous weeks while Kane was gaoler to his
+dreaded captive, his respect for the grim beast's tameless spirit by
+no means diminished; but he had no shadow of misgiving as to the
+future to which he destined his victim. He felt that in sending the
+incomparable wolf to the gardens, where he would be well cared for,
+and at the same time an educative influence, he was being both just
+and kind. And it was with feelings of unmixed delight that he received
+a formal resolution of gratitude from the zoölogical society for his
+valued and in some respects unique donation.
+
+It was about a year and a half later that Kane had occasion to revisit
+the city of his Alma Mater. As soon as possible he hurried to inspect
+the little gardens, which had already marched so far towards success
+as to be familiarly styled "The Zoo." There were two or three paddocks
+of deer, of different North American species--for the society was
+inclined to specialize on the wild kindreds of native origin. There
+were moose, caribou, a couple of bears, raccoons, foxes, porcupines,
+two splendid pumas, a rather flea-bitten and toothless tiger, and the
+Gray Master, solitary in his cage!
+
+A sure instinct led Kane straight to that cage, which immediately
+adjoined the big double cage of the pumas. As he approached, he caught
+sight of a tall, gray shape pacing, pacing, pacing, pacing to and fro
+behind the bars with a sort of measured restlessness that spoke an
+immeasurable monotony. When he reached the front of the cage, Kane saw
+that the great wolf's eyes were noting nothing of what was about him,
+but dim with some far-off vision. As he marked the look in them, and
+thought of what they must be remembering and aching for, his heart
+began to smite him. He felt his first pang of self-reproach, for
+having doomed to ignominious exile and imprisonment this splendid
+creature who had deserved, at least, to die free. As he mused over
+this point, half angrily, the Gray Master suddenly paused, and his
+thin nostrils wrinkled. Perhaps there still clung about Kane's clothes
+some scent of the spruce woods, some pungent breath of the cedar
+swamps. He turned and looked Kane straight in the eyes.
+
+There was unmistakable recognition in that deep stare. There was
+also, to Kane's sensitive imagination, a tameless hate and an
+unspeakable but dauntless despair. Convicted in his own mind of a
+gross and merciless misunderstanding of his wild kindreds, whom he
+professed to know so well, he glanced up and saw the painted placard
+staring down at him, exactly as he had anticipated----
+
+ CANIS OCCIDENTALIS.
+ EASTERN NORTH AMERICA.
+ PRESENTED BY ARTHUR KANE, ESQ.
+
+The sight sickened him. He had a foolish impulse to tear it down and
+to abase himself with a plea for pardon before the silent beast behind
+the bars. But when he looked again, the Gray Master had turned away,
+and was once more, with indrawn, far-off vision in his eyes, pacing,
+pacing, pacing to and fro. Kane felt overwhelmed with the intolerable
+weariness of it, as if it had been going on, just like that, ever
+since he had pronounced this doom upon his vanquished adversary, and
+as if it would go on like that forever. In vain by coaxing word, by
+sharp, sudden whistle, by imitations of owl, loon, and deer calls,
+which brought all the boys in the place admiringly about him, did he
+strive to catch again the attention of the captive. But not once
+more, even for the fleeting fraction of a second, would the Gray
+Master turn his eyes. And presently, angry and self-reproachful, Kane
+turned on his heel and went home, pursued by the enthusiasm of the
+small boys.
+
+After this, Kane went nearly every day to the little "Zoo"; but never
+again did he win the smallest hint of notice from the Gray Master. And
+ever that tireless pacing smote him with bitterest self-reproach. Half
+unconsciously he made it a sort of penance to go and watch his victim,
+till at last he found himself indulging in sentimental, idiotic
+notions of trying to ransom the prisoner. Realizing that any such
+attempt would make him supremely ridiculous, and that such a dangerous
+and powerful creature could not be set free anywhere, he consoled
+himself with a resolve that never again would he take captive any of
+the freedom-loving, tameless kindreds of the wilderness. He would kill
+them and have cleanly done with it, or leave them alone.
+
+One morning, thinking to break the spell of that eternal, hopeless
+pacing by catching the Gray Master at his meals, Kane went up to the
+gardens very early, before any of the usual visitors had arrived. He
+found that the animals had already been fed. The cages were being
+cleaned. He congratulated himself on his opportune arrival, for this
+would give him a new insight into the ways of the beasts with their
+keepers.
+
+The head-keeper, as it chanced, was a man of long experience with wild
+animals, in one of the chief zoölogical parks of the country. Long
+familiarity, however, had given him that most dangerous gift,
+contempt. And he had lost his position through that fault most
+unforgivable in an animal keeper, drunkenness. Owing to this fact, the
+inexperienced authorities of this little "Zoo" had been able to obtain
+his services at a comparatively moderate wage--and were congratulating
+themselves on the possession of a treasure.
+
+On this particular morning, Biddell was not by any means himself. He
+was cleaning the cage of the two pumas, and making at the same time
+desperate efforts to keep his faculties clear and avoid betraying his
+condition. The two big cats seemed to observe nothing peculiar in his
+manner, and obeyed him, sulkily, as usual; but Kane noticed that the
+great wolf, though pacing up and down according to his custom, had his
+eyes on the man in the next cage, instead of upon his own secret
+visions. Biddell had driven the two pumas back through the door which
+led from the open cage to the room which served them for a den, and
+closed the door on them. Then, having finished his duties there, he
+unfastened the strong door between this cage and that of the Gray
+Master, and stepped through, leaving the door slightly ajar.
+
+Biddell was armed, of course, with a heavy-pronged fork, but he
+carried it carelessly as he went about his work, as if he had long
+since taught the sombre wolf to keep at a distance. But to-day the
+wolf acted curiously. He backed away in silence, as usual, but eyed
+the man fixedly with a look which, as it seemed to Kane, showed
+anything rather than fear. The stiff hair rose slightly along his neck
+and massive shoulders. Kane could not help congratulating himself that
+he was not in the keeper's place. But he felt sure everything was all
+right, as Biddell was supposed to know his business.
+
+When Biddell came to the place where the wolf was standing, the latter
+made way reluctantly, still backing, and staring with that sinister
+fixity which Kane found so impressive. He wondered if Biddell noticed.
+He was just on the point of speaking to him about it, through the
+bars, when he chanced to glance aside to the cage of the pumas.
+Biddell, in his foggy state of mind, had forgotten to close an inner
+door connecting the two rooms in the rear. The pumas had quietly
+passed through, and emerged again into their cage by the farther
+entrance. Catching sight of the door into the wolf's cage standing
+ajar, they had crept up to it; and now, with one great noiseless paw,
+the leader of the two was softly pushing it open.
+
+Kane gave an inarticulate yell of warning. No words were needed to
+translate that warning to the keeper, who was sobered completely as he
+flashed round and saw what was happening. With a sharp command he
+rushed to drive the pumas back and close the gate. But one was already
+through, and the other blocked the way.
+
+At this tense instant, while Kane glanced swiftly aside to see if any
+help were in sight, the Gray Master launched himself across the cage.
+Kane could not see distinctly, so swiftly did it happen, whether the
+man or the intruding puma was the object of that mad rush. But in the
+next second the man was down, on his face, with the silent wolf and
+the screeching puma locked in a death grapple on top of him.
+
+[Illustration: "Then the second puma pounced."]
+
+Horrified, and yelling for help, Kane tore at the bars, but there was
+no way of getting in, the door being locked. He saw that the wolf had
+secured a hold upon the puma's throat, but that the great cat's claws
+were doing deadly work. Then the second puma pounced, with a screech,
+upon the Gray Master's back, bearing him down.
+
+At this moment Biddell rolled out from under the raving, writhing
+heap, and staggered to his feet, bleeding, but apparently uninjured.
+With his fork and his booted foot he threw himself upon the combatants
+furiously, striving to separate them. After what seemed to Kane an age
+he succeeded in forcing off the second puma and driving it through the
+gate, which he shut. Then he returned to the fight.
+
+But he had little more to do now, for the fight was over. Though no
+wolf is supposed to be a fair match for a puma, the Gray Master, with
+his enormous strength and subtle craft, might perhaps have held his
+own against his first antagonist alone. But against the two he was
+powerless. The puma, badly torn, now crouched snarling upon his
+unresisting body. Biddell forced the victor off and drove him into a
+corner, where he lay lashing his sides with heavy, twitching tail.
+
+The keeper was sober enough now. One long look at the great wolf's
+body satisfied him it was all over. He turned and saw Kane's white
+face pressed against the bars. With a short laugh he shook himself,
+to make sure he was all sound, then pushed the body of the Gray Master
+gently with his foot. Yet there was respect, not disrespect, in the
+gesture.
+
+"I wouldn't have had that happen for a thousand dollars, Mr. Kane!"
+said he in a voice of keen regret. "That was a great beast, an' we'll
+never get another wolf to match him."
+
+Kane was on the point of saying that it would _not_ have happened but
+for certain circumstances which it was unnecessary for him to specify.
+He realized, however, that he was glad it had happened, glad the long
+pacing, pacing, pacing was at an end, glad the load of his
+self-reproach was lifted off. So he said something quite different.
+
+"Well, Biddell, he's _free_! And maybe, when all's said, that was just
+what he was after!"
+
+Then he turned and strode hurriedly away, more content in his heart
+than he had felt for days.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN-GAZER
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN-GAZER
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+To Jim Horner it seemed as if the great, white-headed eagle was in
+some way the uttered word of the mountain and the lake--of the lofty,
+solitary, granite-crested peak, and of the deep, solitary water at its
+base. As his canoe raced down the last mad rapid, and seemed to snatch
+breath again as it floated out upon the still water of the lake, Jim
+would rest his paddle across the gunwales and look upward expectantly.
+First his keen, far-sighted, gray eyes would sweep the blue arc of
+sky, in search of the slow circling of wide, motionless wings. Then,
+if the blue was empty of this far shape, his glance would range at
+once to a dead pine standing sole on a naked and splintered shoulder
+of the mountain which he knew as "Old Baldy." There he was almost sure
+to see the great bird sitting, motionless and majestic, staring at the
+sun. Floating idly and smoking, resting after his long battle with
+the rapids, he would watch, till the immensity and the solitude would
+creep in upon his spirit and oppress him. Then, at last, a shrill
+yelp, far off and faint, but sinister, would come from the pine-top;
+and the eagle, launching himself on open wings from his perch, would
+either wheel upward into the blue, or flap away over the serried
+fir-tops to some ravine in the cliffs that hid his nest.
+
+One day, when Jim came down the river and stopped, as usual, to look
+for the great bird, he scanned in vain both sky and cliff-side. At
+last he gave up the search and paddled on down the lake with a sense
+of loss. Something had vanished from the splendor of the solitude. But
+presently he heard, close overhead, the beat and whistle of vast
+wings, and looking up, he saw the eagle passing above him, flying so
+low that he could catch the hard, unwinking, tameless stare of its
+black and golden eyes as they looked down upon him with a sort of
+inscrutable challenge. He noted also a peculiarity which he had never
+seen in any other eagle. This one had a streak of almost black
+feathers immediately over its left eye, giving it a heavy and sinister
+eyebrow. The bird carried in the clutch of its talons a big,
+glistening lake trout, probably snatched from the fish-hawk; and Jim
+was able to take note of the very set of its pinion-feathers as the
+wind hummed in their tense webs. Flying with a massive power quite
+unlike the ease of his soaring, the eagle mounted gradually up the
+steep, passed the rocky shoulder with its watch-tower pine, and
+disappeared over the edge of a ledge which looked to Horner like a
+mere scratch across the face of the mountain.
+
+"There's where his nest is, sure!" muttered Horner to himself. And
+remembering that cold challenge in the bird's yellow stare, he
+suddenly decided that he wanted to see an eagle's nest. He had plenty
+of time. He was in no particular hurry to get back to the settlement
+and the gossip of the cross-roads store. He turned his canoe to land,
+lifted her out and hid her in the bushes, and struck back straight for
+the face of "Old Baldy."
+
+The lower slope was difficult to climb, a tangle of tumbled boulders
+and fallen trunks, mantled in the soundless gloom of the fir-forest.
+Skilled woodsman though he was, Horner's progress was so slow, and the
+windless heat became so oppressive to his impatience, that he was
+beginning to think of giving up the idle venture, when suddenly he
+came face to face with a perpendicular and impassable wall of cliff.
+This curt arrest to his progress was just what was needed to stiffen
+his wavering resolution. He understood the defiance which his ready
+fancy had found in the stare of the eagle. Well, he had accepted the
+challenge. He would not be baffled by a rock. If he could not climb
+over it, he would go round it; but he would find the nest.
+
+With an obstinate look in his eyes, Horner began to work his way along
+the foot of the cliff towards the right. Taking advantage of every
+inch of ascent that he could gain, he at last found, to his
+satisfaction, that he had made sufficient height to clear the gloom of
+the woods. As he looked out over their tops, a light breeze cooled his
+wet forehead, and he pressed on with fresh vigor. Presently the slope
+grew a trifle easier, the foothold surer, and he mounted more rapidly.
+The steely lake, and the rough-ridged, black-green sea of the fir-tops
+began to unroll below him. At last he rounded an elbow of the steep,
+and there before him, upthrust perhaps a hundred feet above his head,
+stood the outlying shoulder of rock, crowned with its dead pine, on
+which he was accustomed to see the eagle sitting. Even as he looked,
+motionless, there came a rushing of great wings; and suddenly there
+was the eagle himself, erect on his high perch, and staring, as it
+seemed to Horner, straight into the sun.
+
+When Horner resumed his climbing, the great bird turned his head and
+gazed down upon him with an ironic fixity which betrayed neither dread
+nor wonder. Concluding that the nest would be lying somewhere within
+view of its owner's watch-tower, Horner now turned his efforts towards
+reaching the dead pine. With infinite difficulty, and with a few
+bruises to arm and leg, he managed to cross the jagged crevice which
+partly separated the jutting rock-pier from the main face of the
+cliff. Then, laboriously and doggedly, he dragged himself up the
+splintered slope, still being forced around to the right, till there
+fell away below him a gulf into which it was not good for the nervous
+to look. Feeling that a fate very different from that of Lot's wife
+might be his if he should let himself look back too indiscreetly, he
+kept his eyes upon the lofty goal and pressed on upwards with a haste
+that now grew a trifle feverish. It began to seem to him that the
+irony of the eagle's changeless stare might perhaps not be
+unjustified.
+
+Not till Horner had conquered the steep and, panting but elated,
+gained the very foot of the pine, did the eagle stir. Then, spreading
+his wings with a slow disdain, as if not dread but aversion to this
+unbidden visitor bade him go, he launched himself on a long, splendid
+sweep over the gulf, and then mounted on a spacious spiral to his
+inaccessible outlook in the blue. Leaning against the bleached and
+scarred trunk of the pine, Horner watched this majestic departure for
+some minutes, recovering his breath and drinking deep the cool and
+vibrant air. Then he turned and scanned the face of the mountain.
+
+[Illustration: "He launched himself on a long, splendid sweep over the
+gulf."]
+
+There it lay, in full view--the nest which he had climbed so far to
+find. It was not more than a hundred yards away. Yet, at first sight,
+it seemed hopelessly out of reach. The chasm separating the ledge on
+which it clung from the outlying rock of the pine was not more than
+twenty feet across; but its bottom was apparently somewhere in the
+roots of the mountain. There was no way of passing it at this point.
+But Horner had a faith that there was a way to be found over or around
+every obstacle in the world, if only one kept on looking for it
+resolutely enough. To keep on looking for a path to the eagle's nest,
+he struggled forward, around the outer slope of the buttress, down a
+ragged incline, and across a narrow and dizzy "saddle-back," which
+brought him presently upon another angle of the steep, facing
+southeast. Clinging with his toes and one hand, while he wiped his
+dripping forehead with his sleeve, he looked up--and saw the whole
+height of the mountain, unbroken and daunting, stretched skyward above
+him.
+
+But to Horner the solemn sight was not daunting in the least.
+
+"Gee!" he exclaimed, grinning with satisfaction. "I _hev_ circumvented
+that there cervice, sure's death!"
+
+Of the world below he had now a view that was almost overpoweringly
+unrestricted; but of the mountain, and his scene of operations, he
+could see only the stretch directly above him. A little calculation
+convinced him, however, that all he had to do was to keep straight on
+up for perhaps a hundred and fifty feet, then, as soon as the slope
+would permit, work around to his left, and descend upon the nest from
+above. Incidentally, he made up his mind that his return journey
+should be made by another face of the mountain--any other, rather than
+that by which he had rashly elected to come.
+
+It seemed to Horner like a mile, that last hundred and fifty feet; but
+at last he calculated that he had gained enough in height. At the same
+time he felt the slope grow easier. Making his way towards the left,
+he came upon a narrow ledge, along which he could move easily
+side-wise, by clinging to the rock. Presently it widened to a path by
+which he could walk almost at ease, with the wide, wild solitude, dark
+green laced with silver watercourses, spread like a stupendous
+amphitheatre far below him. It was the wilderness which he knew so
+well in detail, yet had never before seen as a whole; and the sight,
+for a few moments, held him in a kind of awed surprise. When, at last,
+he tore his gaze free from the majestic spectacle, there, some ten or
+twelve yards below his feet, he saw the object of his quest.
+
+It was nothing much to boast of in the way of architecture, this nest
+of the Kings of the Air--a mere cart-load of sticks and bark and
+coarse grass, apparently tumbled at haphazard upon the narrow ledge.
+But in fact its foundations were so skilfully wedged into the crevices
+of the rock, its structure was so cunningly interwoven, that the
+fiercest winds which scourged that lofty seat were powerless against
+it. It was a secure throne, no matter what tempests might rage around
+it.
+
+Sitting half erect on the nest were two eaglets, almost full grown,
+and so nearly full feathered that Horner wondered why they did not
+take wing at his approach. He did not know that the period of
+helplessness with these younglings of royal birth lasted even after
+they looked as big and well able to take care of themselves as their
+parents. It was a surprise to him, also, to see that they were quite
+unlike their parents in color, being black all over from head to tail,
+instead of a rich brown with snow-white head, neck, and tail. As he
+stared, he slowly realized that the mystery of the rare "black eagle"
+was explained. He had seen one once, flying heavily just above the
+tree-tops, and imagined it a discovery of his own. But now he reached
+the just conclusion that it had been merely a youngster in its first
+plumage.
+
+As he stared, the two young birds returned his gaze with interest,
+watching him with steady, yellow, undaunted eyes from under their
+flat, fierce brows; with high-shouldered wings half raised, they
+appeared quite ready to resent any familiarity which the strange
+intruder might be contemplating.
+
+Horner lay face downward on his ledge, and studied the perpendicular
+rock below him for a way to reach the next. He had no very definite
+idea what he wanted to do when he got there; possibly, if the
+undertaking seemed feasible, he might carry off one of the royal brood
+and amuse himself with trying to domesticate it. But, at any rate, he
+hoped to add something, by a closer inspection, to his rather
+inadequate knowledge of eagles.
+
+And this hope, indeed, as he learned the next moment, was not
+unjustified. Cautiously he was lowering himself over the edge, feeling
+for the scanty and elusive foothold, when all at once the air was
+filled with a rush of mighty wings, which seemed about to overwhelm
+him. A rigid wing-tip buffeted him so sharply that he lost his hold on
+the ledge. With a yell of consternation, which caused his assailant to
+veer off, startled, he fell backwards, and plunged down straight upon
+the nest.
+
+It was the nest only that saved him from instant death. Tough and
+elastic, it broke his fall; but at the same time its elasticity threw
+him off, and on the rebound he went rolling and bumping on down the
+steep slopes below the ledge, with the screaming of the eagles in his
+ears, and a sickening sense in his heart that the sunlit world
+tumbling and turning somersaults before his blurred sight was his last
+view of life. Then, to his dim surprise, he was brought up with a
+thump; and clutching desperately at a bush which scraped his face, he
+lay still. At the same moment a flapping mass of feathers and fierce
+claws landed on top of him, but only to scramble off again as swiftly
+as possible with a hoarse squawk. He had struck one of the young
+eagles in his fall, hurled it from the nest, and brought it down with
+him to this lower ledge which had given him so timely a refuge.
+
+For several minutes, perhaps, he lay clutching the bush desperately
+and staring straight upwards. There he saw both parent eagles whirling
+excitedly, screaming, and staring down at him; and then the edge of
+the nest, somewhat dilapidated by his strange assault, overhanging the
+ledge about thirty feet above. At length his wits came back to him,
+and he cautiously turned his head to see if he was in danger of
+falling if he should relax his hold on the bush. He was in bewildering
+pain, which seemed distributed all over him; but in spite of it he
+laughed aloud, to find that the bush, to which he hung so desperately,
+was in a little hollow on a spacious platform, from which he could not
+have fallen by any chance. At that strange, uncomprehended sound of
+human laughter the eagles ceased their screaming for a few moments and
+wheeled farther aloof.
+
+With great difficulty and anguish Horner raised himself to a sitting
+position and tried to find out how seriously he was hurt. One leg was
+quite helpless. He felt it all over, and came to the conclusion that
+it was not actually broken; but for all the uses of a leg, for the
+present at least, it might as well have been putty, except for the
+fact that it pained him abominably. His left arm and shoulder, too,
+seemed to be little more than useless encumbrances, and he wondered
+how so many bruises and sprains could find place on one human body of
+no more than average size. However, having assured himself, with
+infinite relief, that there were no bones broken, he set his teeth
+grimly and looked about to take account of the situation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+The ledge on which he had found refuge was apparently an isolated one,
+about fifty or sixty feet in length, and vanishing into the face of
+the sheer cliff at either end. It had a width of perhaps twenty-five
+feet; and its surface, fairly level, held some soil in its rocky
+hollows. Two or three dark-green seedling firs, a slim young silver
+birch, a patch or two of wind-beaten grass, and some clumps of
+harebells, azure as the clear sky overhead, softened the bareness of
+this tiny, high-flung terrace. In one spot, at the back, a spread of
+intense green and a handbreadth of moisture on the rock showed where a
+tiny spring oozed from a crevice to keep this lonely oasis in the
+granite alive and fresh.
+
+At the farthest edge of the shelf, and eying him with savage dread,
+sat the young eagle which had fallen with him. Horner noticed, with a
+kind of sympathy, that even the bird, for all his wings, had not come
+out of the affair without some damage; for one of its black wings was
+not held up so snugly as the other. He hoped it was not broken. As he
+mused vaguely upon this unimportant question, his pain so exhausted
+him that he sank back and lay once more staring up at the eagles, who
+were still wheeling excitedly over the nest. In an exhaustion that was
+partly sleep and partly coma, his eyes closed. When he opened them
+again, the sun was hours lower and far advanced towards the west, so
+that the ledge was in shadow. His head was now perfectly clear; and
+his first thought was of getting himself back to the canoe. With
+excruciating effort he dragged himself to the edge of the terrace and
+looked down. The descent, at this point, was all but perpendicular for
+perhaps a hundred feet. In full possession of his powers, he would
+find it difficult enough. In his present state he saw clearly that he
+might just as well throw himself over as attempt it.
+
+Not yet disheartened, however, he dragged himself slowly towards the
+other end of the terrace, where the young eagle sat watching him. As
+he approached, the bird lifted his wings, as if about to launch
+himself over and dare the element which he had not yet learned to
+master. But one wing drooped as if injured, and he knew the attempt
+would be fatal. Opening his beak angrily, he hopped away to the other
+end of the terrace. But Horner was paying no heed to birds at that
+moment. He was staring down the steep, and realizing that this ledge
+which had proved his refuge was now his prison, and not unlikely to
+become also his tomb.
+
+Sinking back against a rock, and grinding his teeth with pain, he
+strove to concentrate his attention upon the problem that confronted
+him. Was he to die of thirst and hunger on this high solitude before
+he could recover sufficiently to climb down? The thought stirred all
+his dogged determination. He _would_ keep alive, and that was all
+there was about it. He _would_ get well, and then the climbing down
+would be no great matter. This point settled, he dismissed it from his
+consideration and turned his thoughts to ways and means. After all,
+there was that little thread of a spring trickling from the rock! He
+would have enough to drink. And as for food--how much worse it would
+have been had the ledge been a bare piece of rock! Here he had some
+grass, and the roots of the herbs and bushes. A man could keep himself
+alive on such things if he had will enough. And, as a last resource,
+there was the young eagle! This idea, however, was anything but
+attractive to him; and it was with eyes of good-will rather than of
+appetite that he glanced at his fellow-prisoner sitting motionless at
+the other extremity of the ledge.
+
+"It'ld be hard lines, pardner, ef I should hev to eat you, after all!"
+he muttered, with a twisted kind of grin. "We're both of us in a hole,
+sure enough, an' I'll play fair as long as I kin!"
+
+As he mused, a great shadow passed over his head, and looking up, he
+saw one of the eagles hovering low above the ledge. It was the male,
+his old acquaintance, staring down at him from under that strange,
+black brow. He carried a large fish in his talons, and was plainly
+anxious to feed his captive young, but not quite ready to approach
+this mysterious man-creature who had been able to invade his eyrie as
+if with wings. Horner lay as still as a stone, watching through
+half-closed lids. The young eagle, seeing food so near, opened its
+beak wide and croaked eagerly; while the mother bird, larger but
+wilder and less resolute than her mate, circled aloof with sharp cries
+of warning. At last, unable any longer to resist the appeals of his
+hungry youngster, the great bird swooped down over him, dropped the
+fish fairly into his clutches, and slanted away with a hurried
+flapping which betrayed his nervousness.
+
+As the youngster fell ravenously upon his meal, tearing it and
+gulping the fragments, Horner drew a deep breath.
+
+"There's where I come in, pardner," he explained. "When I kin git up
+an appetite for that sort of vittles, I'll go shares with you, ef
+y'ain't got no objection!"
+
+Having conceived this idea, Horner was seized with a fear that the
+captive might presently gain the power of flight and get away. This
+was a thought under which he could not lie still. In his pocket he
+always carried a bunch of stout salmon-twine and a bit of copper
+rabbit-wire, apt to be needed in a hundred forest emergencies. He
+resolved to catch the young eagle and tether it securely to a bush.
+
+His first impulse was to set about this enterprise at once. With
+excruciating effort he managed to pull off his heavy woollen
+hunting-shirt, intending to use it as the toreador uses his mantle, to
+entangle the dangerous weapons of his adversary. Then he dragged
+himself across to the other end of the ledge and attempted to corner
+the captive. For this he was not quite quick enough, however. With a
+flop and a squawk the bird eluded him, and he realized that he had
+better postpone the undertaking till the morrow. Crawling back to his
+hollow by the bush, he sank down, utterly exhausted. Not till the
+sharp chill which comes with sunset warned him of its necessity, was
+he able to grapple with the long, painful problem of getting his shirt
+on again.
+
+Through the night he got some broken sleep, though the hardness of his
+bed aggravated every hurt he had suffered. On the edge of dawn he saw
+the male eagle come again--this time more confidently and
+deliberately--to feed the captive. After he was gone, Horner tried to
+move, but found himself now, from the night's chill and the austerity
+of his bed, altogether helpless. Not till the sun was high enough to
+warm him through and through, and not till he had manipulated his legs
+and arms assiduously for more than an hour, did his body feel as if it
+could ever again be of any service to him. Then he once more got off
+his shirt and addressed himself to the catching of the indignant bird
+whom he had elected to be his preserver.
+
+Though the anguish caused by every movement was no less intense than
+it had been the afternoon before, he was stronger now and more in
+possession of his faculties. Before starting the chase, he cut a strip
+from his shirt to wind around the leg of the young eagle, in order
+that he might be able to tether it tightly without cutting the flesh.
+The bird had suddenly become most precious to him!
+
+Very warily he made his approaches, sidling down the ledge so as to
+give his quarry the least possible room for escape. As he drew near,
+the bird turned and faced him, with its one uninjured wing lifted
+menacingly and its formidable beak wide open. Holding the heavy shirt
+ready to throw, Horner crept up cautiously, so intent now upon the
+game that the anguish in the leg which he dragged stiffly behind him
+was almost forgotten. The young bird, meanwhile, waited, motionless
+and vigilant, its savage eyes hard as glass.
+
+At last a faint quiver and shrinking in the bird's form, an
+involuntary contracting of the feathers, gave warning to Horner's
+experienced eye that it was about to spring aside. On the instant he
+flung the shirt, keeping hold of it by the sleeve. By a singular piece
+of luck, upon which he had not counted at all, it opened as he threw
+it, and settled right over the bird's neck and disabled wing, blinding
+and baffling it completely. With a muffled squawk it bounced into the
+air, both talons outspread and clawing madly; but in a second Horner
+had it by the other wing, pulling it down, and rolling himself over
+upon it so as to smother those dangerous claws. He felt them sink
+once into his injured leg, but that was already anguishing so
+vehemently that a little more or less did not matter. In a few moments
+he had his captive bundled up with helplessness, and was dragging it
+to a sturdy bush near the middle of the terrace. Here, without much
+further trouble, he wrapped one of its legs with the strip of flannel
+from his shirt, twisted on a hand-length of wire, and then tethered it
+safely with a couple of yards of his doubled and twisted cord.
+
+Just as he had accomplished this to his satisfaction, and was about to
+undo the imprisoning shirt, it flashed across his mind that it was
+lucky the old eagles had not been on hand to interfere. He glanced
+upward--and saw the dark form dropping like a thunderbolt out of the
+blue. He had just time to fling himself over on his back, lifting his
+arm to shield his face, and his foot to receive the attack, when the
+hiss of that lightning descent filled his ears. Involuntarily he half
+closed his eyes. But no shock came, except a great buffet of air on
+his face. Not quite daring to grapple with that ready defence, the
+eagle had opened its wings when within a few feet of the ledge, and
+swerved upward again, where it hung hovering and screaming. Horner saw
+that it was the female, and shook his fist at her in defiance. Had it
+been his old acquaintance and challenger, the male, he felt sure that
+he would not have got off so easily.
+
+Puzzled and alarmed, the mother now perched herself beside the other
+eaglet, on the edge of the nest. Then, keeping a careful eye upon her,
+lest she should return to the attack, Horner dexterously unrolled the
+shirt, and drew back just in time to avoid a vicious slash from the
+talons of his indignant prisoner. The latter, after some violent
+tugging and flopping at his tether and fierce biting at the wire,
+suddenly seemed to conclude that such futile efforts were undignified.
+He settled himself like a rock and stared unwinkingly at his captor.
+
+It was perhaps an hour after this, when the sun had grown hot, and
+Horner, having slaked his thirst at the spring in the rock, had tried
+rather ineffectually to satisfy his hunger on grass roots, that the
+male eagle reappeared, winging heavily from the farthest end of the
+lake. From his talons dangled a limp form, which Horner presently made
+out to be a duck.
+
+"Good!" he muttered to himself. "I always did like fowl better'n
+fish."
+
+When the eagle arrived, he seemed to notice something different in
+the situation, for he wheeled slowly overhead for some minutes,
+uttering sharp yelps of interrogation. But the appeals of the
+youngster at last brought him down, and he delivered up the prize. The
+moment he was gone, Horner crept up to where the youngster was already
+tearing the warm body to pieces. Angry and hungry, the bird made a
+show of fighting for his rights; but his late experience with his
+invincible conqueror had daunted him. Suddenly he hopped away, the
+full length of his tether; and Horner picked up the mangled victim.
+But his appetite was gone by this time; he was not yet equal to a diet
+of raw flesh. Tossing the prize back to its rightful owner, he
+withdrew painfully to grub for some more grass roots.
+
+[Illustration: "After this the eagle came regularly every three or four
+hours with food for the prisoner."]
+
+After this the eagle came regularly every three or four hours with
+food for the prisoner. Sometimes it was a fish--trout, or brown
+sucker, or silvery chub--sometimes a duck or a grouse, sometimes a
+rabbit or a muskrat. Always it was the male, with that grim black
+streak across the side of his white face, who came. Always Horner made
+a point of taking the prize at once from the angry youngster, and then
+throwing it back to him, unable to stomach the idea of the raw flesh.
+At last, on the afternoon of the third day of his imprisonment, he
+suddenly found that it was not the raw flesh, but the grass roots,
+which he loathed. While examining a fine lake-trout, he remembered
+that he had read of raw fish being excellent food under the right
+conditions. This was surely one of those right conditions. Picking
+somewhat fastidiously, he nevertheless managed to make so good a meal
+off that big trout that there was little but head and tail to toss
+back to his captor.
+
+"Never mind, pardner!" he said seriously. "I'll divide fair nex' time.
+But you know you've been havin' more'n your share lately."
+
+But the bird was so outraged that for a long time he would not look at
+these remnants, and only consented to devour them, at last, when
+Horner was not looking.
+
+After this Horner found it easy enough to partake of his prisoner's
+meals, whether they were of fish, flesh, or fowl; and with the
+ice-cold water from the little spring, and an occasional mouthful of
+leaves and roots, he fared well enough to make progress towards
+recovery. The male eagle grew so accustomed to his presence that he
+would alight beside the prisoner, and threatened Horner with that old,
+cold stare of challenge, and frequently Horner had to drive him off
+in order to save his share of the feast from the rapacity of the
+eaglet. But as for the female, she remained incurably suspicious and
+protesting. From the upper ledge, where she devoted her care to the
+other nestling, she would yelp down her threats and execrations, but
+she never ventured any nearer approach.
+
+For a whole week the naked hours of day and dark had rolled over the
+peak before Horner began to think himself well enough to try the
+descent. His arm and shoulder were almost well, but his leg, in spite
+of ceaseless rubbing and applications of moist earth, remained
+practically helpless. He could not bear his weight on it for a second.
+His first attempt at lowering himself showed him that he must not be
+in too great haste. It was nearly a week more before he could feel
+assured, after experiments at scaling the steep above him, that he was
+fit to face the terrible steep below. Then he thought of the eaglet,
+his unwilling and outraged preserver! After a sharp struggle, of which
+both his arms and legs bore the marks for months, he caught the bird
+once more and examined the injured wing. It was not broken; and he saw
+that its owner would be able to fly all right in time, perhaps as
+soon as his more fortunate brother in the nest above. Satisfied on
+this point, he loosed all the bonds and jumped back to avoid the
+indomitable youngster's retort of beak and claws. Unamazed by his
+sudden freedom, the young eagle flopped angrily away to the farther
+end of the ledge; and Horner, having resumed his useful shirt, started
+to climb down the mountain, whose ascent he had so heedlessly
+adventured nearly two weeks before. As he lowered himself over the
+dizzy brink, he glanced up, to see the male eagle circling slowly
+above him, gazing down at him with the old challenge in his unwinking,
+golden eyes.
+
+"I reckon you win!" said Horner, waving the imperturbable bird a grave
+salutation. "But you're a gentleman, an' I thank you fer your kind
+hospitality."
+
+It was still early morning when Horner started to descend the
+mountain. It was dusk when he reached the lake and flung himself down,
+prostrated with fatigue and pain and strain of nerve, beside his
+canoe. From moment to moment, through spells of reeling faintness and
+spasmodic exhaustion, the silent gulfs of space had clutched at him,
+as if the powers of the solitude and the peak had but spared him so
+long to crush him inexorably in the end. At last, more through the
+sheer indomitableness of the human spirit than anything else, he had
+won. But never afterwards could he think of that awful descent without
+a sinking of the heart. For three days more he made his camp by the
+lake, recovering strength and nerve before resuming his journey down
+the wild river to the settlements. And many times a day his
+salutations would be waved upward to that great, snowy-headed,
+indifferent bird, wheeling in the far blue, or gazing at the sun from
+his high-set watch-tower of the pine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Two or three years later, it fell in Horner's way to visit a great
+city, many hundreds of miles from the gray peak of "Old Baldy." He was
+in charge of an exhibit of canoes, snowshoes, and other typical
+products of his forest-loving countrymen. In his first morning of
+leisure, his feet turned almost instinctively to the wooded gardens
+wherein the city kept strange captives, untamed exiles of the
+wilderness, irreconcilable aliens of fur and hide and feather, for the
+crowds to gape at through their iron bars.
+
+He wandered aimlessly past some grotesque, goatish-looking deer which
+did not interest him, and came suddenly upon a paddock containing a
+bull moose, two cows, and a yearling calf. The calf looked ungainly
+and quite content with his surroundings. The cows were faded and
+moth-eaten, but well fed. He had no concern for them at all. But the
+bull, a splendid, black-shouldered, heavy-muffled fellow, with the new
+antlers just beginning to knob out from his massive forehead, appealed
+to him strongly. The splendid, sullen-looking beast stood among his
+family, but towered over and seemed unconscious of them. His long,
+sensitive muzzle was held high to catch a breeze which drew coolly
+down from the north, and his half-shut eyes, in Horner's fancy, saw
+not the wires of his fence, but the cool, black-green fir thickets of
+the north, the gray rampikes of the windy barrens, the broad lily
+leaves afloat in the sheltered cove, the wide, low-shored lake water
+gleaming rose-red in the sunset.
+
+"It's a shame," growled Horner, "to keep a critter like that shut up
+in a seven-by-nine chicken-pen!" And he moved on, feeling as if he
+were himself a prisoner, and suddenly homesick for a smell of the
+spruce woods.
+
+It was in this mood that he came upon the great dome-roofed cage
+containing the hawks and eagles. It was a dishevelled, dirty place,
+with a few uncanny-looking dead trees stuck up in it to persuade the
+prisoners that they were free. Horner gave a hasty glance and then
+hurried past, enraged at the sight of these strong-winged adventurers
+of the sky doomed to so tame a monotony of days. But just as he got
+abreast of the farther extremity of the cage, he stopped, with a queer
+little tug at his heart-strings. He had caught sight of a great,
+white-headed eagle, sitting erect and still on a dead limb close to
+the bars, and gazing through them steadily, not at him, but straight
+into the eye of the sun.
+
+"Shucks! It ain't possible! There's millions o' bald eagles in the
+world!" muttered Horner discontentedly.
+
+It was the right side of the bird's head that was turned towards him,
+and that, of course, was snowy white. Equally, of course, it was as,
+Horner told himself, the height of absurdity to think that this grave,
+immobile prisoner gazing out through the bars at the sun could be his
+old friend of the naked peak. Nevertheless, something within his heart
+insisted it was so. If only the bird would turn his head! At last
+Horner put two fingers between his mouth, and blew a whistle so
+piercing that every one stared rebukingly, and a policeman came
+strolling along casually to see if any one had signalled for help. But
+Horner was all unconscious of the interest which he had excited. In
+response to his shrill summons the eagle had slowly, very
+deliberately, turned his head, and looked him steadily in the eyes.
+Yes, there was the strange black bar above the left eye, and there,
+unbroken by defeat and captivity, was the old look of imperturbable
+challenge!
+
+Horner could almost have cried, from pity and homesick sympathy. Those
+long days on the peak, fierce with pain, blinding bright with sun,
+wind-swept and solitary, through which this great, still bird had kept
+him alive, seemed to rush over his spirit all together.
+
+"Gee, old pardner!" he murmured, leaning as far over the railing as he
+could. "But ain't you got the grit! I'd like to know who it was served
+this trick on you. But don't you fret. I'll get you out o' this, ef it
+takes a year's arnings to do it! You wait an' see!" And with his jaws
+set resolutely he turned and strode from the gardens. That bird should
+not stay in there another night if he could help it.
+
+Horner's will was set, but he did not understand the difficulties he
+had to face. At first he was confronted, as by a stone wall, by the
+simple and unanswerable fact that the bird was not for sale at any
+price. And he went to bed that night raging with disappointment and
+baffled purpose. But in the course of his efforts and angry
+protestations he had let out a portion of his story--and this, as a
+matter of interest, was carried to the president of the society which
+controlled the gardens. To this man, who was a true naturalist and not
+a mere dry-as-dust cataloguer of bones and teeth, the story made a
+strong appeal, and before Horner had quite made up his mind whether to
+get out a writ of _habeas corpus_ for his imprisoned friend, or commit
+a burglary on the cage, there came a note inviting him to an interview
+at the president's office. The result of this interview was that
+Horner came away radiant, convinced at last that there was heart and
+understanding in the city as well as in the country. He had agreed to
+pay the society simply what it might cost to replace the captive by
+another specimen of his kind; and he carried in his pocket an order
+for the immediate delivery of the eagle into his hands.
+
+To the practical backwoodsman there was no fuss or ceremony now to be
+gone through. He admired the expeditious fashion in which the keeper
+of the bird-house handled his dangerous charge, coming out of the
+brief tussle without a scratch. Trussed up as ignominiously as a
+turkey--proud head hooded, savage talons muffled, and skyey wings
+bound fast, the splendid bird was given up to his rescuer, who rolled
+him in a blanket without regard to his dignity, and carried him off
+under his arm like a bundle of old clothes.
+
+Beyond the outskirts of the city Horner had observed a high, rocky,
+desolate hill which seemed suited to his purpose. He took a street
+car and travelled for an hour with the bundle on his knees. Little his
+fellow-passengers guessed of the wealth of romance, loyalty, freedom,
+and spacious memory hidden in that common-looking bundle on the knees
+of the gaunt-faced, gray-eyed man. At the foot of the hill, at a space
+of bare and ragged common, Horner got off. By rough paths, frequented
+by goats, he made his way up the rocky slope, through bare ravines and
+over broken ridges, and came at last to a steep rock in a solitude,
+whence only far-off roofs could be seen, and masts, and bridges, and
+the sharp gleam of the sea in the distance.
+
+This place satisfied him. On the highest point of the rock he
+carefully unfastened the bonds of his prisoner, loosed him, and jumped
+back with respect and discretion. The great bird sat up very straight,
+half raised and lowered his wings as if to regain his poise, looked
+Horner dauntlessly in the eye, then stared slowly about him and above,
+as if to make sure that there were really no bars for him to beat his
+wings against. For perhaps a full minute he sat there. Then, having
+betrayed no unkingly haste, he spread his wings to their full splendid
+width and launched himself from the brink. For a few seconds he
+flapped heavily, as if his wings had grown unused to their function.
+Then he got his rhythm, and swung into a wide, mounting spiral, which
+Horner watched with sympathetic joy. At last, when he was but a
+wheeling speck in the pale blue dome, he suddenly turned and sailed
+off straight towards the northeast, with a speed which carried him out
+of sight in a moment.
+
+Horner drew a long breath, half wistful, half glad.
+
+"Them golden eyes of yourn kin see a thunderin' long ways off,
+pardner," he muttered, "but I reckon even you can't make out the top
+of 'Old Baldy' at this distance. It's the eyes o' your heart ye must
+have seen it with, to make for it so straight!"
+
+
+
+
+THE LORD OF THE GLASS HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+THE LORD OF THE GLASS HOUSE
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+In the sheltered Caribbean cove the water was warm as milk, green and
+clear as liquid beryl, and shot through with shimmering sun. Under
+that stimulating yet mitigated radiance the bottom of the cove was
+astir with strange life, grotesque in form, but brilliant as jewels or
+flowers. Long, shining weeds, red, yellow, amber, purple, and olive,
+waved sinuously among the weed-like sea-anemones which outshone them
+in colored sheen. Fantastic pink-and-orange crabs sidled awkwardly but
+nimbly this way and that. Tiny sea-horses, yet more fantastic, slipped
+shyly from one weed-covert to another, aware of a possible peril in
+every gay but menacing bloom. And just above this eccentric life of
+the shoal sea-floor small fishes of curious form shot hither and
+thither, live, darting gleams of gold and azure and amethyst. Now and
+again a long, black shadow would sail slowly over the scene of
+freakish life--the shadow of a passing albacore or barracouta.
+Instantly the shining fish would hide themselves among the shining
+shells, and every movement, save that of the unconsciously waving
+weeds, would be stilled. But the sinister shadow would go by, and
+straightway the sea-floor would be alive again, busy with its affairs
+of pursuit and flight.
+
+The floor of the cove was uneven, by reason of small, shell-covered
+rocks and stones being strewn over it at haphazard. From under the
+slightly overhanging base of one of these stones sprouted what seemed
+a cluster of yellowish gray, pink-mottled weed-stems, which sprawled
+out inertly upon the mottled bottom. Over the edge of the stone came
+swimming slowly one of the gold-and-azure fish, its jewelled,
+impassive eyes on the watch for some small prey. Up from the bottom,
+swift as a whip-lash, darted one of those inert-looking weed-stems,
+and fastened about the bright fish just behind the gills.
+
+Fiercely the shining one struggled, lashing with tail and fins till
+the water swirled to a boil over the shell-covered rock, and the
+sea-anemones all about shut their gorgeous, greedy flower-cups in a
+panic. But the struggle was a vain one. Slowly, inexorably, that
+mottled tentacle curled downward with its prey, and a portion of the
+under side of the rock became alive! Two ink-black eyes appeared,
+bulging, oval, implacable; and between them opened a great, hooked
+beak, like a giant parrot's. There was no separate head behind this
+gaping beak, but eyes and beak merely marked the blunt end of a
+mottled, oblong, sac-like body.
+
+[Illustration: "And the writhing tentacles composed themselves once more
+to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting the next careless
+passer-by."]
+
+As the victim was drawn down to the waiting beak, among the bases of
+the tentacles, all the tentacles awoke to dreadful life, writhing in
+aimless excitement, although there was no work for them to do. In a
+few seconds the fish was torn asunder and engulfed--those inky eyes
+the while unwinking and unmoved. A darker, livid hue passed fleetingly
+over the pallid body of the octopus. Then it slipped back under the
+shelter of the rock; and the writhing tentacles composed themselves
+once more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting the next careless
+passer-by. Once more they seemed mere inert trailers of weed, not
+worth the notice of fish or crab. And soon the anemones near by
+reopened their treacherous blooms of yellow and crimson.
+
+Whether because there was something in the gold-and-azure fish that
+disturbed his inward content, or because his place of ambush had
+somehow grown distasteful to his soft, unarmored body, the octopus
+presently bestirred himself and crawled forth into the open, walking
+awkwardly on the incurled tips of his tentacles. It looked about as
+comfortable a method of progression as for a baby to creep on the back
+of its hands. The traveller himself did not seem to find it altogether
+satisfactory, for all at once he sprang upward nimbly, clear of the
+bottom, and gathered his eight tentacles into a compact parallel bunch
+extending straight out past his eyes. In this attitude he was no
+longer clumsy, but trim and swift-looking. Beneath the bases of the
+tentacles, on the under side of the body, a sort of valve opened
+spasmodically and took in a huge gulp of water, which was at once
+ejected with great force through a tube among the tentacles. Driven by
+the strange propulsion of this pulsating stream, the elongated shape
+shot swiftly on its way, but travelling backward instead of forward.
+The traveller had apparently taken his direction with care before he
+started, however, for he made his way straight to another rock,
+weedier and more overhanging than the first. Here he stopped, settled
+downward, and let his tentacles once more sprawl wide, preparatory to
+backing his spotted body-sac into its new quarters.
+
+This was the moment when he was least ready for attack or defence;
+and just at this moment a foraging dolphin, big-jawed and hungry, shot
+down upon him through the lucent green, mistaking him, perhaps, for an
+overgrown but unretaliating squid. The assailant aimed at the big,
+succulent-looking body, but missed his aim, and caught instead one of
+the tentacles which had reared themselves instantly to ward off the
+attack. Before he realized what was happening, another tentacle had
+curled about his head, clamping his jaws firmly together so that he
+could not open them to release his hold; while yet others had wrapped
+themselves securely about his body.
+
+The dolphin was a small one; and such a situation as this had never
+come within range of his experience. In utter panic he lashed out with
+his powerful tail and darted forward, carrying the octopus with him.
+But the weight upon his head, the crushing encumbrance about his body,
+were too much for him, and bore him slowly downward. Suddenly two
+tentacles, which had been trailing for an anchorage, got grip upon the
+bottom--and the dolphin's frantic flight came to a stop abruptly. He
+lashed, plunged, whirled in a circle, but all to no purpose. His
+struggles grew weaker. He was drawn down, inexorably, till he lay
+quivering on the sand. Then the great beak of the octopus made an end
+of the matter, and the prey was dragged back to the lair beneath the
+weed-covered rock.
+
+A long time after this, a shadow bigger and blacker than that of any
+albacore--bigger than that of any shark or saw-fish--drifted over the
+cove. There was a splash, and a heavy object came down upon the
+bottom, spreading the swift stillness of terror for yards about. The
+shadow ceased drifting, for the boat had come to anchor. Then in a
+very few minutes, because the creatures of the sea seem unable to fear
+what does not move, the life of the sea-floor again bestirred itself,
+and small, misshapen forms that did not love the sunlight began to
+convene in the shadow of the boat.
+
+Presently, from over the side of the boat descended a dark tube, with
+a bright tip that seemed like a kind of eye. The tube moved very
+slowly this way and that, as if to let the eye scan every hiding-place
+on the many-colored bottom. As it swept over the rock that sheltered
+the octopus, it came to a stop. Those inert, sprawling things that
+looked like weeds appeared to interest it. Then it was softly
+withdrawn.
+
+A few moments later, a large and tempting fish appeared at the surface
+of the water, and began slowly sinking straight downward in a most
+curious fashion. The still eyes of the octopus took note at once. They
+had never seen a fish behave that way before; but it plainly was a
+fish. A quiver of eagerness passed through the sprawling tentacles,
+for their owner was already hungry again. But the prize was still too
+far away, and the tentacles did not move. The curious fish, however,
+seemed determined to come no nearer, and at last the waiting tentacles
+came stealthily to life. Almost imperceptibly they drew themselves
+forward, writhing over the bottom as casually as weeds adrift in a
+light current. And behind them those two great, inky, impassive eyes,
+and then the fat, mottled, sac-like body, emerged furtively from under
+the rock.
+
+The bottom, just at this point, was covered with a close brown weed,
+and almost at once the body of the octopus and his tentacles began to
+change to the same hue. When the change was complete, the gliding
+monster was almost invisible. He was now directly beneath that
+incomprehensible fish; but the fish had gently risen, so that it was
+still out of reach.
+
+For a few seconds the octopus crouched, staring upward with motionless
+orbs, and gathering himself together. Then he sprang straight up, like
+a leaping spider. He fixed two tentacles upon the tantalizing prey;
+then the other tentacles straightened out, and with a sharp jet of
+water from his propulsion tube he essayed to dart back to his lair.
+
+To his amazement, the prey refused to come. In some mysterious way it
+managed to hold itself--or was held--just where it was. Amazement gave
+way to rage. The monster wrapped his prize in three more tentacles,
+and then plunged his beak into it savagely. The next instant he was
+jerked to the surface of the water. A blaze of fierce sun blinded him,
+and strong meshes enclosed him, binding and entangling his tentacles.
+
+In such an appalling crisis most creatures of sea or land would have
+been utterly demoralized by terror. Not so the octopus. Maintaining
+undaunted the clutch of one tentacle upon his prize, he turned the
+others, along with the effectual menace of his great beak, to the
+business of battle. The meshes fettered him in a way that drove him
+frantic with rage, but two of his tentacles managed to find their way
+through, and writhed madly this way and that in search of some
+tangible antagonist on which to fasten themselves. While they were yet
+groping vainly for a grip, he felt himself lifted bodily forth into
+the strangling air, and crowded--net, prey, and all--into a dark and
+narrow receptacle full of water.
+
+This fate, of course, was not to be tamely endured. Though he was
+suffocating in the unnatural medium, and though his great, unwinking
+eyes could see but vaguely outside their native element, he was all
+fight. One tentacle clutched the rim of the metal vessel; and one
+fixed its deadly suckers upon the bare black arm of a half-seen
+adversary who was trying to crowd him down into the dark prison. There
+was a strident yell. A sharp, authoritative voice exclaimed: "Look
+out! Don't hurt him! _I'll_ make him let go!" But the next instant the
+frightened darky had whipped out a knife and sliced off a good foot of
+the clutching tentacle. As the injured stump shrank back upon its
+fellows like a spade-cut worm, the other tentacle was deftly twisted
+loose from its hold on the rim, and the captive felt himself forced
+down into the narrow prison. A cover was clapped on, and he found
+himself in darkness, with his prey still gripped securely. Upset and
+raging though he was, there was nothing to be done about it, so he
+fell to feasting indignantly upon the prize for which he had paid so
+dear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Left to himself, the furious prisoner by and by disentangled himself
+from the meshes of the net, and composed himself as well as he could
+in his straitened quarters. Then for days and days thereafter there
+was nothing but tossing and tumbling, blind feeding, and
+uncomprehended distress; till at last his prison was turned upside
+down and he was dropped unceremoniously into a great tank of glass and
+enamel that glowed with soft light. Bewildered though he was, he took
+in his surroundings in an instant, straightened his tentacles out
+before him, and darted backwards to the shelter of an overhanging rock
+which he had marked on the floor of the tank. Having backed his
+defenceless body under that shield, he flattened his tentacles
+anxiously among the stones and weeds that covered the tank-bottom, and
+impassively stared about.
+
+It was certainly an improvement on the black hole from which he had
+just escaped. Light came down through the clear water, but a cold,
+white light, little like the green and gold glimmer that illumined
+the slow tide in his Caribbean home. The floor about him was not
+wholly unfamiliar. The stones, the sand, the colored weeds, the
+shells,--they were like, yet unlike, those from which he had been
+snatched away. But on three sides there were white, opaque walls, so
+near that he could have touched them by stretching out a tentacle.
+Only on the fourth side was there space--but a space of gloom and
+inexplicable moving confusion from which he shrank. In this direction
+the floor of sand and stones and weeds ended with a mysterious
+abruptness; and the vague openness beyond filled him with uneasiness.
+Pale-colored shapes, with eyes, would drift up, sometimes in crowds,
+and stare in at him fixedly. It daunted him as nothing else had ever
+done, this drift of peering faces. It was long before he could teach
+himself to ignore them. When food came to him,--small fish and crabs,
+descending suddenly from the top of the water,--at such times the
+faces would throng tumultuously in that open space, and for a long
+time the many peering eyes would so disconcert him as almost to spoil
+his appetite. But at last he grew accustomed even to the faces and the
+eyes, and disregarded them as if they were so much passing seaweed,
+borne by the tide. His investigating tentacles had shown him that
+between him and the space of confusion there was an incomprehensible
+barrier fixed, which he could see through but not pass; and that if he
+could not get out, neither could the faces get in to trouble him.
+
+Thus, well fed and undisturbed, the octopus grew fairly content in his
+glass house, and never guessed the stormy life of the great city
+beyond his walls. For all he knew, his comfortable prison might have
+been on the shore of one of his own Bahaman Keys. He was undisputed
+lord of his domain, narrow though it was; and the homage he received
+from the visitors who came to pay him court was untiring.
+
+His lordship had been long unthreatened, when one day, had he not been
+too indifferent to notice them, he might have seen that the faces in
+the outer gloom were unusually numerous, the eyes unusually intent.
+Suddenly there was the accustomed splash in the water above him. That
+splash had come to him to mean just food, unresisting victims, and his
+tentacles were instantly alert to seize whatever should come within
+reach.
+
+This time the splash was unusually heavy, and he was surprised to see
+a massive, roundish creature, with a little, pointed tail sticking
+out behind, a small, snake-like head stretched out in front, and two
+little flippers outspread on each side. With these four flippers the
+stranger came swimming down calmly towards him. He had never seen
+anything at all like this daring stranger; but without the slightest
+hesitation he whipped up two writhing tentacles and seized him. The
+faces beyond the glass surged with excitement.
+
+When that abrupt and uncompromising clutch laid hold upon the turtle,
+his tail, head, and flippers vanished as if they had never been, and
+his upper and lower shells closed tight together till he seemed
+nothing more than a lifeless box of horn. Absolutely unresisting, he
+was drawn down to the impassive eyes and gaping beak of his captor.
+The tentacles writhed all over him, stealthily but eagerly
+investigating. Then the great parrot-beak laid hold on the shell,
+expecting to crush it. Making no impression, however, it slid
+tentatively all over the exasperating prize, seeking, but in vain, for
+a weak point.
+
+[Illustration: "Without the slightest hesitation he whipped up two
+writhing tentacles and seized him."]
+
+This went on for several minutes, while the watching faces outside the
+glass gazed in tense expectancy. Then at last the patience of the
+octopus gave way. In a sudden fury he threw himself upon the
+exasperating shell, tumbling it over and over, biting at it madly,
+wrenching it insanely with all his tentacles. And the faces beyond the
+glass surged thrillingly, wondering how long the turtle would stand
+such treatment.
+
+Shut up within his safe armor, the turtle all at once grew tired of
+being tumbled about, and his wise discretion forsook him. He did not
+mind being shut up, but he objected to being knocked about. Some
+prudence he had, to be sure, but not enough to control his short
+temper. Out shot his narrow, vicious-looking head, with its dull eyes
+and punishing jaws, and fastened with the grip of a bulldog upon the
+nearest of the tentacles, close to its base. A murmur arose outside
+the glass.
+
+The rage of the octopus swelled to a frenzy, and in his contortions
+the locked fighters bumped heavily against the glass, making the faces
+shrink back. The small stones on the bottom were scattered this way
+and that, and the fine silt rose in a cloud that presently obscured
+the battle.
+
+Had the turtle had cunning to match his courage, the lordship of the
+glass house might have changed holders in that fight. Had he fixed his
+unbreakable grip in the head of his foe, just above the beak, he
+would have conquered in the end. But as it was, he had now a
+vulnerable point, and at last the octopus found it. His beak closed
+upon the exposed half of the turtle's head, and slowly, inexorably,
+sheared it clean off just behind the eyes. The stump shrank instantly
+back into the shell; and the shell became again the unresisting
+plaything of the tentacles, which presently, as if realizing that it
+had no more power to retaliate, flung it aside. In a few minutes the
+silt settled. Then the eager faces beyond the glass saw the lord of
+the tank crouching motionless before his lair, his ink-like eyes as
+impassive and implacable as ever, while the turtle lay bottom side up
+against the glass, no more to be taken account of than a stone.
+
+
+
+
+BACK TO THE WATER WORLD
+
+
+
+
+BACK TO THE WATER WORLD
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+An iron coast, bleak, black, and desolate, without harborage for so
+much as a catboat for leagues to north or south. A coast so pitiless,
+so lashed forever by the long, sullen rollers of the North Atlantic,
+so tormented by the shifting and treacherous currents of the tide
+between its chains of outlying rocky islets, that no ship ever
+ventured willingly within miles of its uncompromising menace. A coast
+so little favored by summer that even in glowing August the sun could
+reach it seldom through its cold and drenching fogs.
+
+Perhaps half a mile off shore lay the islands--some of them, indeed,
+mere ledges, deathtraps for ships, invisible except at low tide, but
+others naked hills of upthrust rock, which the highest tides and
+wildest hurricanes could not overwhelm. Even on the loftiest of them
+there was neither grass, bush, nor tree to break the jagged outlines,
+but day and night, summer and winter long, the sea-birds clamored
+over them, and brooded by the myriad on their upper ledges.
+
+These islands were fretted, on both their landward and their seaward
+sides, by innumerable caves. In one of these caves, above the reach of
+the highest tide, and facing landward, so that even in the wildest
+storms no waves could invade it, the pup of the seal first opened his
+mild eyes upon the misty northern daylight.
+
+Of all the younglings of the wild, he was perhaps the most winsome,
+with his soft, whitish, shadowy-toned, close, woolly coat, his round,
+babyish head, his dark, gentle eyes wide with wonder at everything to
+be seen from the cave mouth. He lay usually very near the entrance,
+but partly hidden from view by a ragged horn of rock. While
+alone--which was a good part of the time, indeed, like most
+fishermen's children--he would lie so still that his woolly little
+form was hardly to be distinguished from the rock that formed his
+couch. He had no desire to attract public attention--for the only
+public that might have been attracted to attend consisted of the pair
+of great sea eagles whose shadows sometimes swooped aross the ledge,
+or of an occasional southward-wandering white bear. As for the
+innumerable gulls, and gannets, and terns, and lesser auks, which
+made the air forever loud about these lonely islets, nothing could
+have induced them to pay him any attention whatever. They knew him,
+and his people, to be harmless; and that was all their winged and
+garrulous companies were concerned to know.
+
+But to the little seal, on the other hand, the noisy birds were
+incessantly interesting. Filled with insatiable curiosity, his mild
+eyes gazed out upon the world. The sea just below the cave was, of
+course, below his line of vision; but at a distance of some hundred
+yards or so--a distance which varied hugely with the rising and
+falling of the tide--he caught sight of the waves, and felt himself
+strangely drawn to them. Whether leaden and menacing under the drift
+of rain and the brooding of gray clouds, or green-glinting under the
+sheen of too rare sunshine, he loved them and found them always
+absorbing. The sky, too, was worth watching, especially when white
+fleeces chased each other across a patch of blue, or wonderful colors,
+pallid yet intense, shot up into it at dawn from behind a far-off line
+of saw-toothed rocks.
+
+The absences of the mother seal were sometimes long, for it required
+many fish to satisfy her appetite and keep warm her red blood in
+those ice-cold arctic currents. Fish were abundant, to be sure, along
+that coast, where the invisible fruitfulness of the sea made
+compensation for the blank barrenness of the land; but they were swift
+and wary, and had to be caught, one at a time, outwitted and
+outspeeded in their own element. The woolly cub, therefore, was often
+hungry before his mother returned. But when, at last, she came,
+flopping awkwardly up the rocky slope, and pausing for an instant to
+reconnoitre, as her round, glistening head appeared over the brink of
+the ledge, the youngster's delight was not all in the satisfying of
+his hunger and in the mothering of his loneliness. As he snuggled
+under her caress, the salty drip from her wet, sleek sides thrilled
+him with a dim sense of anticipation. He connected it vaguely with
+that endless, alluring dance of the waves beyond his threshold.
+
+When he had grown a few days older, the little seal began to turn his
+attention from the brighter world outside to the shadows that
+surrounded him in his cave. His interest was caught at once by a
+woolly gray creature like himself, only somewhat smaller, which lay
+perhaps seven or eight feet away, at the other side of the cave, and
+farther back. He had not realized before that his narrow retreat was
+the home of two families. Being of a companionable disposition, he
+eyed his newly discovered neighbor with immense good-will. Finding no
+discouragement in the mild gaze that answered his, he presently raised
+himself on his flippers, and with laborious, ungainly effort flopped
+himself over to make acquaintance. Both youngsters were too
+unsophisticated for ceremony, too trusting for shyness, so in a very
+few minutes they were sprawling over each other in great content.
+
+In this baby comradeship the stranger's mother, returning to her
+household duties, found them. She was smaller and younger than our
+Pup's dam, but with the same kindly eyes and the same salty-dripping
+coat. So, when her own baby fell to nursing, the Pup insisted
+confidently on sharing the entertainment. The young mother protested,
+and drew herself away uneasily, with little threatening grunts; but
+the Pup, refusing to believe she was in earnest, pressed his point so
+pertinaciously that at length he got his way. When, half an hour
+later, the other mother returned to her charge, well filled with fish
+and well disposed toward all the world, she showed no discontent at
+the situation. She belonged to the tribe of the "Harbor Seals," and,
+unlike her pugnacious cousins, the big "Hoods," she was always
+inclined towards peace and a good understanding. There was probably
+nothing that could have brought the flame of wrath into her confiding
+eyes, except an attack upon her young, on whose behalf she would have
+faced the sea-serpent himself. Without a moment's question, she joined
+the group; and henceforth the cave was the seat of a convenient
+partnership in mothers.
+
+It was perhaps a week or two later, when the islands were visited by a
+wonderful spell of sun and calm. It was what would have been called,
+farther south, Indian summer. All along the ledges, just above the
+mark of the diminished surf, the seals lay basking in the glow. The
+gulls and mews clamored rapturously, and squabbled with gay zest over
+the choicer prizes of their fishing. It appeared to be generally known
+that the bears, displeased at the warmth, had withdrawn farther north.
+The sea took on strange hues of opal and lilac and thrice-diluted
+sapphire. Even the high black cliffs across the charmed water veiled
+their harshness in a skyey haze. It was a time for delicious
+indolence, for the slackening of vigilance, for the forgetfulness of
+peril. And it was just at this very time that it came the young
+seal's way to get his first lesson in fear.
+
+He was lying beside his mother, about a dozen feet out from the mouth
+of the cave. A few steps away basked his little cave-mate--alone for
+the moment, because its mother had flung herself vehemently down the
+slope to capture a wounded fish which had just been washed ashore. As
+she reached the water's edge, a wide shadow floated across the rocks.
+She wheeled like a flash and scrambled frantically up the steep. But
+she was too late. She saw the other mothers near by throw their bodies
+over those of their young, and lift their faces skyward with bared,
+defiant fangs. She saw her own little one, alone in the bright open,
+gaze around in helpless bewilderment and alarm. He saw her coming, and
+lifting himself on his weak flippers, started towards her with a
+little cry. Then came a terrible hissing of wings in the air above,
+and he cowered, trembling. The next instant, with a huge buffet of
+wind in all the upturned faces, a pair of vast, dark pinions were
+outspread above the trembler; great clutching talons reached down and
+seized him by neck and back; and his tiny life went out in a throttled
+whimper. The nearest seal, the mother of the Pup, reared on her
+flippers and lunged savagely at the marauder. But all she got was a
+blinding slash of rigid wing-tips across her face. Then, launching
+himself from the brink of the slope, the eagle flapped scornfully away
+across the water toward the black cliffs, his victim hanging limply
+from his claws. And all along the ledges the seals barked furiously
+after him.
+
+The Pup, whom death had brushed so closely, could not be persuaded for
+hours to leave the shelter of his mother's side, even after she had
+led him back to the cave. But now he found himself the exclusive
+proprietor of two mothers; for the bereaved dam, thenceforth, was no
+less assiduously devoted to him than his own parent. With such care,
+and with so abundant nourishment, he throve amazingly, outstripping in
+growth all the other youngsters of his age along the ledges. His
+terror quickly passed away from him; but the results of the lesson
+long remained, in the vigilance with which his glance would sweep the
+sky, and question every approach of wings more wide than those of gull
+or gannet.
+
+It was not long after this grim chance that the Pup's woolly coat
+began to change. A straight, close-lying under-fur pushed swiftly into
+view, and the wool dropped out--a process which a certain sense of
+irritation in his skin led him to hasten by rubbing his back and
+sides against the rock. In an astonishingly short time his coat grew
+like his mother's--a yellowish gray, dotted irregularly with blackish
+spots, and running to a creamy tone under the belly. As soon as this
+change was completed to his mother's satisfaction, he was led down
+close to the water's edge, where he had never been allowed before.
+
+Eagerly as he loved the sight of the waves, and the salty savor of
+them, when the first thin crest splashed up and soused him he shrank
+back daunted. It was colder, too, that first slap in his face, than he
+had expected. He turned, intending to retreat a little way up the
+rocks and consider the question, in spite of the fact that there was
+his little mother in the water, swimming gayly a few feet out from
+shore and coaxing him with soft cries. He was anxious to join her--but
+not just yet. Then, all at once the question was decided for him. His
+real mother, who was just behind him, suddenly thrust her muzzle under
+his flank, and sent him rolling into deep water.
+
+He came up at once, much startled. Straightway he found that he could
+move in the water much more easily and naturally than on shore--and he
+applied the discovery to getting ashore again with all possible
+haste. But his mother, awaiting him at the edge, shoved him off
+relentlessly.
+
+Feeling much injured, he turned and swam out to his other mother. Here
+the first one joined him; and in a few minutes amazement and
+resentment alike were lost in delight, as he began to realize that
+this, at last, was life. Here, and not sprawling half helplessly on
+the rocks, was where he belonged. He swam, and dived, and darted like
+a fish, and went wild with childish ecstasy. He had come to his own
+element. After this, he hardly ever returned to the cave, but slept
+close at the side of one or the other of his mothers, on the open
+rocks just a few feet above the edge of tide.
+
+A little later came a period of mad weather, ushering in the autumn
+storms. Snow and sleet drove down out of the north, and lay in great
+patches over the more level portions of the islets above tide. The
+wind seemed as if it would lift the islets bodily and sweep them away.
+The vast seas, green and black and lead-color, thundered down upon the
+rocks as if they would batter them to fragments. The ledges shuddered
+under the incessant crashing. When the snow stopped, on its heels came
+the vanguard of the arctic cold. The ice formed instantly in all the
+pools left by the tide. Along the edges of the tide it was ground to a
+bitter slush by the perpetual churning of the waves.
+
+After a week or two of this violence, the seals--who, unlike their
+polar cousins, the "Harps" and the "Hoods," were no great lovers of
+storm and the fiercer cold--began to feel discontented. Presently a
+little party of them, not more than a score in all, with a few of the
+stronger youngsters of that season, on a sudden impulse left their
+stormy ledges and started southward. The Pup, who, thanks to his
+double mothering, was far bigger and more capable than any of his
+mates, went with his partner-mothers in the very forefront of the
+migration.
+
+Straight down along the roaring coast they kept, usually at a distance
+of not more than half a mile from shore. They had, of course, no
+objection to going farther out, but neither had they any object in
+doing so, since the fish-life on which they fed as they journeyed was
+the more abundant where the sea began to shoal. With their slim,
+sleek, rounded bodies, thickest at the fore flippers and tapering
+finely to tail and muzzle, each a lithe and close-knit structure of
+muscle and nerve-energy, they could swim with astounding speed; and
+therefore, although there was no hurry whatever, they went along at
+the pace of a motor-boat.
+
+All this time the gale was lashing the coast, but it gave them little
+concern. Down in the black troughs of the gigantic rollers there was
+always peace from the yelling of the wind--a tranquillity wherein the
+gulls and mews would snatch their rest after being buffeted too long
+about the sky. Near the tops of the waves, of course, it was not good
+to be, for the gale would rip the crests off bodily and tear them into
+shreds of whipping spray. But the seals could always dive and slip
+smoothly under these tormented regions. Moreover, if weary of the
+tossing surfaces and the tumult of the gale, they had only to sink
+themselves down, down, into the untroubled gloom beneath the
+wave-bases, where greenish lights gleamed or faded with the passing of
+the rollers overhead, and where strange, phosphorescent shapes of life
+crawled or clung among the silent rocks. Longer than any other
+red-blooded animal, except the whale, could their lungs go without
+fresh oxygen; so, though they knew nothing of those great depths where
+the whales sometimes frequent, it was easy for them to go deep enough
+to get below the storm.
+
+Sometimes a break in the coast-line, revealing the mouth of an inlet,
+would tempt the little band of migrants. Hastening shoreward, they
+would push their way inland between the narrowing banks, often as far
+as the head of tide, gambolling in the quiet water, and chasing the
+salmon fairly out upon the shoals. Like most discriminating creatures,
+they were very fond of salmon, but it was rarely, except on such
+occasions as this, that they had a chance to gratify their taste.
+
+After perhaps a week of this southward journeying, the travellers
+found themselves one night at the head of a little creek where the
+tide lapped pleasantly on a smooth, sandy beach. They were already
+getting into milder weather, and here, a half mile inland, there was
+no wind. The sky was overcast, and the seals lay in contented security
+along the edge of the water. The blacker darkness of a fir forest came
+down to within perhaps fifty paces of their resting-place. But they
+had no anxieties. The only creatures that they had learned to fear on
+shore besides man were the polar bears; and they knew they were now
+well south of that deadly hunter's range. As for eagles, they did not
+hunt at night; and, moreover, they were a terror only in the
+woolly-coated, baby stage of a seal's existence.
+
+But it often enough happens that wild animals, no less than human
+beings, may be ignorant of something which their health requires them
+to know. There was another bear in Labrador--a smallish, rusty-coated,
+broad-headed, crafty cousin of the ordinary American black bear. And
+one of these, who had acquired a taste for seal, along with some
+cleverness in gratifying that taste, had his headquarters, as it
+chanced, in that near-neighboring fir wood.
+
+The Pup lay crowded in snugly between his two mothers. He liked the
+warmth of being crowded; for the light breeze, drawing up from the
+water, was sharp with frost. There is such a thing, however, as being
+just a little too crowded, and presently, waking up with a protest, he
+pushed and wriggled to get more space. As he did so, he raised his
+head. His keen young eyes fell upon a black something a little blacker
+than the surrounding gloom.
+
+The black something was up the slope halfway between the water and the
+wood. It looked like a mass of rock. But the Pup had a vague feeling
+that there had been no rock thereabouts when he went to sleep. A
+thrill of apprehension went up and down his spine, raising the
+stiffish hairs along his neck. Staring with all his eyes through the
+dimness, he presently saw the black shape move. Yes, it was drawing
+nearer. With a shrill little bark of terror he gave the alarm, at the
+same time struggling free and hurling himself toward the water.
+
+In that same instant the bear rushed, coming down the slope as it were
+in one plunging jump. The seals, light sleepers all, were already
+awake and floundering madly back to the water. But for one of them,
+and that one the Pup's assistant mother, the alarm came too late. Just
+as she was turning, bewildered with terror of she knew not what, the
+dark bulk of the bear landed upon her, crushing her down. A terrific
+blow on the muzzle broke her skull, and she collapsed into a quivering
+mass. The rest of the band, after a moment of loud splashing, swam off
+noiselessly for the safe retreat of the outer ledges. And the bear,
+after shaking the body of his victim to make sure it was quite dead,
+dragged it away with a grunt of satisfaction into the fir wood.
+
+After this tragedy, though the travellers continued to ascend the
+creeks and inlets when the whim so moved them, they took care to
+choose for sleep the ruder security of outlying rocks and islands,
+and cherished, by night and by day, a wholesome distrust of
+dark fir woods. But for all their watchfulness their journeying was
+care-free and joyous, and from time to time, as they went, their
+light-heartedness would break out into aimless gambols, or something
+very like a children's game of tag. Nothing, however, checked their
+progress southward, and presently, turning into the Belle Isle
+Straits, they came to summer skies and softer weather. At this point,
+under the guidance of an old male who had followed the southward track
+before, they forsook the Labrador shore-line and headed fearlessly out
+across the strait till they reached the coast of Newfoundland. This
+coast they followed westward till they gained the Gulf of St.
+Lawrence, then, turning south, worked their way down the southwest
+coast of the great Island Province, past shores still basking in the
+amethystine light of Indian summer, through seas so teeming with fish
+that they began to grow lazy with fatness. Here the Pup and other
+younger members of the company felt inclined to stay. But their elders
+knew that winter, with the long cold, and the scanty sun, and the
+perilous grinding of tortured ice-floes around the shore-rocks, would
+soon be upon them; so the journey was continued. On they pressed,
+across the wide gateway of the Gulf, from Cape Ray to North Cape, the
+eastern point of Nova Scotia. Good weather still waited upon their
+wayfaring, and they loitered onward gayly, till, arriving at the
+myriad-islanded bay of the Tuskets, near the westernmost tip of the
+peninsula, they could not, for sheer satisfaction, go farther. Here
+was safe seclusion, with countless inaccessible retreats. Here was
+food in exhaustless plenty; and here was weather benignant enough for
+any reasonable needs.
+
+It was just here, off the Tuskets, that the Pup got another lesson.
+Hitherto his ideas of danger had been altogether associated with the
+land where eagles swooped out of a clear sky and bears skulked in the
+darkness, and where, moreover, he himself was incapable of swift
+escape. But now he found that the sea, too, held its menace for the
+gentle kindred of the seals. It was a still, autumnal morning, blue
+and clear, with a sunny sparkle on sea and air. The seals were most of
+them basking luxuriously on the seaward ledges of one of the outermost
+islands, while half a dozen of the more energetic were amusing
+themselves with their game of tag in the deep water. Pausing for a
+moment to take breath, after a sharp wrestling-match far down among
+the seaweeds, the Pup's observant eyes caught sight of a small, black
+triangular object cutting swiftly the smooth surface of the swells.
+He stared at it curiously. It was coming towards him, but it did not,
+to his uninitiated eyes, look dangerous. Then he became conscious of a
+scurrying of alarm all about him; and cries of sharp warning reached
+him from the sentinels on the ledge. Like a flash he dived, at an
+acute angle to the line of approach of the mysterious black object.
+Even in the instant, it was close upon him, and he caught sight of a
+long, terrible, gray shape, thrice as long as a seal, which turned on
+one side in its rush, showing a whitish belly, and a gaping,
+saw-toothed mouth big enough to take him in at one gulp. Only by a
+hair's-breadth did he avoid that awful rush, carrying with him as he
+passed the sound of the snapping jaws and the cold gleam of the
+shark's small, malignant eye.
+
+Hideously frightened, he doubled this way and that, with a nimbleness
+that his huge pursuer could not hope to match. It took the shark but a
+few seconds to realize that this was a vain chase. An easier quarry
+caught his eye. He darted straight shoreward, where the deep water ran
+in abruptly to the very lip of the ledge. The Pup came to the surface
+to watch. One of the younger seals, losing its wits utterly with
+fright, and forgetting that its safety lay in the deep water where it
+could twist and dodge, was struggling frantically to clamber out upon
+the rocks. It had almost succeeded, indeed. It was just drawing up its
+narrow, tail-like hind flippers, when the great, rounded snout of the
+shark shot into the air above it. The monstrous shape descended upon
+it, and fell back with it into the water, leaving only a splash and
+trickle of blood upon the lip of the ledge. The other seals tossed
+their heads wildly, jumped about on their fore-flippers, and barked in
+lively dismay; and in a few moments, as if the matter had been put to
+vote and carried unanimously, they betook themselves in haste to one
+of the inner islands, where they knew that the shark, who hates shoal
+water, would not venture to follow them.
+
+In this sheltered archipelago the little herd might well have passed
+the winter. But after a few weeks of content the southing spirit again
+seized upon the old male who had hitherto been the unquestioned
+leader. At this point, however, his authority went to pieces. When he
+resumed the southward wandering, less than half the herd accompanied
+him. But among those faithful were the Pup and his mild-eyed mother.
+
+Rounding the extremity of Nova Scotia, the travellers crossed the
+wide mouth of the Bay of Fundy, and lingered a few days about the
+lofty headlands of Grand Manan. By this time they had grown so
+accustomed to ships of all kinds, from the white-sailed fishing-smack
+to the long, black, churning bulk of the ocean liner, that they no
+longer heeded them any more than enough to give them a wide berth. One
+and all, these strange apparitions appeared quite indifferent to
+seals, so very soon the seals became almost indifferent to them. Off
+the island of Campobello, however, something mysterious occurred which
+put an end to this indifference, although none of the band could
+comprehend it.
+
+A beautiful, swift, white craft, with yellow gleams flashing here and
+there from her deck as the sun caught her polished brasswork, was
+cleaving the light waves northward. The seals, their round, dark heads
+bobbing above the water at a distance of perhaps three hundred yards
+from her port-quarter, gazed at the spectacle with childlike interest.
+They saw a group of men eying them from the deck of the swift monster.
+All at once from this group spurted two thin jets of flame. The Pup
+heard some tiny vicious thing go close over his head with a cruel
+whine, and _zip_ sharply through a wave-crest just beyond. On the
+instant, even before the sharp clatter of the two reports came to
+their ears, all the seals dived, and swam desperately to get as far
+away as possible from the terrifying bright monster. When they came to
+the surface again, they were far out of range. But the restless old
+male, their leader, was not among them. The white yacht was steaming
+away into the distance, with its so-called sportsmen congratulating
+themselves that they had almost certainly killed something. The little
+band of seals waited about the spot for an hour or two, expecting the
+return of their chief; and then, puzzled and apprehensive, swam away
+toward the green-crested shore-line of Maine.
+
+Here, lacking a leader, their migration came to an end. There seemed
+no reason to go farther, since here was everything they wanted. The
+Pup, by this time an expert pursuer of all but the swiftest fish, was
+less careful now to keep always within his mother's reach, though the
+affection between the two was still ardent. One day, while he was
+swimming some little distance apart from the herd, he noticed a
+black-hulled boat rocking idly on the swells near by. It was too near
+for his comfort, so he dived at once, intending to seek a safer
+neighborhood. But as luck would have it, he had hardly plunged below
+the surface when he encountered an enormous school of young herring.
+What throngs of them there were! And how crowded together! Never had
+he seen anything like it. They were darting this way and that in
+terrific excitement. He himself went wild at once, dashing hither and
+thither among them with snapping jaws, destroying many more than he
+could eat. And still they seemed to throng about him ever the more
+closely. At last he got tired of it, and dashed straight ahead to
+clear the shoal. The next moment, to his immeasurable astonishment, he
+was checked and flung back by a fine, invisible barrier. No, it was
+not quite invisible. He could see a network of meshes before him.
+Puzzled and alarmed, he shot up to the surface to reconnoitre.
+
+As his head rose above the water, his heart fairly stopped for a
+second with dismay. The black side of the fishing boat was just above
+him, and the terrifying eyes of men looked straight down into his.
+Instantly he dived again, through the ever thickening masses of the
+herring. But straightway again he met the fine, invincible barrier of
+the net. Frantically he struggled to break through it, but only
+succeeded in coiling it about him till he could not move a flipper.
+And while he wriggled there impotently, under the squirming myriads of
+the fish, he was lifted out into the air and dragged into the boat.
+
+Seeing the damage he had wrought in their catch, the fishermen were
+for knocking their captive straightway on the nose. But as he lay
+there, looking up with innocent eyes of wonder and appeal through the
+meshes, something in his baby helplessness softened the captain's
+heart.
+
+"Hold hard, Jim," he ordered, staying a big sailor's hand. "Blamed if
+the little varmint ain't got eyes most as soft as my Libby's. I reckon
+he'll make a right purty pet fer the kid, an' kind of keep her from
+frettin' after her canary what died last Sunday."
+
+"He don't much resemble a canary, Ephraim," laughed Jim, dropping the
+belaying-pin.
+
+"I reckon he'll fill the bill fine, all the same," said the captain.
+
+So the Pup was carried prisoner to Eastport.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+As it happened, Miss Libby was a child of decided views. One of the
+most decided of her views proved to be that a seal pup, with very
+little voice and that little by no means melodious, was no substitute
+for a canary. She refused to look at the Pup at all, until her father,
+much disappointed, assured her that she should have a canary also
+without further delay. And even then, though she could not remain
+quite indifferent to the Pup's soft eyes and confiding friendliness,
+she never developed any real enthusiasm for him. She would minister
+amiably to his wants, and laugh at his antics, and praise his good
+temper, and stroke his sleek, round head, but she stuck resolutely to
+her first notion, that he was quite too "queer" for her to really
+love. She could never approve of his having flippers instead of fore
+paws, and of his lying down all the time even when he walked. As for
+his hind feet, which stuck out always straight behind him and close
+together, like a sort of double-barrelled tail, she was quite sure
+they had been fixed that way by mistake, and she could not, in spite
+of all her father's explanations as to the advantages, for a seal, of
+that arrangement, ever bring herself to accept them as normal.
+
+Miss Libby's mother proved even less cordial. Her notions of natural
+history being of the most primitive, at first view she had jumped to
+the conclusion that the Pup was a species of fish; and in this opinion
+nothing could ever shake her.
+
+"Well, I never!" she had exclaimed. "If that ain't just like you, Eph
+Barnes. As if it wa'n't enough to have to eat fish, an' talk fish, an'
+smell fish, year in an' year out, but you must go an' bring a live
+fish home to flop aroun' the house an' keep gittin' under a body's
+feet every way they turn! An' what's he goin' to eat, anyways, I'd
+like to know?"
+
+"He eats _fish_, but he ain't no manner of fish himself, mother, no
+more than you nor I be!" explained Captain Ephraim, with a grin. "An'
+he won't be in your way a mite, for he'll live out in the yard, an'
+I'll sink the half of a molasses hogshead out there an' fill it with
+salt water for him to play in. He's an amusin' little beggar, an'
+gentle as a kitten."
+
+"Well, I'd have you know that _I_ wash my hands of him, Ephraim!"
+declared Mrs. Barnes, with emphasis. And so it came about that the
+Pup presently found himself, not Libby's special pet, but Captain
+Ephraim's.
+
+Two important members of the Barnes family were a large yellow cat and
+a small, tangle-haired, blue-gray mop of a Skye terrier. At the first
+glimpse of the Pup, the yellow cat had fled, with tail as big as a
+bottle-brush, to the top of the kitchen dresser, where she crouched
+growling, with eyes like green full moons. The terrier, on the other
+hand, whose name was Toby, had shown himself rather hospitable to the
+mild-eyed stranger. Unacquainted with fear, and always inclined to be
+scornful of whatever conduct the yellow cat might indulge in, he had
+approached the newcomer with a friendly wagging of his long-haired
+stump of a tail, and sniffed at him with pleased curiosity. The Pup,
+his lonely heart hungering for comradeship, had met this civil advance
+with effusion; and thenceforward the two were fast friends.
+
+By the time the yellow cat and Mrs. Barnes had both got over regarding
+the Pup as a stranger, he had become an object of rather distant
+interest to them. When he played at wrestling matches with Toby in the
+yard,--which always ended by the Pup rolling indulgently on his back,
+while Toby, with yelps of excitement, mounted triumphantly between
+his fanning flippers,--the yellow cat would crouch upon the woodpile
+close by and regard the proceedings with intent but non-committal eye.
+Mrs. Barnes, for her part, would open the kitchen door and
+surreptitiously coax the Pup in, with the lure of a dish of warm milk,
+which he loved extravagantly. Then--this being while Libby was at
+school and Captain Ephraim away on the water--she would seat herself
+in the rocking-chair by the window with her knitting and watch the Pup
+and Toby at their play. The young seal was an endless source of
+speculation to her.
+
+"To think, now," she would mutter to herself, "that I'd be a-settin'
+here day after day a-studyin' out a critter like that, what's no
+more'n jest plain _fish_ says I, if he _do_ flop roun' the house an'
+drink milk like a cat. He's right uncanny; but there ain't no denyin'
+but what he's as good as a circus when he gits to playin' with Toby."
+
+As Mrs. Barnes had a very good opinion of Toby's intelligence,
+declaring him to be the smartest dog in Maine, she gradually imbibed a
+certain degree of respect for Toby's friend. And so it came about that
+the Pup acquired a taste which no seal was ever intended to
+acquire--a taste for the luxurious glow of the kitchen fire.
+
+When at last the real Atlantic winter had settled down upon the coast,
+binding it with bitter frost and scourging it with storm, then Captain
+Ephraim spent most of his time at home in his snug cottage. He had
+once, on a flying visit to New York, seen a troupe of performing
+seals, which had opened his eyes to the marvellous intelligence of
+these amphibians. It now became his chief occupation, in the long
+winter evenings, to teach tricks to the Pup. And stimulated by
+abundant prizes in the shape of fresh herrings and warm milk, right
+generously did the Pup respond. He learned so fast that before spring
+the accomplished Toby was outstripped; and as for the canary,--an
+aristocratic golden fellow who had come all the way from Boston,--Miss
+Libby was constrained to admit that, except when it came to a question
+of singing, her pet was "not in it" with her father's. Mrs. Barnes'
+verdict was that "canaries seemed more natural-like, but couldn't
+rightly be called so interestin'."
+
+Between Libby and her father there was always a lot of gay banter
+going on, and now Captain Ephraim declared that he would teach the Pup
+to sing as well as the canary. The obliging animal had already
+acquired a repertoire of tricks that would have made him something of
+a star in any troupe. The new demand upon his wits did not disturb
+him, so long as it meant more fish, more milk, and more petting.
+Captain Ephraim took a large tin bucket, turned it upside down on the
+floor, and made the Pup rest his chest upon the bottom. Then, tying a
+tin plate to each flipper, he taught the animal to pound the plates
+vigorously against the sides of the bucket, with a noise that put the
+shrill canary to shamefaced silence and drove the yellow cat in
+frantic amazement from the kitchen. This lesson it took weeks to
+perfect, because the Pup himself always seemed mortified at the
+blatant discords which he made. When it was all achieved, however, it
+was not singing, but mere instrumental music, as Libby triumphantly
+proclaimed. Her father straightway swore that he was not to be downed
+by any canary. A few weeks more, and he had taught the Pup to point
+his muzzle skyward and emit long, agonizing groans, the while he kept
+flapping the two tin plates against the bucket. It was a wonderful
+achievement, which made Toby retreat behind the kitchen stove and gaze
+forth upon his friend with grieved surprise. But it obliged Libby, who
+was a fair-minded child, to confess to her father that she and her
+pet were vanquished.
+
+All this while the Pup was growing, as perhaps no harbor seal of his
+months had grown before. When spring came, he saw less of Captain
+Ephraim, but he had compensation, for the good captain now diverted
+into his modest grounds a no-account little brook which was going
+begging, and dug a snug little basin at the foot of the garden for the
+Pup to disport himself therein. All through the summer he continued to
+grow and was happy, playing with Toby, offending the yellow cat,
+amusing Miss Libby, and affording food for speculation to Mrs. Barnes
+over her knitting. In the winter Captain Ephraim polished him up in
+his old tricks, and taught him some new ones. But by this time he had
+grown so big that Mrs. Barnes began to grumble at him for taking up
+too much room. He was, as ever, a model of confiding amiability, in
+spite of his ample jaws and formidable teeth. But one day toward
+spring he showed that this good nature of his would not stand the test
+of seeing a friend ill-used.
+
+It happened in this way. Toby, who was an impudent little dog, had
+managed to incur the enmity of a vicious half-breed mastiff, which
+lived on a farm some distance out of Eastport. The brute was known to
+have killed several smaller dogs; so whenever he passed the Barnes'
+gate, and snarled his threats at Toby, Toby would content himself with
+a scornful growl from the doorstep.
+
+But one morning, as the big mongrel went by at the tail of his
+master's sled, Toby chanced to be very busy in the snow near the gate
+digging up a precious buried bone. The big dog crept up on tiptoe, and
+went over the gate with a scrambling bound. Toby had just time to lift
+his shaggy little head out of the snow and turn to face the assault.
+His heart was great, and there was no terror in the growl with which
+he darted under the foe's huge body and sank his teeth strategically
+into the nearest hind paw. But the life would have been crushed out of
+him in half a minute, had not the Pup, at this critical juncture, come
+flopping up awkwardly to see how his little friend was faring.
+
+Now the Pup, as we have seen, was simply overflowing with good-will
+towards dogs, and cats, and every one. But that was because he thought
+they were all friendly. He was amazed to find here a dog that seemed
+unfriendly. Then all at once he realized that something very serious
+was happening to his playmate. His eyes reddened and blazed; and with
+one mighty lunge he flung himself forward upon the enemy. With that
+terrific speed of action which could snap up a darting mackerel, he
+caught the mastiff in the neck, close behind the jaw. His teeth were
+built to hold the writhings of the biggest salmon, and his grip was
+that of a bulldog--except that it cut far deeper.
+
+The mastiff yelped, snapped wildly at his strange antagonist, and
+then, finding himself held so that he could not by any possibility get
+a grip, strove to leap into the air and shake his assailant off. But
+the Pup held him down inexorably, his long teeth cutting deeper and
+deeper with every struggle. For perhaps half a minute the fight
+continued, the mad contortions of the entangled three (for Toby still
+clung to his grip on the foe's hind paw) tearing up the snow for a
+dozen feet in every direction. The snow was flecked with crimson,--but
+suddenly, with a throbbing gush, it was flooded scarlet. The Pup's
+teeth had torn through the great artery of his opponent's neck. With a
+cough the brute fell over, limp and unresisting as a half-filled bran
+sack.
+
+At this moment the mastiff's owner, belatedly aware that the tables
+were being turned on his vicious favorite, came yelling and cursing
+over the gate, brandishing a sled stake in his hands. But at the same
+time arrived Captain Ephraim, rushing bareheaded from the kitchen, and
+stepped in front of the new arrival. One glance had shown him that the
+fight was over.
+
+"Hold hard there, Baiseley!" he ordered in curt tones. Then he
+continued more slowly--"It ain't no use makin' a fuss. That murderin'
+brute of yourn begun it, an' come into my yard to kill my own little
+tike here. He's got just what he deserved. An' if the Pup here hadn't
+'a' done it, I'd 'a' done it myself. See?"
+
+Baiseley, like his mongrel follower, was a bully. But he had
+discretion. He calmed down.
+
+"That there dog o' mine, Captain Ephraim, was a good dog, an' worth
+money. I reckon ye'll hev to pay me ten dollars for that dog, an'
+we'll call it square."
+
+"Reckon I'll have to owe it to ye, Hank! Mebbe I'll pay it some day
+when you git han'somer 'n you are now!" laughed Captain Ephraim dryly.
+He gave a piercing whistle through his teeth. Straightway Toby, sadly
+bedraggled, came limping up to him. The Pup let go of his dead enemy,
+and lifted his head to eye his master inquiringly. His whole front was
+streaming with blood.
+
+"Go wash yerself!" ordered the captain picking up a chip and hurling
+it into the pond, which was now half empty of ice.
+
+The Pup floundered off obediently to get the chip, and Baiseley,
+muttering inarticulate abuse, slouched away to his sled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Toward the end of April there came a great change in the Pup's
+affairs. Primarily, the change was in Captain Ephraim's. Promoted to
+the command of a smart schooner engaged in cod-fishing on the Grand
+Banks, he sold his cottage at Eastport and removed his family to
+Gloucester, Massachusetts. At the same time, recognizing with many a
+pang that a city like Gloucester was no place for him to keep a seal
+in, he sold the Pup, at a most consoling price indeed, to the agent of
+an English animal trainer. With the prospect of shortly becoming the
+cynosure of all eyes at Shepherd's Bush or Earl's Court, the Pup was
+shipped on a freighter for Liverpool.
+
+With his pervasive friendliness, and seeking solace for the absence of
+Toby and Captain Ephraim, the Pup proved a most privileged and popular
+passenger. All went well till the ship came off Cape Race,
+Newfoundland. Then that treacherous and implacable promontory made
+haste to justify its reputation; and in a blind sou'wester the ship
+was driven on the ledges. While she was pounding to pieces, the crew
+got away in their boats, and presently the Pup found himself reviving
+half-forgotten memories amid the buffeting of the huge Atlantic
+rollers.
+
+He felt amazingly at home, but very lonely. Bobbing his head as high
+as he could above the water, he stared about him in every direction,
+dimly hoping to catch sight of Captain Ephraim or Toby--or even of the
+unsociable yellow cat. They were nowhere to be seen. Well, company he
+must have. After fish, of which there was no lack in those teeming
+waters, company was his urgent demand. He headed impatiently for the
+coast, which he could not see indeed, but which he felt clearly in the
+distance.
+
+The first land he encountered was a high hogback of rock which proved
+to be an island. Swimming around under its lea, he ran into a little
+herd of seals of his own kind, and hastened confidently to fraternize
+with them.
+
+The strangers, mostly females and young males, met his advances with a
+good-natured indifference. One of the herd, however, a big dog-seal
+who seemed to consider himself the chief, would have none of him, but
+grumbled and showed his teeth in a most unpleasant manner. The Pup
+avoided him politely, and crawled out upon the rocks, about twenty
+feet away, beside two friendly females. He wanted to get acquainted,
+that was all. But the old male, after grumbling for several minutes,
+got himself worked up into a rage, and came floundering over the rocks
+to do up the visitor. Roughly he pushed the two complaisant females
+off into the water, and then, with a savage lunge, he fell upon the
+Pup.
+
+But in this last step the old male was ill-advised. Hitherto the Pup
+had felt diffident in the face of such a reception, but now a sudden
+red rage flared into his eyes. Young as he was, he was as big as his
+antagonist, and, here on land, a dozen times more nimble. Here came in
+the advantage of Captain Ephraim's training. When the old male lunged
+upon him, he simply wasn't there. He had shot aside, and wheeled like
+a flash, and secured a hold at the root of his assailant's flipper. Of
+course in this position he too received some sharp punishment. But he
+held on like a bulldog, worrying, worrying mercilessly, till all at
+once the other squealed, and threw up his muzzle, and struggled to get
+away. The Pup, satisfied with this sign of submission, let him go at
+once, and he flounced off furiously into the water.
+
+As a prompt result of this victory, the Pup found himself undisputed
+leader of the little herd, his late antagonist, after a vain effort to
+effect a division, having slipped indolently into a subordinate place.
+This suited the Pup exactly, who was happy himself, and wanted
+everybody else to be so likewise.
+
+As spring advanced, the herd worked their way northward along the
+Newfoundland coast, sometimes journeying hurriedly, sometimes
+lingering for days in the uninhabited inlets and creek mouths. The Pup
+was in a kind of ecstasy over his return to the water world, and
+indulged in antics that seemed perhaps frivolous in the head of so
+important a family. But once in a while a qualm of homesickness would
+come over him, for Toby, and the Captain, and a big tin basin of warm
+milk. And in one of these moods he was suddenly confronted by men.
+
+The herd was loitering off a point which marked the entrance to a
+shallow cove, when round the jutting rocks slid a row-boat, with two
+fishermen coming out to set lines. They had no guns with them,
+fortunately. They saw the seals dive and vanish at the first glimpse
+of them, as was natural. But to their amazement, one seal--the
+biggest, to their astonished eyes, in the whole North Atlantic--did
+not vanish with the rest. Instead of that, after eying them
+fearlessly at a distance of some fifty feet, he swam deliberately
+straight toward them.
+
+Now there is nothing very terrifying, except to a fish, in the aspect
+of even the biggest harbor seal; but to these fishermen, who knew the
+shyness of the seals, it was terrifying to the last degree that one
+should conduct himself in this unheard-of way. They stopped rowing,
+and stared with superstitious eyes.
+
+"Howly Mother!" gasped one, "that b'ain't no seal, Mike!"
+
+"What d'ye s'pose he wants wid us, Barney, annyhow?" demanded Mike, in
+an awed voice.
+
+"Sure, an' it's a _sign_ for the one or t'other of us. It's gittin'
+back to shore we'd better be," suggested Barney, pulling round hard on
+the bow oar.
+
+As the mysterious visitor was still advancing, this counsel highly
+commended itself to Mike, who would have faced a polar bear with no
+weapon but his oar, but had no stomach for a parley with the
+supernatural. In another moment the boat was rushing back up the cove
+with all the speed their practised muscles could impart. But still,
+swimming leisurely in their wake, with what seemed to them a dreadful
+deliberation, the Pup came after them.
+
+"Don't ye be comin' nigh _me_!" cried Mike, somewhat hysterically, "or
+I'll bash yer face wid the oar, mind!"
+
+"Whisht!" said Barney, "don't ye be after talkin' that way to a
+sperrit, or maybe he'll blast ye!"
+
+"I'm thinkin', now," said Mike, presently, in a hushed voice, "as
+maybe it be Dan Sheedy's sperrit, comin' back to ha'nt me coz I didn't
+give up them boots o' his to his b'y, accordin' to me promise."
+
+"Shure an' why not that?" agreed Barney, cheered by the hope that the
+visitation was not meant for him.
+
+A moment more and the boat reached the beach with an abruptness that
+hurled both rowers from their seats. Scrambling out upon the shingle,
+they tugged wildly at the boat to draw her up. But the Pup, his eyes
+beaming affection, was almost on their heels. With a yell of dismay
+Mike dashed up the shore toward their shack; but Barney, having less
+on his conscience, delayed to snatch out of the bow the precious tin
+pail in which they carried their bait. Then he followed Mike. But
+looking back over his shoulder, he saw his mysterious pursuer ascend
+from the water and come flopping up the shore at a pace which
+assuredly no _mortal_ seal could ever accomplish on dry land. At that
+he fell over a boulder, dropped the pail of bait, picked himself up
+with a startled yell, and made a dash for the shack as if all the
+fiends were chasing him.
+
+Slamming the door behind them, the two stared fearfully out of the
+window. Their guns, loaded with slugs, leaned against the wall, but
+they would never be guilty of such perilous impiety as to use them.
+
+When he came to the tin pail and the spilled bait the Pup was pleased.
+He knew very well what the pail was for, and what the men expected of
+him. He had no objection to being paid in advance, so he gobbled the
+bait at once. It was not much, but he had great hopes that, if he
+acquitted himself well, he might get a pan of warm milk. Cheerfully he
+hoisted his massive chest upon the pail, and then, pounding jerkily
+with his flippers as hard as he could, he lifted his muzzle heavenward
+and delivered himself of a series of prolonged and anguished groans.
+
+This was too much for his audience.
+
+"Howly Mother, save us!" sobbed Barney, dropping upon his knees, and
+scrabbling desperately in his untidy memory for some fragments of his
+childhood's prayers.
+
+"Don't, Dan, don't!" pleaded Mike, gazing out with wild eyes at the
+Pup's mystical performance. "I'll give back them boots to the b'y.
+I'll give 'em back, Dan! Let me be now, won't 'ee, old mate?"
+
+Thus adjured, the Pup presently stopped, and stared expectantly at the
+shack, awaiting the pan of warm milk. When it did not come, he was
+disgusted. He had never been kept waiting this way before. These men
+were not like Captain Ephraim. In a minute or two he rolled off the
+pail, flopped heavily down the beach, and plunged back indignantly
+into the sea. As his dark head grew smaller and smaller in the
+distance, the men in the shack threw open the door, and came out as if
+they needed fresh air.
+
+"I always _said_ as how Dan had a good heart," muttered Mike, in a
+shaken voice. "An' shure, now, ye see, Barney, he ain't after bearin'
+no grudge."
+
+"But ye'll be takin' back them boots to young Dan, this very day of
+our lives," urged Barney. "An' ye'll be after makin' it all right wid
+the Widdy Sheedy, afore ye're a day older, now."
+
+"Shure, an' to wanst ain't none too quick for me, an' me receavin' a
+hint loike that!" agreed Mike.
+
+As for the Pup, after this shock to his faith in man, he began to
+forget the days of his comfortable captivity. His own kind proved
+vastly interesting to him, and in a few weeks his reversion was
+complete. By that time his journeyings had led him, with his little
+herd, far up the coast of Labrador. At last he came to a chain of
+rocky islands, lying off a black and desolate coast. The islands were
+full of caves, and clamorous with sea-birds, and trodden forever by a
+white and shuddering surf. Here old memories stirred dimly but sweetly
+within him--and here he brought his wanderers to rest.
+
+
+
+
+LONE WOLF
+
+
+
+
+LONE WOLF
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Not, like his grim ancestors for a thousand generations, in some dark
+cave of the hills was he whelped, but in a narrow iron cage littered
+with straw. Two brothers and a sister made at the same time a like
+inauspicious entrance upon an alien and fettered existence. And
+because their silent, untamable mother loved too savagely the
+hereditary freedom of her race to endure the thought of bearing her
+young into a life of bondage, she would have killed them mercifully,
+even while their blind baby mouths were groping for her breasts. But
+the watchful keeper forestalled her. Whelps of the great gray timber
+wolf, born in captivity, and therefore likely to be docile, were rare
+and precious. The four little sprawlers, helpless and hungrily
+whimpering, were given into the care of a foster-mother, a sorrowing
+brown spaniel bitch who had just been robbed of her own puppies.
+
+When old enough to be weaned, the two brothers and the sister, sturdy
+and sleek as any wolf cubs of the hills, were sold to a dealer in wild
+animals, who carried them off to Hamburg. But "Lone Wolf," as Toomey,
+the trainer, had already named him, stayed with the circus. He was the
+biggest, the most intelligent, and the most teachable cub of the whole
+litter, and Toomey, who had an unerring eye for quality in a beast,
+expected to make of him a star performer among wolves.
+
+Job Toomey had been a hunter and a trapper in the backwoods of New
+Brunswick, where his instinctive knowledge of the wild kindreds had
+won him a success which presently sickened him. His heart revolted
+against the slaughter of the creatures which he found so interesting,
+and for a time, his occupation gone, he had drifted aimlessly about
+the settlements. Then, at the performance of a travelling circus,
+which boasted two trained bears and a little trick elephant, he had
+got his cue. It was borne in upon him that he was meant to be an
+animal trainer. Then and there he joined the circus at a nominal wage,
+and within six months found himself an acknowledged indispensable. In
+less than a year he had become a well-known trainer, employed in one
+of the biggest menageries of America. Not only for his wonderful
+comprehension and command of animals was he noted, but also for his
+pose, to which he clung obstinately, of giving his performances always
+in the homespun garb of a backwoodsman, instead of in the conventional
+evening dress.
+
+"Lone Wolf!" It seemed a somewhat imaginative name for the prison-born
+whelp, but as he grew out of cub-hood his character and his stature
+alike seemed to justify it. Influenced by the example of his gentle
+foster-mother, he was docility itself toward his tamer, whom he came
+to love well after the reticent fashion of his race. But toward all
+others, man and beast alike, his reserve was cold and dangerous.
+Toomey, apparently, absorbed all the affection which his lonely nature
+had to spare. In return for this singleness of regard, Toomey trained
+him with a firm patience which never forgot to be kind, and made him,
+by the time he was three years old, quite the cleverest and most
+distinguished performing wolf who had ever adorned a show.
+
+He was now as tall as the very tallest Great Dane, but with a depth of
+shoulder and chest, a punishing length and strength of jaw, that no
+dog ever could boast. When he looked at Toomey, his eyes wore the
+expression of a faithful and understanding follower; but when he
+answered the stares of the crowd through the bars of his cage, the
+greenish fire that flamed in their inscrutable depths was ominous and
+untamed. In all save his willing subjection to Toomey's mastery, he
+was a true wolf, of the savage and gigantic breed of the Northwestern
+timber. To the spectators this was aggressively obvious; and therefore
+the marvel of seeing this sinister gray beast, with the murderous
+fangs, so submissive to Toomey's gentlest bidding, never grew stale.
+In every audience there were always some spectators hopefully
+pessimistic, who vowed that the great wolf would some day turn upon
+his master and tear his throat. To be sure, Lone Wolf was not by any
+means the only beast whom the backwoodsman had performing for the
+delectation of his audiences. But all the others--the lions, the
+leopards, the tiger, the elephant, the two zebras, and the white
+bear--seemed really subdued, as it were hypnotized into harmlessness.
+It was Lone Wolf only who kept the air of having never yielded up his
+spirit, of being always, in some way, not the slave but the free
+collaborator.
+
+Ordinarily, in spite of the wild fire smouldering in his veins, Lone
+Wolf was well enough content. The show was so big and so important
+that it was accustomed to visit only the great centres, and to make
+long stops at each place. At such times his life contained some
+measure of freedom. He would be given a frequent chance of exercise,
+in some secure enclosure where he could run, and jump, and stretch his
+mighty muscles, and breathe deep. And not infrequently--after dark as
+a rule--his master would snap a massive chain upon his collar, and
+lead him out, on leash like a dog, into the verdurous freshness of
+park or country lane. But when the show was on tour, then it was very
+different. Lone Wolf hated fiercely the narrow cage in which he had to
+travel. He hated the harsh, incessant noise of the grinding rails, the
+swaying and lurching of the trucks, the dizzying procession of the
+landscape past the barred slits which served as windows to his car.
+Moreover, sometimes the unwieldy length of the circus train would be
+halted for an hour or two on some forest siding, to let the regular
+traffic of the line go by. Then, as his wondering eyes caught glimpses
+of shadowed glades, and mysterious wooded aisles, and far-off hills
+and horizons, or wild, pungent smells of fir thicket and cedar swamp
+drew in upon the wind to his uplifted nostrils, his veins would run
+hot with an uncomprehended but savage longing for delights which he
+had never known, for a freedom of which he had never learned or
+guessed. At such times his muscles would ache and quiver, till he felt
+like dashing himself blindly against his bars. And if the halt
+happened to take place at night, with perhaps a white moon staring in
+upon him from over a naked hill-top, he would lift his lean muzzle
+straight up toward the roof of his cage and give utterance to a
+terrible sound of which he knew not the meaning, the long, shrill
+gathering cry of the pack. This would rouse all the other beasts to a
+frenzy of wails and screeches and growls and roars; till Toomey would
+have to come and stop his performance by darkening the cage with a
+tarpaulin. At the sound of Toomey's voice, soothing yet overmastering,
+the great wolf would lie down quietly, and the ghostly summons of his
+far-ravaging fathers would haunt his spirit no more.
+
+After one of these long journeys, the show was halted at an inland
+city for a stop of many weeks; and to house the show a cluster of
+wooden shanties was run up on the outskirts of the city, forming a
+sort of mushroom village flanked by the great white exhibition tents.
+In one of these shanties, near the centre of the cluster, Lone Wolf's
+cage was sheltered, along with the cages of the puma, the leopard,
+and the little black Himalayan bear. Immediately adjoining this shanty
+was the spacious open shed where the elephants were tethered.
+
+That same night, a little before dawn, when the wearied attendants
+were sleeping heavily, Lone Wolf's nostrils caught a strange smell
+which made him spring to his feet and sniff anxiously at the suddenly
+acrid air. A strange reddish glow was dispersing the dark outside his
+window. From the other cages came uneasy mutterings and movements, and
+the little black bear, who was very wise, began to whine. The dull
+glow leaped into a glare and then the elephants trumpeted the alarm.
+Instantly the night was loud with shoutings, and tramplings, and
+howlings, and rushings to and fro. A cloud of choking smoke blew into
+Lone Wolf's cage, making him cough and wonder anxiously why Toomey
+didn't come. The next moment Toomey came, with one of the keepers, and
+an elephant. Frantically they began pushing and dragging out the
+cages. But there was a wind; and before the first cage, that of the
+puma, was more than clear of the door, the flames were on top of them
+like a leaping tiger. Panic-stricken, the elephant screamed and
+bolted. The keeper, shouting, "We can't save any more in this house.
+Let's git the lions out!" made off with one arm over his eyes,
+doggedly dragging the heavy cage of the puma. The keeper was right. He
+had his work cut out for him, as it was, to save the screeching puma.
+As for Toomey, his escape was already almost cut off. But he could not
+endure to save himself without giving the imprisoned beasts a chance
+for their lives. Dashing at the three remaining cages, he tore them
+open; and then, with a summons to Lone Wolf to follow him, he threw
+his arms over his face and dashed through the flames.
+
+The three animals sprang out at once into the middle of the floor, but
+their position seemed already hopeless. The leopard, thoroughly cowed,
+leaped back into his cage and curled up in the farthest corner,
+spitting insanely. Lone Wolf dashed at the door by which Toomey had
+fled, but a whirl of flame in his face drove him back to the middle of
+the floor, where the little bear stood whimpering. Just at this moment
+a massive torrent of water from a fire engine crashed through the
+window, drenching Lone Wolf, and knocking the bear clean over. The
+beneficent stream was whisked away again in an instant, having work to
+do elsewhere than on this already doomed and hopeless shed. But to the
+wise little bear it had shown a way of escape. Out through the window
+he scurried, and Lone Wolf went after him in one tremendous leap just
+as the flames swooped in and licked the floor clean, and slew the
+huddled leopard in its cage.
+
+Outside, in the awful heat, the alternations of dazzling glare and
+blinding smoke, the tumult of the shouting and the engines, the roar
+of the flames, the ripping crash of the streams, and the cries of the
+beasts, Lone Wolf found himself utterly confused. But he trusted, for
+some reason, to the sagacity of the bear, and followed his shaggy
+form, bearing diagonally up and across the wind. Presently a cyclone
+of suffocating smoke enveloped him, and he lost his guide. But
+straight ahead he darted, stretched out at top speed, belly to the
+ground, and in another moment he emerged into the clear air. His eyes
+smarting savagely, his nose and lips scorched, his wet fur singed, he
+hardly realized at first his escape, but raced straight on across the
+fields for several hundred yards. Then, at the edge of a wood, he
+stopped and looked back. The little bear was nowhere to be seen. The
+night wind here blew deliciously cool upon his face. But there was the
+mad red monster, roaring and raging still as if it would eat up the
+world. The terror of it was in his veins. He sprang into the covert
+of the wood, and ran wildly, with the one impulse to get as far away
+as possible.
+
+Before he had gone two miles, he came out upon an open country of
+fields, and pastures, and farmyards, and little thickets. Straight on
+he galloped, through the gardens and the farmyards as well as the open
+fields. In the pastures the cattle, roused by the glare in the sky,
+stamped and snorted at him as he passed, and now and then a man's
+voice yelled at him angrily as his long form tore through flowerbeds
+or trellised vines. He had no idea of avoiding the farmhouses, for he
+had at first no fear of men; but at length an alert farmer got a long
+shot at him with a fowling-piece, and two or three small leaden
+pellets caught him in the hind quarters. They did not go deep enough
+to do him serious harm, but they hurt enough to teach him that men
+were dangerous. Thereupon he swerved from the uncompromising straight
+line of his flight, and made for the waste places. When the light of
+the fire had quite died out behind him, the first of the dawn was
+creeping up the sky; and by this time he had come to a barren region
+of low thickets, ragged woods, and rocks thrusting up through a
+meagre, whitish soil.
+
+Till the sun was some hours high Lone Wolf pressed on, his terror of
+the fire now lost in a sense of delighted freedom. By this time he was
+growing hungry, and for an instant the impulse seized him to turn back
+and seek his master. But no, that way lay the scorching of the flames.
+Instead of turning, he ran on all the faster. Suddenly a rabbit
+bounded up, almost beneath his nose. Hitherto he had never tasted
+living prey, but with a sure instinct he sprang after the rabbit. To
+his fierce disappointment, however, the nimble little beast was so
+inconsiderate as to take refuge in a dense bramble thicket which he
+could not penetrate. His muzzle, smarting and tender from the fire,
+could not endure the harsh prickles, so after prowling about the
+thicket for a half-hour in the wistful hope that the rabbit might come
+out, he resumed his journey. He had no idea, of course, where he
+wanted to go, but he felt that there must be a place somewhere where
+there were plenty of rabbits and no bramble thickets.
+
+Late in the afternoon he came upon the fringes of a settlement, which
+he skirted with caution. In a remote pasture field, among rough
+hillocks and gnarled, fire-scarred stumps, he ran suddenly into a
+flock of sheep. For a moment he was puzzled at the sight, but the
+prompt flight of the startled animals suggested pursuit. In a moment
+he had borne down the hindermost. To reach for its throat was a sure
+instinct, and he feasted, with a growing zest of savagery, upon the
+hot flesh. Before he realized it, he was dragging the substantial
+remnant of his meal to a place of hiding under an overhanging rock.
+Then, well content with himself, he crept into a dark thicket and
+slept for several hours.
+
+When he awoke, a new-risen moon was shining, with something in her
+light which half bewildered him, half stung him to uncomprehended
+desires. Skulking to the crest of a naked knoll, he saw the landscape
+spread out all around him, with the few twinkling lights of the
+straggling village below the slopes of the pasture. But not for
+lights, or for villages, or for men was his concern. Sitting up very
+straight on his gaunt haunches, he stretched his muzzle toward the
+taunting moon, and began to sound that long, dreadful gathering cry of
+his race.
+
+It was an unknown or a long-forgotten voice in those neighborhoods,
+but none who heard it needed to have it explained. In half a minute
+every dog in the settlement was howling, barking, or yelping, in rage
+or fear. To Lone Wolf all this clamor was as nothing. He paid no more
+attention to it than as if it had been the twittering of sparrows.
+Then doors opened, and lights flashed as men came out to see what was
+the matter. Clearly visible, silhouetted against the low moon, Lone
+Wolf kept up his sinister chant to the unseen. But presently, out of
+the corner of his eye, he noted half a dozen men approaching up the
+pasture, with the noisy dogs at their heels. Men! That was different!
+Could it be that they wanted him? All at once he experienced a qualm
+of conscience, so to speak, about the sheep he had killed. It occurred
+to him that if sheep belonged to men, there might be trouble ahead.
+Abruptly he stopped his serenading of the moon, slipped over the crest
+of the knoll, and made off at a long, tireless gallop which before
+morning had put leagues between himself and the angry villagers.
+
+After this he gave a wide berth to settlements; and having made his
+first kill, he suddenly found himself an accomplished hunter. It was
+as if long-buried memories had sprung all at once to life,--memories,
+indeed, not of his own but of his ancestors',--and he knew, all at
+once, how to stalk the shy wild rabbits, to run down and kill the red
+deer. The country through which he journeyed was well stocked with
+game, and he fed abundantly as he went, with no more effort than just
+enough to give zest to his freedom. In this fashion he kept on for
+many days, working ever northward just because the wild lands
+stretched in that direction; and at last he came upon the skirts of a
+cone-shaped mountain, ragged with ancient forest, rising solitary and
+supreme out of a measureless expanse of wooded plain. From a jutting
+shoulder of rock his keen eyes noted but one straggling settlement,
+groups of scattered clearings, wide apart on the skirts of the great
+hill. They were too far off to mar the vast seclusion of the height;
+and Lone Wolf, finding a cave in the rocks that seemed exactly
+designed for his retreat, went no farther. He felt that he had come
+into his own domain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+The settlers around the skirts of Lost Mountain were puzzled and
+indignant. For six weeks their indignation had been growing, and the
+mystery seemed no nearer a solution. Something was slaughtering their
+sheep--something that knew its business and slaughtered with dreadful
+efficiency. Several honest dogs fell under suspicion, not because
+there was anything whatever against their reputations, but simply
+because they had the misfortune to be big enough and strong enough to
+kill a sheep if they wanted to, and the brooding backwoods mind, when
+troubled, will go far on the flimsiest evidence.
+
+Of all the wrathful settlers the most furious was Brace Timmins. Not
+only had he lost in those six weeks six sheep, but now his dog, a
+splendid animal, half deerhound and half collie, had been shot on
+suspicion by a neighbor, on no better grounds, apparently, than his
+long legs and long killing jaws. Still the slaughtering of the flocks
+went on with undiminished vigor. And a few days later Brace Timmins
+avenged his favorite by publicly thrashing his too hasty neighbor in
+front of the cross-roads store. The neighbor, pounded into exemplary
+penitence, apologized, and as far as the murdered dog was concerned,
+the score was wiped clean. But the problem of the sheep killing was no
+nearer solution. If not Brace Timmins' dog, as every one made prudent
+haste to acknowledge, then whose dog was it? The life of every dog in
+the settlement, if bigger than a wood-chuck, hung by a thread, which
+might, it seemed, at any moment turn into a halter. Brace Timmins
+loved dogs; and not wishing that others should suffer the unjust fate
+which had overtaken his own, he set his whole woodcraft to the
+discovery of the true culprit.
+
+Before he had made any great progress, however, on this trail, a new
+thing happened, and suspicion was lifted from the heads of all the
+dogs. Joe Anderson's dog, a powerful beast, part sheep-dog and part
+Newfoundland, with a far-off streak of bull, and the champion fighter
+of the settlements, was found dead in the middle of Anderson's sheep
+pasture, his whole throat fairly ripped out. He had died in defence of
+his charges, and it was plainly no dog's jaws that had done such
+mangling. What dog indeed could have mastered Anderson's "Dan"?
+
+"It's a bear, gone mad on mutton," pronounced certain of the wise
+ones, idling at the cross-roads store. "Ye see as how he hain't _et_
+the dawg, noways, but jest bit him to teach him not to go interferin'
+as regards sheep."
+
+"Ye're all off," contradicted Timmins, with authority. "A bear'd hev'
+tore him an' batted him an' mauled him more'n he'd hev' bit him. A
+bear thinks more o' usin' his fore paws than what he does his jaws, if
+he gits into any kind of an onpleasantness. No, boys, our unknown
+friend up yonder's a _wolf_, take my word for it."
+
+Joe Anderson snorted, and spat accurately out through the door.
+
+"A _wolf_!" he sneered. "Go chase yerself, Brace Timmins. I'd like to
+see any wolf as could 'a' done up my Dan that way!"
+
+"Well, keep yer hair on, Joe," retorted Timmins, easily. "I'm a-goin'
+after him, an' I'll show him to you in a day or two, as like as not!"
+
+"I reckon, Joe," interposed the storekeeper, leaning forward across
+the counter, "as how there be other breeds of wolf besides the
+sneakin' little gray varmint of the East here, what's been cleaned out
+of these parts fifty year ago. If Brace is right,--an' I reckon he
+be,--then it must sure be one of them big timber wolves we read about,
+what the Lord's took it into His head to plank down here in our safe
+old woods to make us set up an' take notice. You better watch out,
+Brace. If ye don't git the brute first lick, he'll git you!"
+
+"_I'll_ watch out!" drawled Timmins, confidently; and selecting a
+strong, steel trap-chain from a box beside the counter, he sauntered
+off to put his plans in execution.
+
+These plans were simple enough. He knew that he had a wide-ranging
+adversary to deal with. But he himself was a wide ranger, and
+acquainted with every cleft and crevice of Lost Mountain. He would
+find the great wolf's lair, and set his traps accordingly, one in the
+runway, to be avoided if the wolf was as clever as he ought to be, and
+a couple of others a little aside to really do the work. Of course, he
+would carry his rifle, in case of need, but he wanted to take his
+enemy alive.
+
+For several arduous but exciting days Timmins searched in vain alike
+the dark cedar swamps and the high, broken spurs of the mountain.
+Then, one windless afternoon, when the forest scents came rising to
+him on the clear air, far up the steep he found a climbing trail
+between gray, shelving ledges. Stealthy as a lynx he followed,
+expecting at the next turn to come upon the lair of the enemy. It was
+a just expectation, but as luck would have it, that next turn, which
+would have led him straight to his goal, lay around a shoulder of rock
+whose foundations had been loosened by the rains. With a kind of long
+growl, rending and sickening, the rock gave way, and sank beneath
+Timmins' feet.
+
+Moved by the alert and unerring instinct of the woodsman, Timmins
+leaped into the air. Both high and wide he sprang, and so escaped
+being engulfed in the mass which he had dislodged. On the top of the
+ruin he fell, but he fell far and hard; and for some fifteen or twenty
+minutes after that fall he lay very still, while the dust and débris
+settled into silence under the quiet flooding of the sun.
+
+At last he opened his eyes. For a moment he made no effort to move,
+but lay wondering where he was. A weight was on his legs, and glancing
+downward, he saw that he was half covered with earth and rubbish. Then
+he remembered. Was he badly hurt? He was half afraid, now, to make
+the effort to move, lest he should find himself incapable of it.
+Still, he felt no serious pain. His head ached, to be sure; and he saw
+that his left hand was bleeding from a gash at the base of the thumb.
+That hand still clutched one of the heavy traps which he had been
+carrying, and it was plainly the trap that had cut him, as if in a
+frantic effort to escape. But where was his rifle? Cautiously turning
+his head, he peered around for it, but in vain, for during the fall it
+had flown far aside into the thickets. As he stared solicitously, all
+at once his dazed and sluggish senses sprang to life again with a
+scorching throb, which left a chill behind it. There, not ten paces
+away, sitting up on its haunches and eying him contemplatively, was a
+gigantic wolf, much bigger, it seemed to him, than any wolf had any
+right to be.
+
+Timmins' first instinct was to spring to his feet, with a yell that
+would give the dreadful stranger to understand that he was a fellow it
+would not be well to tamper with. But his woodcraft stayed him. He was
+not by any means sure that he _could_ spring to his feet. Still less
+was he sure that such an action would properly impress the great wolf,
+who, for the moment at least, seemed not actively hostile. Stillness,
+absolute immobility, was the trump-card to be always played in the
+wilderness when in doubt. So Timmins kept quite still, looking
+inquiringly at Lone Wolf. And Lone Wolf looked inquiringly at him.
+
+For several minutes this waiting game went on. Then, with easy
+nonchalance, Lone Wolf lifted one huge hind paw and vigorously
+scratched his ear. This very simple action was a profound relief to
+Timmins.
+
+"Sartain," he thought, "the crittur must be in an easy mood, or he'd
+never think to scratch his ear like that. Or mebbe he thinks I'm so
+well buried I kin wait, like an old bone!"
+
+Just then Lone Wolf got up, stretched himself, yawned prodigiously,
+came a couple of steps nearer, and sat down again, with his head
+cocked to one side, and a polite air of asking, "Do I intrude?"
+
+"Sartain sure, I'll never ketch him in a better humor!" thought
+Timmins. "I'll try the human voice on him."
+
+"Git to H---- out of that!" he commanded in a sharp voice.
+
+Lone Wolf cocked his head to the other side interrogatively. He had
+been spoken to by Toomey in that voice of authority, but the words
+were new to him. He felt that he was expected to do something, but he
+knew not what. He liked the voice--it was something like Toomey's. He
+liked the smell of Timmins' homespun shirt--it, too, was something
+like Toomey's. He became suddenly anxious to please this stranger. But
+what was wanted of him? He half arose to his feet, and glanced around
+to see if, perchance, the inexplicable order had been addressed to
+some one else. As he turned, Timmins saw, half hidden in the heavy fur
+of the neck, a stout leather collar.
+
+"I swear!" he muttered, "if tain't a _tame_ wolf what's got away!"
+With that he sat up; and pulling his legs, without any very serious
+hurt, from their covering of earth and sticks he got stiffly to his
+feet. For a moment the bright landscape reeled and swam before him,
+and he had a vague sense of having been hammered all over his body.
+Then he steadied himself. He saw that the wolf was watching him with
+the expression of a diffident but friendly dog who would like to make
+acquaintance. As he stood puzzling his wits, he remembered having read
+about the great fire which had recently done such damage to Sillaby
+and Hopkins' Circus, and he concluded that the stranger was one of the
+fugitives from that disaster.
+
+"Come here, sir! Come here, big wolf!" said he, holding out a
+confident hand.
+
+"Wolf"--that was a familiar sound to Lone Wolf's ears! it was at least
+a part of his name! And the command was one he well understood.
+Wagging his tail gravely, he came at once, and thrust his great head
+under Timmins' hand for a caress. He had enjoyed his liberty, to be
+sure, but he was beginning to find it lonely.
+
+Timmins understood animals. His voice, as he talked to the redoubtable
+brute beside him, was full of kindness, but at the same time vibrant
+with authority. His touch was gentle, but very firm and unhesitating.
+Both touch and voice conveyed very clearly to Lone Wolf's disciplined
+instinct the impression that this man, like Toomey, was a being who
+had to be obeyed, whose mastery was inevitable and beyond the reach of
+question. When Timmins told him to lie down, he did so at once, and
+stayed there obediently while Timmins gathered himself together, shook
+the dirt out of his hair and boots, recovered his cap, wiped his
+bleeding hand with leaves, and hunted up his scattered traps and
+rifle. At last Timmins took two bedraggled but massive pork
+sandwiches, wrapped in newspaper, from his pocket, and offered one to
+his strange associate. Lone Wolf was not hungry, being full of
+perfectly good mutton, but being too polite to refuse, he gulped down
+the sandwich. Timmins took out the steel chain, snapped it on to Lone
+Wolf's collar, said, "Come on!" and started homeward. And Lone Wolf,
+trained to a short leash, followed close at his heels.
+
+Timmins' breast swelled with exultation. What was the loss of one dog
+and half a dozen no-account sheep to the possession of this
+magnificent captive and the prestige of such a naked-handed capture?
+He easily inferred, of course, that his triumph must be due, in part
+at least, to some resemblance to the wolf's former master, whose
+dominance had plainly been supreme. His only anxiety was as to how the
+great wolf might conduct himself toward Settlement Society in general.
+Assuredly nothing could be more lamb-like than the animal's present
+demeanor, but Timmins remembered the fate of Joe Anderson's powerful
+dog, and had his doubts. He examined Lone Wolf's collar, and
+congratulated himself that both collar and chain were strong.
+
+It was getting well along in the afternoon when Timmins and Lone Wolf
+emerged from the thick woods into the stumpy pastures and rough burnt
+lands that spread back irregularly from the outlying farms. And here,
+while crossing a wide pasture known as Smith's Lots, an amazing thing
+befell. Of course Timmins was not particularly surprised, because his
+backwoods philosophizing had long ago led him to the conclusion that
+when things get started happening, they have a way of keeping it up.
+Days, weeks, months, glide by without event enough to ripple the most
+sensitive memory. Then the whimsical Fates do something different,
+find it interesting, and proceed to do something else. So, though
+Timmins had been accustomed all his life to managing bulls,
+good-tempered and bad-tempered alike, and had never had the ugliest of
+them presume to turn upon him, he was not astonished now by the
+apparition of Smith's bull, a wide-horned, carrot-red, white-faced
+Hereford, charging down upon him in thunderous fury from behind a
+poplar thicket. In a flash he remembered that the bull, which was
+notoriously murderous in temper, had been turned out into that pasture
+to act as guardian to Smith's flocks. There was not a tree near big
+enough for refuge. There was not a stick big enough for a weapon. And
+he could not bring himself to shoot so valuable a beast as this fine
+thoroughbred. "Shucks!" he muttered in deep disgust. "I might 'a'
+knowed it!" Dropping Lone Wolf's chain, he ran forward, waving his
+arms and shouting angrily. But that red onrushing bulk was quite too
+dull-witted to understand that it ought to obey. It was in the mood to
+charge an avalanche. Deeply humiliated, Timmins hopped aside, and
+reluctantly ran for the woods, trusting to elude his pursuer by timely
+dodging.
+
+Hitherto Lone Wolf had left all cattle severely alone, having got it
+somehow into his head that they were more peculiarly under man's
+protection than the sheep. Now, however, he saw his duty, and duty is
+often a very well-developed concept in the brain of dog and wolf. His
+ears flattened, his eyes narrowed to flaming green slits, his lips
+wrinkled back till his long white fangs were clean bared, and without
+a sound he hurled himself upon the red bull's flank. Looking back over
+his shoulder, Timmins saw it all. It was as if all his life Lone Wolf
+had been killing bulls, so unerring was that terrible chopping snap at
+the great beast's throat. Far forward, just behind the bull's jaws,
+the slashing fangs caught. And Timmins was astounded to see the bull,
+checked in mid-rush, plunge staggering forward upon his knees. From
+this position he abruptly rolled over upon his side, thrown by his
+own impetus combined with a dexterous twist of his opponent's body.
+Then Lone Wolf bounded backward, and stood expectant, ready to repeat
+the attack if necessary. But it was not necessary. Slowly the great
+red bull arose to his feet, and stared about him stupidly, the blood
+gushing from his throat. Then he swayed and collapsed. And Lone Wolf,
+wagging his tail like a dog, went back to Timmins' side for
+congratulations.
+
+The woodsman gazed ruefully at his slain foe. Then he patted his
+defender's head, recovered the chain with a secure grip, and said
+slowly:--
+
+"I reckon, partner, ye did yer dooty as ye seen it, an' mebbe I'm
+beholden to ye fer a hul' skin, fer that there crittur was sartinly
+amazin' ugly an' spry on his pins. But ye're goin' to be a
+responsibility some. Ye ain't no suckin' lamb to hev aroun' the house,
+I'm thinkin'."
+
+To these remarks, which he judged from their tone to be approving,
+Lone Wolf wagged assent, and the homeward journey was continued.
+Timmins went with his head down, buried in thought. All at once,
+coming to a convenient log, he seated himself, and made Lone Wolf lie
+down at his feet. Then he took out the remaining sandwich,--which he
+himself, still shaken from his fall, had no desire to eat,--and
+contemplatively, in small fragments, he fed it to the wolf's great
+blood-stained jaws. At last he spoke, with the finality of one whose
+mind is quite made up.
+
+"Partner," said he, "there ain't no help for it. Bill Smith's a-goin'
+to hold _me_ responsible for the killin' o' that there crittur o'
+his'n, an' that means a pretty penny, it bein' a thoroughbred, an'
+imported at that. He ain't never a-goin' to believe but what I let you
+loose on to him a purpose, jest to save _my_ hide! Shucks! Moreover,
+ye may's well realize y'ain't _popular_ 'round these parts; an' first
+thing, when I wasn't lookin', somebody'd be a-puttin' somethin'
+onhealthy into yer vittles, partner! We've kind o' took to each other,
+you an' me; an' I reckon _we'd_ git on together _fine_, me always
+havin' me own way, of course. But there ain't no help fer it. Ye're
+too hefty a proposition, by long odds, fer a community like Lost
+Mountain Settlement. I'm a-goin' to write right off to Sillaby an'
+Hopkins, an' let them have ye back, partner. An' I reckon the price
+they'll pay'll be enough to let me square myself with Bill Smith."
+
+And thus it came about that, within a couple of weeks, Lone Wolf and
+Toomey were once more entertaining delighted audiences, while the
+settlement of Lost Mountain, with Timmins' prestige established beyond
+assault, relapsed into its uneventful quiet.
+
+
+
+
+THE BEAR'S FACE
+
+
+
+
+THE BEAR'S FACE
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+"There ain't no denying but what you give us a great show, Job," said
+the barkeeper, with that air of patronage which befits the man who
+presides over and autocratically controls the varied activities of a
+saloon in a Canadian lumber town.
+
+"It _is_ a good show!" assented Job Toomey, modestly. He leaned up
+against the bar in orthodox fashion, just as if his order had been
+"whiskey fer mine!" but being a really great animal trainer, whose eye
+must be always clear and his nerve always steady as a rock, his glass
+contained nothing stronger than milk and Vichy.
+
+Fifteen years before, Job Toomey had gone away with a little
+travelling menagerie because he loved wild animals. He had come back
+famous, and the town of Grantham Mills, metropolis of his native
+county, was proud of him. He was head of the menagerie of the Sillaby
+and Hopkins' Circus, and trainer of one of the finest troupes of
+performing beasts in all America. It was a great thing for Grantham
+Mills to have had a visit from the Sillaby and Hopkins' Circus on its
+way from one important centre to another. There had been two great
+performances, afternoon and evening. And now, after the last
+performance, some of Toomey's old-time acquaintances were making
+things pleasant for him in the bar of the Continental.
+
+"I don't see how ye do it, Job!" said Sanderson, an old river-man who
+had formerly trapped and hunted with Toomey. "I mind ye was always
+kind o' slick an' understandin' with the wild critters; but the way
+them lions an' painters an' bears an' wolves jest folly yer eye an'
+yer nod, willin' as so many poodle dogs, beats me. They seem to like
+it, too."
+
+"They _do_," said Toomey. "Secret of it is, _I_ like _them_; so by an'
+by they learn to like me well enough, an' try to please me. I make it
+worth their while, too. Also, they know I'll stand no fooling. Fear
+an' love, rightly mixed, boys--plenty of love, an' jest enough fear to
+keep it from spilin'--that's a mixture'll carry a man far--leastways
+with animals!"
+
+The barkeeper smiled, and was about to say the obvious thing, but he
+was interrupted by a long, lean-jawed, leather-faced man, captain of
+one of the river tugs, whose eyes had grown sharp as gimlets with
+looking out for snags and sandbanks.
+
+"The finest beast in the whole menagerie, that big grizzly," said he,
+spitting accurately into a spacious box of sawdust, "I noticed as how
+ye didn't have _him_ in your performance, Mr. Toomey. Now, I kind o'
+thought as how I'd like to see you put _him_ through his stunts."
+
+Toomey was silent for a moment. Then, with a certain reserve in his
+voice, he answered--
+
+"Oh, he ain't exactly strong on stunts."
+
+The leather-faced captain grinned quizzically.
+
+"Which does he go shy on, Mr. Toomey, the love or the fear?" he
+asked.
+
+"Both," said Toomey, shortly. Then his stern face relaxed, and he
+laughed good-humoredly. "Fact is, I think we'll have to be sellin'
+that there grizzly to some zoölogical park. He's kind of bad fer my
+prestige."
+
+"How's that, Job?" asked Sanderson, expectant of a story.
+
+"Well," replied Toomey, "to tell you the truth, boys,--an' I only say
+it because I'm here at home, among friends,--it's _me_ that's afraid
+of _him_! An' he knows it. He's the only beast that's ever been able
+to make me feel fear--the real, deep-down fear. An' I've never been
+able to git quit of that ugly notion. I go an' stand in front o' his
+cage; an' he jest puts that great face of his up agin the bars an'
+stares at me. An' I look straight into his eyes, an' remember what has
+passed between us, an' I feel afraid still. Yes, it wouldn't be much
+use me tryin' to train _that_ bear, boys, an' I'm free to acknowledge
+it to you all."
+
+"Tell us about it, Job!" suggested the barkeeper, settling his large
+frame precariously on the top of a small, high stool.
+
+An urgent chorus of approval came from all about the bar. Toomey took
+out his watch and considered.
+
+"We start away at 5.40 A.M.," said he. "An' I must make out to get a
+wink o' sleep. But I reckon I've got time enough. As you'll see,
+however, before I git through, the drinks are on me, so name yer
+pison, boys. Meanwhile, you'll excuse me if I don't join you this
+time. A man kin hold jest about so much Vichy an' milk, an' I've got
+my load aboard.
+
+"It was kind of this way," he continued, when the barkeeper had
+performed his functions. "You see, for nigh ten years after I left
+Grantham Mills, I'd stuck closer'n a burr to my business, till I began
+to feel I knew 'most all there was to know about trainin' animals.
+Men do git that kind of a fool feelin' sometimes about lots of things
+harder than animal-trainin'. Well, nothin' would do me but I should go
+back to my old business of _trappin'_ the beasts, only with one big
+difference. I wanted to go in fer takin' them alive, so as to sell
+them to menageries an' all that sort of thing. An' it was no pipe
+dream, fer I done well at it from the first. But that's not here nor
+there. I was gittin' tired of it, after a lot o' travellin' an' some
+lively kind of scrapes; so I made up my mind to finish up with a
+grizzly, an' then git back to trainin', which was what I was cut out
+fer, after all.
+
+"Well, I wanted a grizzly; an' it wasn't long before I found one. We
+were campin' among the foothills of the upper end of the Sierra Nevada
+range, in northern California. It was a good prospectin' ground fer
+grizzly, an' we found lots o' signs. I wanted one not too big fer
+convenience, an' not so old as to be too set in his ways an' too proud
+to larn. I had three good men with me, an' we scattered ourselves over
+a big bit o' ground, lookin' fer a likely trail. When I stumbled on to
+that chap in the cage yonder, what Captain Bird admires so, I knew
+right off _he_ wasn't what I was after. But the queer thing was that
+_he_ didn't seem to feel that way about _me_. He was after me before I
+had time to think of anything jest suitable to the occasion."
+
+"Where in thunder was yer gun?" demanded the river-man.
+
+"That was jest the trouble!" answered Toomey. "Ye see, I'd stood the
+gun agin a tree, in a dry place, while I stepped over a bit o' boggy
+ground, intendin' to lay down an' drink out of a leetle spring. Well,
+the bear was handier to that gun than I was. When he come fer me, I
+tell ye I didn't go back fer the gun. I ran straight up the hill, an'
+him too close at my heels fer convenience. Then I remembered that a
+grizzly don't run his best when he goes up hill on a slant, so on the
+slant I went. It worked, I reckon, fer though I couldn't say I gained
+on him much, it was soothin' to observe that he didn't seem to gain on
+me.
+
+"Fer maybe well on to three hundred yards it was a fine race, and I
+was beginnin' to wonder if the bear was gittin' as near winded as I
+was, when slap, I come right out on the crest of the ridge, which jest
+ahead o' me jutted out in a sort of elbow. What there was on the other
+side I couldn't see, and couldn't take time to inquire. I jest had to
+chance it, hopin' it might be somethin' less than a thousand foot
+drop. I ran straight to the edge, and jest managed to throw myself
+flat on my face an' clutch at the grasses like mad to keep from
+pitchin' clean out into space. It _was_ a drop, all right,--two
+hundred foot or more o' sheer cliff.
+
+"An' the bear was not thirty yards behind me.
+
+"I looked at the bear, as I laid there clutchin' the grass-roots. Then
+I looked down over the edge. I didn't feel frightened exactly, so fur;
+didn't _know_ enough, maybe, to be _frightened_ of _any_ animal. But
+jest at this point I was mighty anxious. You'll believe, then, it was
+kind o' good to me to see, right below, maybe twenty foot down, a
+little pocket of a ledge full o' grass an' blossomin' weeds. There was
+no time to calculate. I could let myself drop, an' maybe, if I had
+luck, I could stop where I fell, in the pocket, instead of bouncin'
+out an' down, to be smashed into flinders. Or, on the other hand, I
+could stay where I was, an' be ripped into leetle frayed ravellin's by
+the bear; an' that would be in about three seconds, at the rate he was
+comin'. Well, I let myself over the edge till I jest hung by the
+fingers, an' then dropped, smooth as I could, down the rock face, kind
+of clutchin' at every leetle knob as I went to check the fall. I lit
+true in the pocket, an' I lit pretty hard, as ye might know, but not
+hard enough to knock the wits out o' me, the grass an' weeds bein'
+fairly soft. An' clawin' out desperate with both hands, I caught, an'
+stayed put. Some dirt an' stones come down, kind o' smart, on my head,
+an' when they'd stopped I looked up. There was the bear, his big head
+stuck down, with one ugly paw hangin' over beside it, starin' at me. I
+was so tickled at havin' fooled him, I didn't think o' the hole I was
+in, but sez to him, saucy as you please, 'Thou art so near, an' yet so
+far.' At this he give a grunt, which might have meant anything, an'
+disappeared.
+
+"'Ye know enough to know when you're euchred,' says I. An' then I
+turned to considerin' the place I was in, an' how I was to git out of
+it.
+
+"To git out of it, indeed! The more I considered, the more I wondered
+how I'd ever managed to stay in it. It wasn't bigger than three foot
+by two, or two an' a half, maybe, in width, out from the cliff-face.
+On my left, as I sat with my back agin the cliff, a wall o' rock ran
+out straight, closin' off the pocket to that side clean an' sharp,
+though with a leetle kind of a roughness, so to speak--nothin' more
+than a roughness--which I calculated _might_ do, on a pinch, fer me
+to hang on to if I wanted to try to climb round to the other side. I
+_didn't_ want to jest yet, bein' still shaky from the drop, which, as
+things turned out, was just as well for me.
+
+"To my right a bit of a ledge, maybe six or eight inches wide, ran off
+along the cliff-face for a matter of ten or a dozen feet, then slanted
+up, an' widened out agin to another little pocket, or shelf like, of
+bare rock, about level with the top o' my head. From this shelf a
+narrow crack, not more than two or three inches wide, kind o'
+zigzagged away till it reached the top o' the cliff, perhaps forty
+foot off. It wasn't much, but it looked like somethin' I could git a
+good finger-hold into, if only I could work my way along to that
+leetle shelf. I was figurin' hard on this, an' had about made up my
+mind to try it, an' was reachin' out, in fact, to start, when I
+stopped sudden.
+
+"A good, healthy-lookin' rattler, his diamond-pattern back bright in
+the sun, come out of the crevice an' stopped on the shelf to take a
+look at the weather.
+
+"It struck me right off that he was on his way down to this pocket o'
+mine, which was maybe his favorite country residence. I didn't like
+one bit the idee o' his comin' an' findin' me there, when I'd never
+been invited. I felt right bad about it, you bet; and I'd have got
+away if I could. But not bein' able to, there was nothin' fer me to do
+but try an' make myself onpleasant. I grabbed up a handful o' dirt an'
+threw it at the rattler. It scattered all 'round him, of course, an'
+some of it hit him. Whereupon he coiled himself like a flash, with
+head an' tail both lifted, an' rattled indignantly. There was nothin'
+big enough to do him any damage with, an' I was mighty oneasy lest he
+might insist on comin' home to see who his impident caller was. But I
+kept on flingin' dirt as long as there was any handy, while he kept on
+rattlin', madder an' madder. Then I stopped, to think what I'd better
+do next. I was jest startin' to take off my boot, to hit him with as
+he come along the narrow ledge, when suddenly he uncoiled an' slipped
+back into the crevice.
+
+"Either it was very hot, or I'd been a bit more anxious than I'd
+realized, for I felt my forehead wet with sweat; I drew my sleeve
+across it, all the time keeping my eyes glued on the spot where the
+rattler'd disappeared. Jest then, seemed to me, I felt a breath on the
+back o' my neck. A kind o' cold chill crinkled down my backbone, an' I
+turned my face 'round sharp.
+
+"Will you believe it, boys? I was nigh jumpin' straight off that there
+ledge, right into the landscape an' eternity! There, starin' 'round
+the wall o' rock, not one inch more than a foot away from mine, was
+the face o' the bear.
+
+"Well, I was scared. There's no gittin' round that fact. There was
+something so onnatural about that big, wicked face hangin' there over
+that awful height, an' starin' so close into mine. I jest naturally
+scrooged away as fur as I could git, an' hung on tight to the rock
+so's not to go over. An' _then_ my face wasn't more'n two feet away,
+do the best I could; an' that was the time I found what it felt like
+to be right down scared. I believe if that face had come much closer,
+I'd have _bit_ at it, that minute, like a rat in a hole.
+
+"For maybe thirty seconds we jest stared. Then, I kind o' got a holt
+of myself, an' cursed myself good fer bein' such a fool; an' my blood
+got to runnin' agin. I fell to studyin' how the bear could have got
+there; an' pretty soon I reckoned it out as how there must be a big
+ledge runnin' down the cliff face, jest the other side o' the wall o'
+the pocket. An' I hugged myself to think I hadn't managed to climb
+'round on to that ledge jest before the bear arrived. I got this all
+figgered out, an' it took some time. But still that face, hangin' out
+there over the height, kept starin' at me; an' I never saw a wickeder
+look than it had on to it, steady an' unwinkin' as a nightmare. It is
+curious how long a beast _kin_ look at one without winkin'. At last,
+it got on to my nerves so I jest couldn't stand it; an' snatching a
+bunch of weeds (I'd already flung away all the loose dirt, flingin' it
+at the rattler), I whipped 'em across them devilish leetle eyes as
+hard as I could. It was a kind of a child's trick, or a woman's, but
+it worked all right, fer it made the eyes blink. That proved they were
+real eyes, an' I felt easier. After all, it _was_ only a bear; an' he
+couldn't git any closer than he was. But that was a mite too close,
+an' I wished he'd move. An' jest then, not to be gittin' _too_ easy in
+my mind, I remembered the rattler.
+
+"Another cold chill down my backbone! I looked 'round right smart. But
+the rattler wasn't anywhere in sight. That, however, put me in mind of
+what I'd been goin' to do to _him_. A boot wasn't much of a weapon
+agin a bear, but it was the only thing handy, so I reckoned I'd have
+to make it do. I yanked it off, took it by the toe, an' let that
+wicked face have the heel of it as hard as I could. I hadn't any room
+to swing, so I couldn't hit very hard. But a bear's nose is tender,
+on the tip; an' it was jest there, of course, I took care to land.
+There was a big snort, kind o' surprised like, an' the face
+disappeared.
+
+"I felt a sight better.
+
+"Fer maybe five minutes nothin' else happened. I sat there figgerin'
+how I was goin' to git out o' that hole; an' my figgerin' wasn't
+anyways satisfactory. I knew the bear was a stayer, all right. There'd
+be no such a thing as tryin' to crawl 'round that shoulder o' rock
+till I was blame sure _he_ wasn't on t'other side; an' how I was goin'
+to find _that_ out was more than I could git at. There was no such a
+thing as climbin' _up_. There was no such a thing as climbin' _down_.
+An' as fer that leetle ledge an' crevice leadin' off to the
+right,--well, boys, when there's a rattler layin' low fer ye in a
+crevice, ye're goin' to keep clear o' that crevice. It wanted a good
+three hours of sundown, an' I knew my chaps wouldn't be missin' me
+before night. When I didn't turn up for dinner, of course they'd begin
+to suspicion somethin', because they knew I was takin' things rather
+easy an' not followin' up any long trails. It looked like I was there
+fer the night; an' I didn't like it, I tell you. There wasn't room to
+lay down, and if I fell asleep settin' up, like as not I'd roll off
+the ledge. There was nothing fer it but to set up a whoop an' a yell
+every once in a while, in hopes that one or other of the boys _might_
+be cruisin' 'round near enough to hear me. So I yelled some half a
+dozen times, stoppin' between each yell to listen. Gittin' no answer,
+at last I decided to save my throat a bit an try agin after a spell o'
+restin' an' worryin'. Jest then I turned my head; an' I forgot, right
+off, to worry about fallin' off the ledge. There, pokin' his ugly head
+out o' the crevice, was the rattler. I chucked a bunch o' weeds at
+him, an' he drew back in agin. But the thing that jarred me now was,
+how would I keep him off when it got too dark fer me to see him. He'd
+be slippin' home quiet like, thinkin' maybe I was gone, an' mad when
+he found I wasn't, fer, ye see, _he_ hadn't no means of knowin' that I
+couldn't go _up_ the rock jest as easy as I come down. I feared there
+was goin' to be trouble after dark. An' while I was figgerin' on that
+till the sweat come out on my forehead, I turned agin, an' there agin
+was the bear's face starin' round the rock not more'n a foot away.
+
+"You'll understand how my nerves was on the jumps, when I tell you,
+boys, that I was scared an' startled all over again, like the first
+time I'd seen it. With a yell, I fetched a swipe at it with my boot;
+but it was gone, like a shadow, before I hit it; an' the boot flew out
+o' my hand an' went over the cliff, an' me pretty nigh after it. I
+jest caught myself, an' hung on, kind o' shaky, fer a minute. Next
+thing, I heard a great scratchin' at the other side o' the rock, as if
+the brute was tryin' to git a better toehold an' work some new dodge
+on me. Then the face appeared agin, an' maybe, though perhaps that was
+jest my excited imagination, it was some two or three inches closer
+this time.
+
+"I lit out at it with my fist, not havin' my other boot handy. But
+Lord, a bear kin dodge the sharpest boxer. That face jest wasn't
+there, before I could hit it. Then, five seconds more, an' it was back
+agin starin' at me. I wouldn't give it the satisfaction o' tryin' to
+swipe it agin, so I jest kept still, pretendin' to ignore it; an' in a
+minute or two it disappeared. But then, a minute or two more an' it
+was back agin. An' so it went on, disappearin', comin' back, goin'
+away, comin' back, an' always jest when I _wasn't_ expectin' it, an'
+always sudden an' quick as a shadow, till _that_ kind o' got on to my
+nerves too, an' I wished he'd stay one way or t'other, so as I could
+know what I was up against. At last, settlin' down as small as I
+could, I made up my mind I jest wouldn't look that way at all, face or
+no face, but give all my attention to watchin' for the rattler, an'
+yellin' fer the boys. Judgin' by the sun,--which went mighty slow that
+day,--I kept that game up for an hour or more; an' then, as the
+rattler didn't come any more than the boys, I got tired of it, an'
+looked 'round for the bear's face. Well, that time it wasn't there.
+But in place of it was a big brown paw, reachin' round the edge of the
+rock all by itself, an' clawin' quietly within about a foot o' my ear.
+That was all the farthest it would reach, however, so I tried jest to
+keep my mind off it. In a minute or two it disappeared; an' then back
+come the face.
+
+"I didn't like it. I preferred the paw. But then, it kept the
+situation from gittin' monotonous.
+
+"I suppose it was about this time the bear remembered somethin' that
+wanted seein' to down the valley. The face disappeared once more, and
+this time it didn't come back. After I hadn't seen it fer a half-hour,
+I began to think maybe it had _really_ gone away; but I knew how foxy
+a bear could be, an' thought jest as like as not he was waitin',
+patient as a cat, on the other side o' the rock fer me to look round
+so's he could git a swipe at me that would jest wipe my face clean
+off. I didn't try to look round. But I kept yellin' every little
+while; an' all at once a voice answered right over my head. I tell you
+it sounded good, if _'twasn't_ much of a voice. It was Steevens, my
+packer, lookin' down at me.
+
+"'Hello, what in h---- are ye doin' down there, Job?' he demanded.
+
+"'Waiting fer you to git a rope an' hoist me up!' says I. 'But look
+out fer the bear!'
+
+"'Bear nothin'!' says he.
+
+"'Chuck an eye down the other side,' says I.
+
+"He disappeared, but came right back. 'Bear nothin',' says he agin,
+havin' no originality.
+
+"'Well, he _was_ there, 'an' he stayed all the afternoon,' says I.
+
+"'Reckon he must 'a' heard ye was an animal trainer, an' got skeered!'
+says Steevens. But I wasn't jokin' jest then.
+
+"'You cut fer camp, an' bring a rope, an' git me out o' this, _quick_,
+d'ye hear?' says I. 'There's a rattler lives here, an' he's comin'
+back presently, an' I don't want to meet him. Slide!'
+
+"Well, boys, that's all. That bear _wasn't_ jest what I'd wanted; but
+feelin' ugly about him, I decided to take him an' break him in. We
+trailed him, an' after a lot o' trouble we trapped him. He was a sight
+more trouble after we'd got him, I tell you. But afterwards, when I
+set myself to tryin' to train him, why, I might jest as well have
+tried to train an earthquake. Do you suppose that grizzly was goin' to
+be afraid o' _me?_ He'd seen me afraid o' _him_, all right. He'd seen
+it in my eyes! An' what's more, _I_ couldn't forgit it; but when I'd
+look at him I'd _feel_, every time, the nightmare o' that great wicked
+face hangin' there over the cliff, close to mine. So, he don't
+perform. What'll ye take, boys? It's hot milk, this time, fer mine."
+
+
+
+
+THE DUEL ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+
+
+THE DUEL ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+White and soft over the wide, sloping upland lay the snow, marked
+across with the zigzag gray lines of the fences, and spotted here and
+there with little clumps of woods or patches of bushy pasture. The sky
+above was white as the earth below, being mantled with snow-laden
+cloud not yet ready to spill its feathery burden on the world. One
+little farm-house, far down the valley, served but to emphasize the
+spacious emptiness of the silent winter landscape.
+
+Out from one of the snow-streaked thickets jumped a white rabbit, its
+long ears waving nervously, and paused for a second to look back with
+a frightened air. It had realized that some enemy was on its trail,
+but what that enemy was, it did not know. After this moment of
+perilous hesitation, it went leaping forward across the open, leaving
+a vivid track in the soft surface snow. The little animal's discreet
+alarm, however, was dangerously corrupted by its curiosity; and at the
+lower edge of the field, before going through a snake fence and
+entering another thicket, it stopped, stood up as erect as possible on
+its strong hind quarters, and again looked back. As it did so, the
+unknown enemy again revealed himself, just emerging, a slender and
+sinister black shape, from the upper thicket. A quiver of fear passed
+over the rabbit's nerves. Its curiosity all effaced, it went through
+the fence with an elongated leap and plunged into the bushes in a
+panic. Here it doubled upon itself twice in a short circle, trusting
+by this well-worn device to confuse the unswerving pursuer. Then,
+breaking out upon the lower side of the thicket, it resumed its
+headlong flight across the fields.
+
+Meanwhile the enemy, a large mink, was following on the trail with the
+dogged persistence of a sleuth-hound. Sure of his methods, he did not
+pause to see what the quarry was doing, but kept his eyes and nose
+occupied with the fresh tracks. His speed was not less than that of
+the rabbit, and his endurance was vastly greater. Being very long in
+the body, and extremely short in the legs, he ran in a most peculiar
+fashion, arching his lithe back almost like a measuring-worm and
+straightening out like a steel spring suddenly released. These sinuous
+bounds were grotesque enough in appearance, but singularly effective.
+The trail they made, overlapping that of the rabbit, but quite
+distinct from it, varied according to the depth of the surface snow.
+Where the snow lay thin, just deep enough to receive an imprint, the
+mink's small feet left a series of delicate, innocent-looking marks,
+much less formidable in appearance than those of the pad-footed
+fugitive. But where the loose snow had gathered deeper the mink's long
+body and sinewy tail from time to time stamped themselves
+unmistakably.
+
+When the mink reached the second thicket, his keen and experienced
+craft penetrated at once the poor ruses of the fugitive. Cutting
+across the circlings of the trail, he picked it up again with
+implacable precision, making almost a straight line through the
+underbrush. When he emerged again into the open, the rabbit was in
+full view ahead.
+
+The next strip of woodland in the fugitive's path was narrow and
+dense. Below it, in a patch of hillocky pasture ground, sloping to a
+pond of steel-bright ice, a red fox was diligently hunting. He ran
+hither and thither, furtive, but seemingly erratic, poking his nose
+into half-covered moss-tufts and under the roots of dead stumps,
+looking for mice or shrews. He found a couple of the latter, but
+these were small satisfaction to his vigorous winter appetite.
+Presently he paused, lifted his narrow, cunning nose toward the woods,
+and appeared to ponder the advisability of going on a rabbit hunt. His
+fine, tawny, ample brush of a tail gently swept the light snow behind
+him as he stood undecided.
+
+All at once he crouched flat upon the snow, quivering with excitement,
+like a puppy about to jump at a wind-blown leaf. He had seen the
+rabbit emerging from the woods. Absolutely motionless he lay, so still
+that, in spite of his warm coloring, he might have been taken for a
+fragment of dead wood. And as he watched, tense with anticipation, he
+saw the rabbit run into a long, hollow log, which lay half-veiled in a
+cluster of dead weeds. Instantly he darted forward, ran at top speed,
+and crouched before the lower end of the log, where he knew the rabbit
+must come out.
+
+Within a dozen seconds the mink arrived, and followed the fugitive
+straight into his ineffectual retreat. Such narrow quarters were just
+what the mink loved. The next instant the rabbit shot forth--to be
+caught in mid-air by the waiting fox, and die before it had time to
+realize in what shape doom had come upon it.
+
+All unconscious that he was trespassing upon another's hunt, the fox,
+with a skilful jerk of his head, flung the limp and sprawling victim
+across his shoulder, holding it by one leg, and started away down the
+slope toward his lair on the other side of the pond.
+
+As the mink's long body darted out from the hollow log he stopped
+short, crouched flat upon the snow with twitching tail, and stared at
+the triumphant intruder with eyes that suddenly blazed red. The
+trespass was no less an insult than an injury; and many of the wild
+kindreds show themselves possessed of a nice sensitiveness on the
+point of their personal dignity. For an animal of the mink's size the
+fox was an overwhelmingly powerful antagonist, to be avoided with care
+under all ordinary circumstances. But to the disappointed hunter, his
+blood hot from the long, exciting chase, this present circumstance
+seemed by no means ordinary. Noiseless as a shadow, and swift and
+stealthy as a snake, he sped after the leisurely fox, and with one
+snap bit through the great tendon of his right hind leg, permanently
+laming him.
+
+As the pang went through him, and the maimed leg gave way beneath his
+weight, the fox dropped his burden and turned savagely upon his
+unexpected assailant. The mink, however, had sprung away, and lay
+crouched in readiness on the snow, eying his enemy malignantly. With a
+fierce snap of his long, punishing jaws the fox rushed upon him.
+But--the mink was not there. With a movement so quick as fairly to
+elude the sight, he was now crouching several yards away, watchful,
+vindictive, menacing. The fox made two more short rushes, in vain;
+then he, too, crouched, considering the situation, and glaring at his
+slender black antagonist. The mink's small eyes were lit with a
+smouldering, ruddy glow, sinister and implacable; while rage and pain
+had cast over the eyes of the fox a peculiar green opalescence.
+
+For perhaps half a minute the two lay motionless, though quivering
+with the intensity of restraint and expectation. Then, with lightning
+suddenness, the fox repeated his dangerous rush. But again the mink
+was not there. As composed as if he had never moved a hair, he was
+lying about three yards to one side, glaring with that same immutable
+hate.
+
+At this the fox seemed to realize that it was no use trying to catch
+so elusive a foe. The realization came to him slowly--and slowly,
+sullenly, he arose and turned away, ignoring the prize which he could
+not carry off. With an awkward limp, he started across the ice,
+seeming to scorn his small but troublesome antagonist.
+
+Having thus recovered the spoils, and succeeded in scoring his point
+over so mighty an adversary, the mink might have been expected to let
+the matter rest and quietly reap the profit of his triumph. But all
+the vindictiveness of his ferocious and implacable tribe was now
+aroused. Vengeance, not victory, was his craving. When the fox had
+gone about a dozen feet, all at once the place where the mink had been
+crouching was empty. Almost in the same instant, as it seemed, the fox
+was again, and mercilessly, bitten through the leg.
+
+This time, although the fox had seemed to be ignoring the foe, he
+turned like a flash to meet the assault. Again, however, he was just
+too late. His mad rush, the snapping of his long jaws, availed him
+nothing. The mink crouched, eying him, ever just beyond his reach. A
+gleam of something very close to fear came into his furious eyes as he
+turned again to continue his reluctant retreat.
+
+Again, and again, and yet again, the mink repeated his elusive attack,
+each time inflicting a deep and disastrous wound, and each time
+successfully escaping the counter-assault. The trail of the fox was
+now streaked and flecked with scarlet, and both his hind legs dragged
+heavily. He reached the edge of the smooth ice and turned at bay. The
+mink drew back, cautious for all his hate. Then the fox started across
+the steel-gray glair, picking his steps that he might have a firm
+foothold.
+
+A few seconds later the mink once more delivered his thrust. Feinting
+towards the enemy's right, he swerved with that snake-like celerity of
+his, and bit deep into the tender upper edge of the fox's thigh, where
+it plays over the groin.
+
+It was a cunning and deadly stroke. But in recovering from it, to dart
+away again to safe distance, his feet slipped, ever so little, on the
+shining surface of the ice. The delay was only for the minutest
+fraction of a second. But in that minutest fraction lay the fox's
+opportunity. His wheel and spring were this time not too late. His
+jaws closed about the mink's slim backbone and crunched it to
+fragments. The lean, black shape straightened out with a sharp
+convulsion and lay still on the ice.
+
+Though fully aware of the efficacy and finality of that bite, the fox
+set his teeth, again and again, with curious deliberation of movement,
+into the limp and unresisting form. Then, with his tongue hanging a
+little from his bloody jaws, he lifted his head and stared, with a
+curious, wavering, anxiously doubtful look, over the white familiar
+fields. The world, somehow, looked strange and blurry to him. He
+turned, leaving the dead mink on the ice, and painfully retraced his
+deeply crimsoned trail. Just ahead was the opening in the log, the way
+to that privacy which he desperately craved. The code of all the
+aristocrats of the wild kindred, subtly binding even in that supreme
+hour, forbade that he should consent to yield himself to death in the
+garish publicity of the open. With the last of his strength he crawled
+into the log, till just the bushy tip of his tail protruded to betray
+him. There he lay down with one paw over his nose, and sank into the
+long sleep. For an hour the frost bit hard upon the fields, stiffening
+to stone the bodies but now so hot with eager life. Then the snow came
+thick and silent, filling the emptiness with a moving blur, and buried
+away all witness of the fight.
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+Charles G. D. Roberts'
+
+ THE BACKWOODSMEN
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 12mo $1.50_
+
+ "'The Backwoodsmen' shows that the writer knows the backwoods as
+ the sailor knows the sea. Indeed, his various studies of wild life
+ in general, whether cast in the world of short sketch or story or
+ full-length narrative, have always secured an interested
+ public.... Mr. Roberts possesses a keen artistic sense which is
+ especially marked when he is rounding some story to its end. There
+ is never a word too much, and he invariably stops when the stop
+ should be made.... Few writers exhibit such entire sympathy with
+ the nature of beasts and birds as he."--_Boston Herald._
+
+ "When placed by the side of the popular novel, the strength of
+ these stories causes them to stand out like a huge primitive giant
+ by the side of a simpering society miss, and while the grace and
+ beauty of the girl may please the eye for a moment, it is to the
+ rugged strength of the primitive man your eyes will turn to glory
+ in his power and simplicity. In simple, forceful style Mr. Roberts
+ takes the reader with him out into the cold, dark woods, through
+ blizzards, stalking game, encountering all the dangers of the
+ backwoodsmen's life, and enjoying the close contact with Nature in
+ all her moods. His descriptions are so vivid that you can almost
+ feel the tang of the frosty air, the biting sting of the snowy
+ sleet beating on your face, you can hear the crunch of the snow
+ beneath your feet, and when, after heartlessly exposing you to the
+ elements, he lets you wander into camp with the characters of the
+ story, you stretch out and bask in the warmth and cheer of the
+ fire."--_Western Review._
+
+L. W. Brownell's
+
+ PHOTOGRAPHY FOR THE SPORTSMAN NATURALIST
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "It often occurs that he who finds delight in woodcraft finds also
+ a pleasure in preserving by photography what he finds to interest
+ him in his wanderings in the open. To such this book appeals with
+ a peculiar force, for the author is evidently at once familiar
+ with wood and field life and an adept with the camera."--_Boston
+ Transcript._
+
+Photography for the Sportsman Naturalist is in
+
+ THE AMERICAN SPORTSMAN LIBRARY SERIES
+
+The other volumes in the series are _The American Thoroughbred_,
+_American Yachting_, _Bass, Pike, Perch, and other Fish_, _Big Game
+Fishes of the United States_, _The Deer Family_, _Guns, Ammunition,
+and Tackle_, _Lawn Tennis and Lacrosse_, _Musk-Ox, Bison, Sheep, and
+Goat_, _Riding and Driving_, _Rowing and Track Athletics_, _Salmon and
+Trout_, _The Sporting Dog_, _The Trotting and the Pacing Horse_,
+_Upland Game Birds_, _and The Water Fowl Family_.
+
+The price of each volume is $2.00 net.
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+
+Ernest Ingersoll's
+
+ LIFE OF ANIMALS: THE MAMMALS
+
+ _Colored Plates and Photographic Illustrations_
+
+ _Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "Bountifully illustrated with new colored plates drawn and painted
+ by the author's daughter, and with more than a hundred
+ photographs, many of them taken by the author himself, the text of
+ the volume gives a succinct and lucid account of the life of the
+ mammals,... their ancestry, their place in nature, their means of
+ livelihood, and their general characteristics."--_New York
+ Herald._
+
+ "An exceedingly entertaining and informing book containing the
+ latest information concerning the whole group of mammals, that
+ branch of animal creation most interesting to man because he is
+ one himself. There are numberless works on this topic or related
+ ones, but we know of none that is so comprehensive as this in
+ a single volume.... There is an amazing amount of information
+ written simply but with authority. Every man, woman, and child
+ who takes up this book will hate to put it down for a
+ moment."--_Philadelphia Inquirer._
+
+ "There are pictures and anecdotes for the little ones of the
+ family, adventures and curious habits to attract the eager minds
+ of older lads, guiding information and suggestion for the student,
+ and the whole is treated in the light of the latest facts. Many
+ novelties, apart from the simple, homely, almost humorous method
+ of handling a truly scientific subject, characterize the volume.
+ Nowhere else is so intelligently traced the relation between the
+ past (fossil history) and the present of the families in this most
+ important of all animal tribes; nowhere else will be found
+ explained many curious customs, such as the origin of the habit of
+ storing winter food, how the opossum came to 'play 'possum,' and
+ why beavers dam up streams. The book is written from the American
+ point of view, yet the whole world is covered and the newest
+ material has been utilized. It would be difficult to find a book
+ on natural history which could make a stronger appeal to the
+ reader, old or young, who is interested in natural history than
+ this volume by Ernest Ingersoll."--_Brooklyn Daily Eagle._
+
+ "There is not a page of the whole volume but is full of interest,
+ and the many splendid photographs of the existing and prehistoric
+ mammals add greatly to the value of the book. One lays it down
+ with reluctance and with the feeling that the author has added
+ largely to the sum of human knowledge."--_Toronto Globe._
+
+ "A large and admirable book.... Interesting as fiction,
+ scientifically exact, simply expressed, this well-prepared volume
+ will almost literally repeople the earth for many readers. Those
+ who already love natural history will rejoice in its fascinating
+ richness of information, while it would be difficult to imagine a
+ more readable and comprehensive introduction to the numerous big
+ and little brethren of the woods and fields."--_Chicago
+ Record-Herald._
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+
+Lieut.-Col. J. H. Patterson's
+
+ IN THE GRIP OF THE NYIKA
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "Nyika merely means wilderness, and its grip is conveyed very
+ forcefully to the pages of Colonel Patterson's book, which holds
+ the reader as closely as the Nyika holds those who venture into
+ it.... Colonel Patterson has a particularly interesting way of
+ describing things he sees.... The whole volume is filled with
+ exciting incidents and many illustrations from photographs of odd
+ animals and queer people."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ THE MAN-EATERS OF TSAVO AND OTHER EAST AFRICAN ADVENTURES
+
+ With Foreword by Mr. Frederick C. Selous
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "The account of how Colonel Patterson overcame the many
+ difficulties that confronted him in building his bridge across the
+ Tsavo River makes excellent reading, while the courage he
+ displayed in attacking, single-handed, lions, as well as
+ rhinoceroses and other animal foes, was surpassed by his pluck,
+ tact, and determination in quelling a formidable mutiny which once
+ broke out among his native workers."--_New York Herald._
+
+Theodore S. Van Dyke's
+
+ THE STILL HUNTER
+
+ _Illustrated, Cloth 8vo $1.75 net_
+
+ "A vivid account of the most exciting sport in the world.... The
+ record of years of experience.... It is crammed full of valuable
+ advice for the deer hunter, and has the advantage of having been
+ written before hunting became more of a pastime than a serious
+ business, requiring untiring energy, great patience, cool nerves,
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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Kings in Exile, by Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts</title>
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+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook of Kings in Exile, by Sir Charles George
+Douglas Roberts</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Kings in Exile</p>
+<p>Author: Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts</p>
+<p>Release Date: April 7, 2009 [eBook #28530]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KINGS IN EXILE***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Roger Frank<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/illus-cvr.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 296px; height: 460px;' /><br />
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h1>KINGS IN EXILE</h1>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figcenter' style='margin-bottom:0em;'>
+<img alt='emblem' src='images/illus-emb.jpg' />
+</div>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.9em;'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.7em;margin-bottom:0.5em;'>NEW YORK ˇ BOSTON ˇ CHICAGO<br />DALLAS ˇ SAN FRANCISCO</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.9em;'>MACMILLAN &amp; CO., Limited</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.7em;margin-bottom:0.5em;'>LONDON ˇ BOMBAY ˇ CALCUTTA<br />MELBOURNE</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.9em;'>THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, Ltd.</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.7em;'>TORONTO</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 314px; height: 434px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 314px;'>
+&#8220;The Gray Master.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:2em;margin-top:20px;margin-bottom:2em;'>KINGS IN EXILE</p>
+<p class='tp' style='margin-bottom:10px;'>BY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;'>CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:120px;'>AUTHOR OF &#8220;THE BACKWOODSMEN,&#8221; ETC.</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-style:italic;margin-bottom:120px;'>ILLUSTRATED</p>
+<p class='tp' style=''>New York</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</p>
+<p class='tp' style=''>1912</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-top:0.8em;margin-bottom:20px;'>All rights reserved</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='margin-top:20px;font-size:0.8em;margin-bottom:1em;'>Copyright by Perry, Mason &amp; Co. (1907), The Curtis<br />
+Publishing Co. (1908-1909), The Associated Sunday<br />
+Magazines (1908), The Red Book Magazine (1908).</p>
+
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;'>Copyright, 1910,</p>
+
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;'>By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.</p>
+
+<hr class='p10' />
+
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;'>Set up and electrotyped. Published February, 1910. Reprinted<br />June, 1910; July, December, 1912.</p>
+
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:0.8em;margin-top:50px;'>Norwood Press<br />J. S. Cushing Co.&mdash;Berwick &amp; Smith Co.<br />Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td align='left'><span style='font-size:small;'>&nbsp;</span></td>
+ <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small;'>PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Last Bull</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#LAST_BULL'>1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The King of the Flaming Hoops</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_KING_OF_THE_FLAMING_HOOPS'>25</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Monarch of Park Barren</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_MONARCH_OF_PARK_BARREN'>69</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Gray Master</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_GRAY_MASTER'>105</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Sun-Gazer</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_SUNGAZER'>137</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Lord of the Glass House</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_LORD_OF_THE_GLASS_HOUSE'>173</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Back to the Water World</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#BACK_TO_THE_WATER_WORLD'>191</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Lone Wolf</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#LONE_WOLF'>237</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Bear&#8217;s Face</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_BEARS_FACE'>269</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>The Duel on the Trail</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#THE_DUEL_ON_THE_TRAIL'>289</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Illustrations' style='margin:1em 4em;'>
+<col style='width:80%;' />
+<col style='width:20%;' />
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td align='right'><span style='font-size:small'>FACING PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;The Gray Master.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_1'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a little knoll in his pasture.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_2'>6</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;Only to be hurled back again with a vigor that brought him to his knees.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_3'>10</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little dark eyes glowed suddenly red.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_4'>32</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet distant, crouched, ready to spring, the biggest puma he had ever seen.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_5'>64</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;He reached the tree just in time to swing well up among the branches.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_6'>72</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was able to keep up this almost incredible pace.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_7'>90</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;Then the second puma pounced.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_8'>134</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;He launched himself on a long, splendid sweep over the gulf.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_9'>144</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;After this the eagle came regularly every three or four hours with food for the prisoner.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_10'>160</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;And the writhing tentacles composed themselves once more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting the next careless passer-by.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_11'>176</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' align='left'>&#8220;Without the slightest hesitation he whipped up two writhing tentacles and seized him.&#8221;</td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#linki_12'>188</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='LAST_BULL' id='LAST_BULL'></a>
+<h2>LAST BULL</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span></div>
+<h2>Last Bull</h2>
+<p>That was what two grim old sachems
+of the Dacotahs had dubbed him; and
+though his official title, on the lists of the
+Zo&ouml;logical Park, was &#8220;Kaiser,&#8221; the new and
+more significant name had promptly supplanted
+it. The Park authorities&mdash;people of imagination
+and of sentiment, as must all be who would
+deal successfully with wild animals&mdash;had felt
+at once that the name aptly embodied the tragedies
+and the romantic memories of his all-but-vanished
+race. They had felt, too, that the two
+old braves who had been brought East to adorn
+a city pageant, and who had stood gazing stoically
+for hours at the great bull buffalo through
+the barrier of the steel-wire fence, were fitted,
+before all others, to give him a name. Between
+him and them there was surely a tragic bond,
+as they stood there islanded among the swelling
+tides of civilization which had already engulfed
+their kindreds. &#8220;Last Bull&#8221; they had called
+him, as he answered their gaze with little, sullen,
+melancholy eyes from under his ponderous and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span>
+shaggy front. &#8220;Last Bull&#8221;&mdash;and the passing
+of his race was in the name.</p>
+<p>Here, in his fenced, protected range, with
+a space of grassy meadow, half a dozen clumps
+of sheltering trees, two hundred yards of the
+run of a clear, unfailing brook, and a warm shed
+for refuge against the winter storms, the giant
+buffalo ruled his little herd of three tawny cows,
+two yearlings, and one blundering, butting calf
+of the season. He was a magnificent specimen
+of his race&mdash;surpassing, it was said, the finest
+bull in the Yellowstone preserves or in the
+guarded Canadian herd of the North. Little
+short of twelve feet in length, a good five foot
+ten in height at the tip of his humped and
+huge fore-shoulders, he seemed to justify the
+most extravagant tales of pioneer and huntsman.
+His hind-quarters were trim and fine-lined,
+built apparently for speed, smooth-haired,
+and of a grayish lion-color. But his fore-shoulders,
+mounting to an enormous hump,
+were of an elephantine massiveness, and clothed
+in a dense, curling, golden-brown growth of
+matted hair. His mighty head was carried
+low, almost to the level of his knees, on a neck
+of colossal strength, which was draped, together
+with the forelegs down to the knees, in a flowing
+brown mane tipped with black. His head,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span>
+too, to the very muzzle, wore the same luxuriant
+and sombre drapery, out of which curved viciously
+the keen-tipped crescent of his horns.
+Dark, huge, and ominous, he looked curiously
+out of place in the secure and familiar tranquillity
+of his green pasture.</p>
+<p>For a distance of perhaps fifty yards, at the
+back of the pasture, the range of the buffalo
+herd adjoined that of the moose, divided from
+it by that same fence of heavy steel-wire mesh,
+supported by iron posts, which surrounded the
+whole range. One sunny and tingling day in
+late October&mdash;such a day as makes the blood
+race full red through all healthy veins&mdash;a
+magnificent stranger was brought to the Park,
+and turned into the moose-range.</p>
+<p>The newcomer was a New Brunswick bull
+moose, captured on the Tobique during the
+previous spring when the snow was deep and
+soft, and purchased for the Park by one of the
+big Eastern lumber-merchants. The moose-herd
+had consisted, hitherto, of four lonely
+cows, and the splendid bull was a prize which
+the Park had long been coveting. He took
+lordly possession, forthwith, of the submissive
+little herd, and led them off at once from the
+curious crowds about the gate to explore the
+wild-looking thickets at the back of the pasture.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span>
+But no sooner had he fairly entered these thickets
+than he found his further progress barred
+by the steel-meshed fence. This was a bitter
+disappointment, for he had expected to go
+striding through miles of alder swamp and
+dark spruce woods, fleeing the hated world of
+men and bondage, before setting himself to get
+acquainted with his new followers. His high-strung
+temper was badly jarred. He drew off,
+shaking his vast antlers, and went shambling
+with spacious stride down along the barrier
+towards the brook. The four cows, in single
+file, hurried after him anxiously, afraid he might
+be snatched away from them.</p>
+<p>Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a
+little knoll in his pasture, caught sight of the
+strange, dark figure of the running moose. A
+spark leapt into his heavy eyes. He wheeled,
+pawed the sod, put his muzzle to the ground,
+and bellowed a sonorous challenge. The moose
+stopped short and stared about him, the stiff
+hair lifting angrily along the ridge of his massive
+neck. Last Bull lowered his head and
+tore up the sod with his horns.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-006.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 297px; height: 455px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 297px;'>
+&#8220;Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a little knoll in his pasture.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span></div>
+<p>This vehement action caught the eyes of the
+moose. At first he stared in amazement, for
+he had never seen any creature that looked like
+Last Bull. The two were only about fifty or
+sixty yards apart, across the little valley of
+the bushy swamp. As he stared, his irritation
+speedily overcame his amazement. The curious-looking
+creature over there on the knoll
+was defying him, was challenging him. At
+this time of year his blood was hot and quick
+for any challenge. He gave vent to a short,
+harsh, explosive cry, more like a grumbling
+bleat than a bellow, and as unlike the buffalo&#8217;s
+challenge as could well be imagined. Then he
+fell to thrashing the nearest bushes violently
+with his antlers. This, for some reason unknown
+to the mere human chronicler, seemed
+to be taken by Last Bull as a crowning insolence.
+His long, tasselled tail went stiffly up
+into the air, and he charged wrathfully down
+the knoll. The moose, with his heavy-muzzled
+head stuck straight out scornfully before him,
+and his antlers laid flat along his back, strode
+down to the encounter with a certain deadly
+deliberation. He was going to fight. There
+was no doubt whatever on that score. But he
+had not quite made up his wary mind as to how
+he would deal with this unknown and novel
+adversary.</p>
+<p>They looked not so unequally matched, these
+two, the monarch of the Western plains, and the
+monarch of the northeastern forests. Both
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span>
+had something of the monstrous, the uncouth,
+about them, as if they belonged not to this
+modern day, but to some prehistoric epoch when
+Earth moulded her children on more lavish and
+less graceful lines. The moose was like the
+buffalo in having his hind-quarters relatively
+slight and low, and his back sloping upwards
+to a hump over the immensely developed fore-shoulders.
+But he had much less length of
+body, and much less bulk, though perhaps eight
+or ten inches more of height at the tip of the
+shoulder. His hair was short, and darker than
+that of his shaggy rival, being almost black except
+on legs and belly. Instead of carrying his
+head low, like the buffalo, for feeding on the
+level prairies, he bore it high, being in the main
+a tree-feeder. But the greatest difference between
+the two champions was in their heads
+and horns. The antlers of the moose formed a
+huge, fantastic, flatly palmated or leaflike structure,
+separating into sharp prongs along the
+edges, and spreading more than four feet from
+tip to tip. To compare them with the short,
+polished crescent of the horns of Last Bull was
+like comparing a two-handed broadsword to a
+bowie-knife. And his head, instead of being
+short, broad, ponderous, and shaggy, like Last
+Bull&#8217;s, was long, close-haired, and massively
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span>
+horse-faced, with a projecting upper lip heavy
+and grim.</p>
+<p>Had there been no impregnable steel barrier
+between them, it is hard to say which would
+have triumphed in the end, the ponderous weight
+and fury of Last Bull, or the ripping prongs and
+swift wrath of the moose. The buffalo charged
+down the knoll at a thundering gallop; but
+just before reaching the fence he checked himself
+violently. More than once or twice before
+had those elastic but impenetrable meshes given
+him his lesson, hurling him back with humiliating
+harshness when he dashed his bulk against
+them. He had too lively a memory of past discomfitures
+to risk a fresh one now in the face
+of this insolent foe. His matted front came
+against the wire with a force so cunningly
+moderated that he was not thrown back by the
+recoil. And the keen points of his horns went
+through the meshes with a vehemence which
+might indeed have done its work effectively
+had they come in contact with the adversary.
+As it was, however, they but prodded empty
+air.</p>
+<p>The moose, meanwhile, had been in doubt
+whether to attack with his antlers, as was his
+manner when encountering foes of his own
+kind, or with his knife-edged fore-hoofs, which
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span>
+were the weapons he used against bears, wolves,
+or other alien adversaries. Finally he seemed
+to make up his mind that Last Bull, having
+horns and a most redoubtable stature, must be
+some kind of moose. In that case, of course,
+it became a question of antlers. Moreover, in
+his meetings with rival bulls it had never been
+his wont to depend upon a blind, irresistible
+charge,&mdash;thereby leaving it open to an alert opponent
+to slip aside and rip him along the flank,&mdash;but
+rather to fence warily for an advantage
+in the locking of antlers, and then bear down
+his foe by the fury and speed of his pushing.
+It so happened, therefore, that he, too, came
+not too violently against the barrier. Loudly
+his vast spread of antlers clashed upon the steel
+meshes; and one short prong, jutting low over
+his brow, pierced through and furrowed deeply
+the matted forehead of the buffalo.</p>
+<p>As the blood streamed down over his nostrils,
+obscuring one eye, Last Bull quite lost his
+head with rage. Drawing off, he hurled himself
+blindly upon the barrier&mdash;only to be hurled
+back again with a vigor that brought him to
+his knees. But at the same time the moose,
+on the other side of the fence, got a huge surprise.
+Having his antlers against the barrier
+when Last Bull charged, he was forced back
+irresistibly upon his haunches, with a rudeness
+quite unlike anything that he had ever before
+experienced. His massive neck felt as if a
+pine tree had fallen upon it, and he came back
+to the charge quite beside himself with bewilderment
+and rage.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-010.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 294px; height: 454px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 294px;'>
+&#8220;Only to be hurled back again with a vigor that brought him to his knees.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span></div>
+<p>By this time, however, the keepers and Park
+attendants were arriving on the scene, armed
+with pitchforks and other unpleasant executors
+of authority. Snorting, and bellowing, and
+grunting, the monstrous duellists were forced
+apart; and Last Bull, who had been taught
+something of man&#8217;s dominance, was driven off
+to his stable and imprisoned. He was not let
+out again for two whole days. And by that
+time another fence, parallel with the first and
+some five or six feet distant from it, had been
+run up between his range and that of the
+moose. Over this impassable zone of neutrality,
+for a few days, the two rivals flung insult
+and futile defiance, till suddenly, becoming
+tired of it all, they seemed to agree to ignore
+each other&#8217;s existence.</p>
+<p>After this, Last Bull&#8217;s sullenness of temper
+appeared to grow upon him. He was fond of
+drawing apart from the little herd, and taking
+up his solitary post on the knoll, where he
+would stand for an hour at a time motionless
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+except for the switching of his long tail, and
+staring steadily westward as if he knew where
+the great past of his race had lain. In that
+direction a dense grove of chestnuts, maples,
+and oaks bounded the range, cutting off the
+view of the city roofs, the roar of the city traffic.
+Beyond the city were mountains and wide
+waters which he could not see; but beyond the
+waters and the mountains stretched the green,
+illimitable plains&mdash;which perhaps (who knows?)
+in some faint vision inherited from the ancestors
+whose myriads had possessed them, his
+sombre eyes, in some strange way, <i>could</i> see.
+Among the keepers and attendants generally it
+was said, with anxious regret, that perhaps
+Last Bull was &#8220;going bad.&#8221; But the head-keeper,
+Payne, himself a son of the plains, repudiated
+the idea. <i>He</i> declared sympathetically
+that the great bull was merely homesick, pining
+for the wind-swept levels of the open country
+(God&#8217;s country, Payne called it!) which his imprisoned
+hoofs had never trodden.</p>
+<p>Be this as it may, the fact could not be gainsaid
+that Last Bull was growing more and more
+morose. The spectators, strolling along the
+wide walk which skirted the front of his range,
+seemed to irritate him, and sometimes, when a
+group had gathered to admire him, he would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span>
+turn his low-hung head and answer their staring
+eyes with a kind of heavy fury, as if he
+burned to break forth upon them and seek vengeance
+for incalculable wrongs. This smouldering
+indignation against humanity extended
+equally, if not more violently, to all creatures
+who appeared to him as servants or allies of
+humanity. The dogs whom he sometimes saw
+passing, held in leash by their masters or mistresses,
+made him paw the earth scornfully if
+he happened to be near the fence. The patient
+horses who pulled the road-roller or the noisy
+lawn-mower made his eyes redden savagely.
+And he hated with peculiar zest the roguish
+little trick elephant, Bong, who would sometimes,
+his inquisitive trunk swinging from side
+to side, go lurching lazily by with a load of
+squealing children on his back.</p>
+<p>Bong, who was a favored character, amiable
+and trustworthy, was allowed the freedom of
+the Park in the early morning, before visitors
+began to arrive who might be alarmed at seeing
+an elephant at large. He was addicted to
+minding his own business, and never paid the
+slightest attention to any occupants of cage or
+enclosure. He was quite unaware of the hostility
+which he had aroused in the perverse and
+brooding heart of Last Bull.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span></p>
+<p>One crisp morning in late November, when
+all the grass in the Park had been blackened
+by frost, and the pools were edged with silver
+rims of ice, and mists were white and saffron
+about the scarce-risen sun, and that autumn
+thrill was in the air which gives one such an
+appetite, Bong chanced to be strolling past
+the front of Last Bull&#8217;s range. He did not see
+Last Bull, who was nothing to him. But,
+being just as hungry as he ought to be on so
+stimulating a morning, he did see, and note
+with interest, some bundles of fresh hay on the
+other side of the fence.</p>
+<p>Now, Bong was no thief. But hay had always
+seemed to him a free largess, like grass
+and water, and this looked like very good hay.
+So clear a conscience had he on the subject
+that he never thought of glancing around to see
+if any of the attendants were looking. Innocently
+he lurched up to the fence, reached his
+lithe trunk through, gathered a neat wisp of the
+hay, and stuffed it happily into his curious, narrow,
+pointed mouth. Yes, he had not been
+mistaken. It was good hay. With great satisfaction
+he reached in for another mouthful.</p>
+<p>Last Bull, as it happened, was standing close
+by, but a little to one side. He had been ignoring,
+so far, his morning ration. He was not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+hungry. And, moreover, he rather disapproved
+of the hay because it had the hostile man-smell
+strong upon it. Nevertheless, he recognized it
+very clearly as his property, to be eaten when
+he should feel inclined to eat it. His wrath,
+then, was only equalled by his amazement when
+he saw the little elephant&#8217;s presumptuous gray
+trunk reach in and coolly help itself. For a
+moment he forgot to do anything whatever
+about it. But when, a few seconds later, that
+long, curling trunk of Bong&#8217;s insinuated itself
+again and appropriated another bundle of the
+now precious hay, the outraged owner bestirred
+himself. With a curt roar, that was more of a
+cough or a grunt than a bellow, he lunged forward
+and strove to pin the intruding trunk to
+the ground.</p>
+<p>With startled alacrity Bong withdrew his
+trunk, but just in time to save it from being
+mangled. For an instant he stood with the
+member held high in air, bewildered by what
+seemed to him such a gratuitous attack. Then
+his twinkling little eyes began to blaze, and he
+trumpeted shrilly with anger. The next moment,
+reaching over the fence, he brought
+down the trunk on Last Bull&#8217;s hump with such
+a terrible flail-like blow that the great buffalo
+stumbled forward upon his knees.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span></p>
+<p>He was up again in an instant and hurling
+himself madly against the inexorable steel
+which separated him from his foe. Bong
+hesitated for a second, then, reaching over
+the fence once more, clutched Last Bull maliciously
+around the base of his horns and tried
+to twist his neck. This enterprise, however,
+was too much even for the elephant&#8217;s titanic
+powers, for Last Bull&#8217;s greatest strength lay
+in the muscles of his ponderous and corded
+neck. Raving and bellowing, he plunged this
+way and that, striving in vain to wrench himself
+free from that incomprehensible, snake-like
+thing which had fastened upon him. Bong,
+trumpeting savagely, braced himself with widespread
+pillars of legs, and between them it
+seemed that the steel fence must go down
+under such cataclysmic shocks as it was suffering.
+But the noisy violence of the battle
+presently brought its own ending. An amused
+but angry squad of attendants came up and
+stopped it, and Bong, who seemed plainly the
+aggressor, was hustled off to his stall in deep
+disgrace.</p>
+<p>Last Bull was humiliated. In this encounter
+things had happened which he could in no way
+comprehend; and though, beyond an aching in
+neck and shoulders, he felt none the worse
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span>
+physically, he had nevertheless a sense of having
+been worsted, of having been treated with
+ignominy, in spite of the fact that it was his
+foe, and not he, who had retired from the field.
+For several days he wore a subdued air and
+kept about meekly with his docile cows. Then
+his old, bitter moodiness reasserted itself, and
+he resumed his solitary broodings on the crest
+of the knoll.</p>
+<p>When the winter storms came on, it had
+been Last Bull&#8217;s custom to let himself be
+housed luxuriously at nightfall, with the rest
+of the herd, in the warm and ample buffalo-shed.
+But this winter he made such difficulty
+about going in that at last Payne decreed that
+he should have his own way and stay out. &#8220;It
+will do him no harm, and may cool his peppery
+blood some!&#8221; had been the keeper&#8217;s decision.
+So the door was left open, and Last Bull
+entered or refrained, according to his whim.
+It was noticed, however,&mdash;and this struck a
+chord of answering sympathy in the plainsman&#8217;s
+imaginative temperament,&mdash;that, though
+on ordinary nights he might come in and stay
+with the herd under shelter, on nights of driving
+storm, if the tempest blew from the west or
+northwest, Last Bull was sure to be out on the
+naked knoll to face it. When the fine sleet or
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+stinging rain drove past him, filling his nostrils
+with their cold, drenching his matted mane,
+and lashing his narrowed eyes, what visions
+swept through his troubled, half-comprehending
+brain, no one may know. But Payne, with
+understanding born of sympathy and a common
+native soil, catching sight of his dark
+bulk under the dark of the low sky, was wont
+to declare that <i>he</i> knew. He would say that
+Last Bull&#8217;s eyes discerned, black under the
+hurricane, but lit strangely with the flash of
+keen horns and rolling eyes and frothed nostrils,
+the endless and innumerable droves of the
+buffalo, with the plains wolf skulking on their
+flanks, passing, passing, southward into the
+final dark. In the roar of the wind, declared
+Payne, Last Bull, out there in the night, listened
+to the trampling of all those vanished
+droves. And though the other keepers insisted
+to each other, quite privately, that their
+chief talked a lot of nonsense about &#8220;that there
+mean-tempered old buffalo,&#8221; they nevertheless
+came gradually to look upon Last Bull with a
+kind of awe, and to regard his surly whims as
+privileged.</p>
+<p>It chanced that winter that men were driving
+a railway tunnel beneath a corner of the
+Park. The tunnel ran for a short distance
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span>
+under the front of Last Bull&#8217;s range, and passed
+close by the picturesque cottage occupied by
+Payne and two of his assistants. At this point
+the level of the Park was low, and the shell of
+earth was thin above the tunnel roof.</p>
+<p>There came a Sunday afternoon, after days
+of rain and penetrating January thaw, when
+sun and air combined to cheat the earth with
+an illusion of spring. The buds and the mould
+breathed of April, and gay crowds flocked to
+the Park, to make the most of winter&#8217;s temporary
+repulse. Just when things were at their
+gayest, with children&#8217;s voices clamoring everywhere
+like starlings, and Bong, the little elephant,
+swinging good-naturedly up the broad
+white track with all the load he had room for
+on his back, there came an ominous jar and
+rumble, like the first of an earthquake, which
+ran along the front of Last Bull&#8217;s range.</p>
+<p>With sure instinct, Bong turned tail and fled
+with his young charges away across the grassland.
+The crowds, hardly knowing what they
+fled from, with screams and cries and blanched
+faces, followed the elephant&#8217;s example. A
+moment later and, with a muffled crash, all
+along the front of the range, the earth sank into
+the tunnel, carrying with it half a dozen panels
+of Last Bull&#8217;s hated fence.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span></p>
+<p>Almost in a moment the panic of the crowd
+subsided. Every one realized just what had
+happened. Moreover, thanks to Bong&#8217;s timely
+alarm, every one had got out of the way in
+good season. All fear of earthquake being removed,
+the crowd flocked back eagerly to stare
+down into the wrecked tunnel, which formed
+now a sort of gaping, chaotic ditch, with sides
+at some points precipitous and at others brokenly
+sloping. The throng was noisy with excited
+interest and with relief at having escaped so
+cleanly. The break had run just beneath one
+corner of the keepers&#8217; cottage, tearing away a
+portion of the foundation and wrenching the
+structure slightly aside without overthrowing
+it. Payne, who had been in the midst of his
+Sunday toilet, came out upon his twisted porch,
+half undressed and with a shaving-brush covered
+with lather in his hand. He gave one look at
+the damage which had been wrought, then
+plunged indoors again to throw his clothes on,
+at the same time sounding the hurry call for
+the attendants in other quarters of the Park.</p>
+<p>Last Bull, who had been standing on his knoll,
+with his back to the throngs, had wheeled in
+astonishment at the heavy sound of the cave-in.
+For a few minutes he had stared sullenly, not
+grasping the situation. Then very slowly it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+dawned on him that his prison walls had fallen.
+Yes, surely, there at last lay his way to freedom,
+his path to the great open spaces for which he
+dumbly and vaguely hungered. With stately
+deliberation he marched down from his knoll to
+investigate.</p>
+<p>But presently another idea came into his slow
+mind. He saw the clamorous crowds flocking
+back and ranging themselves along the edge of
+the chasm. These were his enemies. They
+were coming to balk him. A terrible madness
+surged through all his veins. He bellowed savage
+warning and came thundering down the field,
+nose to earth, dark, mountainous, irresistible.</p>
+<p>The crowd yelled and shrank back. &#8220;He
+can&#8217;t get across!&#8221; shouted some. But others
+cried: &#8220;He can! He&#8217;s coming! Save yourselves!&#8221;
+And with shrieks they scattered wildly
+across the open, making for the kiosks, the pavilions,
+the trees, anything that seemed to promise
+hiding or shelter from that onrushing doom.</p>
+<p>At the edge of the chasm&mdash;at this point
+forming not an actual drop, but a broken slide&mdash;Last
+Bull hardly paused. He plunged down,
+rolled over in the d&eacute;bris, struggled to his feet
+again instantly, and went ploughing and snorting
+up the opposite steep. As his colossal front,
+matted with mud, loomed up over the brink, his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span>
+little eyes rolling and flaming, and the froth flying
+from his red nostrils, he formed a very nightmare
+of horror to those fugitives who dared to
+look behind them.</p>
+<p>Surmounting the brink, he paused. There
+were so many enemies, he knew not which to
+pursue first. But straight ahead, in the very
+middle of the open, and far from any shelter,
+he saw a huddled group of children and nurses
+fleeing impotently and aimlessly. Shrill cries
+came from the cluster, which danced with colors,
+scarlet and yellow and blue and vivid pink.
+To the mad buffalo, these were the most conspicuous
+and the loudest of his foes, and therefore
+the most dangerous. With a bellow he flung
+his tail straight in the air, and charged after
+them.</p>
+<p>An appalling hush fell, for a few heart-beats,
+all over the field. Then from different quarters
+appeared uniformed attendants, racing and
+shouting frantically to divert the bull&#8217;s attention.
+From fleeing groups black-coated men leapt
+forth, armed only with their walking-sticks, and
+rushed desperately to defend the flock of children,
+who now, in the extremity of their terror,
+were tumbling as they ran. Some of the
+nurses were fleeing far in front, while others,
+the faithful ones, with eyes starting from their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span>
+heads, grabbed up their little charges and struggled
+on under the burden.</p>
+<p>Already Last Bull was halfway across the space
+which divided him from his foes. The ground
+shook under his ponderous gallop. At this moment
+Payne reappeared on the broken porch.</p>
+<p>One glance showed him that no one was near
+enough to intervene. With a face stern and sorrowful
+he lifted the deadly .405 Winchester which
+he had brought out with him. The spot he covered
+was just behind Last Bull&#8217;s mighty shoulder.</p>
+<p>The smokeless powder spoke with a small,
+venomous report, unlike the black powder&#8217;s
+noisy reverberation. Last Bull stumbled. But
+recovering himself instantly, he rushed on.
+He was hurt, and he felt it was those fleeing
+foes who had done it. A shade of perplexity
+darkened Payne&#8217;s face. He fired again. This
+time his aim was true. The heavy expanding
+bullet tore straight through bone and muscle
+and heart, and Last Bull lurched forward upon
+his head, ploughing up the turf for yards. As
+his mad eyes softened and filmed, he saw once
+more, perhaps,&mdash;or so the heavy-hearted keeper
+who had slain him would have us believe,&mdash;the
+shadowy plains unrolling under the wild sky,
+and the hosts of his vanished kindred drifting
+past into the dark.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_KING_OF_THE_FLAMING_HOOPS' id='THE_KING_OF_THE_FLAMING_HOOPS'></a>
+<h2>THE KING OF THE FLAMING HOOPS</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span></div>
+<h2>The King of the Flaming Hoops</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>The white, scarred face of the mountain
+looked straight east, over a vast basin of
+tumbled, lesser hills, dim black forests, and
+steel-blue loops of a far-winding water. Here
+and there long, level strata of pallid mist
+seemed to support themselves on the tree-tops,
+their edges fading off into the startling transparency
+that comes upon the air with the first
+of dawn. But that was in the lower world.
+Up on the solitary summit of White Face the
+daybreak had arrived. The jagged crest of the
+peak shot sudden radiances of flame-crimson,
+then bathed itself in a flow of rose-pinks and
+thin, indescribable reds and pulsating golds.
+Swiftly, as the far horizon leapt into blaze, the
+a&euml;rial flood spread down the mountain-face,
+revealing and transforming. It reached the
+mouth of a cave on a narrow ledge. As the
+splendor poured into the dark opening, a
+tawny shape, long and lithe and sinewy, came
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+padding forth, noiseless as itself, as if to meet
+and challenge it.</p>
+<p>Half emerging from the entrance upon the
+high rock-platform which formed its threshold,
+the puma halted, head uplifted and forepaws
+planted squarely to the front. With wide,
+palely bright eyes she stared out across the
+tremendous and mysterious landscape. As
+the colored glory rushed down the mountain,
+rolling back the blue-gray transparency of
+shadow, those inscrutable eyes swept every suddenly
+revealed glade, knoll, and waterside where
+deer or elk might by chance be pasturing.</p>
+<p>She was a magnificent beast, this puma, massive
+of head and shoulder almost as a lioness,
+and in her calm scrutiny of the spaces unrolling
+before her gaze was a certain air of overlordship,
+as if her supremacy had gone long unquestioned.
+Suddenly, however, her attitude
+changed. Her eyes narrowed, her mighty
+muscles drew themselves together like springs
+being upcoiled, she half crouched, and her
+head turned sharply to the left, listening. Far
+down the narrow ledge which afforded the
+trail to her den she had caught the sound of
+something approaching.</p>
+<p>As she listened, she crouched lower and
+lower, and her eyes began to burn with a thin,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span>
+green flame. Her ears would flatten back
+savagely, then lift themselves again to interrogate
+the approaching sounds. Her anger at
+the intrusion upon her private domain was
+mixed with some apprehension, for behind her,
+in a warm corner of the den, curled up in a soft
+and furry ball like kittens, were her two sleeping
+cubs.</p>
+<p>Her trail being well marked and with her
+scent strong upon it, she knew it could be no ignorant
+blunderer that drew near. It was plainly
+an enemy, and an arrogant enemy, since it made
+no attempt at stealth. The steps were not those
+of any hunter, white man or Indian, of that
+she presently assured herself. With this assurance,
+her anxiety diminished and her anger increased.
+Her tail, long and thick, doubled in
+thickness and began to jerk sharply from side
+to side. Crouching to the belly, she crept all
+the way out upon the ledge and peered cautiously
+around a jutting shoulder of rock.</p>
+<p>The intruder was not yet in sight, because
+the front of White Face, though apparently a
+sheer and awful precipice when viewed from the
+valley, was in fact wrinkled with gullies and
+buttresses and bucklings of the tortured strata.
+But the sound of his coming was now quite intelligible
+to her. That softly ponderous tread, that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+careless displacing of stones, those undisguised
+sniffings and mumblings could come only from
+a bear, and a bear frankly looking for trouble.
+Well, he was going to find what he was looking
+for. With an antagonism handed down to her
+by a thousand ancestors, the great puma hated
+bears.</p>
+<p>Many miles north of White Face, on the
+other side of that ragged mountain-ridge to
+which he formed an isolated and towering outpost,
+there was a fertile valley which had just
+been invaded by settlers. On every hand awoke
+the sharp barking of the axe. Rifle-shots
+startled the echoes. Masterful voices and confident
+human laughter filled all the wild inhabitants
+with wonder and dismay. The undisputed
+lord of the range was an old silver-tip grizzly,
+of great size and evil temper. Furious at the
+unexpected trespass on his sovereignty, yet well
+aware of his powerlessness against the human
+creature that could strike from very far off with
+lightning and thunder, he had made up his
+mind at once to withdraw to some remoter
+range. Nevertheless, he had lingered for some
+days, sullenly expecting he knew not what.
+These formless expectations were most unpleasantly
+fulfilled when he came upon a man
+in a canoe paddling close in by the steep shore
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span>
+of the lake. He had hurled himself blindly
+down the bank, raging for vengeance, but when
+he reached the water&#8217;s edge, the man was far
+out of reach. Then, while he stood there
+wavering, half minded to swim in pursuit, the
+man had spoken with the lightning and the
+thunder, after the terrifying fashion of his kind.
+The bear had felt himself stung near the tip of
+the shoulder, as if by a million wasps at once,
+and the fiery anguish had brought him to his
+senses.</p>
+<p>It was no use trying to fight man, so he had
+dashed away into the thickets, and not halted
+till he had put miles between himself and the
+inexplicable enemy.</p>
+<p>For two days, with occasional stops to forage
+or to sleep, the angry grizzly had travelled
+southward, heading towards the lonely peak of
+White Face. As the distance from his old haunts
+increased, his fears diminished; but his anger
+grew under the ceaseless fretting of that wound
+on his neck just where he could not reach to
+lick and soothe it. The flies, however, could
+reach it very well, and did. As a consequence,
+by the time he reached the upper slopes of
+White Face, he was in a mood to fight anything.
+He would have charged a regiment,
+had he suddenly found one in his path.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span></p>
+<p>When he turned up a stone for the grubs,
+beetles, and scorpions which lurked beneath it,
+he would send it flying with a savage sweep of
+his paw. When he caught a rabbit, he smashed
+it flat in sheer fury, as if he cared more to
+mangle than to eat.</p>
+<p>At last he stumbled upon the trail of a puma.
+As he sniffed at it, he became, if possible, more
+angry than ever. Pumas he had always hated.
+He had never had a chance to satisfy his grudge,
+for never had one dared to face his charge;
+but they had often snarled down defiance at
+him from some limb of oak or pine beyond his
+reach. He flung himself forward upon the
+trail with vengeful ardor. When he realized,
+from the fact that it was a much-used trail and
+led up among the barren rocks, that it was
+none other than the trail to the puma&#8217;s lair, his
+satisfaction increased. He would be sure to
+find either the puma at home or the puma&#8217;s
+young unguarded.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-032.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 298px; height: 455px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 298px;'>
+&#8220;When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little dark eyes glowed suddenly red.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span></div>
+<p>When the puma, at last, saw him emerge
+around a curve of the trail, and noted his
+enormous stature, she gave one longing, wistful
+look back over her shoulder to the shadowed
+nook wherein her cubs lay sleeping. Had
+there been any chance to get them both safely
+away, she would have shirked the fight, for
+their sakes. But she could not carry them
+both in her mouth at once up the face of the
+mountain. She would not desert either one.
+She hesitated a moment, as if doubtful whether
+or not to await attack in the mouth of the
+cave. Then she crept farther out, where the
+ledge was not three feet wide, and crouched
+flat, silent, watchful, rigid, in the middle of the
+trail.</p>
+<p>When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little
+dark eyes glowed suddenly red, and he came
+up with a lumbering rush. With his gigantic,
+furry bulk, it looked as if he must instantly
+annihilate the slim, light creature that opposed
+him. It was a dreadful place to give battle,
+on that straight shelf of rock overhanging a
+sheer drop of perhaps a thousand feet. But
+scorn and rage together blinded the sagacity
+of the bear. With a grunt he charged.</p>
+<p>Not until he was within ten feet of her did
+the crouching puma stir. Then she shot into the
+air, as if hurled up by the release of a mighty
+spring. Quick as a flash the grizzly shrank
+backward upon his haunches and swept up a
+huge black paw to parry the assault. But he
+was not quite quick enough. The puma&#8217;s
+spring overreached his guard. She landed
+fairly upon his back, facing his tail; but in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+fraction of a second she had whirled about and
+was tearing at his throat with teeth and claws,
+while the terrible talons of her hinder paws
+ripped at his flanks.</p>
+<p>With a roar of pain and amazement the
+grizzly struggled to shake her off, clutching and
+striking at her with paws that at one blow could
+smash in the skull of the most powerful bull.
+But he could not reach her. Then he reared
+up, and threw himself backwards against the
+face of the rock, striving to crush her under his
+enormous weight. And in this he almost succeeded.
+Just in time, she writhed around and
+outward, but not quite far enough, for one paw
+was caught and ground to a pulp. But at the
+next instant, thrust back from the rock by his
+own effort, the bear toppled outward over the
+brink of the shelf. Grappling madly to save
+himself, he caught only the bowed loins of the
+puma, who now sank her teeth once more into
+his throat, while her rending claws seemed to
+tear him everywhere at once. He crushed her
+in his grip; and in a dreadful ball of screeching,
+roaring, biting, mangling rage the two plunged
+downward into the dim abyss. Once, still
+locked in the death-grip, they struck upon a
+jutting rock, and bounded far out into space.
+Then, as the ball rolled over in falling, it came
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+apart; and separated now, though still very close
+together, the two bodies fell sprawlingly, and
+vanished into the blue-shadowed deeps which
+the dawn had not yet reached.</p>
+<p>Upon this sudden and terrible ending of the
+fight appeared a bearded frontiersman who had
+been trailing the grizzly for half an hour and
+waiting for light enough to secure a sure shot.
+With something like awe in his face he came,
+and knelt down, with hands gripping cautiously,
+and peered over the dreadful brink. &#8220;Gee!
+But that there cat was game!&#8221; he muttered,
+drawing back and sweeping a comprehensive
+gaze across the stupendous landscape, as if
+challenging denial of his statement. Obviously
+the silences were of the same opinion, for there
+came no suggestion of dissent. Carefully he
+rose to his feet and pressed on towards the
+cave.</p>
+<p>Without hesitation he entered, for he knew
+that the puma&#8217;s mate some weeks before had
+been shot, far down in the valley. He found
+the kittens asleep and began to fondle them.
+At his touch, and the smell of him, they awoke,
+spitting and clawing with all their mother&#8217;s
+courage. Young as they were, their claws drew
+blood abundantly. &#8220;Gritty little devils!&#8221;
+growled the man good-naturedly, snatching
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span>
+back his hand and wiping the blood on his
+trouser-leg. Then he took off his coat, threw
+it over the troublesome youngsters, rolled them
+in it securely, so that not one protesting claw
+could get out, and started back to the camp with
+the grumbling and uneasy bundle in his arms.</p>
+<p>Three months later, the two puma cubs, sleek,
+fat, full of gayety as two kittens of like age, and
+convinced by this time that man was the source
+and origin of all good things, were sold to a
+travelling collector. One, the female, was sent
+down to a zo&ouml;logical garden on the Pacific coast.
+The other, the male, much the larger and at the
+same time the more even-tempered and amenable
+to teaching, found its way to the cages of
+an animal-trainer in the East.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>&#8220;King&#8217;s kind of ugly to-night, seems to me;
+better keep yer eyes peeled!&#8221; said Andy Hansen,
+the assistant trainer, the big, yellow-haired
+Swede who knew not fear. Neither did he
+know impatience or irritability; and so all the
+animals, as a rule, were on their good behavior
+under his calm, masterful, blue eye. Yet he
+was tactful with the beasts, and given to humoring
+their moods as far as convenient without
+ever letting them guess it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, you go chase yourself, Andy!&#8221; replied
+Signor Tomaso, the trainer, with a strong New
+England accent. &#8220;If I got to look out for King,
+I&#8217;d better quit the business. Don&#8217;t you go
+trying to make trouble between friends, Andy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Of course, Bill, I know he&#8217;d never try to
+maul <i>you</i>,&#8221; explained Hansen seriously, determined
+that he should not be misunderstood in
+the smallest particular. &#8220;But he&#8217;s acting curious.
+Look out he don&#8217;t get into a scrap with
+some of the other animals.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon I kin keep &#8217;em all straight,&#8221; answered
+the trainer dryly, as he turned away to
+get ready for the great performance which the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+audience, dimly heard beyond the canvas walls,
+was breathlessly awaiting.</p>
+<p>The trainer&#8217;s name was William Sparks,
+and his birthplace Big Chebeague, Maine; but
+his lean, swarthy face and piercing, green-brown
+eyes, combined with the craving of his audiences
+for a touch of the romantic, had led him to
+adopt the more sonorous pseudonym of &#8220;Signor
+Tomaso.&#8221; He maintained that if he went under
+his own name, nobody would ever believe that
+what he did could be anything wonderful.
+Except for this trifling matter of the name,
+there was no fake about Signor Tomaso. He
+was a brilliant animal-trainer, as unacquainted
+with fear as the Swede, as dominant of eye,
+and of immeasurably greater experience. But
+being, at the same time, more emotional, more
+temperamental than his phlegmatic assistant, his
+control was sometimes less steady, and now and
+again he would have to assert his authority with
+violence. He was keenly alive to the varying
+personalities of his beasts, naturally, and hence
+had favorites among them. His especial favorite,
+who heartily reciprocated the attachment,
+was the great puma, King, the most
+intelligent and amiable of all the wild animals
+that had ever come under his training whip.</p>
+<p>As Hansen&#8217;s success with the animals, during
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span>
+the few months of his experience as assistant,
+had been altogether phenomenal, his chief felt
+a qualm of pique upon being warned against
+the big puma. He had too just an appreciation
+of Hansen&#8217;s judgment, however, to quite
+disregard the warning, and he turned it over
+curiously in his mind as he went to his dressing-room.
+Emerging a few minutes later in
+the black-and-white of faultless evening dress,
+without a speck on his varnished shoes, he
+moved down along the front of the cages, addressing
+to the occupant of each, as he passed,
+a sharp, authoritative word which brought it to
+attention.</p>
+<p>With the strange, savage smell of the cages
+in his nostrils, that bitter, acrid pungency to
+which his senses never grew blunted, a new
+spirit of understanding was wont to enter
+Tomaso&#8217;s brain. He would feel a sudden kinship
+with the wild creatures, such a direct and
+instant comprehension as almost justified his
+fancy that in some previous existence he had
+himself been a wild man of the jungle and
+spoken in their tongue. As he looked keenly
+into each cage, he knew that the animal whose
+eyes for that moment met his was in untroubled
+mood. This, till he came to the cage containing
+the latest addition to his troupe, a large
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+cinnamon bear, which was rocking restlessly to
+and fro and grumbling to itself. The bear was
+one which had been long in captivity and well
+trained. Tomaso had found him docile, and
+clever enough to be admitted at once to the
+performing troupe. But to-night the beast&#8217;s
+eyes were red with some ill-humor. Twice
+the trainer spoke to him before he heeded; but
+then he assumed instantly an air of mildest subservience.
+The expression of a new-weaned
+puppy is not more innocently mild than the look
+which a bear can assume when it so desires.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ah, ha! old sport! So it&#8217;s you that&#8217;s got
+a grouch on to-night; I&#8217;ll keep an eye on you!&#8221;
+he muttered to himself. He snapped his heavy
+whip once, and the bear obediently sat up on
+its haunches, its great paws hanging meekly.
+Tomaso looked it sharply in the eye. &#8220;Don&#8217;t
+forget, now, and get funny!&#8221; he admonished.
+Then he returned to the first cage, which contained
+the puma, and went up close to the bars.
+The great cat came and rubbed against him,
+purring harshly.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There ain&#8217;t nothing the matter with <i>you</i>,
+boy, I reckon,&#8221; said Tomaso, scratching him
+affectionately behind the ears. &#8220;Andy must
+have wheels in his head if he thinks I&#8217;ve got to
+keep my eyes peeled on <i>your</i> account.&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span></p>
+<p>Out beyond the iron-grilled passage, beyond
+the lighted canvas walls, the sharp, metallic
+noises of the workmen setting up the great performing-cage
+came to a stop. There was a
+burst of music from the orchestra. That, too,
+ceased. The restless hum of the unseen masses
+around the arena died away into an expectant
+hush. It was time to go on. At the
+farther end of the passage, by the closed door
+leading to the performing cage, Hansen appeared.
+Tomaso opened the puma&#8217;s cage.
+King dropped out with a soft thud of his great
+paws, and padded swiftly down the passage, his
+master following. Hansen slid wide the door,
+admitting a glare of light, a vast, intense rustle
+of excitement; and King marched majestically
+out into it, eying calmly the tier on climbing
+tier of eager faces. It was his customary privilege,
+this, to make the entrance alone, a good
+half minute ahead of the rest of the troupe;
+and he seemed to value it. Halfway around
+the big cage he walked, then mounted his
+pedestal, sat up very straight, and stared blandly
+at the audience. A salvo of clapping ran smartly
+round the tiers&mdash;King&#8217;s usual tribute, which
+he had so learned to expect that any failure of
+it would have dispirited him for the whole performance.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span></p>
+<p>Signor Tomaso had taken his stand, whip in
+hand, just inside the cage, with Hansen opposite
+him, to see that the animals, on entry, went
+each straight to his own bench or pedestal.
+Any mistake in this connection was sure to lead
+to trouble, each beast being almost childishly
+jealous of its rights. Inside the long passage
+an attendant was opening one cage after another;
+and in a second more the animals began
+to appear in procession, filing out between the
+immaculate Signor and the roughly clad Swede.
+First came a majestic white Angora goat, carrying
+high his horned and bearded head, and
+stepping most daintily upon slim, black hoofs.
+Close behind, and looking just ready to pounce
+upon him but for dread of the Signor&#8217;s eye,
+came slinking stealthily a spotted black-and-yellow
+leopard, ears back and tail twitching.
+He seemed ripe for mischief, as he climbed reluctantly
+on to his pedestal beside the goat;
+but he knew better than to even bare a claw.
+And as for the white goat, with his big golden
+eyes superciliously half closed, he ignored his
+dangerous neighbor completely, while his jaws
+chewed nonchalantly on a bit of brown shoe-lace
+which he had picked up in the passage.</p>
+<p>Close behind the leopard came a bored-looking
+lion, who marched with listless dignity
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+straight to his place. Then another lion, who
+paused in the doorway and looked out doubtfully,
+blinking with distaste at the strong light.
+Tomaso spoke sharply, like the snap of his
+whip, whereupon the lion ran forward in haste.
+But he seemed to have forgotten which was his
+proper pedestal, for he hopped upon the three
+nearest in turn, only to hop down again with
+apologetic alacrity at the order of the cracking
+whip. At last, obviously flustered, he reached
+a pedestal on which he was allowed to remain.
+Here he sat, blinking from side to side and
+apparently much mortified.</p>
+<p>The lion was followed by a running wolf,
+who had shown his teeth savagely when the
+lion, for a moment, trespassed upon his pedestal.
+This beast was intensely interested in the
+audience, and, as soon as he was in his place,
+turned his head and glared with green, narrowed
+eyes at the nearest spectators, as if trying
+to stare them out of countenance. After the
+wolf come a beautiful Bengal tiger, its black-and-golden
+stripes shining as if they had been
+oiled. He glided straight to his stand, sniffed
+at it superciliously, and then lay down before it.
+The whip snapped sharply three times, but the
+tiger only shut his eyes tight. The audience
+grew hushed. Tomaso ran forward, seized the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span>
+beast by the back of the neck, and shook him
+roughly. Whereupon the tiger half rose, opened
+his great red mouth like a cavern, and roared in
+his master&#8217;s face. The audience thrilled from
+corner to corner, and a few cries came from
+frightened women.</p>
+<p>The trainer paused for an instant, to give full
+effect to the situation. Then, stooping suddenly,
+he lifted the tiger&#8217;s hind-quarters and deposited
+them firmly on the pedestal, and left
+him in that awkward position.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There,&#8221; he said in a loud voice, &#8220;that&#8217;s all
+the help you&#8217;ll get from me!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The audience roared with instant and delighted
+appreciation. The tiger gathered up
+the rest of himself upon his pedestal, wiped his
+face with his paw, like a cat, and settled down
+complacently with a pleased assurance that he
+had done the trick well.</p>
+<p>At this moment the attention of the audience
+was drawn to the entrance, where there seemed
+to be some hitch. Tomaso snapped his whip
+sharply, and shouted savage orders, but nothing
+came forth. Then the big Swede, with an
+agitated air, snatched up the trainer&#8217;s pitchfork,
+which stood close at hand in case of emergency,
+made swift passes at the empty doorway, and
+jumped back. The audience was lifted fairly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span>
+to its feet with excitement. What monster could
+it be that was giving so much trouble? The
+next moment, while Tomaso&#8217;s whip hissed in
+vicious circles over his head, a plump little drab-colored
+pug-dog marched slowly out upon the
+stage, its head held arrogantly aloft. Volleys
+of laughter crackled around the arena, and the
+delighted spectators settled, tittering, back into
+their seats.</p>
+<p>The pug glanced searchingly around the
+cage, then selecting the biggest of the lions as
+a worthy antagonist, flew at his pedestal, barking
+furious challenge. The lion glanced down
+at him, looked bored at the noise, and yawned.
+Apparently disappointed, the pug turned away
+and sought another adversary. He saw King&#8217;s
+big tail hanging down beside his pedestal.
+Flinging himself upon it, he began to worry it
+as if it were a rat. The next moment the tail
+threshed vigorously, and the pug went rolling
+end over end across the stage.</p>
+<p>Picking himself up and shaking the sawdust
+from his coat, the pug growled savagely and
+curled his little tail into a tighter screw. Bristling
+with wrath, he tiptoed menacingly back
+toward the puma&#8217;s pedestal, determined to wipe
+out the indignity. This time his challenge
+was accepted. Tomaso&#8217;s whip snapped, but the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span>
+audience was too intent to hear it. The great
+puma slipped down from his pedestal, ran forward
+a few steps, and crouched.</p>
+<p>With a shrill snarl the pug rushed in. At
+the same instant the puma sprang, making a
+splendid tawny curve through the air, and
+alighted ten feet behind his antagonist&#8217;s tail.
+There he wheeled like lightning and crouched.
+But the pug, enraged at being balked of his
+vengeance, had also wheeled, and charged again
+in the same half second. In the next, he had
+the puma by the throat. With a dreadful
+screech the great beast rolled over on his side
+and stiffened out his legs. The pug drew off,
+eyed him critically to make sure that he was
+quite dead, then ran, barking shrill triumph,
+to take possession of the victim&#8217;s place. Then
+the whip cracked once more. Whereupon the
+puma got up, trotted back to his pedestal,
+mounted it, and tucked the pug protectingly
+away between his great forepaws.</p>
+<p>The applause had not quite died away when
+a towering, sandy-brown bulk appeared in the
+entrance to the cage. Erect upon its hind legs,
+and with a musket on its shoulder, it marched
+ponderously and slowly around the circle, eying
+each of the sitting beasts&mdash;except the wolf&mdash;suspiciously
+as it passed. The watchful eyes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span>
+of both Signor Tomaso and Hansen noted that
+it gave wider berth to the puma than to any of
+the others, and also that the puma&#8217;s ears, at the
+moment, were ominously flattened. Instantly
+the long whip snapped its terse admonition to
+good manners. Nothing happened, except that
+the pug, from between the puma&#8217;s legs, barked
+insolently. The sandy-brown bulk reached its
+allotted pedestal,&mdash;which was quite absurdly
+too small for it to mount,&mdash;dropped the musket
+with a clatter, fell upon all fours with a loud
+<i>whoof</i> of relief, and relapsed into a bear.</p>
+<p>The stage now set to his satisfaction, Signor
+Tomaso advanced to the centre of it. He
+snapped his whip, and uttered a sharp cry
+which the audience doubtless took for purest
+Italian. Immediately the animals all descended
+from their pedestals, and circled solemnly around
+him in a series of more or less intricate evolutions,
+all except the bear, who, not having yet
+been initiated into this beast quadrille, kept his
+place and looked scornful. At another signal
+the evolutions ceased, and all the beasts, except
+one of the lions, hurried back to their places.
+The lion, with the bashful air of a boy who gets
+up to &#8220;speak his piece&#8221; at a school examination,
+lingered in the middle of the stage. A
+rope was brought. The Swede took one end
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+of it, the attendant who had brought it took
+the other, and between them they began to
+swing it, very slowly, as a great skipping-rope.
+At an energetic command from Signor Tomaso
+the lion slipped into the swinging circle, and
+began to skip in a ponderous and shamefaced
+fashion. The house thundered applause. For
+perhaps half a minute the strange performance
+continued, the whip snapping rhythmically with
+every descent of the rope. Then all at once,
+as if he simply could not endure it for another
+second, the lion bolted, head down, clambered
+upon his pedestal, and shut his eyes hard as if
+expecting a whipping. But as nothing happened
+except a roar of laughter from the seats,
+he opened them again and glanced from side
+to side complacently, as if to say, &#8220;Didn&#8217;t I
+get out of that neatly?&#8221;</p>
+<p>The next act was a feat of teetering. A
+broad and massive teeter-board was brought
+in, and balanced across a support about two
+feet high. The sulky leopard, at a sign from
+Tomaso, slouched up to it, pulled one end to
+the ground, and mounted. At the centre he
+balanced cautiously for a moment till it tipped,
+then crept on to the other end, and crouched
+there, holding it down as if his very life depended
+on it. Immediately the white goat dropped from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span>
+his pedestal, minced daintily over, skipped up
+upon the centre of the board, and mounted to
+the elevated end. His weight was not sufficient
+to lift, or even to disturb, the leopard, who kept
+the other end anchored securely. But the goat
+seemed to like his high and conspicuous position,
+for he maintained it with composure and
+stared around with great condescension upon the
+other beasts.</p>
+<p>The goat having been given time to demonstrate
+his unfitness for the task he had undertaken,
+Tomaso&#8217;s whip cracked again. Instantly
+King descended from his pedestal, ran
+over to the teeter-board, and mounted it at the
+centre. The goat, unwilling to be dispossessed
+of his high place, stamped and butted at him
+indignantly, but with one scornful sweep of his
+great paw the puma brushed him off to the sawdust,
+and took his place at the end of the board.
+Snarling and clutching at the cleats, the leopard
+was hoisted into the air, heavily outweighed.
+The crowd applauded; but the performance,
+obviously, was not yet perfect. Now came the
+white goat&#8217;s opportunity. He hesitated a moment,
+till he heard a word from Tomaso. Then
+he sprang once more upon the centre of the
+board, faced King, and backed up inch by inch
+towards the leopard till the latter began to descend.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+At this point of balance the white goat
+had one forefoot just on the pivot of the board.
+With a dainty, dancing motion, and a proud
+tossing of his head, he now threw his weight
+slowly backward and forward. The great teeter
+worked to perfection. Signor Tomaso was kept
+bowing to round after round of applause while
+the leopard, the goat, and King returned proudly
+to their places.</p>
+<p>After this, four of the red-and-yellow uniformed
+attendants ran in, each carrying a large
+hoop. They stationed themselves at equal distances
+around the circumference of the cage,
+holding the hoops out before them at a height
+of about four feet from the ground. At the
+command of Tomaso, the animals all formed
+in procession&mdash;though not without much cracking
+of the whip and vehement command&mdash;and
+went leaping one after the other through the
+hoops&mdash;all except the pug, who tried in vain
+to jump so high, and the bear, who, not knowing
+how to jump at all, simply marched around and
+pretended not to see that the hoops were there.
+Then four other hoops, covered with white
+paper, were brought in, and head first through
+them the puma led the way. When it came
+to the bear&#8217;s turn, the whip cracked a special
+signal. Whereupon, instead of ignoring the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+hoop as he had done before, he stuck his head
+through it and marched off with it hanging on
+his neck. All four hoops he gathered up in this
+way, and, retiring with them to his place, stood
+shuffling restlessly and grunting with impatience
+until he was relieved of the awkward burden.</p>
+<p>A moment later four more hoops were handed
+to the attendants. They looked like the first
+lot; but the attendants took them with hooked
+handles of iron and held them out at arm&#8217;s length.
+Touched with a match, they burst instantly into
+leaping yellow flames; whereupon all the beasts,
+except King, stirred uneasily on their pedestals.
+The whip snapped with emphasis; and all the
+beasts&mdash;except King, who sat eying the flames
+tranquilly, and the bear, who whined his disapproval,
+but knew that he was not expected to
+take part in this act&mdash;formed again in procession,
+and ran at the flaming hoops as if to jump
+through them as before. But each, on arriving
+at a hoop, crouched flat and scurried under it
+like a frightened cat&mdash;except the white goat,
+which pranced aside and capered past derisively.
+Pretending to be much disappointed in them,
+Signor Tomaso ordered them all back to their
+places, and, folding his arms, stood with his
+head lowered as if wondering what to do about
+it. Upon this, King descended proudly from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span>
+his pedestal and approached the blazing terrors.
+With easiest grace and nonchalance he lifted
+his lithe body, and went bounding lightly
+through the hoops, one after the other. The
+audience stormed its applause. Twice around
+this terrifying circuit he went, as indifferent to
+the writhing flames as if they had been so much
+grass waving in the wind. Then he stopped
+abruptly, turned his head, and looked at Tomaso
+in expectation. The latter came up, fondled
+his ears, and assured him that he had done
+wonders. Then King returned to his place,
+elation bristling in his whiskers.</p>
+<p>While the flaming hoops were being rushed
+from the ring and the audience was settling
+down again to the quiet of unlimited expectation,
+a particularly elaborate act was being prepared.
+A massive wooden stand, with shelves
+and seats at various heights, was brought in.
+Signor Tomaso, coiling the lash of his whip and
+holding the heavy handle, with its loaded butt, as
+a sceptre, took his place on a somewhat raised
+seat at the centre of the frame. Hansen, with his
+pitchfork in one hand and a whip like Tomaso&#8217;s
+in the other, drew nearer; and the audience,
+with a thrill, realized that something more than
+ordinarily dangerous was on the cards. The
+tiger came and stretched itself at full length before
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span>
+Tomaso, who at once appropriated him as
+a footstool. The bear and the biggest of the
+lions posted themselves on either side of their
+master, rearing up like the armorial supporters
+of some illustrious escutcheon, and resting their
+mighty forepaws apparently on their master&#8217;s
+shoulders, though in reality on two narrow
+little shelves placed there for the purpose.
+Another lion came and laid his huge head on
+Tomaso&#8217;s knees, as if doing obeisance. By this
+time all the other animals were prowling about
+the stand, peering this way and that, as if trying
+to remember their places; and the big Swede
+was cracking his whip briskly, with curt, deep-toned
+commands, to sharpen up their memories.
+Only King seemed quite clear as to what he had
+to do&mdash;which was to lay his tawny body along the
+shelf immediately over the heads of the lion and
+the bear; but as he mounted the stand from the
+rear, his ears went back and he showed a curious
+reluctance to fulfil his part. Hansen&#8217;s keen eyes
+noted this at once, and his whip snapped emphatically
+in the air just above the great puma&#8217;s
+nose. Still King hesitated. The lion paid no
+attention whatever, but the bear glanced up with
+reddening eyes and a surly wagging of his head.
+It was all a slight matter, too slight to catch the
+eye or the uncomprehending thoughts of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+audience. But a grave, well-dressed man, with
+copper-colored face, high cheek-bones and
+straight, coal-black hair, who sat close to the
+front, turned to a companion and said:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Those men are good trainers, but they don&#8217;t
+know everything about pumas. <i>We</i> know that
+there is a hereditary feud between the pumas
+and the bears, and that when they come together
+there&#8217;s apt to be trouble.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The speaker was a full-blooded Sioux, and a
+graduate of one of the big Eastern universities.
+He leaned forward with a curious fire in his deep-set,
+piercing eyes, as King, unwillingly obeying
+the mandates of the whip, dropped down and
+stretched out upon his shelf, his nervous forepaws
+not more than a foot above the bear&#8217;s head.
+His nostrils were twitching as if they smelled
+something unutterably distasteful, and his thick
+tail looked twice its usual size. The Sioux,
+who, alone of all present, understood these signs,
+laid an involuntary hand of warning upon his
+companion&#8217;s knee.</p>
+<p>Just what positions the other animals were
+about to take will never be known. King&#8217;s
+sinews tightened. &#8220;Ha-ow!&#8221; grunted the
+Sioux, reverting in his excitement to his ancient
+utterance. There was a lightning sweep of
+King&#8217;s paw, a shout from Hansen, a <i>wah</i> of surprise
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
+and pain from the bear. King leaped
+back to the top of the stand to avoid the expected
+counter-stroke. But not against him did
+the bear&#8217;s rage turn. The maddened beast
+seemed to conclude that his master had betrayed
+him. With a roar he struck at Tomaso with
+the full force of his terrible forearm. Tomaso
+was in the very act of leaping forward from his
+seat, when the blow caught him full on the
+shoulder, shattering the bones, ripping the whole
+side out of his coat, and hurling him senseless
+to the floor.</p>
+<p>The change in the scene was instantaneous
+and appalling. Most of the animals, startled,
+and dreading immediate punishment, darted for
+their pedestals,&mdash;<i>any</i> pedestals that they found
+within reach,&mdash;and fought savagely for the possession
+of the first they came to. The bear fell
+furiously upon the body of Tomaso. Cries and
+shrieks arose from the spectators. Hansen
+rushed to the rescue, his fork clutched in both
+hands. Attendants, armed with forks or iron
+bars, seemed to spring up from nowhere. But
+before any one could reach the spot, an appalling
+screech tore across the uproar, and King&#8217;s
+yellow body, launched from the top of the stand,
+fell like a thunderbolt upon the bear&#8217;s back.</p>
+<p>The shock rolled the bear clean over. While
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+he was clawing about wildly, in the effort to
+grapple with his assailant, Hansen dragged
+aside the still unconscious Tomaso, and two attendants
+carried him hurriedly from the stage.</p>
+<p>Audience and stage alike were now in a sort
+of frenzy. Animals were fighting here and
+there in tangled groups; but for the moment
+all eyes were riveted on the deadly struggle
+which occupied the centre of the stage.</p>
+<p>For all that he had less than a quarter the
+weight and nothing like a quarter the bulk of
+his gigantic adversary, the puma, through the
+advantage of his attack, was having much the
+best of the fight. Hansen had no time for sentiment,
+no time to concern himself as to whether
+his chief was dead or alive. His business was
+to save valuable property by preventing the
+beasts from destroying each other. It mattered
+not to him, now, that King had come so effectively
+to Tomaso&#8217;s rescue. Prodding him mercilessly
+with his fork, and raining savage blows
+upon his head, he strove, in a cold rage, to
+drive him off; but in vain. But other keepers,
+meanwhile, had run in with ropes and iron bars.
+A few moments more and both combatants were
+securely lassoed. Then they were torn apart
+by main force, streaming with blood. Blinded
+by blankets thrown over their heads, and hammered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+into something like subjection, they were
+dragged off at a rush and slammed unceremoniously
+into their dens. With them out of the
+way, it was a quick matter to dispose of the
+other fights, though not till after the white goat
+had been killed to satisfy that ancient grudge
+of the leopard&#8217;s, and the wolf had been cruelly
+mauled for having refused to give up his pedestal
+to one of the excited lions. Only the pug
+had come off unscathed, having had the presence
+of mind to dart under the foundations of
+the frame at the first sign of trouble, and stay
+there. When all the other animals had been
+brought to their senses and driven off, one by
+one, to their cages, he came forth from his hiding
+and followed dejectedly, the curl quite taken
+out of his confident tail. Then word went
+round among the spectators that Tomaso was
+not dead&mdash;that, though badly injured, he would
+recover; and straightway they calmed down,
+with a complacent sense of having got the value
+of their money. The great cage was taken
+apart and carried off. The stage was speedily
+transformed. And two trick comedians, with
+slippers that flapped a foot beyond their toes,
+undertook to wipe out the memory of what had
+happened.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+<p>The show was touring the larger towns of
+the Northwest. On the following day it
+started, leaving Tomaso behind in hospital,
+with a shattered shoulder and bitter wrath in
+his heart. At the next town, Hansen took
+Tomaso&#8217;s place, but, for two reasons, with a
+sadly maimed performance. He had not yet
+acquired sufficient control of the animals to
+dare all Tomaso&#8217;s acts; and the troupe was
+lacking some of its most important performers.
+The proud white goat was dead. The bear,
+the wolf, and one of the lions were laid up with
+their wounds. And as for the great puma,
+though <i>he</i> had come off with comparatively
+little hurt, his temper had apparently been quite
+transformed. Hansen could do nothing with
+him. Whether it was that he was sick for
+Tomaso, whom he adored, or that he stewed
+in a black rage over the blows and pitchforkings,
+hitherto unknown to him, no one could
+surely say. He would do nothing but crouch,
+brooding, sullen and dangerous, at the back of
+his cage. Hansen noted the green light flickering
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+fitfully across his pale, wide eyes, and
+prudently refrained from pressing matters.</p>
+<p>He was right. For, as a matter of fact, it
+was against the big Swede exclusively, and
+not against man in general, that King was
+nursing his grudge. In a dim way it had got
+into his brain that Hansen had taken sides with
+the bear against him and Tomaso, and he
+thirsted for vengeance. At the same time, he
+felt that Tomaso had deserted him. Day by
+day, as he brooded, the desire for escape&mdash;a
+desire which he had never known before&mdash;grew
+in his heart. Vaguely, perhaps, he
+dreamed that he would go and find Tomaso.
+At any rate, he would go&mdash;somewhere, anywhere,
+away from this world which had turned
+unfriendly to him. When this feeling grew
+dominant, he would rise suddenly and go
+prowling swiftly up and down behind the bars
+of his cage like a wild creature just caught.</p>
+<p>Curiously enough&mdash;for it is seldom indeed
+that Fate responds to the longing of such exiles
+from the wild&mdash;his opportunity came.
+Late at night the show reached a little town
+among the foothills. The train had been delayed
+for hours. The night was dark. Everything
+was in confusion, and all nerves on edge.
+The short road from the station to the field
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+where the tents were to be set up was in bad
+repair, or had never been really a road. It ran
+along the edge of a steep gully. In the darkness
+one wheel of the van containing King&#8217;s cage
+dropped to the hub into a yawning rut. Under
+the violence of the jolt a section of the edge
+of the bank gave way and crashed down to
+the bottom of the gully, dragging with it the
+struggling and screaming horses. The cage
+roof was completely smashed in.</p>
+<p>To King&#8217;s eyes the darkness was but a
+twilight, pleasant and convenient. He saw
+an opening big enough to squeeze through;
+and beyond it, beyond the wild shouting and
+the flares of swung lanterns, a thick wood dark
+beneath the paler sky. Before any one could
+get down to the wreck, he was out and
+free and away. Crouching with belly to the
+earth, he ran noiselessly, and gained the
+woods before any one knew he had escaped.
+Straight on he ran, watchful but swift, heading
+for the places where the silence lay
+heaviest. Within five minutes Hansen had
+half the men of the show, with ropes, forks,
+and lanterns, hot on the trail. Within fifteen
+minutes, half the male population of
+the town was engaged in an enthusiastic
+puma hunt. But King was already far away,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+and making progress that would have been
+impossible to an ordinary wild puma. His
+life among men had taught him nothing about
+trees, so he had no unfortunate instinct to
+climb one and hide among the branches to
+see what his pursuers would be up to. His
+idea of getting away&mdash;and, perhaps, of finding
+his vanished master&mdash;was to keep right
+on. And this he did, though of course not
+at top speed, the pumas not being a race of
+long-winded runners like the wolves. In an
+hour or two he reached a rocky and precipitous
+ridge, quite impassable to men except
+by day. This he scaled with ease, and at the
+top, in the high solitude, felt safe enough to
+rest a little while. Then he made his way
+down the long, ragged western slopes, and at
+daybreak came into a wild valley of woods and
+brooks.</p>
+<p>By this time King was hungry. But game
+was plentiful. After two or three humiliating
+failures with rabbits&mdash;owing to his inexperience
+in stalking anything more elusive than
+a joint of dead mutton, he caught a fat wood-chuck,
+and felt his self-respect return. Here
+he might have been tempted to halt, although,
+to be sure, he saw no sign of Tomaso, but
+beyond the valley, still westward, he saw mountains,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span>
+which drew him strangely. In particular,
+one uplifted peak, silver and sapphire as
+the clear day, and soaring supreme over the
+jumble of lesser summits, attracted him. He
+knew now that that was where he was going,
+and thither he pressed on with singleness of
+purpose, delaying only when absolutely necessary,
+to hunt or to sleep. The cage, the stage,
+the whip, Hansen, the bear, even the proud
+excitement of the flaming hoops, were swiftly
+fading to dimness in his mind, overwhelmed
+by the inrush of new, wonderful impressions.
+At last, reaching the lower, granite-ribbed flanks
+of old White Face itself, he began to feel curiously
+content, and no longer under the imperative
+need of haste.</p>
+<p>Here it was good hunting. Yet, though well
+satisfied, he made no effort to find himself a
+lair to serve as headquarters, but kept gradually
+working his way onward up the mountain.
+The higher he went, the more content he grew,
+till even his craving for his master was forgotten.
+Latent instincts began to spring into life,
+and he lapsed into the movements and customs
+of the wild puma. Only when he came upon a
+long, massive footprint in the damp earth by a
+spring, or a wisp of pungent-smelling fur on
+the rubbed and clawed bark of a tree, memory
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span>
+would rush back upon him fiercely. His ears
+would flatten down, his eyes would gleam green,
+his tail would twitch, and crouching to earth he
+would glare into every near-by thicket for a
+sight of his mortal foe. He had not yet learned
+to discriminate perfectly between an old scent
+and a new.</p>
+<p>About this time a hunter from the East, who
+had his camp a little farther down the valley,
+was climbing White Face on the trail of a large
+grizzly. He was lithe of frame, with a lean,
+dark, eager face, and he followed the perilous
+trail with a lack of prudence which showed a
+very inadequate appreciation of grizzlies. The
+trail ran along a narrow ledge cresting an
+abrupt but bushy steep. At the foot of the
+steep, crouched along a massive branch and
+watching for game of some sort to pass by, lay
+the big puma. Attracted by a noise above
+his head he glanced up, and saw the hunter.
+It was certainly not Tomaso, but it looked like
+him; and the puma&#8217;s piercing eyes grew almost
+benevolent. He had no ill-feeling to any man
+but the Swede.</p>
+<p>Other ears than those of the puma had heard
+the unwary hunter&#8217;s footsteps. The grizzly had
+caught them and stopped to listen. Yes, he
+was being followed. In a rage he wheeled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
+about and ran back noiselessly to see who it was
+that could dare such presumption. Turning a
+shoulder of rock, he came face to face with the
+hunter, and at once, with a deep, throaty grunt,
+he charged.</p>
+<p>The hunter had not even time to get his
+heavy rifle to his shoulder. He fired once,
+point blank, from the hip. The shot took effect
+somewhere, but in no vital spot evidently, for it
+failed to check, even for one second, that terrific
+charge. To meet the charge was to be blasted
+out of being instantly. There was but one
+way open. The hunter sprang straight out
+from the ledge with a lightning vision of thick,
+soft-looking bushes far below him. The slope
+was steep, but by no means perpendicular, and
+he struck in a thicket which broke the full
+shock of the fall. His rifle flew far out of his
+hands. He rebounded, clutching at the bushes;
+but he could not check himself. Rolling over
+and over, his eyes and mouth choked with dust
+and leaves, he bumped on down the slope, and
+brought up at last, dazed but conscious, in a
+swampy hole under the roots of a huge over-leaning
+tree.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-064.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 297px; height: 457px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 297px;'>
+&#8220;Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet distant, crouched, ready to spring, the biggest puma he had ever seen.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span></div>
+<p>Striving to clear his eyes and mouth, his
+first realization was that he could not lift his
+left arm. The next, that he seemed to have
+jumped from the frying-pan into the fire. His
+jaws set themselves desperately, as he drew the
+long hunting-knife from his belt and struggled
+up to one knee, resolved to at least make his
+last fight a good one. Almost over his head,
+on a limb not six feet distant, crouched, ready
+to spring, the biggest puma he had ever seen.
+At this new confronting of doom his brain
+cleared, and his sinews seemed to stretch with
+fresh courage. It was hopeless, of course, as
+he knew, but his heart refused to recognize the
+fact. Then he noted with wonder that not at
+him at all was the puma looking, but far over
+his head. He followed that look, and again his
+heart sank, this time quite beyond the reach of
+hope. There was the grizzly coming headlong
+down the slope, foam slavering from his red
+jaws.</p>
+<p>Bewildered, and feeling like a rat in a hole,
+the hunter tried to slip around the base of the
+tree, desperately hoping to gain some post of
+vantage whence to get home at least two or
+three good blows before the end. But the moment
+he moved, the grizzly fairly hurled himself
+downwards. The hunter jumped aside and
+wheeled, with his knife lifted, his disabled left
+arm against the tree trunk. But in that same
+instant, a miracle! Noiselessly the puma&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+tawny length shot out overhead and fell upon
+the bear in the very mid-rush of the charge.</p>
+<p>At once it seemed as if some cataclysmic
+upheaval were in progress. The air, as it were,
+went mad with screeches, yells, snarls, and
+enormous thick gruntings. The bushes went
+down on every side. Now the bear was on
+top, now the puma. They writhed over and
+over, and for some seconds the hunter stared
+with stupefaction. Then he recovered his wits.
+He saw that the puma, for some inexplicable
+reason, had come to his help. But he saw, also,
+that the gigantic grizzly must win. Instead of
+slipping off and leaving his ally to destruction,
+he ran up, waited a moment for the perfect opportunity,
+and drove his knife to the hilt into
+the very centre of the back of the bear&#8217;s neck,
+just where it joined the skull. Then he sprang
+aside.</p>
+<p>Strangely the noise died away. The huge
+bulk of the grizzly sank slowly into a heap,
+the puma still raking it with the eviscerating
+weapons of his hinder claws. A moment more
+and he seemed to realize that he had achieved
+a sudden triumph. Bleeding, hideously mangled,
+but still, apparently, full of fighting vigor,
+he disengaged himself from the unresisting mass
+and looked around him proudly. His wild eyes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+met those of the hunter, and the hunter had an
+anxious moment. But the great beast looked
+away again at once, and seemed, in fact, to
+forget all about the man&#8217;s existence. He lay
+down and commenced licking assiduously at
+his wounds. Filled with astonishment, and just
+now beginning to realize the anguish in his
+broken arm, the hunter stole discreetly away.</p>
+<p>After an hour or two the puma arose, rather
+feebly, passed the body of his slain foe without
+a glance, and clambered up the slope to the
+ledge. He wanted a place of refuge now, a
+retreat that would be safe and cool and dark.
+Up and up he followed the winding of that narrow
+trail, and came out at last upon a rocky
+platform before a black-mouthed cave. He
+knew well enough that he had killed the owner
+of the cave, so he entered without hesitation.</p>
+<p>Here, for two days, he lay in concealment,
+licking his wounds. He had no desire to eat;
+but two or three times, because the wounds
+fevered him, he came forth and descended the
+trail a little way to where he had seen a cold
+spring bubbling from the rocks. His clean
+blood, in that high, clean air, quickly set itself
+to the healing of the hurts, and strength flowed
+back swiftly into his torn sinews. At dawn of
+the third day he felt himself suddenly hungry,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span>
+and realizing that he must seek some small game,
+even though not yet ready for any difficult hunting,
+he crept forth, just as the first thin glory of
+rose light came washing into the cave. But
+before he started down the trail he paused, and
+stood staring, with some dim half memory, out
+across the transparent, hollow spaces, the jumbled
+hilltops, misty, gray-green forests, and steel-bright
+loops of water to which he had at last
+come home.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_MONARCH_OF_PARK_BARREN' id='THE_MONARCH_OF_PARK_BARREN'></a>
+<h2>THE MONARCH OF PARK BARREN</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span></div>
+<h2>The Monarch of Park Barren</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>From the cold spring lakes and sombre
+deeps of spruce forest, over which the
+bald granite peak of Old Saugamauk kept endless
+guard, came reports of a moose of more
+than royal stature, whose antlers beggared all
+records for symmetry and spread. From a
+home-coming lumber cruiser here, a wandering
+Indian there, the word came straggling in, till
+the settlements about the lower reaches of the
+river began to believe there might be some truth
+behind the wild tales. Then&mdash;for it was autumn,
+the season of gold and crimson falling
+leaves, and battles on the lake-shores under the
+white full moon&mdash;there followed stories of
+other moose seen fleeing in terror, with torn
+flanks and bleeding shoulders; and it was realized
+that the prowess of the great moose bull
+was worthy of his stature and his adornment.
+Apparently he was driving all the other bulls
+off the Saugamauk ranges.</p>
+<p>By this time the matter became of interest
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+to the guides. The stories gathered in from
+different quarters, so it was hard to guess just
+where the gigantic stranger was most likely to
+be found. To north and northeast of the mountain
+went the two Armstrongs, seeking the
+stranger&#8217;s trail; while to south and southeastward
+explored the Crimmins boys. If real, the
+giant bull had to be located; if a myth, he had
+to be exploded before raising impossible hopes
+in the hearts of visiting sportsmen.</p>
+<p>Then suddenly arrived corroboration of all
+the stories. It came from Charley Crimmins.
+He was able to testify with conviction that the
+giant bull was no figment of Indian&#8217;s imagination
+or lumberman&#8217;s inventive humor. For it
+was he whose search had been successful.</p>
+<p>In fact, he might have been content to have
+it just a shade less overwhelmingly successful.
+That there is such a thing as an embarrassment
+of success was borne in upon him when he
+found himself jumping madly for the nearest
+tree, with a moose that seemed to have the
+stature of an elephant crashing through the
+thickets close behind him. He reached the
+tree just in time to swing well up among its
+branches. Then the tree quivered as the furious
+animal flung his bulk against it. Crimmins
+had lost his rifle in the flight. He could do
+nothing but sit shivering on his branch, making
+remarks so uncomplimentary that the great bull,
+if he could have appreciated them, would probably
+have established himself under that tree
+till vengeance was accomplished. But not
+knowing that he had been insulted, he presently
+grew tired of snorting at his captive, and wandered
+off through the woods in search of more
+exciting occupation. Then, indignant beyond
+words, Charley descended from his retreat, and
+took his authoritative report in to the Settlements.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-072.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 282px; height: 479px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 282px;'>
+&#8220;He reached the tree just in time to swing well up among the branches.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span></div>
+<p>At first it was thought that there would be
+great hunting around Old Saugamauk, till
+those tremendous antlers should fall a prize
+to some huntsman not only lucky but rich.
+For no one who could not pay right handsomely
+for the chance might hope to be guided
+to the range where such an unequalled trophy
+was to be won. But when the matter, in all
+its authenticated details, came to the ears of
+Uncle Adam, dean of the guides of that region,
+he said &#8220;<i>No</i>&#8221; with an emphasis that left no
+room for argument. There should be no hunting
+around the slopes of Saugamauk for several
+seasons. If the great bull was the terror they
+made him out to be, then he had driven all the
+other bulls from his range, and there was nothing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
+to be hunted but his royal self. &#8220;Well,&#8221;
+decreed the far-seeing old guide, &#8220;we&#8217;ll let him
+be for a bit, till his youngsters begin to grow
+up like him. Then there&#8217;ll be no heads in all
+the rest of New Brunswick like them that comes
+from Old Saugamauk.&#8221; This decree was accepted,
+the New Brunswick guides being among
+those who are wise enough to cherish the golden-egged
+goose.</p>
+<p>In the course of that season the giant moose
+was seen several times by guides and woodsmen&mdash;but
+usually from a distance, as the inconsiderate
+impetuosity of his temper was not favorable
+to close or calm observation. The only
+people who really knew him were those who,
+like Charley Crimmins, had looked down upon
+his grunting wrath from the branches of a substantial
+tree.</p>
+<p>Upon certain important details, however, all
+observers agreed. The stranger (for it was
+held that, driven by some southward wandering
+instinct, he had come down from the wild
+solitudes of the Gasp&eacute; Peninsula) was reckoned
+to be a good eight inches taller at the shoulders
+than any other moose of New Brunswick record,
+and several hundredweight heavier. His antlers,
+whose symmetry and palmation seemed
+perfect, were estimated to have a spread of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
+sixty inches at least. That was the conservative
+estimate of Uncle Adam, who had made
+his observations with remarkable composure
+from a tree somewhat less lofty and sturdy
+than he would have chosen had he had the
+time for choice.</p>
+<p>In color the giant was so dark that his back
+and flanks looked black except in the strongest
+sunlight. His mighty head, with long, deeply
+overhanging muzzle, was of a rich brown; while
+the under parts of his body, and the inner surfaces
+of his long, straight legs, were of a rusty
+fawn color. His &#8220;bell&#8221;&mdash;as the shaggy appendix
+that hangs from the neck of a bull
+moose, a little below the throat, is called&mdash;was
+of unusual development, and the coarse hair
+adorning it peculiarly glossy. To bring down
+such a magnificent prize, and to carry off such
+a trophy as that unmatched head and antlers,
+the greatest sportsmen of America would have
+begrudged no effort or expense. But though
+the fame of the wonderful animal was cunningly
+allowed to spread to the ears of all sportsmen,
+its habitat seemed miraculously elusive. It
+was heard of on the Upsalquitch, the Nipisiguit,
+the Dungarvan, the Little Sou&#8217;west, but
+never, by some strange chance, in the country
+around Old Saugamauk. Visiting sportsmen
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span>
+hunted, spent money, dreamed dreams, followed
+great trails and brought down splendid heads,
+all over the Province; but no stranger with a
+rifle was allowed to see the proud antlers of
+the monarch of Saugamauk.</p>
+<p>The right of the splendid moose to be called
+the Monarch of Saugamauk was settled beyond
+all question one moonlight night when
+the surly old bear who lived in a crevasse far
+up under the stony crest of the mountain came
+down and attempted to dispute it. The wild
+kindreds, as a rule, are most averse to unnecessary
+quarrels. Unless their food or their mates
+are at stake, they will fight only under extreme
+provocation, or when driven to bay. They are
+not ashamed to run away, rather than press
+matters too far and towards a doubtful issue.
+A bull moose and a bear are apt to give each
+other a wide berth, respecting each other&#8217;s
+prowess. But there are exceptions to all rules,
+especially where bears, the most individual of
+our wild cousins, are concerned. And this
+bear was in a particularly savage mood. Just
+in the mating season he had lost his mate, who
+had been shot by an Indian. The old bear did
+not know what had happened to her, but he
+was ready to avenge her upon any one who
+might cross his path.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span></p>
+<p>Unluckily for him, it was the great moose
+who crossed his path; and the luck was all
+Charley Crimmins&#8217;s, who chanced to be the
+spectator of what happened there beside the
+moonlit lake.</p>
+<p>Charley was on his way over to the head
+of the Nipisiguit, when it occurred to him that
+he would like to get another glimpse of the
+great beast who had so ignominiously discomfited
+him. Peeling a sheet of bark from
+the nearest white birch, he twisted himself a
+&#8220;moose-call,&#8221; then climbed into the branches
+of a willow which spread out over the edge of
+the shining lake. From this concealment he
+began to utter persuasively the long, uncouth,
+melancholy call by which the moose cow summons
+her mate.</p>
+<p>Sometimes these vast northern solitudes seem,
+for hours together, as if they were empty of all
+life. It is as if a wave of distrust had passed
+simultaneously over all the creatures of the wild.
+At other times the lightest occasion suffices to
+call life out of the stillness. Crimmins had not
+sounded more than twice his deceptive call,
+when the bushes behind the strip of beech
+crackled sharply. But it was not the great bull
+that stepped forth into the moonlight. It was
+a cow moose. She came out with no effort
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+at concealment, and walked up and down
+the beach, angrily looking for her imagined
+rival.</p>
+<p>When the uneasy animal&#8217;s back was towards
+him, Crimmins called again, a short, soft call.
+The cow jumped around as if she had been
+struck, and the stiff hair along her neck stood
+up with jealous rage. But there was no rival
+anywhere in sight, and she stood completely
+mystified, shaking her ungainly head, peering
+into the dark undergrowth, and snorting tempestuously
+as if challenging the invisible rival
+to appear. Then suddenly her angry ridge of
+hair sank down, she seemed to shrink together
+upon herself, and with a convulsive bound she
+sprang away from the dark undergrowth, landing
+with a splash in the shallow water along
+shore. At the same instant the black branches
+were burst apart, and a huge bear, forepaws upraised
+and jaws wide open, launched himself
+forth into the open.</p>
+<p>Disappointed at missing his first spring, the
+bear rushed furiously upon his intended victim,
+but the cow, for all her apparent awkwardness,
+was as agile as a deer. Barely eluding
+his rush, she went shambling up the shore at
+a terrific pace, plunged into the woods, and
+vanished. The bear checked himself at the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span>
+water&#8217;s edge, and turned, holding his nose high
+in the air, as if disdaining to acknowledge that
+he had been foiled.</p>
+<p>Crimmins hesitatingly raised his rifle. Should
+he bag this bear, or should he wait and sound
+his call again a little later, in the hope of yet
+summoning the great bull? As he hesitated,
+and the burly black shape in the moonlight also
+stood hesitating, the thickets rustled and parted
+almost beneath him, and the mysterious bull
+strode forth with his head held high.</p>
+<p>He had come in answer to what he thought
+was the summons of his mate; but when he saw
+the bear, his rage broke all bounds. He doubtless
+concluded that the bear had driven his mate
+away. With a bawling roar he thundered down
+upon the intruder.</p>
+<p>The bear, as we have seen, was in no mood
+to give way. His small eyes glowed suddenly
+red with vengeful fury, as he wheeled and gathered
+himself, half crouching upon his haunches,
+to meet the tremendous attack. In this attitude
+all his vast strength was perfectly poised,
+ready for use in any direction. The moose,
+had he been attacking a rival of his own kind,
+would have charged with antlers down, but
+against all other enemies the weapons he relied
+upon were his gigantic hoofs, edged like chisels.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
+As he reached his sullenly waiting antagonist
+he reared on his hind-legs, towering like a black
+rock about to fall and crush whatever was in
+its path. Like pile-drivers his fore-hoofs struck
+downwards, one closely following the other.</p>
+<p>The bear swung aside as lightly as a weasel,
+and eluded, but only by a hair&#8217;s breadth, that
+destructive stroke. As he wheeled he delivered
+a terrific, swinging blow, with his armed forepaw,
+upon his assailant&#8217;s shoulder.</p>
+<p>The blow was a fair one. Any ordinary
+moose bull would have gone down beneath it,
+with his shoulder-joint shattered to splinters.
+But this great bull merely staggered, and stood
+for a second in amazement. Then he whipped
+about and darted upon the bear with a sort of
+hoarse scream, his eyes flashing with a veritable
+madness. He neither reared to strike, nor lowered
+his antlers to gore, but seemed intent upon
+tearing the foe with his teeth, as a mad horse
+might. At the sight of such resistless fury
+Crimmins involuntarily tightened his grip on
+his branch and muttered: &#8220;That ain&#8217;t no <i>moose</i>!
+It&#8217;s a&mdash;&#8221; But before he could finish his comparison,
+astonishment stopped him. The bear,
+unable with all his strength and weight to withstand
+the shock of that straight and incredibly
+swift charge, had been rolled over and over
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+down the gentle slope of the beach. At the
+same moment the moose, blinded by his rage
+and unable to check himself, had tripped over
+a log that lay hidden in the bushes, and fallen
+headlong on his nose.</p>
+<p>Utterly cowed by the overwhelming completeness
+of this overthrow, the bear was on
+his feet again before his conqueror, and scurrying
+to refuge like a frightened rat. He made
+for the nearest tree, and that nearest tree, to
+Crimmins&#8217;s dismay, was Crimmins&#8217;s. The startled
+guide swung himself hastily to a higher
+branch which stretched well out over the water.</p>
+<p>Before the great bull could recover his footing,
+the fugitive had gained a good start. But
+desperately swift though he was, the doom that
+thundered behind him was swifter, and caught
+him just as he was scrambling into the tree.
+Those implacable antlers ploughed his hind-quarters
+remorselessly, till he squealed with pain
+and terror. His convulsive scrambling raised
+him, the next instant, beyond reach of that punishment;
+but immediately the great bull reared,
+and struck him again and again with his terrible
+hoofs, almost crushing the victim&#8217;s maimed
+haunches. The bear bawled again, but maintained
+his clutch of desperation, and finally drew
+himself up to a safe height, where he crouched
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+on a branch, whimpering pitifully, while the
+victor raged below.</p>
+<p>At this moment the bear caught sight of
+Crimmins eying him steadily. To the cowed
+beast this was a new peril menacing him. With
+a frightened glance he crawled out on another
+branch, as far as it could be trusted to support
+his weight. And there he clung, huddled and
+shivering like a beaten puppy, looking from the
+man to the moose, from the moose to the man,
+as if he feared they might both jump at him
+together.</p>
+<p>But the sympathies of Crimmins were now
+entirely with the unfortunate bear, his fellow-prisoner,
+and he looked down at the arrogant
+tyrant below with a sincere desire to humble
+his pride with a rifle-bullet. But he was too
+far-seeing a guide for that. He contented himself
+with climbing a little lower till he attracted
+the giant&#8217;s attention to himself, and then dropping
+half a handful of tobacco, dry and powdery,
+into those snorting red nostrils.</p>
+<p>It was done with nice precision, just as the
+giant drew in his breath. He got the fullest
+benefit of the pungent dose; and such trivial
+matters as bears and men were instantly forgotten
+in the paroxysms which seized him.
+His roaring sneezes seemed as if they would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span>
+rend his mighty bulk asunder. He fairly stood
+upon his head, burrowing his muzzle into the
+moist leafage, as he strove to purge the exasperating
+torment from his nostrils. Crimmins
+laughed till he nearly fell out of the tree, while
+the bear forgot to whimper as he stared in terrified
+bewilderment. At last the moose stuck
+his muzzle up in the air and began backing
+blindly over stones and bushes, as if trying to
+get away from his own nose. Plump into four
+or five feet of icy water he backed. The shock
+seemed to give him an idea. He plunged his
+head under, and fell to wallowing and snorting
+and raising such a prodigious disturbance
+that all the lake shores rang with it. Then he
+bounced out upon the beach again, and dashed
+off through the woods as if a million hornets
+were at his ears.</p>
+<p>Weak with laughter, Crimmins climbed
+down out of his refuge, waved an amiable farewell
+to the stupefied bear, and resumed the trail
+for the Nipisiguit.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>For the next two years the fame of the great
+moose kept growing, adding to itself various
+wonders and extravagances till it assumed
+almost the dimensions of a myth. Sportsmen
+came from all over the world in the hope of
+bagging those unparalleled antlers. They shot
+moose, caribou, deer, and bear, and went away
+disappointed only in one regard. But at last
+they began to swear that the giant was a mere
+fiction of the New Brunswick guides, designed
+to lure the hunters. The guides, therefore,
+began to think it was time to make good and
+show their proofs. Even Uncle Adam was
+coming around to this view, when suddenly
+word came from the Crown Land Department
+at Fredericton that the renowned moose must
+not be allowed to fall to any rifle. A special
+permit had been issued for his capture and
+shipment out of the country, that he might be
+the ornament of a famous Zo&ouml;logical Park and
+a lively proclamation of what the New Brunswick
+forests could produce.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span></p>
+<p>The idea of taking the King of Saugamauk
+alive seemed amusing to the guides, and to
+Crimmins particularly. But Uncle Adam,
+whose colossal frame and giant strength seemed
+to put him peculiarly in sympathy with the
+great moose bull, declared that it could and
+should be done, for he would do it. Upon this,
+scepticism vanished, even from the smile of
+Charley Crimmins, who voiced the general
+sentiment when he said,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Uncle Adam ain&#8217;t the man to bite off any
+more than he can chew!&#8221;</p>
+<p>But Uncle Adam was in no hurry. He had
+such a respect for his adversary that he would
+not risk losing a single point in the approaching
+contest. He waited till the mating season
+and the hunting season were long past, and the
+great bull&#8217;s pride and temper somewhat cooled.
+He waited, moreover, for the day to come&mdash;along
+towards midwinter&mdash;when those titanic
+antlers should loosen at their roots, and fall off
+at the touch of the first light branch that might
+brush against them. This, the wise old woodsman
+knew, would be the hour of the King&#8217;s
+least arrogance. Then, too, the northern
+snows would be lying deep and soft and encumbering,
+over all the upland slopes whereon the
+moose loved to browse.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span></p>
+<p>Along toward mid-February word came to
+Uncle Adam that the Monarch had &#8220;yarded
+up,&#8221; as the phrase goes, on the southerly slope
+of Old Saugamauk, with three cows and their
+calves of the previous spring under his protection.
+This meant that, when the snow had
+grown too deep to permit the little herd to
+roam at will, he had chosen a sheltered area
+where the birch, poplar, and cherry, his favorite
+forage, were abundant, and there had trodden
+out a maze of deep paths which led to all
+the choicest browsing, and centred about a
+cluster of ancient firs so thick as to afford
+covert from the fiercest storms. The news
+was what the wise old woodsman had been
+waiting for. With three of his men, a pair of
+horses, a logging-sled, axes, and an unlimited
+supply of rope, he went to capture the King.</p>
+<p>It was a clear, still morning, so cold that
+the great trees snapped sharply under the
+grip of the bitter frost. The men went on
+snowshoes, leaving the teams hitched in a
+thicket on the edge of a logging road some
+three or four hundred yards from the &#8220;moose-yard.&#8221;
+The sun glittered keenly on the long
+white alleys which led this way and that at
+random through the forest. The snow, undisturbed
+and accumulating for months, was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+heaped in strange shapes over hidden bushes,
+stumps, and rocks. The tread of the snowshoes
+made a furtive crunching sound as it
+rhythmically broke the crisp surface.</p>
+<p>Far off through the stillness the great moose,
+lying with the rest of the herd in their shadowy
+covert, caught the ominous sound. He lurched
+to his feet and stood listening, while the herd
+watched him anxiously, awaiting his verdict as
+to whether that strange sound meant peril or no.</p>
+<p>For reasons which we have seen, the giant
+bull knew little of man, and that little not
+of a nature to command any great respect.
+Nevertheless, at this season of the year, his
+blood cool, his august front shorn of its
+ornament and defence, he was seized with an
+incomprehensible apprehension. After all, as
+he felt vaguely, there was an unknown menace
+about man; and his ear told him that there
+were several approaching. A few months
+earlier he would have stamped his huge
+hoofs, thrashed the bushes with his colossal
+antlers, and stormed forth to chastise the intruders.
+But now, he sniffed the sharp air,
+snorted uneasily, drooped his big ears, and
+led a rapid but dignified retreat down one of
+the deep alleys of his maze.</p>
+<p>This was exactly what Uncle Adam had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+looked for. His object was to force the herd out
+of the maze of alleys, wherein they could move
+swiftly, and drive them floundering through
+the deep, soft snow, which would wear them
+out before they could go half a mile. Spreading
+his men so widely that they commanded all
+trails by which the fugitives might return, he
+followed up the flight at a run. And he accompanied
+the pursuit with a riot of shouts and
+yells and laughter, designed to shake his quarry&#8217;s
+heart with the fear of the unusual. Wise in all
+woodcraft, Uncle Adam knew that one of the
+most daunting of all sounds, to the creatures of
+the wild, was that of human laughter, so inexplicable
+and seemingly so idle.</p>
+<p>At other times the great bull would merely
+have been enraged at this blatant clamor and
+taken it as a challenge. But now he retreated
+to the farthest corner of his maze. From this
+point there were but two paths of return, and
+along both the uproar was closing in upon him.
+Over the edge of the snow&mdash;which was almost
+breast-high to him, and deep enough to bury
+the calves, hopelessly deep, indeed, for any of
+the herd but himself to venture through&mdash;he
+gave a wistful look towards the depths of the
+cedar swamps in the valley, where he believed
+he could baffle all pursuers. Then his courage&mdash;but
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+without his autumnal fighting rage&mdash;came
+back to him. His herd was his care. He
+crowded the cows and calves between himself
+and the snow, and turned to face his pursuers
+as they came running and shouting through
+the trees.</p>
+<p>When Uncle Adam saw that the King was
+going to live up to his kingly reputation and
+fight rather than be driven off into the deep
+snow, he led the advance more cautiously till
+his forces were within twenty-five or thirty
+paces of the huddling herd. Here he paused,
+for the guardian of the herd was beginning to
+stamp ominously with his great, clacking hoofs,
+and the reddening light in his eyes showed
+that he might charge at any instant.</p>
+<p>He did not charge, however, because his
+attention was diverted by the strange action
+of the men, who had stopped their shouting
+and begun to chop trees. It amazed him to
+see the flashing axes bite savagely into the great
+trunks and send the white chips flying. The
+whole herd watched with wide eyes, curious
+and apprehensive; till suddenly a tree toppled,
+swept the hard blue sky, and came down with
+a crashing roar across one of the runways.
+The cows and calves bounded wildly, clear out
+into the snow. But the King, though his eyes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span>
+dilated with amazement, stood his ground and
+grunted angrily.</p>
+<p>A moment more and another tree, huge-limbed
+and dense, came down across the other
+runway. Two more followed, and the herd
+was cut off from its retreat. The giant bull, of
+course, with his vast stride and colossal strength,
+could have smashed his way through and over
+the barrier; but the others, to regain the safe
+mazes of the &#8220;yard,&#8221; would have had to make
+a detour through the engulfing snow.</p>
+<p>Though the King was now fairly cornered,
+Uncle Adam was puzzled to know what to do
+next. In his hesitation, he felled some more
+trees, dropping the last one so close that the
+herd was obliged to crowd back to avoid being
+struck by the falling top. This, at last, was
+too much for the King, who had never before
+known what it was to be crowded. While his
+followers plunged away in terror, burying themselves
+helplessly before they had gone a dozen
+yards, he bawled with fury and charged upon
+his tormentors.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-090.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 293px; height: 394px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 293px;'>
+&#8220;For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was able to keep up this almost incredible pace.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span></div>
+<p>Though the snow, as we have seen, came
+up to his chest, the giant&#8217;s strength and swiftness
+were such that the woodsmen were taken
+by surprise, and Uncle Adam, who was in front,
+was almost caught. In spite of his bulk, he
+turned and sprang away with the agility of a
+wildcat; but if his snowshoes had turned and
+hindered him for one half second, he would
+have been struck down and trodden to a jelly
+in the smother of snow. Seeing the imminence
+of his peril, the other woodsmen threw up
+their rifles; but Uncle Adam, though extremely
+busy for the moment, saw them out of the
+corner of his eye as he ran, and angrily ordered
+them not to shoot. He knew what he was
+about, and felt quite sure of himself, though the
+enemy was snorting at his very heels.</p>
+<p>For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull
+was able to keep up this almost incredible pace.
+Then the inexorable pull of the snow began to
+tell, even upon such thews as his, and his pace
+slackened. But his rage showed no sign of
+cooling. So, being very accommodating, Uncle
+Adam slackened his own pace correspondingly,
+that his pursuer might not be discouraged.
+And the chase went on. But it went slower,
+and slower, and slower, till at last it stopped with
+Uncle Adam still just about six feet in the lead,
+and the great moose still blind-mad, but too exhausted
+to go one foot farther. Then Uncle
+Adam chuckled softly and called for the ropes.
+There was kicking, of course, and furious lunging
+and wild snorting, but the woodsmen were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+skilful and patient, and the King of Old Saugamauk
+was conquered. In a little while he lay
+upon his side, trussed up as securely and helplessly
+as a papoose in its birch-bark carrying-cradle.
+There was nothing left of his kingship
+but to snort regal defiance, to which his captors
+offered not the slightest retort. In his bonds he
+was carried off to the settlements, on the big
+logging-sled, drawn by the patient horses whom
+he scorned.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+<p>After this ignominy, for days the King was
+submissive, with the sullen numbness of despair.
+Life for him became a succession of
+stunning shocks and roaring change. He
+would be put into strange box-prisons, which
+would straightway begin to rush terribly
+through the world with a voice of thunder.
+Through the cracks in the box he would watch
+trees and fields and hills race by in madness
+of flight. He would be taken out of the box,
+and murmuring crowds would gape at him till
+the black mane along his neck would begin to
+rise in something of his old anger. Then some
+one would drive the crowd away, and he would
+slip back into his stupor. He did not know
+which he hated most,&mdash;the roaring boxes, the
+fleeing landscapes, or the staring crowds. At
+last he came to a loud region where there were
+no trees, but only what seemed to him vast,
+towering, naked rocks, red, gray, yellow, brown,
+full of holes from which issued men in swarms.
+These terrible rocks ran in endless rows,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+and through them he came at last to a wide
+field, thinly scattered with trees. There was
+no seclusion in it, no deep, dark, shadowy hemlock
+covert to lie down in; but it was green,
+and it was spacious, and it was more or less
+quiet. So when he was turned loose in it, he
+was almost glad. He lifted his head, with a
+spark of the old arrogance returning to his
+eyes. And through dilating nostrils he drank
+the free air till his vast lungs thrilled with
+almost forgotten life.</p>
+<p>The men who had brought him to the park&mdash;this
+bleak barren he would have called it,
+had he had the faculty of thinking in terms of
+human speech, this range more fitted for the
+frugal caribou than for a ranger of the deep
+forests like himself&mdash;these men stood watching
+him curiously after they had loosed him from
+his bonds. For a few minutes he forgot all
+about them. Then his eyes fell on them,
+and a heat crept slowly into his veins as he
+looked. Slowly he began to resume his kingship.
+His eyes changed curiously, and a light,
+fiery and fearless, flamed in their depths. His
+mane began to bristle.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s time for us to get out of this. That
+fellow&#8217;s beginning to remember he has some
+old scores to settle up!&#8221; remarked the Director
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
+coolly to the head-keeper and his assistants;
+and they all stepped backwards, with a casual
+air, towards the big gate, which stood ajar to
+receive them. Just as they reached it, the old
+fire and fury surged back into the exile&#8217;s veins,
+but heated seven fold by the ignominies which
+he had undergone. With a hoarse and bawling
+roar, such as had never before been heard in
+those guarded precincts, he launched himself
+upon his gaolers. But they nimbly slipped
+through the gate and dropped the massive bars
+into their sockets.</p>
+<p>They were just in time. The next instant
+the King had hurled himself with all his
+weight upon the barrier. The sturdy ironwork
+and the panels on either side of the posts
+clanged, groaned, and even yielded a fraction
+of an inch beneath the shock. But in the rebound
+they thrust their assailant backward
+with startling violence. Bewildered, he glared
+at the obstacle, which looked so slender, yet
+was so strong to balk him of his vengeance.
+Then, jarred and aching, he withdrew haughtily
+to explore his new domain. The Director, gazing
+after him, nodded with supreme satisfaction.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Those fellows up in New Brunswick told
+no lies!&#8221; said he.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He certainly is a peach!&#8221; assented the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span>
+head-keeper heartily. &#8220;When he grows his
+new antlers, I reckon we will have to enlarge
+the park.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The great exile found his new range interesting
+to explore, and began to forget his indignation.
+Privacy it had not, for the trees at
+this season were all leafless, and there were no
+dense fir or spruce thickets into which he
+could withdraw, to look forth unseen upon
+this alien landscape. But there were certain
+rough boulders behind which he could lurk.
+And there were films of ice, and wraiths of
+thin snow in the hollows, the chill touch of
+which helped him to feel more or less at home.
+In the distance he caught sight of a range of
+those high, square rocks wherein the men dwelt;
+and hating them deeply, he turned and pressed
+on in the opposite direction over a gentle rise
+and across a little valley; till suddenly, among
+the trees, he came upon a curious barrier
+of meshed stuff, something like a gigantic
+cobweb. Through the meshes he could distinctly
+see the country beyond, and it seemed
+to be just the country he desired, more wooded
+and inviting than what he had traversed. Confidently
+he pushed upon the woven obstacle;
+but to his amazement it did not give way before
+him. He eyed it resentfully. How absurd
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span>
+that so frail a thing should venture to forbid
+him passage! He thrust upon it again,
+more brusquely, to be just as brusquely denied.
+The hot blood blazed to his head, and
+he dashed himself upon it with all his strength.
+The impenetrable but elastic netting yielded
+for a space, then sprang back with an impetuosity
+that flung him clear off his feet. He fell
+with a loud grunt, lay for a moment dismayed,
+then got up and eyed his incomprehensible
+adversary with a blank stare. He was learning
+so many strange lessons that it was difficult
+to assimilate them all at once.</p>
+<p>The following morning, when he was feasting
+on a pile of the willow and poplar forage
+which he loved, and which had appeared as if
+by magic close beside the mysterious barrier,
+he saw some men, perhaps a hundred yards
+away, throw open a section of the barrier.
+Forgetting to be angry at their intrusion on
+his range, he watched them curiously. A
+moment more, and a little herd of his own
+kind, apparently quite indifferent to the men,
+followed them into the range. He was not
+surprised at their appearance, for his nose had
+already told him there were moose about. But
+he was surprised to see them on friendly terms
+with man.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></p>
+<p>There were several cows in the herd, with a
+couple of awkward yearlings; and the King,
+much gratified, ambled forward with huge
+strides to meet them and take them under his
+gracious protection. But a moment later two
+fine young bulls came into his view, following
+the rest of the herd at a more dignified pace.
+The King stopped, lowered his mighty front,
+laid back his ears like an angry stallion, and
+grunted a hoarse warning. The stiff black hair
+along his neck slowly arose and stood straight
+up.</p>
+<p>The two young bulls stared in stupid astonishment
+at this tremendous apparition. It
+was not the fighting season, so they had no
+jealousy, and felt nothing but a cold indifference
+toward the stranger. But as he came striding
+down the field his attitude was so menacing,
+his stature so formidable, that they could not
+but realize there was trouble brewing. It was
+contrary to all traditions that they should take
+the trouble to fight in midwinter, when they had
+no antlers and their blood was sluggish. Nevertheless,
+they could not brook to be so affronted,
+as it were, in their own citadel.</p>
+<p>Their eyes began to gleam angrily, and they
+advanced, shaking their heads, to meet the insolent
+stranger. The keepers, surprised, drew
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+together close by the gate; while one of them
+left hurriedly and ran towards a building which
+stood a little way off among the trees.</p>
+<p>As the King swept down upon the herd,
+bigger and blacker than any bull they had ever
+seen before, the cows shrank away and stood
+staring placidly. They were well fed, and for
+the time indifferent to all else in their sheltered
+world. Still, a fight is a fight, and if there was
+going to be one, they were ready enough to
+look on.</p>
+<p>Alas for the right of possession when it runs
+counter to the right of might! The two young
+bulls were at home and in the right, and their
+courage was sound. But when that black
+whirlwind from the fastnesses of Old Saugamauk
+fell upon them, it seemed that they had
+no more rights at all.</p>
+<p>Side by side they confronted the onrushing
+doom. At the moment of impact, they reared
+and struck savagely with their sharp hoofs.
+But the gigantic stranger troubled himself with
+no such details. He merely fell upon them,
+like a blind but raging force, irresistible as a
+falling hillside and almost as disastrous. They
+both went down before him like calves, and
+rolled over and over, stunned and sprawling.</p>
+<p>The completeness of this victory, establishing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+his supremacy beyond cavil, should have satisfied
+the King, especially as this was not the
+mating season and there could be no question
+of rivalry. But his heart was bursting with
+injury, and his thirst for vengeance was raging
+to be glutted. As the vanquished bulls struggled
+to recover their feet, he bounded upon the
+nearest and trod him down again mercilessly.
+The other, meanwhile, fled for his life, stricken
+with shameless terror; and the exile, leaving
+his victim, went thundering in pursuit, determined
+that both should be annihilated. It was
+a terrifying sight, the black giant, mane erect,
+neck out-thrust, mouth open, eyes glaring with
+implacable fury, sweeping down upon the fugitive
+with his terrific strides.</p>
+<p>But just then, when another stride would
+have sufficed, a strange thing happened! A
+flying noose settled over the pursuer&#8217;s head,
+tightened, jerked his neck aside, and threw him
+with a violence that knocked the wind clean
+out of his raging body. While his vast lungs
+sobbed and gasped to recover the vital air,
+other nooses whipped about his legs; and
+before he could recover himself even enough
+to struggle, he was once more trussed up as he
+had been by Uncle Adam amid the snows of
+Saugamauk.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span></p>
+<p>In this ignominious position, his heart bursting
+with shame and impotence, he was left
+lying while his two battered victims were lassoed
+and led away. Since it was plain that
+the King would not suffer them to live in his
+kingdom, even as humble subjects, they were to
+be removed to some more modest domain; for
+the King, whether he deserved it or not, was to
+have the best reserved for him.</p>
+<p>It was little kingly he felt, the fettered giant,
+as he lay there panting on his side. The cows
+came up and gazed at him with a kind of placid
+scorn, till his furious snortings and the undaunted
+rage that flamed in his eyes made
+them draw back apprehensively. Then, the
+men who had overthrown him returned. They
+dragged him unceremoniously up to the gate,
+slipped his bonds, and discreetly put themselves
+on the other side of the barrier before he could
+get to his feet. With a grunt he wheeled and
+faced them with such hate in his eyes that they
+thought he would once more hurl himself upon
+the bars. But he had learned his lesson. For
+a few moments he stood quivering. Then, as
+if recognizing at last a mastery too absolute
+even for him to challenge, he shook himself
+violently, turned away, and stalked off to join
+the herd.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span></p>
+<p>That evening, about sundown, it turned
+colder. Clouds gathered heavily, and there
+was the sense of coming snow in the air. A
+great wind, rising fitfully, drew down out of
+the north. Seeing no covert to his liking, the
+King led his little herd to the top of a naked
+knoll, where he could look about and choose a
+shelter. But that great wind out of the north,
+thrilling in his nostrils, got into his heart and
+made him forget what he had come for. Out
+across the alien gloom he stared, across the
+huddled, unknown masses of the dark, till he
+thought he saw the bald summit of Old Saugamauk
+rising out of its forests, till he thought
+he heard the wind roar in the spruce tops, the
+dead branches clash and crack. The cows, for
+a time, huddled close to his massive flanks, expecting
+some new thing from his vast strength.
+Then, as the storm gathered, they remembered
+the shelter which man had provided for them,
+and the abundant forage it contained. One
+after the other they turned and filed away
+slowly down the slopes, through the dim trees,
+towards the corner where they knew a gate
+would stand open for them, and then a door
+into a warm-smelling shed. The King, lost in
+his dream, did not notice their going. But
+suddenly, feeling himself alone, he started and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span>
+looked about. The last of the yearlings, at its
+mother&#8217;s heels, was just vanishing through the
+windy gloom. He hesitated, started to follow,
+then stopped abruptly. Let them go! They
+would return to him probably. Turning back
+to his station on the knoll, he stood with his
+head held high, his nostrils drinking the cold,
+while the winter night closed in upon him, and
+the wind out of his own north rushed and
+roared solemnly in his face.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_GRAY_MASTER' id='THE_GRAY_MASTER'></a>
+<h2>THE GRAY MASTER</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span></div>
+<h2>The Gray Master</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>Why he was so much bigger, more powerful,
+and more implacably savage than
+the other members of the gray, spectral pack,
+which had appeared suddenly from the north
+to terrorize their lone and scattered clearings,
+the settlers of the lower Quah-Davic Valley
+could not guess. Those who were of French
+descent among them, and full of the old Acadian
+superstitions, explained it simply enough
+by saying he was a <i>loup-garou</i>, or &#8220;wer-wolf,&#8221;
+and resigned themselves to the impossibility
+of contending against a creature of such supernatural
+malignity and power. But their fellows
+of English speech, having no such tradition to
+fall back upon, were mystified and indignant.
+The ordinary gray, or &#8220;cloudy,&#8221; wolf of the East
+they knew, though he was so rare south of
+Labrador that few of them had ever seen one.
+They dismissed them all, indifferently, as &#8220;varmin.&#8221;
+But this unaccountable gray ravager
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span>
+was bigger than any two such wolves, fiercer
+and more dauntless than any ten. Though the
+pack he led numbered no more than half a
+dozen, he made it respected and dreaded through
+all the wild leagues of the Quah-Davic. To
+make things worse, this long-flanked, long-jawed
+marauder was no less cunning than fierce.
+When the settlers, seeking vengeance for sheep,
+pigs, and cattle slaughtered by his pack, went
+forth to hunt him with dogs and guns, it seemed
+that there was never a wolf in the country.
+Nevertheless, either that same night or the
+next, it was long odds that one or more of those
+same dogs who had been officious in the hunt
+would disappear. As for traps and poisoned
+meat, they proved equally futile. They were
+always visited, to be sure, by the pack, at some
+unexpected and indeterminable moment, but
+treated always with a contumelious scorn which
+was doubtless all that such clumsy tactics merited.
+Meanwhile the ravages went on, and the
+children were kept close housed at night, and
+cool-eyed old woodsmen went armed and vigilant
+along the lonely roads. The French <i>habitant</i>
+crossed himself, and the Saxon cursed his
+luck; and no one solved the mystery.</p>
+<p>Yet, after all, as Arthur Kane, the young
+schoolmaster at Burnt Brook Cross-Roads, began
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+dimly to surmise, the solution was quite
+simple. A lucky gold-miner, returning from
+the Klondike, had brought with him not only
+gold and an appetite, but also a lank, implacable,
+tameless whelp from the packs that haunt
+the sweeps of northern timber. The whelp had
+gnawed his way to freedom. He had found,
+fought, thrashed, and finally adopted, a little
+pack of his small, Eastern kin. He had thriven,
+and grown to the strength and stature that were
+his rightful heritage. And &#8220;the Gray Master
+of the Quah-Davic,&#8221; as Kane had dubbed him,
+was no <i>loup-garou</i>, no outcast human soul incarcerate
+in wolf form, but simply a great Alaskan
+timber-wolf.</p>
+<p>But this, when all is said, is quite enough.
+A wolf that can break the back of a full-grown
+collie at one snap of his jaws, and gallop off
+with the carcass as if it were a chipmunk, is
+about as undesirable a neighbor, in the night
+woods, as any <i>loup-garou</i> ever devised by the
+<i>habitant&#8217;s</i> excitable imagination.</p>
+<p>All up and down the Quah-Davic Valley the
+dark spruce woods were full of game,&mdash;moose,
+deer, hares, and wild birds innumerable,&mdash;with
+roving caribou herds on the wide barren beyond
+the hill-ridge. Nevertheless, the great
+gray wolf would not spare the possessions of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+the settlers. His pack haunted the fringes of
+the settlements with a needless tenacity which
+seemed to hold a challenge in it, a direct and
+insolent defiance. And the feeling of resentment
+throughout the Valley was on the point
+of crystallizing into a concerted campaign of
+vengeance which would have left even so cunning
+a strategist as the Gray Master no choice
+but to flee or fall, when something took place
+which quite changed the course of public sentiment.
+Folk so disagreed about it that all concerted
+action became impossible, and each one
+was left to deal with the elusive adversary in
+his own way.</p>
+<p>This was what happened.</p>
+<p>In a cabin about three miles from the nearest
+neighbor lived the Widow Baisley, alone with
+her son Paddy, a lad under ten years old, and
+little for his age. One midwinter night she
+was taken desperately ill, and Paddy, reckless
+of the terrors of the midnight solitudes, ran
+wildly to get help. The moon was high and
+full, and the lifeless backwoods road was a narrow,
+bright, white thread between the silent
+black masses of the spruce forest. Now and
+then, as he remembered afterwards, his ear
+caught a sound of light feet following him in
+the dark beyond the roadside. But his plucky
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+little heart was too full of panic grief about his
+mother to have any room for fear as to himself.
+Only the excited amazement of his neighbors,
+over the fact that he had made the journey in
+safety, opened his eyes to the hideous peril he
+had come through. Willing helpers hurried
+back with him to his mother&#8217;s bedside. And
+on the way one of them, a keen huntsman who
+had more than once pitted his woodcraft in
+vain against that of the Gray Master, had the
+curiosity to step off the road and examine the
+snow under the thick spruces. Perhaps imagination
+misled him, when he thought he caught
+a glimpse of savage eyes, points of green flame,
+fading off into the black depths. But there
+could be no doubt as to the fresh tracks he
+found in the snow. There they were,&mdash;the
+footprints of the pack, like those of so many
+big dogs,&mdash;and among them the huge trail of
+the great, far-striding leader. All the way, almost
+from his threshold, these sinister steps
+had paralleled those of the hurrying child.
+Close to the edge of the darkness they ran,&mdash;close,
+within the distance of one swift leap,&mdash;yet
+never any closer!</p>
+<p>Why had the great gray wolf, who faced
+and pulled down the bull moose, and from
+whose voice the biggest dogs in the settlements
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+ran like whipped curs&mdash;why had he
+and his stealthy pack spared this easy prey?
+It was inexplicable, though many had theories
+good enough to be laughed to scorn by those
+who had none. The <i>habitants</i>, of course, had
+all their superstitions confirmed, and with a
+certain respect and refinement of horror added:
+Here was a <i>loup-garou</i> so crafty as to spare, on
+occasion! He must be conciliated, at all costs.
+They would hunt him no more, his motives
+being so inexplicable. Let him take a few
+sheep, or a steer, now and then, and remember
+that <i>they</i>, at least, were not troubling him. As
+for the English-speaking settlers, their enmity
+cooled down to the point where they could no
+longer get together any concentrated bitterness.
+It was only a big rascal of a wolf, anyway,
+scared to touch a white man&#8217;s child, and
+certainly nothing for a lot of grown men to
+organize about. Some of the women jumped
+to the conclusion that a certain delicacy of
+sentiment had governed the wolves in their
+strange forbearance, while others honestly believed
+that the pack had been specially sent
+by Providence to guard the child through the
+forest on his sacred errand. But all, whatever
+their views, agreed in flouting the young schoolteacher&#8217;s
+uninteresting suggestion that perhaps
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+the wolves had not happened, at the moment,
+to be hungry.</p>
+<p>As it chanced, however, even this very rational
+explanation of Kane&#8217;s was far from the
+truth. The truth was that the great wolf
+had profited by his period of captivity in the
+hands of a masterful man. Into his fine sagacity
+had penetrated the conception&mdash;hazy, perhaps,
+but none the less effective&mdash;that man&#8217;s
+vengeance would be irresistible and inescapable
+if once fairly aroused. This conception he had
+enforced upon the pack. It was enough. For,
+of course, even to the most elementary intelligence
+among the hunting, fighting kindreds of
+the wild, it was patent that the surest way to
+arouse man&#8217;s vengeance would be to attack
+man&#8217;s young. The intelligence lying behind
+the wide-arched skull of the Gray Master was
+equal to more intricate and less obvious conclusions
+than that.</p>
+<p>Among all the scattered inhabitants of the
+Quah-Davic Valley there was no one who devoted
+quite so much attention to the wonderful
+gray wolf as did the young school-teacher.
+His life at the Burnt Brook Cross-Roads, his
+labors at the little Burnt Brook School, were
+neither so exacting nor so exciting but that he
+had time on his hands. His preferred expedients
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
+for spending that time were hunting, and
+studying the life of the wild kindreds. He was
+a good shot with both rifle and camera, and
+would serve himself with one weapon or the
+other as the mood seized him. When life, or
+his dinner, went ill with him, or he found himself
+fretting hopelessly for the metropolitan excitement
+of the little college city where he had
+been educated, he would choose his rifle. And
+so wide-reaching, so mysterious, are the ties which
+enmesh all created beings, that it would seem to
+even matters up and relieve his feelings wonderfully
+just to kill something, if only a rabbit or a
+weasel.</p>
+<p>But at other times he preferred the camera.</p>
+<p>Naturally Kane was interested in the mysterious
+gray wolf more than in all the other prowlers
+of the Quah-Davic put together. He was
+quite unreasonably glad when the plans for a
+concerted campaign against the marauder so
+suddenly fell through. That so individual a
+beast should have its career cut short by an
+angry settler&#8217;s bullet, to avenge a few ordinary
+pigs or sheep, was a thing he could hardly contemplate
+with patience. To scatter the pack
+would be to rob the Quah-Davic solitudes of
+half their romance. He determined to devote
+himself to a study of the great wolf&#8217;s personality
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span>
+and characteristics, and to foil, as far as this
+could be done without making himself unpopular,
+such plots as might be laid for the beast&#8217;s
+undoing.</p>
+<p>Recognizing, however, that this friendly interest
+might not be reciprocated, Kane chose
+his rifle rather than his camera as a weapon, on
+those stinging, blue-white nights when he went
+forth to seek knowledge of the gray wolf&#8217;s ways.
+His rifle was a well-tried repeating Winchester,
+and he carried a light, short-handled axe in his
+belt besides the regulation knife; so he had no
+serious misgivings as he trod the crackling,
+moonlit snow beneath the moose-hide webbing
+of his snowshoes. But not being utterly foolhardy,
+he kept to the open stretches of meadow,
+or river-bed, or snow-buried lake, rather than
+in the close shadows of the forest.</p>
+<p>But now, when he was so expectant, the wolf-pack
+seemed to find business elsewhere. For
+nights not a howl had been heard, not a fresh
+track found, within miles of Burnt Brook Cross-Roads.
+Then, remembering that a watched
+pot takes long to boil, Kane took fishing-lines
+and bait, and went up the wide, white brook-bed
+to the deep lake in the hills, whence it launches
+its shallow flood towards the Quah-Davic. He
+took with him also for companionship, since
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+this time he was not wolf-hunting, a neighbor&#8217;s
+dog that was forever after him&mdash;a useless,
+yellow lump of mongrel dog-flesh, but friendly
+and silent. After building a hasty shelter of
+spruce boughs some distance out from shore in
+the flooding light, he chopped holes through
+the ice and fell to fishing for the big lake trout
+that inhabited those deep waters. He had luck.
+And soon, absorbed in the new excitement, he
+had forgotten all about the great gray wolf.</p>
+<p>It was late, for Kane had slept the early part
+of the night, waiting for moonrise before starting
+on his expedition. The air was tingling
+with windless cold, and ghostly white with the
+light of a crooked, waning moon. Suddenly,
+without a sound, the dog crept close against
+Kane&#8217;s legs. Kane felt him tremble. Looking
+up sharply, his eyes fell on a tall, gray form, sitting
+erect on the tip of a naked point, not a
+hundred yards away, and staring, not at him,
+but at the moon.</p>
+<p>In spite of himself, Kane felt a pricking in
+his cheeks, a creeping of the skin under his
+hair. The apparition was so sudden, and, above
+all, the cool ignoring of his presence was so
+disconcerting. Moreover, through that half-sinister
+light, his long muzzle upstretched towards
+the moon, and raised as he was a little
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+above the level on which Kane was standing,
+the wolf looked unnaturally and impossibly tall.
+Kane had never heard of a wolf acting in this
+cool, self-possessed, arrogantly confident fashion,
+and his mind reverted obstinately to the outworn
+superstitions of his <i>habitants</i> friends. But, after
+all, it was this wolf, not an ordinary brush-fence
+wolf, that he was so anxious to study; and the
+unexpected was just what he had most reason
+to expect! He was getting what he came for.</p>
+<p>Kane knew that the way to study the wild
+creatures was to keep still and make no noise.
+So be stiffened into instant immobility, and regretted
+that he had brought the dog with him.
+But he need not have worried about the dog,
+for that intelligent animal showed no desire
+to attract the Gray Master&#8217;s notice. He was
+crouched behind Kane&#8217;s legs, and motionless
+except for his shuddering.</p>
+<p>For several minutes no one stirred&mdash;nothing
+stirred in all that frozen world. Then, feeling
+the cold begin to creep in upon him in the stillness,
+Kane had to lift his thick-gloved hands
+to chafe his ears. He did it cautiously, but
+the caution was superfluous. The great wolf
+apparently had no objection to his moving as
+much as he liked. Once, indeed, those green,
+lambent eyes flamed over him, but casually, in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+making a swift circuit of the shores of the lake
+and the black fringe of the firs; but for all the
+interest which their owner vouchsafed him,
+Kane might as well have been a juniper bush.</p>
+<p>Knowing very well, however, that this elaborate
+indifference could not be other than feigned,
+Kane was patient, determined to find out what
+the game was. At the same time, he could
+not help the strain beginning to tell on him.
+Where was the rest of the pack? From time
+to time he glanced searchingly over his shoulder
+towards the all-concealing fir woods.</p>
+<p>At last, as if considering himself utterly alone,
+the great wolf opened his jaws, stretched back
+his neck, and began howling his shrill, terrible
+serenade to the moon. As soon as he paused,
+came far-off nervous barkings and yelpings
+from dogs who hated and trembled in the scattered
+clearings. But no wolf-howl made reply.
+The pack, for all the sign they gave, might have
+vanished off the earth. And Kane wondered
+what strong command from their leader could
+have kept them silent when all their ancient
+instincts bade them answer.</p>
+<p>As if well satisfied with his music, the great
+wolf continued to beseech the moon so persistently
+that at last Kane lost patience. He
+wanted more variety in the programme. Muttering,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll see if I can&#8217;t rattle your fine composure
+a bit, my friend!&#8221; he raised his rifle and
+sent a bullet whining over the wolf&#8217;s head. The
+wolf cocked his ears slightly and looked about
+carelessly, as if to say, &#8220;What&#8217;s that?&#8221; then
+coolly resumed his serenade.</p>
+<p>Nettled by such ostentatious nonchalance,
+Kane drove another bullet into the snow within
+a few inches of the wolf&#8217;s forefeet. This proved
+more effective. The great beast looked down
+at the place where the ball had struck, sniffed
+at it curiously, got up on all fours, and turned
+and stared steadily at Kane for perhaps half a
+minute. Kane braced himself for a possible onslaught.
+But it never came. Whirling lightly,
+the Gray Master turned his back on the disturber
+of his song, and trotted away slowly,
+without once looking back. He did not make
+directly for the cover, but kept in full view and
+easy gunshot for several hundred yards. Then
+he disappeared into the blackness of the spruce
+woods. Thereupon the yellow mongrel, emerging
+from his shelter behind Kane&#8217;s legs, pranced
+about on the snow before him with every sign
+of admiration and relief.</p>
+<p>But Kane was too puzzled to be altogether
+relieved. It was not according to the books
+for any wolf, great or small, to conduct himself
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+in this supercilious fashion. Looking back
+along the white bed of the brook, the path by
+which he must return, he saw that the sinking
+of the moon would very soon involve it in thick
+shadow. This was not as he wished it. He had
+had enough of fishing. Gathering up his now
+frozen prizes, and strapping the bag that contained
+them over his shoulder, so as to leave
+both hands free, he set out for home at the
+long, deliberate, yet rapid lope of the experienced
+snowshoer; and the yellow dog, confidence
+in his companion&#8217;s prowess now thoroughly
+established, trotted on heedlessly three
+or four paces ahead.</p>
+<p>Already the shadow of the woods lay halfway
+across the bed of the brook, but down the
+middle of the strip of brightness, still some five
+or six paces in breadth, Kane swung steadily.
+As he went, he kept a sharp eye on the shadowed
+edge of his path. He had gone perhaps
+a mile, when all at once he felt a tingling at the
+roots of his hair, which seemed to tell him he
+was being watched from the darkness. Peer as
+he would, however, he could catch no hint of
+moving forms; strain his ears as he might,
+he could hear no whisper of following feet.
+Moreover, he trusted to the keener senses,
+keener instincts, of the dog, to give him warning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+of any furtive approach; and the dog was
+obviously at ease.</p>
+<p>He was just beginning to execrate himself
+for letting his nerves get too much on edge,
+when suddenly out from the black branches
+just ahead shot a long, spectral shape and fell
+upon the dog. There was one choked yelp&mdash;and
+the dog and the terrible shape vanished
+together, back into the blackness.</p>
+<p>It was all so instantaneous that before Kane
+could get his rifle up they were gone. Startled
+and furious, he fired at random, three times, into
+cover. Then he steadied himself, remembering
+that the number of cartridges in his chamber
+was not unlimited. Seeing to it that his axe
+and knife were both loose for instant action, he
+stopped and replenished his Winchester. Then
+he hurried on as fast as he could without betraying
+haste.</p>
+<p>As he went, he was soon vividly conscious
+that the wolves&mdash;not the Gray Master alone,
+but the whole pack also&mdash;were keeping pace
+with him through the soundless dark beyond
+the rim of the spruces. But not a hint of their
+grim companioning could he see or hear. He
+felt it merely in the creeping of his skin, the
+elemental stirring of the hair at the back of his
+neck. From moment to moment he expected
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span>
+the swift attack, the battle for his life. But he
+was keyed up to it. It was not fear that made
+his nerves tingle, but the tense, trembling excitement
+of the situation. Even against these
+strange, hidden forces of the forest, his spirit
+felt sure of victory. He felt as if his rifle would
+go up and speak, almost of itself, unerringly at
+the first instant of attack, even before the adversary
+broke into view. But through all the
+drawn-out length of those last three miles his
+hidden adversaries gave no sign, save that once a
+dead branch, concealed under the snow, snapped
+sharply. His rifle was at his shoulder, it seemed
+to him, almost before the sound reached his ear.
+But nothing came of it. Then a panic-mad rabbit,
+stretched straight out in flight, darted across
+the fast narrowing brightness of his path. But
+nothing followed. And at last, after what seemed
+to him hours, he came out upon the open
+pastures overlooking Burnt Brook Settlement.
+Here he ran on a little way; and then, because
+the strain had been great, he sat down suddenly
+upon a convenient stump and burst into a peal
+of laughter which must have puzzled the wolves
+beyond measure.</p>
+<p>After this, though well aware that the Gray
+Master&#8217;s inexplicable forbearance had saved him
+a battle which, for all his confidence, might quite
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+conceivably have gone against him, Kane&#8217;s interest
+in the mysterious beast was uncompromisingly
+hostile. He was bitter on account of
+the dog. He felt that the great wolf had put a
+dishonor upon him; and for a few days he was
+no longer the impartial student of natural history,
+but the keen, primitive hunter with the blood-lust
+hot in his veins. Then this mood passed, or,
+rather, underwent a change. He decided that
+the Gray Master was, indeed, too individual a
+beast to be just snuffed out, but, at the same
+time, far too dangerous to be left at liberty.</p>
+<p>And now all the thought and effort that
+could be spared from his daily duties at the
+Cross-Roads were bent to the problem of capturing
+the great wolf alive. He would be doing
+a service to the whole Quah-Davic Valley.
+And he would have the pleasure of presenting
+the splendid captive to his college town, at that
+time greatly interested in the modest beginnings
+of a zo&ouml;logical garden which its citizens
+were striving to inaugurate. It thrilled his
+fancy to imagine a tin placard on the front of a
+cage in the little park, bearing the inscription&mdash;</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Canis Occidentalis.</span><br />
+<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Eastern North America.</span><br />
+<span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Presented by Arthur Kane, Esq.</span><br /></p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span></div>
+<p>After a few weeks of assiduous trapping,
+however, Kane felt bound to acknowledge that
+this modest ambition of his seemed remote
+from fulfilment. Every kind of trap he could
+think of, that would take a beast alive, he tried
+in every kind of way. And having run the
+whole insidious gamut, he would turn patiently
+to run it all over again. Of course, the result
+was inevitable, for no beast, not even such a
+one as the Gray Master, is a match, in the long
+run, for a man who is in earnest. Yet Kane&#8217;s
+triumph, when it blazed upon his startled eyes
+at last, was indirect. In avoiding, and at the
+same time uncovering and making mock of,
+Kane&#8217;s traps, the great wolf put his foot into
+another, a powerful bear-trap, which a cunning
+old trapper had hidden near by, without bait.
+The trap was secured to a tree by a stout chain&mdash;and
+rage, strain, tear as he might, the Gray
+Master found himself snared. In his silent
+fury he would probably have gnawed off the
+captive foot, for the sake of freedom. But before
+he came to that, Kane arrived and occupied
+his attention fully.</p>
+<p>Kane&#8217;s disappointment, at finding the splendid
+prize in another trap than his own, was
+but momentary. He knew his successful rival
+would readily part with his claims, for due
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+consideration. But he was puzzled as to what
+should be done in the immediate emergency.
+He wanted to go back home for help, for ropes,
+straps, and a muzzle with which he had provided
+himself; but he was afraid lest, in his
+absence, the trapper might arrive and shoot the
+captive, for the sake of the pelt and the bounty.
+In his uncertainty he waited, hoping that the
+trapper might come soon; and by way of practice
+for the serious enterprise that would come
+later, as well as to direct the prisoner&#8217;s mind a
+little from his painful predicament, Kane began
+trying to lasso him with a coil of heavy cord
+which he carried.</p>
+<p>His efforts in this direction were not altogether
+successful, but the still fury which they
+aroused in the great wolf&#8217;s breast doubtless obscured
+the mordant anguish in his foot. One
+terrific leap at his enemy, resulting in an ignominious
+overthrow as the chain stopped him in
+mid-air, had convinced the subtle beast of the
+vanity of such tactics. Crouching back, he
+eyed his adversary in silence, with eyes whose
+hatred seemed to excoriate. But whenever the
+running noose at the end of the cord came
+coiling swiftly at his head, with one lightning
+snap of his long teeth he would sever it as with
+a knife. By the time Kane had grown tired of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
+this diversion the cord was so full of knots that
+no noose would any longer run.</p>
+<p>But at this point the old trapper came slouching
+up on his snowshoes, a twinkle of elation in
+his shrewd, frosty, blue eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon we&#8217;ll show the varmint now as
+how he ain&#8217;t no <i>loup-garou</i>!&#8221; he remarked,
+lightly swinging his axe.</p>
+<p>But Kane hastily intervened.</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>Please</i> don&#8217;t kill him, Dave!&#8221; he begged.
+&#8220;<i>I</i> want him, bad! What&#8217;ll you take for
+him?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Just as he stands?&#8221; demanded the old
+trapper, with a chuckle. &#8220;I ain&#8217;t a-goin&#8217; to deliver
+the goods to yer door, ye know!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; laughed Kane, &#8220;just as he stands, right
+here!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, seein&#8217; as it&#8217;s you, I don&#8217;t want no
+more&#8217;n what his pelt&#8217;ld fetch, an&#8217; the bounty on
+his nose,&#8221; answered the trapper.</p>
+<p>&#8220;All right,&#8221; said Kane. &#8220;You wait here a
+bit, will you, an&#8217; keep him amused so&#8217;s he won&#8217;t
+gnaw his paw off; an&#8217; I&#8217;ll run back to the
+Cross-Roads and get some rope and things I
+guess I&#8217;ll be needing.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When he got back with rope, straps, a big
+mastiff-muzzle, and a toboggan, he found Dave
+in a very bad humor, and calling the watchful,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+silent, crouching beast hard names. In his
+efforts to amuse himself by stirring that imperturbable
+and sinister quiet into action, he had
+come just within the range of the Gray Master&#8217;s
+spring. Swift as that spring was, that of the
+alert backwoodsman was just swift enough to
+elude it&mdash;in part. Dave&#8217;s own hide had escaped,
+but his heavy jacket of homespun had
+had the back ripped clean out of it.</p>
+<p>But now, for all his matchless strength, courage,
+and craft, the Gray Master&#8217;s game was
+played out. The fickle Fates of the wild had
+pronounced against him. He could not parry
+two flying nooses at once. And presently,
+having been choked for a few moments into
+unconsciousness, he awoke to find himself
+bound so that he could not move a leg, and his
+mighty jaws imprisoned in a strange cage of
+straps and steel. He was tied upon the toboggan,
+and being dragged swiftly through the
+forest&mdash;that free forest of which he had so long
+felt himself master&mdash;at the heels of his two
+conquerors. His only poor consolation was
+that the hideous, crunching thing had been removed
+from his bleeding paw, which, however,
+anguished cruelly for the soothing of his
+tongue.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>During the strenuous and dangerous weeks
+while Kane was gaoler to his dreaded captive,
+his respect for the grim beast&#8217;s tameless spirit
+by no means diminished; but he had no shadow
+of misgiving as to the future to which he
+destined his victim. He felt that in sending
+the incomparable wolf to the gardens, where he
+would be well cared for, and at the same time
+an educative influence, he was being both just
+and kind. And it was with feelings of unmixed
+delight that he received a formal resolution of
+gratitude from the zo&ouml;logical society for his
+valued and in some respects unique donation.</p>
+<p>It was about a year and a half later that
+Kane had occasion to revisit the city of his
+Alma Mater. As soon as possible he hurried
+to inspect the little gardens, which had already
+marched so far towards success as to be familiarly
+styled &#8220;The Zoo.&#8221; There were two or
+three paddocks of deer, of different North
+American species&mdash;for the society was inclined
+to specialize on the wild kindreds of
+native origin. There were moose, caribou, a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span>
+couple of bears, raccoons, foxes, porcupines,
+two splendid pumas, a rather flea-bitten and
+toothless tiger, and the Gray Master, solitary
+in his cage!</p>
+<p>A sure instinct led Kane straight to that cage,
+which immediately adjoined the big double cage
+of the pumas. As he approached, he caught
+sight of a tall, gray shape pacing, pacing, pacing,
+pacing to and fro behind the bars with a sort
+of measured restlessness that spoke an immeasurable
+monotony. When he reached the
+front of the cage, Kane saw that the great
+wolf&#8217;s eyes were noting nothing of what was
+about him, but dim with some far-off vision.
+As he marked the look in them, and thought
+of what they must be remembering and aching
+for, his heart began to smite him. He felt his
+first pang of self-reproach, for having doomed
+to ignominious exile and imprisonment this
+splendid creature who had deserved, at least,
+to die free. As he mused over this point, half
+angrily, the Gray Master suddenly paused, and
+his thin nostrils wrinkled. Perhaps there still
+clung about Kane&#8217;s clothes some scent of the
+spruce woods, some pungent breath of the
+cedar swamps. He turned and looked Kane
+straight in the eyes.</p>
+<p>There was unmistakable recognition in that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span>
+deep stare. There was also, to Kane&#8217;s sensitive
+imagination, a tameless hate and an unspeakable
+but dauntless despair. Convicted in his
+own mind of a gross and merciless misunderstanding
+of his wild kindreds, whom he professed
+to know so well, he glanced up and saw
+the painted placard staring down at him, exactly
+as he had anticipated&#8211;&#8211;</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Canis Occidentalis.<br />
+Eastern North America.<br />
+Presented by Arthur Kane, Esq.</span><br /></p>
+<p>The sight sickened him. He had a foolish
+impulse to tear it down and to abase himself
+with a plea for pardon before the silent beast
+behind the bars. But when he looked again,
+the Gray Master had turned away, and was
+once more, with indrawn, far-off vision in his
+eyes, pacing, pacing, pacing to and fro. Kane
+felt overwhelmed with the intolerable weariness
+of it, as if it had been going on, just like that,
+ever since he had pronounced this doom upon
+his vanquished adversary, and as if it would go
+on like that forever. In vain by coaxing word,
+by sharp, sudden whistle, by imitations of owl,
+loon, and deer calls, which brought all the boys
+in the place admiringly about him, did he strive
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+to catch again the attention of the captive.
+But not once more, even for the fleeting fraction
+of a second, would the Gray Master turn his
+eyes. And presently, angry and self-reproachful,
+Kane turned on his heel and went home,
+pursued by the enthusiasm of the small boys.</p>
+<p>After this, Kane went nearly every day to
+the little &#8220;Zoo&#8221;; but never again did he win
+the smallest hint of notice from the Gray
+Master. And ever that tireless pacing smote
+him with bitterest self-reproach. Half unconsciously
+he made it a sort of penance to go and
+watch his victim, till at last he found himself
+indulging in sentimental, idiotic notions of
+trying to ransom the prisoner. Realizing
+that any such attempt would make him supremely
+ridiculous, and that such a dangerous
+and powerful creature could not be set free
+anywhere, he consoled himself with a resolve
+that never again would he take captive any of
+the freedom-loving, tameless kindreds of the
+wilderness. He would kill them and have
+cleanly done with it, or leave them alone.</p>
+<p>One morning, thinking to break the spell of
+that eternal, hopeless pacing by catching the
+Gray Master at his meals, Kane went up to the
+gardens very early, before any of the usual visitors
+had arrived. He found that the animals
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+had already been fed. The cages were being
+cleaned. He congratulated himself on his opportune
+arrival, for this would give him a new
+insight into the ways of the beasts with their
+keepers.</p>
+<p>The head-keeper, as it chanced, was a man
+of long experience with wild animals, in one
+of the chief zo&ouml;logical parks of the country.
+Long familiarity, however, had given him that
+most dangerous gift, contempt. And he had
+lost his position through that fault most unforgivable
+in an animal keeper, drunkenness. Owing
+to this fact, the inexperienced authorities
+of this little &#8220;Zoo&#8221; had been able to obtain his
+services at a comparatively moderate wage&mdash;and
+were congratulating themselves on the possession
+of a treasure.</p>
+<p>On this particular morning, Biddell was not
+by any means himself. He was cleaning the
+cage of the two pumas, and making at the same
+time desperate efforts to keep his faculties clear
+and avoid betraying his condition. The two
+big cats seemed to observe nothing peculiar in
+his manner, and obeyed him, sulkily, as usual;
+but Kane noticed that the great wolf, though
+pacing up and down according to his custom,
+had his eyes on the man in the next cage, instead
+of upon his own secret visions. Biddell
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+had driven the two pumas back through the
+door which led from the open cage to the room
+which served them for a den, and closed the
+door on them. Then, having finished his duties
+there, he unfastened the strong door between
+this cage and that of the Gray Master, and
+stepped through, leaving the door slightly ajar.</p>
+<p>Biddell was armed, of course, with a heavy-pronged
+fork, but he carried it carelessly as he
+went about his work, as if he had long since
+taught the sombre wolf to keep at a distance.
+But to-day the wolf acted curiously. He backed
+away in silence, as usual, but eyed the man fixedly
+with a look which, as it seemed to Kane,
+showed anything rather than fear. The stiff
+hair rose slightly along his neck and massive
+shoulders. Kane could not help congratulating
+himself that he was not in the keeper&#8217;s place.
+But he felt sure everything was all right, as Biddell
+was supposed to know his business.</p>
+<p>When Biddell came to the place where the
+wolf was standing, the latter made way reluctantly,
+still backing, and staring with that sinister
+fixity which Kane found so impressive. He
+wondered if Biddell noticed. He was just on
+the point of speaking to him about it, through
+the bars, when he chanced to glance aside to
+the cage of the pumas. Biddell, in his foggy
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span>
+state of mind, had forgotten to close an inner
+door connecting the two rooms in the rear.
+The pumas had quietly passed through, and
+emerged again into their cage by the farther
+entrance. Catching sight of the door into the
+wolf&#8217;s cage standing ajar, they had crept up to
+it; and now, with one great noiseless paw, the
+leader of the two was softly pushing it open.</p>
+<p>Kane gave an inarticulate yell of warning.
+No words were needed to translate that warning
+to the keeper, who was sobered completely
+as he flashed round and saw what was happening.
+With a sharp command he rushed to
+drive the pumas back and close the gate. But
+one was already through, and the other blocked
+the way.</p>
+<p>At this tense instant, while Kane glanced
+swiftly aside to see if any help were in sight,
+the Gray Master launched himself across the
+cage. Kane could not see distinctly, so swiftly
+did it happen, whether the man or the intruding
+puma was the object of that mad rush. But
+in the next second the man was down, on his
+face, with the silent wolf and the screeching
+puma locked in a death grapple on top of him.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-134.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 313px; height: 368px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 313px;'>
+&#8220;Then the second puma pounced.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span></div>
+<p>Horrified, and yelling for help, Kane tore at
+the bars, but there was no way of getting in, the
+door being locked. He saw that the wolf had
+secured a hold upon the puma&#8217;s throat, but that
+the great cat&#8217;s claws were doing deadly work.
+Then the second puma pounced, with a screech,
+upon the Gray Master&#8217;s back, bearing him down.</p>
+<p>At this moment Biddell rolled out from under
+the raving, writhing heap, and staggered to his
+feet, bleeding, but apparently uninjured. With
+his fork and his booted foot he threw himself
+upon the combatants furiously, striving to separate
+them. After what seemed to Kane an age
+he succeeded in forcing off the second puma
+and driving it through the gate, which he shut.
+Then he returned to the fight.</p>
+<p>But he had little more to do now, for the fight
+was over. Though no wolf is supposed to be
+a fair match for a puma, the Gray Master, with
+his enormous strength and subtle craft, might
+perhaps have held his own against his first antagonist
+alone. But against the two he was
+powerless. The puma, badly torn, now crouched
+snarling upon his unresisting body. Biddell
+forced the victor off and drove him into a corner,
+where he lay lashing his sides with heavy,
+twitching tail.</p>
+<p>The keeper was sober enough now. One
+long look at the great wolf&#8217;s body satisfied
+him it was all over. He turned and saw
+Kane&#8217;s white face pressed against the bars.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span>
+With a short laugh he shook himself, to make
+sure he was all sound, then pushed the body
+of the Gray Master gently with his foot. Yet
+there was respect, not disrespect, in the gesture.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t have had that happen for a
+thousand dollars, Mr. Kane!&#8221; said he in a
+voice of keen regret. &#8220;That was a great
+beast, an&#8217; we&#8217;ll never get another wolf to
+match him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Kane was on the point of saying that it
+would <i>not</i> have happened but for certain circumstances
+which it was unnecessary for him
+to specify. He realized, however, that he was
+glad it had happened, glad the long pacing,
+pacing, pacing was at an end, glad the load of
+his self-reproach was lifted off. So he said
+something quite different.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, Biddell, he&#8217;s <i>free</i>! And maybe,
+when all&#8217;s said, that was just what he was
+after!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Then he turned and strode hurriedly away,
+more content in his heart than he had felt
+for days.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_SUNGAZER' id='THE_SUNGAZER'></a>
+<h2>THE SUN-GAZER</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span></div>
+<h2>The Sun-Gazer</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>To Jim Horner it seemed as if the great,
+white-headed eagle was in some way
+the uttered word of the mountain and the
+lake&mdash;of the lofty, solitary, granite-crested
+peak, and of the deep, solitary water at its
+base. As his canoe raced down the last mad
+rapid, and seemed to snatch breath again
+as it floated out upon the still water of the
+lake, Jim would rest his paddle across
+the gunwales and look upward expectantly.
+First his keen, far-sighted, gray eyes would
+sweep the blue arc of sky, in search of
+the slow circling of wide, motionless wings.
+Then, if the blue was empty of this far
+shape, his glance would range at once to a
+dead pine standing sole on a naked and
+splintered shoulder of the mountain which
+he knew as &#8220;Old Baldy.&#8221; There he was
+almost sure to see the great bird sitting,
+motionless and majestic, staring at the sun.
+Floating idly and smoking, resting after his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+long battle with the rapids, he would watch,
+till the immensity and the solitude would
+creep in upon his spirit and oppress him.
+Then, at last, a shrill yelp, far off and faint,
+but sinister, would come from the pine-top;
+and the eagle, launching himself on open
+wings from his perch, would either wheel
+upward into the blue, or flap away over the
+serried fir-tops to some ravine in the cliffs
+that hid his nest.</p>
+<p>One day, when Jim came down the river
+and stopped, as usual, to look for the great
+bird, he scanned in vain both sky and cliff-side.
+At last he gave up the search and
+paddled on down the lake with a sense
+of loss. Something had vanished from the
+splendor of the solitude. But presently he
+heard, close overhead, the beat and whistle
+of vast wings, and looking up, he saw the
+eagle passing above him, flying so low that
+he could catch the hard, unwinking, tameless
+stare of its black and golden eyes as they
+looked down upon him with a sort of inscrutable
+challenge. He noted also a peculiarity
+which he had never seen in any other eagle.
+This one had a streak of almost black feathers
+immediately over its left eye, giving it a
+heavy and sinister eyebrow. The bird carried
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+in the clutch of its talons a big, glistening
+lake trout, probably snatched from the
+fish-hawk; and Jim was able to take note
+of the very set of its pinion-feathers as the
+wind hummed in their tense webs. Flying
+with a massive power quite unlike the ease
+of his soaring, the eagle mounted gradually
+up the steep, passed the rocky shoulder with
+its watch-tower pine, and disappeared over
+the edge of a ledge which looked to Horner
+like a mere scratch across the face of the
+mountain.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s where his nest is, sure!&#8221; muttered
+Horner to himself. And remembering
+that cold challenge in the bird&#8217;s yellow stare,
+he suddenly decided that he wanted to see
+an eagle&#8217;s nest. He had plenty of time. He
+was in no particular hurry to get back to the
+settlement and the gossip of the cross-roads
+store. He turned his canoe to land, lifted her
+out and hid her in the bushes, and struck back
+straight for the face of &#8220;Old Baldy.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The lower slope was difficult to climb, a
+tangle of tumbled boulders and fallen trunks,
+mantled in the soundless gloom of the fir-forest.
+Skilled woodsman though he was,
+Horner&#8217;s progress was so slow, and the
+windless heat became so oppressive to his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span>
+impatience, that he was beginning to think of
+giving up the idle venture, when suddenly he
+came face to face with a perpendicular and
+impassable wall of cliff. This curt arrest to
+his progress was just what was needed to
+stiffen his wavering resolution. He understood
+the defiance which his ready fancy had
+found in the stare of the eagle. Well, he had
+accepted the challenge. He would not be
+baffled by a rock. If he could not climb over
+it, he would go round it; but he would find the
+nest.</p>
+<p>With an obstinate look in his eyes, Horner
+began to work his way along the foot of the
+cliff towards the right. Taking advantage of
+every inch of ascent that he could gain, he
+at last found, to his satisfaction, that he had
+made sufficient height to clear the gloom of
+the woods. As he looked out over their tops,
+a light breeze cooled his wet forehead, and
+he pressed on with fresh vigor. Presently
+the slope grew a trifle easier, the foothold
+surer, and he mounted more rapidly. The
+steely lake, and the rough-ridged, black-green
+sea of the fir-tops began to unroll below him.
+At last he rounded an elbow of the steep,
+and there before him, upthrust perhaps a hundred
+feet above his head, stood the outlying
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span>
+shoulder of rock, crowned with its dead pine, on
+which he was accustomed to see the eagle
+sitting. Even as he looked, motionless, there
+came a rushing of great wings; and suddenly
+there was the eagle himself, erect on his high
+perch, and staring, as it seemed to Horner,
+straight into the sun.</p>
+<p>When Horner resumed his climbing, the great
+bird turned his head and gazed down upon him
+with an ironic fixity which betrayed neither
+dread nor wonder. Concluding that the nest
+would be lying somewhere within view of its
+owner&#8217;s watch-tower, Horner now turned his
+efforts towards reaching the dead pine. With
+infinite difficulty, and with a few bruises to
+arm and leg, he managed to cross the jagged
+crevice which partly separated the jutting rock-pier
+from the main face of the cliff. Then, laboriously
+and doggedly, he dragged himself up the
+splintered slope, still being forced around to the
+right, till there fell away below him a gulf into
+which it was not good for the nervous to look.
+Feeling that a fate very different from that of
+Lot&#8217;s wife might be his if he should let himself
+look back too indiscreetly, he kept his eyes upon
+the lofty goal and pressed on upwards with a
+haste that now grew a trifle feverish. It began
+to seem to him that the irony of the eagle&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span>
+changeless stare might perhaps not be unjustified.</p>
+<p>Not till Horner had conquered the steep and,
+panting but elated, gained the very foot of the
+pine, did the eagle stir. Then, spreading his
+wings with a slow disdain, as if not dread but
+aversion to this unbidden visitor bade him go,
+he launched himself on a long, splendid sweep
+over the gulf, and then mounted on a spacious
+spiral to his inaccessible outlook in the blue.
+Leaning against the bleached and scarred trunk
+of the pine, Horner watched this majestic departure
+for some minutes, recovering his breath
+and drinking deep the cool and vibrant air.
+Then he turned and scanned the face of the
+mountain.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_9' id='linki_9'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-144.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 294px; height: 451px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 294px;'>
+&#8220;He launched himself on a long, splendid sweep over the gulf.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span></div>
+<p>There it lay, in full view&mdash;the nest which he
+had climbed so far to find. It was not more
+than a hundred yards away. Yet, at first sight,
+it seemed hopelessly out of reach. The chasm
+separating the ledge on which it clung from the
+outlying rock of the pine was not more than
+twenty feet across; but its bottom was apparently
+somewhere in the roots of the mountain. There
+was no way of passing it at this point. But
+Horner had a faith that there was a way to be
+found over or around every obstacle in the world,
+if only one kept on looking for it resolutely
+enough. To keep on looking for a path to the
+eagle&#8217;s nest, he struggled forward, around the
+outer slope of the buttress, down a ragged incline,
+and across a narrow and dizzy &#8220;saddle-back,&#8221;
+which brought him presently upon another angle
+of the steep, facing southeast. Clinging with his
+toes and one hand, while he wiped his dripping
+forehead with his sleeve, he looked up&mdash;and
+saw the whole height of the mountain, unbroken
+and daunting, stretched skyward above him.</p>
+<p>But to Horner the solemn sight was not
+daunting in the least.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gee!&#8221; he exclaimed, grinning with satisfaction.
+&#8220;I <i>hev</i> circumvented that there cervice,
+sure&#8217;s death!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Of the world below he had now a view that
+was almost overpoweringly unrestricted; but of
+the mountain, and his scene of operations, he
+could see only the stretch directly above him.
+A little calculation convinced him, however, that
+all he had to do was to keep straight on up for
+perhaps a hundred and fifty feet, then, as soon
+as the slope would permit, work around to his
+left, and descend upon the nest from above. Incidentally,
+he made up his mind that his return
+journey should be made by another face of the
+mountain&mdash;any other, rather than that by which
+he had rashly elected to come.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span></p>
+<p>It seemed to Horner like a mile, that last hundred
+and fifty feet; but at last he calculated that
+he had gained enough in height. At the same
+time he felt the slope grow easier. Making his
+way towards the left, he came upon a narrow
+ledge, along which he could move easily side-wise,
+by clinging to the rock. Presently it
+widened to a path by which he could walk almost
+at ease, with the wide, wild solitude, dark green
+laced with silver watercourses, spread like a stupendous
+amphitheatre far below him. It was the
+wilderness which he knew so well in detail, yet had
+never before seen as a whole; and the sight, for a
+few moments, held him in a kind of awed surprise.
+When, at last, he tore his gaze free from the majestic
+spectacle, there, some ten or twelve yards
+below his feet, he saw the object of his quest.</p>
+<p>It was nothing much to boast of in the way
+of architecture, this nest of the Kings of the
+Air&mdash;a mere cart-load of sticks and bark and
+coarse grass, apparently tumbled at haphazard
+upon the narrow ledge. But in fact its foundations
+were so skilfully wedged into the crevices
+of the rock, its structure was so cunningly interwoven,
+that the fiercest winds which scourged
+that lofty seat were powerless against it. It
+was a secure throne, no matter what tempests
+might rage around it.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></p>
+<p>Sitting half erect on the nest were two
+eaglets, almost full grown, and so nearly full
+feathered that Horner wondered why they did
+not take wing at his approach. He did not
+know that the period of helplessness with these
+younglings of royal birth lasted even after they
+looked as big and well able to take care of
+themselves as their parents. It was a surprise
+to him, also, to see that they were quite unlike
+their parents in color, being black all over
+from head to tail, instead of a rich brown with
+snow-white head, neck, and tail. As he stared,
+he slowly realized that the mystery of the rare
+&#8220;black eagle&#8221; was explained. He had seen
+one once, flying heavily just above the tree-tops,
+and imagined it a discovery of his own. But
+now he reached the just conclusion that it had
+been merely a youngster in its first plumage.</p>
+<p>As he stared, the two young birds returned
+his gaze with interest, watching him with
+steady, yellow, undaunted eyes from under their
+flat, fierce brows; with high-shouldered wings
+half raised, they appeared quite ready to resent
+any familiarity which the strange intruder
+might be contemplating.</p>
+<p>Horner lay face downward on his ledge, and
+studied the perpendicular rock below him for a
+way to reach the next. He had no very definite
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span>
+idea what he wanted to do when he got there;
+possibly, if the undertaking seemed feasible, he
+might carry off one of the royal brood and
+amuse himself with trying to domesticate it.
+But, at any rate, he hoped to add something,
+by a closer inspection, to his rather inadequate
+knowledge of eagles.</p>
+<p>And this hope, indeed, as he learned the
+next moment, was not unjustified. Cautiously
+he was lowering himself over the edge, feeling
+for the scanty and elusive foothold, when all at
+once the air was filled with a rush of mighty
+wings, which seemed about to overwhelm him.
+A rigid wing-tip buffeted him so sharply that
+he lost his hold on the ledge. With a yell of
+consternation, which caused his assailant to
+veer off, startled, he fell backwards, and plunged
+down straight upon the nest.</p>
+<p>It was the nest only that saved him from
+instant death. Tough and elastic, it broke his
+fall; but at the same time its elasticity threw
+him off, and on the rebound he went rolling
+and bumping on down the steep slopes below
+the ledge, with the screaming of the eagles in
+his ears, and a sickening sense in his heart that
+the sunlit world tumbling and turning somersaults
+before his blurred sight was his last view
+of life. Then, to his dim surprise, he was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+brought up with a thump; and clutching desperately
+at a bush which scraped his face, he
+lay still. At the same moment a flapping mass
+of feathers and fierce claws landed on top of him,
+but only to scramble off again as swiftly as possible
+with a hoarse squawk. He had struck one
+of the young eagles in his fall, hurled it from the
+nest, and brought it down with him to this lower
+ledge which had given him so timely a refuge.</p>
+<p>For several minutes, perhaps, he lay clutching
+the bush desperately and staring straight
+upwards. There he saw both parent eagles
+whirling excitedly, screaming, and staring down
+at him; and then the edge of the nest, somewhat
+dilapidated by his strange assault, overhanging
+the ledge about thirty feet above. At
+length his wits came back to him, and he
+cautiously turned his head to see if he was in
+danger of falling if he should relax his hold on
+the bush. He was in bewildering pain, which
+seemed distributed all over him; but in spite
+of it he laughed aloud, to find that the bush, to
+which he hung so desperately, was in a little
+hollow on a spacious platform, from which he
+could not have fallen by any chance. At that
+strange, uncomprehended sound of human
+laughter the eagles ceased their screaming for
+a few moments and wheeled farther aloof.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span></p>
+<p>With great difficulty and anguish Horner
+raised himself to a sitting position and tried to
+find out how seriously he was hurt. One leg
+was quite helpless. He felt it all over, and
+came to the conclusion that it was not actually
+broken; but for all the uses of a leg, for the
+present at least, it might as well have been
+putty, except for the fact that it pained him
+abominably. His left arm and shoulder, too,
+seemed to be little more than useless encumbrances,
+and he wondered how so many bruises
+and sprains could find place on one human
+body of no more than average size. However,
+having assured himself, with infinite relief, that
+there were no bones broken, he set his teeth
+grimly and looked about to take account of the
+situation.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>The ledge on which he had found refuge was
+apparently an isolated one, about fifty or sixty
+feet in length, and vanishing into the face of
+the sheer cliff at either end. It had a width of
+perhaps twenty-five feet; and its surface, fairly
+level, held some soil in its rocky hollows. Two
+or three dark-green seedling firs, a slim young
+silver birch, a patch or two of wind-beaten grass,
+and some clumps of harebells, azure as the clear
+sky overhead, softened the bareness of this tiny,
+high-flung terrace. In one spot, at the back, a
+spread of intense green and a handbreadth of
+moisture on the rock showed where a tiny spring
+oozed from a crevice to keep this lonely oasis
+in the granite alive and fresh.</p>
+<p>At the farthest edge of the shelf, and eying
+him with savage dread, sat the young eagle
+which had fallen with him. Horner noticed,
+with a kind of sympathy, that even the bird, for
+all his wings, had not come out of the affair
+without some damage; for one of its black wings
+was not held up so snugly as the other. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
+hoped it was not broken. As he mused vaguely
+upon this unimportant question, his pain so exhausted
+him that he sank back and lay once
+more staring up at the eagles, who were still
+wheeling excitedly over the nest. In an exhaustion
+that was partly sleep and partly coma,
+his eyes closed. When he opened them again,
+the sun was hours lower and far advanced
+towards the west, so that the ledge was in
+shadow. His head was now perfectly clear;
+and his first thought was of getting himself
+back to the canoe. With excruciating effort he
+dragged himself to the edge of the terrace and
+looked down. The descent, at this point, was
+all but perpendicular for perhaps a hundred
+feet. In full possession of his powers, he would
+find it difficult enough. In his present state
+he saw clearly that he might just as well throw
+himself over as attempt it.</p>
+<p>Not yet disheartened, however, he dragged
+himself slowly towards the other end of the terrace,
+where the young eagle sat watching him.
+As he approached, the bird lifted his wings, as
+if about to launch himself over and dare the
+element which he had not yet learned to master.
+But one wing drooped as if injured, and he knew
+the attempt would be fatal. Opening his beak
+angrily, he hopped away to the other end of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span>
+terrace. But Horner was paying no heed to
+birds at that moment. He was staring down
+the steep, and realizing that this ledge which
+had proved his refuge was now his prison, and
+not unlikely to become also his tomb.</p>
+<p>Sinking back against a rock, and grinding
+his teeth with pain, he strove to concentrate
+his attention upon the problem that confronted
+him. Was he to die of thirst and hunger on
+this high solitude before he could recover sufficiently
+to climb down? The thought stirred
+all his dogged determination. He <i>would</i> keep
+alive, and that was all there was about it. He
+<i>would</i> get well, and then the climbing down
+would be no great matter. This point settled,
+he dismissed it from his consideration and
+turned his thoughts to ways and means. After
+all, there was that little thread of a spring trickling
+from the rock! He would have enough
+to drink. And as for food&mdash;how much worse
+it would have been had the ledge been a bare
+piece of rock! Here he had some grass, and
+the roots of the herbs and bushes. A man
+could keep himself alive on such things if he
+had will enough. And, as a last resource, there
+was the young eagle! This idea, however, was
+anything but attractive to him; and it was with
+eyes of good-will rather than of appetite that he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span>
+glanced at his fellow-prisoner sitting motionless
+at the other extremity of the ledge.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;ld be hard lines, pardner, ef I should hev
+to eat you, after all!&#8221; he muttered, with a
+twisted kind of grin. &#8220;We&#8217;re both of us in a
+hole, sure enough, an&#8217; I&#8217;ll play fair as long as I
+kin!&#8221;</p>
+<p>As he mused, a great shadow passed over
+his head, and looking up, he saw one of the
+eagles hovering low above the ledge. It was
+the male, his old acquaintance, staring down at
+him from under that strange, black brow. He
+carried a large fish in his talons, and was plainly
+anxious to feed his captive young, but not quite
+ready to approach this mysterious man-creature
+who had been able to invade his eyrie as if with
+wings. Horner lay as still as a stone, watching
+through half-closed lids. The young eagle,
+seeing food so near, opened its beak wide and
+croaked eagerly; while the mother bird, larger
+but wilder and less resolute than her mate,
+circled aloof with sharp cries of warning. At
+last, unable any longer to resist the appeals of
+his hungry youngster, the great bird swooped
+down over him, dropped the fish fairly into his
+clutches, and slanted away with a hurried flapping
+which betrayed his nervousness.</p>
+<p>As the youngster fell ravenously upon his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+meal, tearing it and gulping the fragments,
+Horner drew a deep breath.</p>
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s where I come in, pardner,&#8221; he explained.
+&#8220;When I kin git up an appetite for
+that sort of vittles, I&#8217;ll go shares with you, ef
+y&#8217;ain&#8217;t got no objection!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Having conceived this idea, Horner was
+seized with a fear that the captive might presently
+gain the power of flight and get away.
+This was a thought under which he could not
+lie still. In his pocket he always carried a
+bunch of stout salmon-twine and a bit of copper
+rabbit-wire, apt to be needed in a hundred
+forest emergencies. He resolved to catch the
+young eagle and tether it securely to a bush.</p>
+<p>His first impulse was to set about this enterprise
+at once. With excruciating effort he
+managed to pull off his heavy woollen hunting-shirt,
+intending to use it as the toreador uses
+his mantle, to entangle the dangerous weapons of
+his adversary. Then he dragged himself across
+to the other end of the ledge and attempted
+to corner the captive. For this he was not
+quite quick enough, however. With a flop and
+a squawk the bird eluded him, and he realized
+that he had better postpone the undertaking
+till the morrow. Crawling back to his hollow
+by the bush, he sank down, utterly exhausted.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span>
+Not till the sharp chill which comes with sunset
+warned him of its necessity, was he able to
+grapple with the long, painful problem of getting
+his shirt on again.</p>
+<p>Through the night he got some broken
+sleep, though the hardness of his bed aggravated
+every hurt he had suffered. On the edge
+of dawn he saw the male eagle come again&mdash;this
+time more confidently and deliberately&mdash;to
+feed the captive. After he was gone,
+Horner tried to move, but found himself now,
+from the night&#8217;s chill and the austerity of his
+bed, altogether helpless. Not till the sun was
+high enough to warm him through and through,
+and not till he had manipulated his legs and
+arms assiduously for more than an hour, did
+his body feel as if it could ever again be of any
+service to him. Then he once more got off
+his shirt and addressed himself to the catching
+of the indignant bird whom he had elected to
+be his preserver.</p>
+<p>Though the anguish caused by every movement
+was no less intense than it had been the
+afternoon before, he was stronger now and more
+in possession of his faculties. Before starting
+the chase, he cut a strip from his shirt to wind
+around the leg of the young eagle, in order that
+he might be able to tether it tightly without
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+cutting the flesh. The bird had suddenly become
+most precious to him!</p>
+<p>Very warily he made his approaches, sidling
+down the ledge so as to give his quarry the
+least possible room for escape. As he drew
+near, the bird turned and faced him, with its
+one uninjured wing lifted menacingly and its
+formidable beak wide open. Holding the
+heavy shirt ready to throw, Horner crept up
+cautiously, so intent now upon the game that
+the anguish in the leg which he dragged stiffly
+behind him was almost forgotten. The young
+bird, meanwhile, waited, motionless and vigilant,
+its savage eyes hard as glass.</p>
+<p>At last a faint quiver and shrinking in the
+bird&#8217;s form, an involuntary contracting of the
+feathers, gave warning to Horner&#8217;s experienced
+eye that it was about to spring aside. On the
+instant he flung the shirt, keeping hold of it by
+the sleeve. By a singular piece of luck, upon
+which he had not counted at all, it opened as
+he threw it, and settled right over the bird&#8217;s
+neck and disabled wing, blinding and baffling it
+completely. With a muffled squawk it bounced
+into the air, both talons outspread and clawing
+madly; but in a second Horner had it by the
+other wing, pulling it down, and rolling himself
+over upon it so as to smother those dangerous
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+claws. He felt them sink once into his injured
+leg, but that was already anguishing so vehemently
+that a little more or less did not matter.
+In a few moments he had his captive bundled
+up with helplessness, and was dragging it to a
+sturdy bush near the middle of the terrace.
+Here, without much further trouble, he wrapped
+one of its legs with the strip of flannel from
+his shirt, twisted on a hand-length of wire, and
+then tethered it safely with a couple of yards of
+his doubled and twisted cord.</p>
+<p>Just as he had accomplished this to his satisfaction,
+and was about to undo the imprisoning
+shirt, it flashed across his mind that it was
+lucky the old eagles had not been on hand to
+interfere. He glanced upward&mdash;and saw the
+dark form dropping like a thunderbolt out of
+the blue. He had just time to fling himself over
+on his back, lifting his arm to shield his face,
+and his foot to receive the attack, when the hiss
+of that lightning descent filled his ears. Involuntarily
+he half closed his eyes. But no shock
+came, except a great buffet of air on his face.
+Not quite daring to grapple with that ready
+defence, the eagle had opened its wings when
+within a few feet of the ledge, and swerved
+upward again, where it hung hovering and
+screaming. Horner saw that it was the female,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span>
+and shook his fist at her in defiance. Had it
+been his old acquaintance and challenger, the
+male, he felt sure that he would not have got
+off so easily.</p>
+<p>Puzzled and alarmed, the mother now
+perched herself beside the other eaglet, on the
+edge of the nest. Then, keeping a careful eye
+upon her, lest she should return to the attack,
+Horner dexterously unrolled the shirt, and
+drew back just in time to avoid a vicious slash
+from the talons of his indignant prisoner. The
+latter, after some violent tugging and flopping
+at his tether and fierce biting at the wire, suddenly
+seemed to conclude that such futile
+efforts were undignified. He settled himself
+like a rock and stared unwinkingly at his
+captor.</p>
+<p>It was perhaps an hour after this, when the
+sun had grown hot, and Horner, having slaked
+his thirst at the spring in the rock, had tried
+rather ineffectually to satisfy his hunger on
+grass roots, that the male eagle reappeared,
+winging heavily from the farthest end of the
+lake. From his talons dangled a limp form,
+which Horner presently made out to be a duck.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Good!&#8221; he muttered to himself. &#8220;I always
+did like fowl better&#8217;n fish.&#8221;</p>
+<p>When the eagle arrived, he seemed to notice
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+something different in the situation, for he
+wheeled slowly overhead for some minutes,
+uttering sharp yelps of interrogation. But the
+appeals of the youngster at last brought him
+down, and he delivered up the prize. The
+moment he was gone, Horner crept up to where
+the youngster was already tearing the warm
+body to pieces. Angry and hungry, the bird
+made a show of fighting for his rights; but his
+late experience with his invincible conqueror
+had daunted him. Suddenly he hopped away,
+the full length of his tether; and Horner
+picked up the mangled victim. But his appetite
+was gone by this time; he was not
+yet equal to a diet of raw flesh. Tossing the
+prize back to its rightful owner, he withdrew
+painfully to grub for some more grass roots.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_10' id='linki_10'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-160.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 294px; height: 461px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 294px;'>
+&#8220;After this the eagle came regularly every three or four hours with food for the prisoner.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span></div>
+<p>After this the eagle came regularly every
+three or four hours with food for the prisoner.
+Sometimes it was a fish&mdash;trout, or brown
+sucker, or silvery chub&mdash;sometimes a duck
+or a grouse, sometimes a rabbit or a muskrat.
+Always it was the male, with that grim black
+streak across the side of his white face, who
+came. Always Horner made a point of taking
+the prize at once from the angry youngster,
+and then throwing it back to him, unable to
+stomach the idea of the raw flesh. At last, on
+the afternoon of the third day of his imprisonment,
+he suddenly found that it was not the
+raw flesh, but the grass roots, which he loathed.
+While examining a fine lake-trout, he remembered
+that he had read of raw fish being excellent
+food under the right conditions. This
+was surely one of those right conditions. Picking
+somewhat fastidiously, he nevertheless managed
+to make so good a meal off that big trout
+that there was little but head and tail to toss
+back to his captor.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Never mind, pardner!&#8221; he said seriously.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll divide fair nex&#8217; time. But you know
+you&#8217;ve been havin&#8217; more&#8217;n your share lately.&#8221;</p>
+<p>But the bird was so outraged that for a long
+time he would not look at these remnants, and
+only consented to devour them, at last, when
+Horner was not looking.</p>
+<p>After this Horner found it easy enough to
+partake of his prisoner&#8217;s meals, whether they
+were of fish, flesh, or fowl; and with the ice-cold
+water from the little spring, and an occasional
+mouthful of leaves and roots, he fared
+well enough to make progress towards recovery.
+The male eagle grew so accustomed to
+his presence that he would alight beside the
+prisoner, and threatened Horner with that old,
+cold stare of challenge, and frequently Horner
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+had to drive him off in order to save his share
+of the feast from the rapacity of the eaglet.
+But as for the female, she remained incurably
+suspicious and protesting. From the upper
+ledge, where she devoted her care to the other
+nestling, she would yelp down her threats and
+execrations, but she never ventured any nearer
+approach.</p>
+<p>For a whole week the naked hours of day
+and dark had rolled over the peak before
+Horner began to think himself well enough to
+try the descent. His arm and shoulder were
+almost well, but his leg, in spite of ceaseless
+rubbing and applications of moist earth, remained
+practically helpless. He could not
+bear his weight on it for a second. His first
+attempt at lowering himself showed him that
+he must not be in too great haste. It was
+nearly a week more before he could feel assured,
+after experiments at scaling the steep
+above him, that he was fit to face the terrible
+steep below. Then he thought of the eaglet,
+his unwilling and outraged preserver! After
+a sharp struggle, of which both his arms and
+legs bore the marks for months, he caught the
+bird once more and examined the injured wing.
+It was not broken; and he saw that its owner
+would be able to fly all right in time, perhaps
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+as soon as his more fortunate brother in the
+nest above. Satisfied on this point, he loosed
+all the bonds and jumped back to avoid the indomitable
+youngster&#8217;s retort of beak and claws.
+Unamazed by his sudden freedom, the young
+eagle flopped angrily away to the farther end
+of the ledge; and Horner, having resumed his
+useful shirt, started to climb down the mountain,
+whose ascent he had so heedlessly adventured
+nearly two weeks before. As he lowered
+himself over the dizzy brink, he glanced
+up, to see the male eagle circling slowly above
+him, gazing down at him with the old challenge
+in his unwinking, golden eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon you win!&#8221; said Horner, waving
+the imperturbable bird a grave salutation. &#8220;But
+you&#8217;re a gentleman, an&#8217; I thank you fer your
+kind hospitality.&#8221;</p>
+<p>It was still early morning when Horner
+started to descend the mountain. It was dusk
+when he reached the lake and flung himself
+down, prostrated with fatigue and pain and
+strain of nerve, beside his canoe. From moment
+to moment, through spells of reeling faintness
+and spasmodic exhaustion, the silent gulfs
+of space had clutched at him, as if the powers of
+the solitude and the peak had but spared him
+so long to crush him inexorably in the end. At
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
+last, more through the sheer indomitableness of
+the human spirit than anything else, he had
+won. But never afterwards could he think of
+that awful descent without a sinking of the
+heart. For three days more he made his camp
+by the lake, recovering strength and nerve
+before resuming his journey down the wild
+river to the settlements. And many times a
+day his salutations would be waved upward to
+that great, snowy-headed, indifferent bird, wheeling
+in the far blue, or gazing at the sun from
+his high-set watch-tower of the pine.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+<p>Two or three years later, it fell in Horner&#8217;s
+way to visit a great city, many hundreds of
+miles from the gray peak of &#8220;Old Baldy.&#8221; He
+was in charge of an exhibit of canoes, snowshoes,
+and other typical products of his forest-loving
+countrymen. In his first morning of
+leisure, his feet turned almost instinctively to
+the wooded gardens wherein the city kept
+strange captives, untamed exiles of the wilderness,
+irreconcilable aliens of fur and hide and
+feather, for the crowds to gape at through their
+iron bars.</p>
+<p>He wandered aimlessly past some grotesque,
+goatish-looking deer which did not interest
+him, and came suddenly upon a paddock containing
+a bull moose, two cows, and a yearling
+calf. The calf looked ungainly and quite content
+with his surroundings. The cows were
+faded and moth-eaten, but well fed. He had
+no concern for them at all. But the bull, a
+splendid, black-shouldered, heavy-muffled fellow,
+with the new antlers just beginning to knob
+out from his massive forehead, appealed to him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span>
+strongly. The splendid, sullen-looking beast
+stood among his family, but towered over and
+seemed unconscious of them. His long, sensitive
+muzzle was held high to catch a breeze
+which drew coolly down from the north, and
+his half-shut eyes, in Horner&#8217;s fancy, saw not
+the wires of his fence, but the cool, black-green
+fir thickets of the north, the gray rampikes of
+the windy barrens, the broad lily leaves afloat
+in the sheltered cove, the wide, low-shored lake
+water gleaming rose-red in the sunset.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a shame,&#8221; growled Horner, &#8220;to keep a
+critter like that shut up in a seven-by-nine
+chicken-pen!&#8221; And he moved on, feeling as
+if he were himself a prisoner, and suddenly
+homesick for a smell of the spruce woods.</p>
+<p>It was in this mood that he came upon the
+great dome-roofed cage containing the hawks
+and eagles. It was a dishevelled, dirty place,
+with a few uncanny-looking dead trees stuck
+up in it to persuade the prisoners that they
+were free. Horner gave a hasty glance and
+then hurried past, enraged at the sight of these
+strong-winged adventurers of the sky doomed
+to so tame a monotony of days. But just as
+he got abreast of the farther extremity of the
+cage, he stopped, with a queer little tug at his
+heart-strings. He had caught sight of a great,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+white-headed eagle, sitting erect and still on a
+dead limb close to the bars, and gazing through
+them steadily, not at him, but straight into the
+eye of the sun.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shucks! It ain&#8217;t possible! There&#8217;s millions
+o&#8217; bald eagles in the world!&#8221; muttered
+Horner discontentedly.</p>
+<p>It was the right side of the bird&#8217;s head that
+was turned towards him, and that, of course,
+was snowy white. Equally, of course, it was as,
+Horner told himself, the height of absurdity to
+think that this grave, immobile prisoner gazing
+out through the bars at the sun could be his
+old friend of the naked peak. Nevertheless,
+something within his heart insisted it was so.
+If only the bird would turn his head! At last
+Horner put two fingers between his mouth,
+and blew a whistle so piercing that every one
+stared rebukingly, and a policeman came strolling
+along casually to see if any one had signalled
+for help. But Horner was all unconscious of
+the interest which he had excited. In response
+to his shrill summons the eagle had slowly, very
+deliberately, turned his head, and looked him
+steadily in the eyes. Yes, there was the strange
+black bar above the left eye, and there, unbroken
+by defeat and captivity, was the old
+look of imperturbable challenge!
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span></p>
+<p>Horner could almost have cried, from pity
+and homesick sympathy. Those long days on
+the peak, fierce with pain, blinding bright with
+sun, wind-swept and solitary, through which
+this great, still bird had kept him alive, seemed
+to rush over his spirit all together.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Gee, old pardner!&#8221; he murmured, leaning
+as far over the railing as he could. &#8220;But ain&#8217;t
+you got the grit! I&#8217;d like to know who it was
+served this trick on you. But don&#8217;t you fret.
+I&#8217;ll get you out o&#8217; this, ef it takes a year&#8217;s arnings
+to do it! You wait an&#8217; see!&#8221; And with
+his jaws set resolutely he turned and strode
+from the gardens. That bird should not stay
+in there another night if he could help it.</p>
+<p>Horner&#8217;s will was set, but he did not understand
+the difficulties he had to face. At first
+he was confronted, as by a stone wall, by the
+simple and unanswerable fact that the bird was
+not for sale at any price. And he went to bed
+that night raging with disappointment and
+baffled purpose. But in the course of his
+efforts and angry protestations he had let out
+a portion of his story&mdash;and this, as a matter of
+interest, was carried to the president of the
+society which controlled the gardens. To this
+man, who was a true naturalist and not a mere
+dry-as-dust cataloguer of bones and teeth, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
+story made a strong appeal, and before Horner
+had quite made up his mind whether to get out
+a writ of <i>habeas corpus</i> for his imprisoned friend,
+or commit a burglary on the cage, there came
+a note inviting him to an interview at the president&#8217;s
+office. The result of this interview was
+that Horner came away radiant, convinced at
+last that there was heart and understanding in
+the city as well as in the country. He had
+agreed to pay the society simply what it might
+cost to replace the captive by another specimen
+of his kind; and he carried in his pocket an
+order for the immediate delivery of the eagle
+into his hands.</p>
+<p>To the practical backwoodsman there was
+no fuss or ceremony now to be gone through.
+He admired the expeditious fashion in which
+the keeper of the bird-house handled his dangerous
+charge, coming out of the brief tussle without
+a scratch. Trussed up as ignominiously as
+a turkey&mdash;proud head hooded, savage talons
+muffled, and skyey wings bound fast, the splendid
+bird was given up to his rescuer, who rolled
+him in a blanket without regard to his dignity,
+and carried him off under his arm like a bundle
+of old clothes.</p>
+<p>Beyond the outskirts of the city Horner had
+observed a high, rocky, desolate hill which
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span>
+seemed suited to his purpose. He took a
+street car and travelled for an hour with the
+bundle on his knees. Little his fellow-passengers
+guessed of the wealth of romance, loyalty,
+freedom, and spacious memory hidden in that
+common-looking bundle on the knees of the
+gaunt-faced, gray-eyed man. At the foot of
+the hill, at a space of bare and ragged common,
+Horner got off. By rough paths, frequented
+by goats, he made his way up the rocky slope,
+through bare ravines and over broken ridges,
+and came at last to a steep rock in a solitude,
+whence only far-off roofs could be seen, and
+masts, and bridges, and the sharp gleam of the
+sea in the distance.</p>
+<p>This place satisfied him. On the highest
+point of the rock he carefully unfastened the
+bonds of his prisoner, loosed him, and jumped
+back with respect and discretion. The great
+bird sat up very straight, half raised and lowered
+his wings as if to regain his poise, looked
+Horner dauntlessly in the eye, then stared
+slowly about him and above, as if to make sure
+that there were really no bars for him to beat
+his wings against. For perhaps a full minute
+he sat there. Then, having betrayed no unkingly
+haste, he spread his wings to their full
+splendid width and launched himself from the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+brink. For a few seconds he flapped heavily,
+as if his wings had grown unused to their function.
+Then he got his rhythm, and swung into
+a wide, mounting spiral, which Horner watched
+with sympathetic joy. At last, when he was
+but a wheeling speck in the pale blue dome,
+he suddenly turned and sailed off straight towards
+the northeast, with a speed which carried
+him out of sight in a moment.</p>
+<p>Horner drew a long breath, half wistful, half
+glad.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Them golden eyes of yourn kin see a thunderin&#8217;
+long ways off, pardner,&#8221; he muttered, &#8220;but
+I reckon even you can&#8217;t make out the top of
+&#8216;Old Baldy&#8217; at this distance. It&#8217;s the eyes o&#8217;
+your heart ye must have seen it with, to make
+for it so straight!&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_LORD_OF_THE_GLASS_HOUSE' id='THE_LORD_OF_THE_GLASS_HOUSE'></a>
+<h2>THE LORD OF THE GLASS HOUSE</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></div>
+<h2>The Lord of the Glass House</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>In the sheltered Caribbean cove the water
+was warm as milk, green and clear as
+liquid beryl, and shot through with shimmering
+sun. Under that stimulating yet mitigated
+radiance the bottom of the cove was astir with
+strange life, grotesque in form, but brilliant as
+jewels or flowers. Long, shining weeds, red,
+yellow, amber, purple, and olive, waved sinuously
+among the weed-like sea-anemones which
+outshone them in colored sheen. Fantastic
+pink-and-orange crabs sidled awkwardly but
+nimbly this way and that. Tiny sea-horses,
+yet more fantastic, slipped shyly from one weed-covert
+to another, aware of a possible peril in
+every gay but menacing bloom. And just above
+this eccentric life of the shoal sea-floor small
+fishes of curious form shot hither and thither,
+live, darting gleams of gold and azure and
+amethyst. Now and again a long, black
+shadow would sail slowly over the scene of
+freakish life&mdash;the shadow of a passing albacore
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+or barracouta. Instantly the shining fish
+would hide themselves among the shining
+shells, and every movement, save that of the
+unconsciously waving weeds, would be stilled.
+But the sinister shadow would go by, and
+straightway the sea-floor would be alive again,
+busy with its affairs of pursuit and flight.</p>
+<p>The floor of the cove was uneven, by reason
+of small, shell-covered rocks and stones being
+strewn over it at haphazard. From under the
+slightly overhanging base of one of these stones
+sprouted what seemed a cluster of yellowish
+gray, pink-mottled weed-stems, which sprawled
+out inertly upon the mottled bottom. Over
+the edge of the stone came swimming slowly
+one of the gold-and-azure fish, its jewelled, impassive
+eyes on the watch for some small prey.
+Up from the bottom, swift as a whip-lash, darted
+one of those inert-looking weed-stems, and
+fastened about the bright fish just behind the
+gills.</p>
+<p>Fiercely the shining one struggled, lashing
+with tail and fins till the water swirled to a
+boil over the shell-covered rock, and the sea-anemones
+all about shut their gorgeous, greedy
+flower-cups in a panic. But the struggle was
+a vain one. Slowly, inexorably, that mottled
+tentacle curled downward with its prey, and a
+portion of the under side of the rock became
+alive! Two ink-black eyes appeared, bulging,
+oval, implacable; and between them opened a
+great, hooked beak, like a giant parrot&#8217;s. There
+was no separate head behind this gaping beak,
+but eyes and beak merely marked the blunt
+end of a mottled, oblong, sac-like body.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_11' id='linki_11'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-176.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 288px; height: 450px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 288px;'>
+&#8220;And the writhing tentacles composed themselves once more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting the next careless passer-by.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span></div>
+<p>As the victim was drawn down to the waiting
+beak, among the bases of the tentacles, all
+the tentacles awoke to dreadful life, writhing
+in aimless excitement, although there was no
+work for them to do. In a few seconds the fish
+was torn asunder and engulfed&mdash;those inky
+eyes the while unwinking and unmoved. A
+darker, livid hue passed fleetingly over the
+pallid body of the octopus. Then it slipped
+back under the shelter of the rock; and the
+writhing tentacles composed themselves once
+more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting
+the next careless passer-by. Once more they
+seemed mere inert trailers of weed, not worth
+the notice of fish or crab. And soon the
+anemones near by reopened their treacherous
+blooms of yellow and crimson.</p>
+<p>Whether because there was something in the
+gold-and-azure fish that disturbed his inward
+content, or because his place of ambush had
+somehow grown distasteful to his soft, unarmored
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span>
+body, the octopus presently bestirred
+himself and crawled forth into the open, walking
+awkwardly on the incurled tips of his tentacles.
+It looked about as comfortable a method
+of progression as for a baby to creep on the
+back of its hands. The traveller himself did
+not seem to find it altogether satisfactory, for
+all at once he sprang upward nimbly, clear of
+the bottom, and gathered his eight tentacles into
+a compact parallel bunch extending straight out
+past his eyes. In this attitude he was no longer
+clumsy, but trim and swift-looking. Beneath
+the bases of the tentacles, on the under side of
+the body, a sort of valve opened spasmodically
+and took in a huge gulp of water, which was
+at once ejected with great force through a tube
+among the tentacles. Driven by the strange
+propulsion of this pulsating stream, the elongated
+shape shot swiftly on its way, but travelling
+backward instead of forward. The traveller
+had apparently taken his direction with care
+before he started, however, for he made his
+way straight to another rock, weedier and
+more overhanging than the first. Here he
+stopped, settled downward, and let his tentacles
+once more sprawl wide, preparatory to backing
+his spotted body-sac into its new quarters.</p>
+<p>This was the moment when he was least
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+ready for attack or defence; and just at this
+moment a foraging dolphin, big-jawed and hungry,
+shot down upon him through the lucent
+green, mistaking him, perhaps, for an overgrown
+but unretaliating squid. The assailant
+aimed at the big, succulent-looking body, but
+missed his aim, and caught instead one of the
+tentacles which had reared themselves instantly
+to ward off the attack. Before he realized
+what was happening, another tentacle had
+curled about his head, clamping his jaws firmly
+together so that he could not open them to release
+his hold; while yet others had wrapped
+themselves securely about his body.</p>
+<p>The dolphin was a small one; and such a
+situation as this had never come within range
+of his experience. In utter panic he lashed
+out with his powerful tail and darted forward,
+carrying the octopus with him. But
+the weight upon his head, the crushing encumbrance
+about his body, were too much
+for him, and bore him slowly downward. Suddenly
+two tentacles, which had been trailing
+for an anchorage, got grip upon the bottom&mdash;and
+the dolphin&#8217;s frantic flight came to a stop
+abruptly. He lashed, plunged, whirled in a
+circle, but all to no purpose. His struggles
+grew weaker. He was drawn down, inexorably,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+till he lay quivering on the sand. Then
+the great beak of the octopus made an end of
+the matter, and the prey was dragged back
+to the lair beneath the weed-covered rock.</p>
+<p>A long time after this, a shadow bigger and
+blacker than that of any albacore&mdash;bigger
+than that of any shark or saw-fish&mdash;drifted
+over the cove. There was a splash, and a
+heavy object came down upon the bottom,
+spreading the swift stillness of terror for yards
+about. The shadow ceased drifting, for the
+boat had come to anchor. Then in a very
+few minutes, because the creatures of the sea
+seem unable to fear what does not move, the
+life of the sea-floor again bestirred itself, and
+small, misshapen forms that did not love the
+sunlight began to convene in the shadow of the
+boat.</p>
+<p>Presently, from over the side of the boat
+descended a dark tube, with a bright tip that
+seemed like a kind of eye. The tube moved
+very slowly this way and that, as if to let the
+eye scan every hiding-place on the many-colored
+bottom. As it swept over the rock
+that sheltered the octopus, it came to a stop.
+Those inert, sprawling things that looked like
+weeds appeared to interest it. Then it was
+softly withdrawn.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span></p>
+<p>A few moments later, a large and tempting
+fish appeared at the surface of the water, and
+began slowly sinking straight downward in a
+most curious fashion. The still eyes of the
+octopus took note at once. They had never
+seen a fish behave that way before; but it
+plainly was a fish. A quiver of eagerness
+passed through the sprawling tentacles, for
+their owner was already hungry again. But
+the prize was still too far away, and the tentacles
+did not move. The curious fish, however,
+seemed determined to come no nearer,
+and at last the waiting tentacles came stealthily
+to life. Almost imperceptibly they drew themselves
+forward, writhing over the bottom as
+casually as weeds adrift in a light current.
+And behind them those two great, inky, impassive
+eyes, and then the fat, mottled, sac-like
+body, emerged furtively from under the
+rock.</p>
+<p>The bottom, just at this point, was covered
+with a close brown weed, and almost at once
+the body of the octopus and his tentacles began
+to change to the same hue. When the
+change was complete, the gliding monster was
+almost invisible. He was now directly beneath
+that incomprehensible fish; but the fish had
+gently risen, so that it was still out of reach.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span></p>
+<p>For a few seconds the octopus crouched,
+staring upward with motionless orbs, and
+gathering himself together. Then he sprang
+straight up, like a leaping spider. He fixed
+two tentacles upon the tantalizing prey; then
+the other tentacles straightened out, and with
+a sharp jet of water from his propulsion tube
+he essayed to dart back to his lair.</p>
+<p>To his amazement, the prey refused to come.
+In some mysterious way it managed to hold itself&mdash;or
+was held&mdash;just where it was. Amazement
+gave way to rage. The monster wrapped
+his prize in three more tentacles, and then
+plunged his beak into it savagely. The next
+instant he was jerked to the surface of the
+water. A blaze of fierce sun blinded him, and
+strong meshes enclosed him, binding and entangling
+his tentacles.</p>
+<p>In such an appalling crisis most creatures
+of sea or land would have been utterly demoralized
+by terror. Not so the octopus.
+Maintaining undaunted the clutch of one tentacle
+upon his prize, he turned the others,
+along with the effectual menace of his great
+beak, to the business of battle. The meshes
+fettered him in a way that drove him frantic
+with rage, but two of his tentacles managed
+to find their way through, and writhed madly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+this way and that in search of some tangible
+antagonist on which to fasten themselves.
+While they were yet groping vainly for a grip,
+he felt himself lifted bodily forth into the
+strangling air, and crowded&mdash;net, prey, and
+all&mdash;into a dark and narrow receptacle full of
+water.</p>
+<p>This fate, of course, was not to be tamely
+endured. Though he was suffocating in the
+unnatural medium, and though his great, unwinking
+eyes could see but vaguely outside
+their native element, he was all fight. One
+tentacle clutched the rim of the metal vessel;
+and one fixed its deadly suckers upon the bare
+black arm of a half-seen adversary who was
+trying to crowd him down into the dark prison.
+There was a strident yell. A sharp, authoritative
+voice exclaimed: &#8220;Look out! Don&#8217;t
+hurt him! <i>I&#8217;ll</i> make him let go!&#8221; But the
+next instant the frightened darky had whipped
+out a knife and sliced off a good foot of the
+clutching tentacle. As the injured stump
+shrank back upon its fellows like a spade-cut
+worm, the other tentacle was deftly twisted
+loose from its hold on the rim, and the captive
+felt himself forced down into the narrow prison.
+A cover was clapped on, and he found himself
+in darkness, with his prey still gripped securely.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+Upset and raging though he was, there was
+nothing to be done about it, so he fell to feasting
+indignantly upon the prize for which he
+had paid so dear.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>Left to himself, the furious prisoner by and
+by disentangled himself from the meshes of
+the net, and composed himself as well as he
+could in his straitened quarters. Then for
+days and days thereafter there was nothing
+but tossing and tumbling, blind feeding, and
+uncomprehended distress; till at last his prison
+was turned upside down and he was dropped
+unceremoniously into a great tank of glass and
+enamel that glowed with soft light. Bewildered
+though he was, he took in his surroundings
+in an instant, straightened his tentacles
+out before him, and darted backwards to the
+shelter of an overhanging rock which he had
+marked on the floor of the tank. Having
+backed his defenceless body under that shield,
+he flattened his tentacles anxiously among the
+stones and weeds that covered the tank-bottom,
+and impassively stared about.</p>
+<p>It was certainly an improvement on the black
+hole from which he had just escaped. Light
+came down through the clear water, but a
+cold, white light, little like the green and gold
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span>
+glimmer that illumined the slow tide in his
+Caribbean home. The floor about him was not
+wholly unfamiliar. The stones, the sand, the
+colored weeds, the shells,&mdash;they were like, yet
+unlike, those from which he had been snatched
+away. But on three sides there were white,
+opaque walls, so near that he could have
+touched them by stretching out a tentacle.
+Only on the fourth side was there space&mdash;but a
+space of gloom and inexplicable moving confusion
+from which he shrank. In this direction
+the floor of sand and stones and weeds ended
+with a mysterious abruptness; and the vague
+openness beyond filled him with uneasiness.
+Pale-colored shapes, with eyes, would drift up,
+sometimes in crowds, and stare in at him
+fixedly. It daunted him as nothing else had
+ever done, this drift of peering faces. It was
+long before he could teach himself to ignore
+them. When food came to him,&mdash;small fish
+and crabs, descending suddenly from the top
+of the water,&mdash;at such times the faces would
+throng tumultuously in that open space, and for
+a long time the many peering eyes would so
+disconcert him as almost to spoil his appetite.
+But at last he grew accustomed even to the
+faces and the eyes, and disregarded them as if
+they were so much passing seaweed, borne by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+the tide. His investigating tentacles had shown
+him that between him and the space of confusion
+there was an incomprehensible barrier
+fixed, which he could see through but not pass;
+and that if he could not get out, neither could
+the faces get in to trouble him.</p>
+<p>Thus, well fed and undisturbed, the octopus
+grew fairly content in his glass house, and
+never guessed the stormy life of the great city
+beyond his walls. For all he knew, his comfortable
+prison might have been on the shore
+of one of his own Bahaman Keys. He was
+undisputed lord of his domain, narrow though
+it was; and the homage he received from the
+visitors who came to pay him court was untiring.</p>
+<p>His lordship had been long unthreatened,
+when one day, had he not been too indifferent
+to notice them, he might have seen that the
+faces in the outer gloom were unusually numerous,
+the eyes unusually intent. Suddenly there
+was the accustomed splash in the water above
+him. That splash had come to him to mean
+just food, unresisting victims, and his tentacles
+were instantly alert to seize whatever should
+come within reach.</p>
+<p>This time the splash was unusually heavy,
+and he was surprised to see a massive, roundish
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+creature, with a little, pointed tail sticking out
+behind, a small, snake-like head stretched out in
+front, and two little flippers outspread on each
+side. With these four flippers the stranger
+came swimming down calmly towards him.
+He had never seen anything at all like this
+daring stranger; but without the slightest hesitation
+he whipped up two writhing tentacles
+and seized him. The faces beyond the glass
+surged with excitement.</p>
+<p>When that abrupt and uncompromising clutch
+laid hold upon the turtle, his tail, head, and
+flippers vanished as if they had never been,
+and his upper and lower shells closed tight
+together till he seemed nothing more than a
+lifeless box of horn. Absolutely unresisting,
+he was drawn down to the impassive eyes and
+gaping beak of his captor. The tentacles
+writhed all over him, stealthily but eagerly
+investigating. Then the great parrot-beak laid
+hold on the shell, expecting to crush it. Making
+no impression, however, it slid tentatively
+all over the exasperating prize, seeking, but in
+vain, for a weak point.</p>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a name='linki_12' id='linki_12'></a>
+<img src='images/illus-188.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 293px; height: 454px;' /><br />
+<p class='caption' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 293px;'>
+&#8220;Without the slightest hesitation he whipped up two writhing tentacles and seized him.&#8221;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span></div>
+<p>This went on for several minutes, while the
+watching faces outside the glass gazed in tense
+expectancy. Then at last the patience of the
+octopus gave way. In a sudden fury he threw
+himself upon the exasperating shell, tumbling
+it over and over, biting at it madly, wrenching
+it insanely with all his tentacles. And the
+faces beyond the glass surged thrillingly, wondering
+how long the turtle would stand such
+treatment.</p>
+<p>Shut up within his safe armor, the turtle all
+at once grew tired of being tumbled about, and
+his wise discretion forsook him. He did not
+mind being shut up, but he objected to being
+knocked about. Some prudence he had, to be
+sure, but not enough to control his short
+temper. Out shot his narrow, vicious-looking
+head, with its dull eyes and punishing jaws, and
+fastened with the grip of a bulldog upon the
+nearest of the tentacles, close to its base. A
+murmur arose outside the glass.</p>
+<p>The rage of the octopus swelled to a frenzy,
+and in his contortions the locked fighters
+bumped heavily against the glass, making the
+faces shrink back. The small stones on the
+bottom were scattered this way and that, and
+the fine silt rose in a cloud that presently obscured
+the battle.</p>
+<p>Had the turtle had cunning to match his
+courage, the lordship of the glass house might
+have changed holders in that fight. Had he
+fixed his unbreakable grip in the head of his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span>
+foe, just above the beak, he would have conquered
+in the end. But as it was, he had now
+a vulnerable point, and at last the octopus
+found it. His beak closed upon the exposed
+half of the turtle&#8217;s head, and slowly, inexorably,
+sheared it clean off just behind the eyes. The
+stump shrank instantly back into the shell;
+and the shell became again the unresisting
+plaything of the tentacles, which presently, as
+if realizing that it had no more power to retaliate,
+flung it aside. In a few minutes the silt
+settled. Then the eager faces beyond the glass
+saw the lord of the tank crouching motionless
+before his lair, his ink-like eyes as impassive
+and implacable as ever, while the turtle lay
+bottom side up against the glass, no more to
+be taken account of than a stone.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='BACK_TO_THE_WATER_WORLD' id='BACK_TO_THE_WATER_WORLD'></a>
+<h2>BACK TO THE WATER WORLD</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span></div>
+<h2>Back to the Water World</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>An iron coast, bleak, black, and desolate,
+without harborage for so much as a catboat
+for leagues to north or south. A coast so
+pitiless, so lashed forever by the long, sullen
+rollers of the North Atlantic, so tormented by
+the shifting and treacherous currents of the tide
+between its chains of outlying rocky islets, that
+no ship ever ventured willingly within miles of
+its uncompromising menace. A coast so little
+favored by summer that even in glowing August
+the sun could reach it seldom through its
+cold and drenching fogs.</p>
+<p>Perhaps half a mile off shore lay the islands&mdash;some
+of them, indeed, mere ledges, deathtraps
+for ships, invisible except at low tide, but
+others naked hills of upthrust rock, which the
+highest tides and wildest hurricanes could not
+overwhelm. Even on the loftiest of them there
+was neither grass, bush, nor tree to break the
+jagged outlines, but day and night, summer and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span>
+winter long, the sea-birds clamored over them,
+and brooded by the myriad on their upper
+ledges.</p>
+<p>These islands were fretted, on both their
+landward and their seaward sides, by innumerable
+caves. In one of these caves, above the
+reach of the highest tide, and facing landward,
+so that even in the wildest storms no waves
+could invade it, the pup of the seal first opened
+his mild eyes upon the misty northern daylight.</p>
+<p>Of all the younglings of the wild, he was perhaps
+the most winsome, with his soft, whitish,
+shadowy-toned, close, woolly coat, his round,
+babyish head, his dark, gentle eyes wide with
+wonder at everything to be seen from the cave
+mouth. He lay usually very near the entrance,
+but partly hidden from view by a ragged horn
+of rock. While alone&mdash;which was a good
+part of the time, indeed, like most fishermen&#8217;s
+children&mdash;he would lie so still that his woolly
+little form was hardly to be distinguished from
+the rock that formed his couch. He had no
+desire to attract public attention&mdash;for the only
+public that might have been attracted to attend
+consisted of the pair of great sea eagles whose
+shadows sometimes swooped aross the ledge,
+or of an occasional southward-wandering white
+bear. As for the innumerable gulls, and gannets,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+and terns, and lesser auks, which made
+the air forever loud about these lonely islets,
+nothing could have induced them to pay him
+any attention whatever. They knew him, and
+his people, to be harmless; and that was all
+their winged and garrulous companies were
+concerned to know.</p>
+<p>But to the little seal, on the other hand, the
+noisy birds were incessantly interesting. Filled
+with insatiable curiosity, his mild eyes gazed
+out upon the world. The sea just below the
+cave was, of course, below his line of vision;
+but at a distance of some hundred yards or so&mdash;a
+distance which varied hugely with the
+rising and falling of the tide&mdash;he caught sight
+of the waves, and felt himself strangely drawn
+to them. Whether leaden and menacing under
+the drift of rain and the brooding of gray
+clouds, or green-glinting under the sheen of
+too rare sunshine, he loved them and found
+them always absorbing. The sky, too, was
+worth watching, especially when white fleeces
+chased each other across a patch of blue, or
+wonderful colors, pallid yet intense, shot up
+into it at dawn from behind a far-off line of
+saw-toothed rocks.</p>
+<p>The absences of the mother seal were sometimes
+long, for it required many fish to satisfy
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span>
+her appetite and keep warm her red blood in
+those ice-cold arctic currents. Fish were abundant,
+to be sure, along that coast, where the
+invisible fruitfulness of the sea made compensation
+for the blank barrenness of the land; but
+they were swift and wary, and had to be caught,
+one at a time, outwitted and outspeeded in their
+own element. The woolly cub, therefore, was
+often hungry before his mother returned. But
+when, at last, she came, flopping awkwardly up
+the rocky slope, and pausing for an instant to
+reconnoitre, as her round, glistening head appeared
+over the brink of the ledge, the youngster&#8217;s
+delight was not all in the satisfying of his
+hunger and in the mothering of his loneliness.
+As he snuggled under her caress, the salty drip
+from her wet, sleek sides thrilled him with a
+dim sense of anticipation. He connected it
+vaguely with that endless, alluring dance of the
+waves beyond his threshold.</p>
+<p>When he had grown a few days older, the
+little seal began to turn his attention from the
+brighter world outside to the shadows that
+surrounded him in his cave. His interest was
+caught at once by a woolly gray creature like
+himself, only somewhat smaller, which lay perhaps
+seven or eight feet away, at the other side
+of the cave, and farther back. He had not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+realized before that his narrow retreat was the
+home of two families. Being of a companionable
+disposition, he eyed his newly discovered
+neighbor with immense good-will. Finding no
+discouragement in the mild gaze that answered
+his, he presently raised himself on his flippers,
+and with laborious, ungainly effort flopped himself
+over to make acquaintance. Both youngsters
+were too unsophisticated for ceremony, too
+trusting for shyness, so in a very few minutes
+they were sprawling over each other in great
+content.</p>
+<p>In this baby comradeship the stranger&#8217;s
+mother, returning to her household duties,
+found them. She was smaller and younger
+than our Pup&#8217;s dam, but with the same kindly
+eyes and the same salty-dripping coat. So,
+when her own baby fell to nursing, the Pup
+insisted confidently on sharing the entertainment.
+The young mother protested, and drew
+herself away uneasily, with little threatening
+grunts; but the Pup, refusing to believe she was
+in earnest, pressed his point so pertinaciously
+that at length he got his way. When, half an
+hour later, the other mother returned to her
+charge, well filled with fish and well disposed
+toward all the world, she showed no discontent
+at the situation. She belonged to the tribe of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span>
+the &#8220;Harbor Seals,&#8221; and, unlike her pugnacious
+cousins, the big &#8220;Hoods,&#8221; she was always
+inclined towards peace and a good understanding.
+There was probably nothing that could
+have brought the flame of wrath into her confiding
+eyes, except an attack upon her young,
+on whose behalf she would have faced the sea-serpent
+himself. Without a moment&#8217;s question,
+she joined the group; and henceforth the cave
+was the seat of a convenient partnership in
+mothers.</p>
+<p>It was perhaps a week or two later, when the
+islands were visited by a wonderful spell of sun
+and calm. It was what would have been called,
+farther south, Indian summer. All along the
+ledges, just above the mark of the diminished
+surf, the seals lay basking in the glow. The
+gulls and mews clamored rapturously, and
+squabbled with gay zest over the choicer prizes
+of their fishing. It appeared to be generally
+known that the bears, displeased at the warmth,
+had withdrawn farther north. The sea took
+on strange hues of opal and lilac and thrice-diluted
+sapphire. Even the high black cliffs
+across the charmed water veiled their harshness
+in a skyey haze. It was a time for delicious indolence,
+for the slackening of vigilance, for the
+forgetfulness of peril. And it was just at this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span>
+very time that it came the young seal&#8217;s way to
+get his first lesson in fear.</p>
+<p>He was lying beside his mother, about a
+dozen feet out from the mouth of the cave. A
+few steps away basked his little cave-mate&mdash;alone
+for the moment, because its mother had
+flung herself vehemently down the slope to capture
+a wounded fish which had just been washed
+ashore. As she reached the water&#8217;s edge, a
+wide shadow floated across the rocks. She
+wheeled like a flash and scrambled frantically
+up the steep. But she was too late. She saw
+the other mothers near by throw their bodies
+over those of their young, and lift their faces skyward
+with bared, defiant fangs. She saw her
+own little one, alone in the bright open, gaze
+around in helpless bewilderment and alarm. He
+saw her coming, and lifting himself on his weak
+flippers, started towards her with a little cry.
+Then came a terrible hissing of wings in the
+air above, and he cowered, trembling. The
+next instant, with a huge buffet of wind in all
+the upturned faces, a pair of vast, dark pinions
+were outspread above the trembler; great
+clutching talons reached down and seized him
+by neck and back; and his tiny life went out
+in a throttled whimper. The nearest seal, the
+mother of the Pup, reared on her flippers and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span>
+lunged savagely at the marauder. But all she got
+was a blinding slash of rigid wing-tips across her
+face. Then, launching himself from the brink
+of the slope, the eagle flapped scornfully away
+across the water toward the black cliffs, his victim
+hanging limply from his claws. And all along
+the ledges the seals barked furiously after him.</p>
+<p>The Pup, whom death had brushed so closely,
+could not be persuaded for hours to leave the
+shelter of his mother&#8217;s side, even after she had
+led him back to the cave. But now he found
+himself the exclusive proprietor of two mothers;
+for the bereaved dam, thenceforth, was no less
+assiduously devoted to him than his own parent.
+With such care, and with so abundant
+nourishment, he throve amazingly, outstripping
+in growth all the other youngsters of his age
+along the ledges. His terror quickly passed
+away from him; but the results of the lesson
+long remained, in the vigilance with which his
+glance would sweep the sky, and question every
+approach of wings more wide than those of
+gull or gannet.</p>
+<p>It was not long after this grim chance that
+the Pup&#8217;s woolly coat began to change. A
+straight, close-lying under-fur pushed swiftly
+into view, and the wool dropped out&mdash;a process
+which a certain sense of irritation in his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+skin led him to hasten by rubbing his back
+and sides against the rock. In an astonishingly
+short time his coat grew like his mother&#8217;s&mdash;a
+yellowish gray, dotted irregularly with blackish
+spots, and running to a creamy tone under the
+belly. As soon as this change was completed
+to his mother&#8217;s satisfaction, he was led down
+close to the water&#8217;s edge, where he had never
+been allowed before.</p>
+<p>Eagerly as he loved the sight of the waves,
+and the salty savor of them, when the first thin
+crest splashed up and soused him he shrank
+back daunted. It was colder, too, that first slap
+in his face, than he had expected. He turned,
+intending to retreat a little way up the rocks
+and consider the question, in spite of the fact
+that there was his little mother in the water,
+swimming gayly a few feet out from shore and
+coaxing him with soft cries. He was anxious to
+join her&mdash;but not just yet. Then, all at once
+the question was decided for him. His real
+mother, who was just behind him, suddenly
+thrust her muzzle under his flank, and sent him
+rolling into deep water.</p>
+<p>He came up at once, much startled. Straightway
+he found that he could move in the water
+much more easily and naturally than on shore&mdash;and
+he applied the discovery to getting ashore
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span>
+again with all possible haste. But his mother,
+awaiting him at the edge, shoved him off relentlessly.</p>
+<p>Feeling much injured, he turned and swam
+out to his other mother. Here the first one
+joined him; and in a few minutes amazement
+and resentment alike were lost in delight, as
+he began to realize that this, at last, was life.
+Here, and not sprawling half helplessly on the
+rocks, was where he belonged. He swam, and
+dived, and darted like a fish, and went wild
+with childish ecstasy. He had come to his own
+element. After this, he hardly ever returned
+to the cave, but slept close at the side of
+one or the other of his mothers, on the open
+rocks just a few feet above the edge of tide.</p>
+<p>A little later came a period of mad weather,
+ushering in the autumn storms. Snow and
+sleet drove down out of the north, and lay in
+great patches over the more level portions of
+the islets above tide. The wind seemed as if
+it would lift the islets bodily and sweep them
+away. The vast seas, green and black and
+lead-color, thundered down upon the rocks as
+if they would batter them to fragments. The
+ledges shuddered under the incessant crashing.
+When the snow stopped, on its heels came the
+vanguard of the arctic cold. The ice formed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span>
+instantly in all the pools left by the tide. Along
+the edges of the tide it was ground to a bitter
+slush by the perpetual churning of the waves.</p>
+<p>After a week or two of this violence, the
+seals&mdash;who, unlike their polar cousins, the
+&#8220;Harps&#8221; and the &#8220;Hoods,&#8221; were no great lovers
+of storm and the fiercer cold&mdash;began to feel
+discontented. Presently a little party of them,
+not more than a score in all, with a few of the
+stronger youngsters of that season, on a sudden
+impulse left their stormy ledges and started
+southward. The Pup, who, thanks to his double
+mothering, was far bigger and more capable
+than any of his mates, went with his partner-mothers
+in the very forefront of the migration.</p>
+<p>Straight down along the roaring coast they
+kept, usually at a distance of not more than
+half a mile from shore. They had, of course,
+no objection to going farther out, but neither
+had they any object in doing so, since the fish-life
+on which they fed as they journeyed was
+the more abundant where the sea began to
+shoal. With their slim, sleek, rounded bodies,
+thickest at the fore flippers and tapering finely
+to tail and muzzle, each a lithe and close-knit
+structure of muscle and nerve-energy, they could
+swim with astounding speed; and therefore, although
+there was no hurry whatever, they went
+along at the pace of a motor-boat.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span></p>
+<p>All this time the gale was lashing the coast,
+but it gave them little concern. Down in the
+black troughs of the gigantic rollers there was
+always peace from the yelling of the wind&mdash;a
+tranquillity wherein the gulls and mews would
+snatch their rest after being buffeted too long
+about the sky. Near the tops of the waves, of
+course, it was not good to be, for the gale would
+rip the crests off bodily and tear them into
+shreds of whipping spray. But the seals could
+always dive and slip smoothly under these tormented
+regions. Moreover, if weary of the
+tossing surfaces and the tumult of the gale,
+they had only to sink themselves down, down,
+into the untroubled gloom beneath the wave-bases,
+where greenish lights gleamed or faded
+with the passing of the rollers overhead, and
+where strange, phosphorescent shapes of life
+crawled or clung among the silent rocks.
+Longer than any other red-blooded animal,
+except the whale, could their lungs go without
+fresh oxygen; so, though they knew nothing of
+those great depths where the whales sometimes
+frequent, it was easy for them to go deep
+enough to get below the storm.</p>
+<p>Sometimes a break in the coast-line, revealing
+the mouth of an inlet, would tempt the little
+band of migrants. Hastening shoreward, they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+would push their way inland between the
+narrowing banks, often as far as the head of
+tide, gambolling in the quiet water, and chasing
+the salmon fairly out upon the shoals. Like
+most discriminating creatures, they were very
+fond of salmon, but it was rarely, except on such
+occasions as this, that they had a chance to
+gratify their taste.</p>
+<p>After perhaps a week of this southward
+journeying, the travellers found themselves one
+night at the head of a little creek where the tide
+lapped pleasantly on a smooth, sandy beach.
+They were already getting into milder weather,
+and here, a half mile inland, there was no wind.
+The sky was overcast, and the seals lay in contented
+security along the edge of the water.
+The blacker darkness of a fir forest came down
+to within perhaps fifty paces of their resting-place.
+But they had no anxieties. The only
+creatures that they had learned to fear on shore
+besides man were the polar bears; and they
+knew they were now well south of that deadly
+hunter&#8217;s range. As for eagles, they did not
+hunt at night; and, moreover, they were a terror
+only in the woolly-coated, baby stage of a
+seal&#8217;s existence.</p>
+<p>But it often enough happens that wild animals,
+no less than human beings, may be ignorant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+of something which their health requires
+them to know. There was another bear in
+Labrador&mdash;a smallish, rusty-coated, broad-headed,
+crafty cousin of the ordinary American
+black bear. And one of these, who had acquired
+a taste for seal, along with some cleverness
+in gratifying that taste, had his headquarters,
+as it chanced, in that near-neighboring
+fir wood.</p>
+<p>The Pup lay crowded in snugly between his
+two mothers. He liked the warmth of being
+crowded; for the light breeze, drawing up from
+the water, was sharp with frost. There is such
+a thing, however, as being just a little too
+crowded, and presently, waking up with a protest,
+he pushed and wriggled to get more space.
+As he did so, he raised his head. His keen
+young eyes fell upon a black something a little
+blacker than the surrounding gloom.</p>
+<p>The black something was up the slope halfway
+between the water and the wood. It
+looked like a mass of rock. But the Pup had
+a vague feeling that there had been no rock
+thereabouts when he went to sleep. A thrill of
+apprehension went up and down his spine,
+raising the stiffish hairs along his neck. Staring
+with all his eyes through the dimness, he presently
+saw the black shape move. Yes, it was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+drawing nearer. With a shrill little bark of
+terror he gave the alarm, at the same time
+struggling free and hurling himself toward the
+water.</p>
+<p>In that same instant the bear rushed, coming
+down the slope as it were in one plunging
+jump. The seals, light sleepers all, were already
+awake and floundering madly back to the water.
+But for one of them, and that one the Pup&#8217;s
+assistant mother, the alarm came too late.
+Just as she was turning, bewildered with terror
+of she knew not what, the dark bulk of the bear
+landed upon her, crushing her down. A terrific
+blow on the muzzle broke her skull, and she
+collapsed into a quivering mass. The rest of
+the band, after a moment of loud splashing,
+swam off noiselessly for the safe retreat of the
+outer ledges. And the bear, after shaking the
+body of his victim to make sure it was quite
+dead, dragged it away with a grunt of satisfaction
+into the fir wood.</p>
+<p>After this tragedy, though the travellers continued
+to ascend the creeks and inlets when the
+whim so moved them, they took care to choose
+for sleep the ruder security of outlying rocks
+and islands, and cherished, by night and by
+day, a wholesome distrust of dark fir woods.
+But for all their watchfulness their journeying
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span>
+was care-free and joyous, and from time to time,
+as they went, their light-heartedness would
+break out into aimless gambols, or something
+very like a children&#8217;s game of tag. Nothing,
+however, checked their progress southward,
+and presently, turning into the Belle Isle Straits,
+they came to summer skies and softer weather.
+At this point, under the guidance of an old
+male who had followed the southward track
+before, they forsook the Labrador shore-line
+and headed fearlessly out across the strait till
+they reached the coast of Newfoundland. This
+coast they followed westward till they gained
+the Gulf of St. Lawrence, then, turning south,
+worked their way down the southwest coast
+of the great Island Province, past shores still
+basking in the amethystine light of Indian
+summer, through seas so teeming with fish that
+they began to grow lazy with fatness. Here
+the Pup and other younger members of the
+company felt inclined to stay. But their elders
+knew that winter, with the long cold, and the
+scanty sun, and the perilous grinding of tortured
+ice-floes around the shore-rocks, would
+soon be upon them; so the journey was continued.
+On they pressed, across the wide gateway
+of the Gulf, from Cape Ray to North Cape,
+the eastern point of Nova Scotia. Good
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+weather still waited upon their wayfaring, and
+they loitered onward gayly, till, arriving at the
+myriad-islanded bay of the Tuskets, near the
+westernmost tip of the peninsula, they could
+not, for sheer satisfaction, go farther. Here
+was safe seclusion, with countless inaccessible
+retreats. Here was food in exhaustless plenty;
+and here was weather benignant enough for
+any reasonable needs.</p>
+<p>It was just here, off the Tuskets, that the
+Pup got another lesson. Hitherto his ideas
+of danger had been altogether associated with
+the land where eagles swooped out of a clear
+sky and bears skulked in the darkness, and
+where, moreover, he himself was incapable of
+swift escape. But now he found that the sea,
+too, held its menace for the gentle kindred of
+the seals. It was a still, autumnal morning, blue
+and clear, with a sunny sparkle on sea and air.
+The seals were most of them basking luxuriously
+on the seaward ledges of one of the outermost
+islands, while half a dozen of the more
+energetic were amusing themselves with their
+game of tag in the deep water. Pausing for a
+moment to take breath, after a sharp wrestling-match
+far down among the seaweeds, the Pup&#8217;s
+observant eyes caught sight of a small, black
+triangular object cutting swiftly the smooth surface
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span>
+of the swells. He stared at it curiously.
+It was coming towards him, but it did not, to
+his uninitiated eyes, look dangerous. Then he
+became conscious of a scurrying of alarm all
+about him; and cries of sharp warning reached
+him from the sentinels on the ledge. Like a
+flash he dived, at an acute angle to the line of
+approach of the mysterious black object. Even
+in the instant, it was close upon him, and he
+caught sight of a long, terrible, gray shape,
+thrice as long as a seal, which turned on one
+side in its rush, showing a whitish belly, and a
+gaping, saw-toothed mouth big enough to take
+him in at one gulp. Only by a hair&#8217;s-breadth
+did he avoid that awful rush, carrying with him
+as he passed the sound of the snapping jaws
+and the cold gleam of the shark&#8217;s small, malignant
+eye.</p>
+<p>Hideously frightened, he doubled this way
+and that, with a nimbleness that his huge pursuer
+could not hope to match. It took the shark
+but a few seconds to realize that this was a
+vain chase. An easier quarry caught his eye.
+He darted straight shoreward, where the deep
+water ran in abruptly to the very lip of the
+ledge. The Pup came to the surface to watch.
+One of the younger seals, losing its wits utterly
+with fright, and forgetting that its safety lay in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span>
+the deep water where it could twist and dodge,
+was struggling frantically to clamber out upon
+the rocks. It had almost succeeded, indeed.
+It was just drawing up its narrow, tail-like hind
+flippers, when the great, rounded snout of the
+shark shot into the air above it. The monstrous
+shape descended upon it, and fell back
+with it into the water, leaving only a splash and
+trickle of blood upon the lip of the ledge. The
+other seals tossed their heads wildly, jumped
+about on their fore-flippers, and barked in lively
+dismay; and in a few moments, as if the matter
+had been put to vote and carried unanimously,
+they betook themselves in haste to one of the
+inner islands, where they knew that the shark,
+who hates shoal water, would not venture to
+follow them.</p>
+<p>In this sheltered archipelago the little herd
+might well have passed the winter. But after a
+few weeks of content the southing spirit again
+seized upon the old male who had hitherto been
+the unquestioned leader. At this point, however,
+his authority went to pieces. When he
+resumed the southward wandering, less than
+half the herd accompanied him. But among
+those faithful were the Pup and his mild-eyed
+mother.</p>
+<p>Rounding the extremity of Nova Scotia, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span>
+travellers crossed the wide mouth of the Bay of
+Fundy, and lingered a few days about the lofty
+headlands of Grand Manan. By this time they
+had grown so accustomed to ships of all kinds,
+from the white-sailed fishing-smack to the long,
+black, churning bulk of the ocean liner, that
+they no longer heeded them any more than
+enough to give them a wide berth. One and
+all, these strange apparitions appeared quite indifferent
+to seals, so very soon the seals became
+almost indifferent to them. Off the island of
+Campobello, however, something mysterious
+occurred which put an end to this indifference,
+although none of the band could comprehend
+it.</p>
+<p>A beautiful, swift, white craft, with yellow
+gleams flashing here and there from her deck
+as the sun caught her polished brasswork, was
+cleaving the light waves northward. The seals,
+their round, dark heads bobbing above the
+water at a distance of perhaps three hundred
+yards from her port-quarter, gazed at the spectacle
+with childlike interest. They saw a group
+of men eying them from the deck of the swift
+monster. All at once from this group spurted
+two thin jets of flame. The Pup heard some
+tiny vicious thing go close over his head with
+a cruel whine, and <i>zip</i> sharply through a wave-crest
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+just beyond. On the instant, even before
+the sharp clatter of the two reports came to
+their ears, all the seals dived, and swam desperately
+to get as far away as possible from the
+terrifying bright monster. When they came
+to the surface again, they were far out of range.
+But the restless old male, their leader, was not
+among them. The white yacht was steaming
+away into the distance, with its so-called sportsmen
+congratulating themselves that they had
+almost certainly killed something. The little
+band of seals waited about the spot for an hour
+or two, expecting the return of their chief; and
+then, puzzled and apprehensive, swam away
+toward the green-crested shore-line of Maine.</p>
+<p>Here, lacking a leader, their migration came
+to an end. There seemed no reason to go
+farther, since here was everything they wanted.
+The Pup, by this time an expert pursuer of all
+but the swiftest fish, was less careful now to
+keep always within his mother&#8217;s reach, though
+the affection between the two was still ardent.
+One day, while he was swimming some little
+distance apart from the herd, he noticed a
+black-hulled boat rocking idly on the swells
+near by. It was too near for his comfort, so he
+dived at once, intending to seek a safer neighborhood.
+But as luck would have it, he had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span>
+hardly plunged below the surface when he encountered
+an enormous school of young herring.
+What throngs of them there were!
+And how crowded together! Never had he
+seen anything like it. They were darting this
+way and that in terrific excitement. He himself
+went wild at once, dashing hither and
+thither among them with snapping jaws, destroying
+many more than he could eat. And
+still they seemed to throng about him ever the
+more closely. At last he got tired of it, and
+dashed straight ahead to clear the shoal. The
+next moment, to his immeasurable astonishment,
+he was checked and flung back by a fine,
+invisible barrier. No, it was not quite invisible.
+He could see a network of meshes before him.
+Puzzled and alarmed, he shot up to the surface
+to reconnoitre.</p>
+<p>As his head rose above the water, his heart
+fairly stopped for a second with dismay. The
+black side of the fishing boat was just above
+him, and the terrifying eyes of men looked
+straight down into his. Instantly he dived
+again, through the ever thickening masses of
+the herring. But straightway again he met the
+fine, invincible barrier of the net. Frantically
+he struggled to break through it, but only succeeded
+in coiling it about him till he could not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span>
+move a flipper. And while he wriggled there
+impotently, under the squirming myriads of the
+fish, he was lifted out into the air and dragged
+into the boat.</p>
+<p>Seeing the damage he had wrought in their
+catch, the fishermen were for knocking their
+captive straightway on the nose. But as he
+lay there, looking up with innocent eyes of
+wonder and appeal through the meshes, something
+in his baby helplessness softened the
+captain&#8217;s heart.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hold hard, Jim,&#8221; he ordered, staying a big
+sailor&#8217;s hand. &#8220;Blamed if the little varmint
+ain&#8217;t got eyes most as soft as my Libby&#8217;s. I
+reckon he&#8217;ll make a right purty pet fer the kid,
+an&#8217; kind of keep her from frettin&#8217; after her
+canary what died last Sunday.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He don&#8217;t much resemble a canary,
+Ephraim,&#8221; laughed Jim, dropping the belaying-pin.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon he&#8217;ll fill the bill fine, all the same,&#8221;
+said the captain.</p>
+<p>So the Pup was carried prisoner to Eastport.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>As it happened, Miss Libby was a child of
+decided views. One of the most decided of her
+views proved to be that a seal pup, with very
+little voice and that little by no means melodious,
+was no substitute for a canary. She refused
+to look at the Pup at all, until her father,
+much disappointed, assured her that she should
+have a canary also without further delay. And
+even then, though she could not remain quite
+indifferent to the Pup&#8217;s soft eyes and confiding
+friendliness, she never developed any real enthusiasm
+for him. She would minister amiably
+to his wants, and laugh at his antics, and praise
+his good temper, and stroke his sleek, round
+head, but she stuck resolutely to her first
+notion, that he was quite too &#8220;queer&#8221; for her
+to really love. She could never approve of his
+having flippers instead of fore paws, and of his
+lying down all the time even when he walked.
+As for his hind feet, which stuck out always
+straight behind him and close together, like a
+sort of double-barrelled tail, she was quite sure
+they had been fixed that way by mistake, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+she could not, in spite of all her father&#8217;s explanations
+as to the advantages, for a seal, of that
+arrangement, ever bring herself to accept them
+as normal.</p>
+<p>Miss Libby&#8217;s mother proved even less cordial.
+Her notions of natural history being of
+the most primitive, at first view she had jumped
+to the conclusion that the Pup was a species of
+fish; and in this opinion nothing could ever
+shake her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I never!&#8221; she had exclaimed. &#8220;If
+that ain&#8217;t just like you, Eph Barnes. As if it
+wa&#8217;n&#8217;t enough to have to eat fish, an&#8217; talk fish,
+an&#8217; smell fish, year in an&#8217; year out, but you must
+go an&#8217; bring a live fish home to flop aroun&#8217; the
+house an&#8217; keep gittin&#8217; under a body&#8217;s feet every
+way they turn! An&#8217; what&#8217;s he goin&#8217; to eat,
+anyways, I&#8217;d like to know?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;He eats <i>fish</i>, but he ain&#8217;t no manner of fish
+himself, mother, no more than you nor I be!&#8221;
+explained Captain Ephraim, with a grin. &#8220;An&#8217;
+he won&#8217;t be in your way a mite, for he&#8217;ll live
+out in the yard, an&#8217; I&#8217;ll sink the half of a molasses
+hogshead out there an&#8217; fill it with salt
+water for him to play in. He&#8217;s an amusin&#8217; little
+beggar, an&#8217; gentle as a kitten.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I&#8217;d have you know that <i>I</i> wash my
+hands of him, Ephraim!&#8221; declared Mrs. Barnes,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
+with emphasis. And so it came about that the
+Pup presently found himself, not Libby&#8217;s special
+pet, but Captain Ephraim&#8217;s.</p>
+<p>Two important members of the Barnes family
+were a large yellow cat and a small, tangle-haired,
+blue-gray mop of a Skye terrier. At
+the first glimpse of the Pup, the yellow cat had
+fled, with tail as big as a bottle-brush, to the
+top of the kitchen dresser, where she crouched
+growling, with eyes like green full moons. The
+terrier, on the other hand, whose name was
+Toby, had shown himself rather hospitable to
+the mild-eyed stranger. Unacquainted with fear,
+and always inclined to be scornful of whatever
+conduct the yellow cat might indulge in, he had
+approached the newcomer with a friendly wagging
+of his long-haired stump of a tail, and sniffed
+at him with pleased curiosity. The Pup, his lonely
+heart hungering for comradeship, had met this
+civil advance with effusion; and thenceforward
+the two were fast friends.</p>
+<p>By the time the yellow cat and Mrs. Barnes
+had both got over regarding the Pup as a
+stranger, he had become an object of rather
+distant interest to them. When he played at
+wrestling matches with Toby in the yard,&mdash;which
+always ended by the Pup rolling indulgently
+on his back, while Toby, with yelps of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+excitement, mounted triumphantly between his
+fanning flippers,&mdash;the yellow cat would crouch
+upon the woodpile close by and regard the proceedings
+with intent but non-committal eye.
+Mrs. Barnes, for her part, would open the kitchen
+door and surreptitiously coax the Pup in, with
+the lure of a dish of warm milk, which he
+loved extravagantly. Then&mdash;this being while
+Libby was at school and Captain Ephraim away
+on the water&mdash;she would seat herself in the
+rocking-chair by the window with her knitting
+and watch the Pup and Toby at their play.
+The young seal was an endless source of speculation
+to her.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To think, now,&#8221; she would mutter to herself,
+&#8220;that I&#8217;d be a-settin&#8217; here day after day
+a-studyin&#8217; out a critter like that, what&#8217;s no more&#8217;n
+jest plain <i>fish</i> says I, if he <i>do</i> flop roun&#8217; the
+house an&#8217; drink milk like a cat. He&#8217;s right uncanny;
+but there ain&#8217;t no denyin&#8217; but what he&#8217;s
+as good as a circus when he gits to playin&#8217; with
+Toby.&#8221;</p>
+<p>As Mrs. Barnes had a very good opinion of
+Toby&#8217;s intelligence, declaring him to be the
+smartest dog in Maine, she gradually imbibed
+a certain degree of respect for Toby&#8217;s friend.
+And so it came about that the Pup acquired a
+taste which no seal was ever intended to acquire&mdash;a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span>
+taste for the luxurious glow of the kitchen
+fire.</p>
+<p>When at last the real Atlantic winter had
+settled down upon the coast, binding it with
+bitter frost and scourging it with storm, then
+Captain Ephraim spent most of his time at
+home in his snug cottage. He had once, on a
+flying visit to New York, seen a troupe of performing
+seals, which had opened his eyes to
+the marvellous intelligence of these amphibians.
+It now became his chief occupation, in the long
+winter evenings, to teach tricks to the Pup.
+And stimulated by abundant prizes in the
+shape of fresh herrings and warm milk, right
+generously did the Pup respond. He learned
+so fast that before spring the accomplished
+Toby was outstripped; and as for the canary,&mdash;an
+aristocratic golden fellow who had come all
+the way from Boston,&mdash;Miss Libby was constrained
+to admit that, except when it came
+to a question of singing, her pet was &#8220;not in
+it&#8221; with her father&#8217;s. Mrs. Barnes&#8217; verdict was
+that &#8220;canaries seemed more natural-like, but
+couldn&#8217;t rightly be called so interestin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Between Libby and her father there was always
+a lot of gay banter going on, and now
+Captain Ephraim declared that he would teach
+the Pup to sing as well as the canary. The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+obliging animal had already acquired a repertoire
+of tricks that would have made him something
+of a star in any troupe. The new demand
+upon his wits did not disturb him, so long as
+it meant more fish, more milk, and more petting.
+Captain Ephraim took a large tin bucket,
+turned it upside down on the floor, and made
+the Pup rest his chest upon the bottom. Then,
+tying a tin plate to each flipper, he taught the
+animal to pound the plates vigorously against
+the sides of the bucket, with a noise that put the
+shrill canary to shamefaced silence and drove
+the yellow cat in frantic amazement from the
+kitchen. This lesson it took weeks to perfect,
+because the Pup himself always seemed mortified
+at the blatant discords which he made. When
+it was all achieved, however, it was not singing,
+but mere instrumental music, as Libby triumphantly
+proclaimed. Her father straightway
+swore that he was not to be downed by any
+canary. A few weeks more, and he had taught
+the Pup to point his muzzle skyward and emit
+long, agonizing groans, the while he kept flapping
+the two tin plates against the bucket. It
+was a wonderful achievement, which made Toby
+retreat behind the kitchen stove and gaze forth
+upon his friend with grieved surprise. But it
+obliged Libby, who was a fair-minded child, to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+confess to her father that she and her pet were
+vanquished.</p>
+<p>All this while the Pup was growing, as perhaps
+no harbor seal of his months had grown
+before. When spring came, he saw less of Captain
+Ephraim, but he had compensation, for the
+good captain now diverted into his modest
+grounds a no-account little brook which was going
+begging, and dug a snug little basin at the
+foot of the garden for the Pup to disport himself
+therein. All through the summer he continued
+to grow and was happy, playing with
+Toby, offending the yellow cat, amusing Miss
+Libby, and affording food for speculation to
+Mrs. Barnes over her knitting. In the winter
+Captain Ephraim polished him up in his old
+tricks, and taught him some new ones. But by
+this time he had grown so big that Mrs. Barnes
+began to grumble at him for taking up too much
+room. He was, as ever, a model of confiding
+amiability, in spite of his ample jaws and formidable
+teeth. But one day toward spring he
+showed that this good nature of his would not
+stand the test of seeing a friend ill-used.</p>
+<p>It happened in this way. Toby, who was an
+impudent little dog, had managed to incur the
+enmity of a vicious half-breed mastiff, which
+lived on a farm some distance out of Eastport.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+The brute was known to have killed several
+smaller dogs; so whenever he passed the Barnes&#8217;
+gate, and snarled his threats at Toby, Toby
+would content himself with a scornful growl
+from the doorstep.</p>
+<p>But one morning, as the big mongrel went by
+at the tail of his master&#8217;s sled, Toby chanced to
+be very busy in the snow near the gate digging
+up a precious buried bone. The big dog crept
+up on tiptoe, and went over the gate with a
+scrambling bound. Toby had just time to lift
+his shaggy little head out of the snow and turn
+to face the assault. His heart was great, and
+there was no terror in the growl with which he
+darted under the foe&#8217;s huge body and sank his
+teeth strategically into the nearest hind paw.
+But the life would have been crushed out of him
+in half a minute, had not the Pup, at this critical
+juncture, come flopping up awkwardly to see
+how his little friend was faring.</p>
+<p>Now the Pup, as we have seen, was simply
+overflowing with good-will towards dogs, and
+cats, and every one. But that was because he
+thought they were all friendly. He was amazed
+to find here a dog that seemed unfriendly. Then
+all at once he realized that something very serious
+was happening to his playmate. His eyes reddened
+and blazed; and with one mighty lunge
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span>
+he flung himself forward upon the enemy. With
+that terrific speed of action which could snap up
+a darting mackerel, he caught the mastiff in the
+neck, close behind the jaw. His teeth were
+built to hold the writhings of the biggest
+salmon, and his grip was that of a bulldog&mdash;except
+that it cut far deeper.</p>
+<p>The mastiff yelped, snapped wildly at his
+strange antagonist, and then, finding himself
+held so that he could not by any possibility get
+a grip, strove to leap into the air and shake his
+assailant off. But the Pup held him down inexorably,
+his long teeth cutting deeper and
+deeper with every struggle. For perhaps half
+a minute the fight continued, the mad contortions
+of the entangled three (for Toby still clung
+to his grip on the foe&#8217;s hind paw) tearing up the
+snow for a dozen feet in every direction. The
+snow was flecked with crimson,&mdash;but suddenly,
+with a throbbing gush, it was flooded scarlet.
+The Pup&#8217;s teeth had torn through the great
+artery of his opponent&#8217;s neck. With a cough
+the brute fell over, limp and unresisting as a
+half-filled bran sack.</p>
+<p>At this moment the mastiff&#8217;s owner, belatedly
+aware that the tables were being turned on his vicious
+favorite, came yelling and cursing over the
+gate, brandishing a sled stake in his hands.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span>
+But at the same time arrived Captain Ephraim,
+rushing bareheaded from the kitchen, and
+stepped in front of the new arrival. One glance
+had shown him that the fight was over.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Hold hard there, Baiseley!&#8221; he ordered in
+curt tones. Then he continued more slowly&mdash;&#8220;It
+ain&#8217;t no use makin&#8217; a fuss. That murderin&#8217;
+brute of yourn begun it, an&#8217; come into my yard
+to kill my own little tike here. He&#8217;s got just
+what he deserved. An&#8217; if the Pup here hadn&#8217;t
+&#8217;a&#8217; done it, I&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217; done it myself. See?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Baiseley, like his mongrel follower, was a
+bully. But he had discretion. He calmed
+down.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That there dog o&#8217; mine, Captain Ephraim,
+was a good dog, an&#8217; worth money. I reckon
+ye&#8217;ll hev to pay me ten dollars for that dog, an&#8217;
+we&#8217;ll call it square.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Reckon I&#8217;ll have to owe it to ye, Hank!
+Mebbe I&#8217;ll pay it some day when you git
+han&#8217;somer &#8217;n you are now!&#8221; laughed Captain
+Ephraim dryly. He gave a piercing whistle
+through his teeth. Straightway Toby, sadly
+bedraggled, came limping up to him. The Pup
+let go of his dead enemy, and lifted his head
+to eye his master inquiringly. His whole front
+was streaming with blood.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Go wash yerself!&#8221; ordered the captain
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span>
+picking up a chip and hurling it into the pond,
+which was now half empty of ice.</p>
+<p>The Pup floundered off obediently to get
+the chip, and Baiseley, muttering inarticulate
+abuse, slouched away to his sled.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+<p>Toward the end of April there came a great
+change in the Pup&#8217;s affairs. Primarily, the
+change was in Captain Ephraim&#8217;s. Promoted
+to the command of a smart schooner engaged
+in cod-fishing on the Grand Banks, he sold his
+cottage at Eastport and removed his family to
+Gloucester, Massachusetts. At the same time,
+recognizing with many a pang that a city like
+Gloucester was no place for him to keep a seal
+in, he sold the Pup, at a most consoling price
+indeed, to the agent of an English animal
+trainer. With the prospect of shortly becoming
+the cynosure of all eyes at Shepherd&#8217;s Bush
+or Earl&#8217;s Court, the Pup was shipped on a
+freighter for Liverpool.</p>
+<p>With his pervasive friendliness, and seeking
+solace for the absence of Toby and Captain
+Ephraim, the Pup proved a most privileged
+and popular passenger. All went well till the
+ship came off Cape Race, Newfoundland.
+Then that treacherous and implacable promontory
+made haste to justify its reputation; and
+in a blind sou&#8217;wester the ship was driven on the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span>
+ledges. While she was pounding to pieces, the
+crew got away in their boats, and presently the
+Pup found himself reviving half-forgotten
+memories amid the buffeting of the huge Atlantic
+rollers.</p>
+<p>He felt amazingly at home, but very lonely.
+Bobbing his head as high as he could above
+the water, he stared about him in every direction,
+dimly hoping to catch sight of Captain
+Ephraim or Toby&mdash;or even of the unsociable
+yellow cat. They were nowhere to be seen.
+Well, company he must have. After fish, of
+which there was no lack in those teeming
+waters, company was his urgent demand. He
+headed impatiently for the coast, which he
+could not see indeed, but which he felt clearly
+in the distance.</p>
+<p>The first land he encountered was a high
+hogback of rock which proved to be an island.
+Swimming around under its lea, he ran into a
+little herd of seals of his own kind, and hastened
+confidently to fraternize with them.</p>
+<p>The strangers, mostly females and young
+males, met his advances with a good-natured
+indifference. One of the herd, however, a big
+dog-seal who seemed to consider himself the
+chief, would have none of him, but grumbled
+and showed his teeth in a most unpleasant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span>
+manner. The Pup avoided him politely, and
+crawled out upon the rocks, about twenty feet
+away, beside two friendly females. He wanted
+to get acquainted, that was all. But the old
+male, after grumbling for several minutes, got
+himself worked up into a rage, and came
+floundering over the rocks to do up the visitor.
+Roughly he pushed the two complaisant females
+off into the water, and then, with a savage
+lunge, he fell upon the Pup.</p>
+<p>But in this last step the old male was ill-advised.
+Hitherto the Pup had felt diffident in
+the face of such a reception, but now a sudden
+red rage flared into his eyes. Young as he was,
+he was as big as his antagonist, and, here on
+land, a dozen times more nimble. Here came
+in the advantage of Captain Ephraim&#8217;s training.
+When the old male lunged upon him, he simply
+wasn&#8217;t there. He had shot aside, and wheeled
+like a flash, and secured a hold at the root of
+his assailant&#8217;s flipper. Of course in this position
+he too received some sharp punishment. But
+he held on like a bulldog, worrying, worrying
+mercilessly, till all at once the other squealed,
+and threw up his muzzle, and struggled to get
+away. The Pup, satisfied with this sign of submission,
+let him go at once, and he flounced
+off furiously into the water.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span></p>
+<p>As a prompt result of this victory, the Pup
+found himself undisputed leader of the little
+herd, his late antagonist, after a vain effort to
+effect a division, having slipped indolently into
+a subordinate place. This suited the Pup exactly,
+who was happy himself, and wanted everybody
+else to be so likewise.</p>
+<p>As spring advanced, the herd worked their
+way northward along the Newfoundland coast,
+sometimes journeying hurriedly, sometimes lingering
+for days in the uninhabited inlets and
+creek mouths. The Pup was in a kind of ecstasy
+over his return to the water world, and indulged
+in antics that seemed perhaps frivolous
+in the head of so important a family. But once
+in a while a qualm of homesickness would come
+over him, for Toby, and the Captain, and a big
+tin basin of warm milk. And in one of these
+moods he was suddenly confronted by men.</p>
+<p>The herd was loitering off a point which
+marked the entrance to a shallow cove, when
+round the jutting rocks slid a row-boat, with
+two fishermen coming out to set lines. They
+had no guns with them, fortunately. They saw
+the seals dive and vanish at the first glimpse of
+them, as was natural. But to their amazement,
+one seal&mdash;the biggest, to their astonished eyes,
+in the whole North Atlantic&mdash;did not vanish
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span>
+with the rest. Instead of that, after eying them
+fearlessly at a distance of some fifty feet, he
+swam deliberately straight toward them.</p>
+<p>Now there is nothing very terrifying, except
+to a fish, in the aspect of even the biggest harbor
+seal; but to these fishermen, who knew
+the shyness of the seals, it was terrifying to the
+last degree that one should conduct himself in
+this unheard-of way. They stopped rowing,
+and stared with superstitious eyes.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howly Mother!&#8221; gasped one, &#8220;that b&#8217;ain&#8217;t
+no seal, Mike!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;What d&#8217;ye s&#8217;pose he wants wid us, Barney,
+annyhow?&#8221; demanded Mike, in an awed voice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sure, an&#8217; it&#8217;s a <i>sign</i> for the one or t&#8217;other of
+us. It&#8217;s gittin&#8217; back to shore we&#8217;d better be,&#8221;
+suggested Barney, pulling round hard on the
+bow oar.</p>
+<p>As the mysterious visitor was still advancing,
+this counsel highly commended itself to Mike,
+who would have faced a polar bear with no
+weapon but his oar, but had no stomach for
+a parley with the supernatural. In another
+moment the boat was rushing back up the cove
+with all the speed their practised muscles could
+impart. But still, swimming leisurely in their
+wake, with what seemed to them a dreadful deliberation,
+the Pup came after them.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t ye be comin&#8217; nigh <i>me</i>!&#8221; cried Mike,
+somewhat hysterically, &#8220;or I&#8217;ll bash yer face
+wid the oar, mind!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Whisht!&#8221; said Barney, &#8220;don&#8217;t ye be after
+talkin&#8217; that way to a sperrit, or maybe he&#8217;ll blast
+ye!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m thinkin&#8217;, now,&#8221; said Mike, presently, in
+a hushed voice, &#8220;as maybe it be Dan Sheedy&#8217;s
+sperrit, comin&#8217; back to ha&#8217;nt me coz I didn&#8217;t
+give up them boots o&#8217; his to his b&#8217;y, accordin&#8217;
+to me promise.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shure an&#8217; why not that?&#8221; agreed Barney,
+cheered by the hope that the visitation was not
+meant for him.</p>
+<p>A moment more and the boat reached the
+beach with an abruptness that hurled both
+rowers from their seats. Scrambling out upon
+the shingle, they tugged wildly at the boat to
+draw her up. But the Pup, his eyes beaming
+affection, was almost on their heels. With a
+yell of dismay Mike dashed up the shore toward
+their shack; but Barney, having less on
+his conscience, delayed to snatch out of the bow
+the precious tin pail in which they carried their
+bait. Then he followed Mike. But looking
+back over his shoulder, he saw his mysterious
+pursuer ascend from the water and come flopping
+up the shore at a pace which assuredly no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span>
+<i>mortal</i> seal could ever accomplish on dry land.
+At that he fell over a boulder, dropped the pail
+of bait, picked himself up with a startled yell,
+and made a dash for the shack as if all the fiends
+were chasing him.</p>
+<p>Slamming the door behind them, the two
+stared fearfully out of the window. Their guns,
+loaded with slugs, leaned against the wall, but
+they would never be guilty of such perilous impiety
+as to use them.</p>
+<p>When he came to the tin pail and the spilled
+bait the Pup was pleased. He knew very well
+what the pail was for, and what the men expected
+of him. He had no objection to being
+paid in advance, so he gobbled the bait at once.
+It was not much, but he had great hopes that,
+if he acquitted himself well, he might get a pan
+of warm milk. Cheerfully he hoisted his massive
+chest upon the pail, and then, pounding jerkily
+with his flippers as hard as he could, he lifted
+his muzzle heavenward and delivered himself
+of a series of prolonged and anguished groans.</p>
+<p>This was too much for his audience.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Howly Mother, save us!&#8221; sobbed Barney,
+dropping upon his knees, and scrabbling desperately
+in his untidy memory for some fragments
+of his childhood&#8217;s prayers.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t, Dan, don&#8217;t!&#8221; pleaded Mike, gazing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span>
+out with wild eyes at the Pup&#8217;s mystical performance.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ll give back them boots to the
+b&#8217;y. I&#8217;ll give &#8217;em back, Dan! Let me be now,
+won&#8217;t &#8217;ee, old mate?&#8221;</p>
+<p>Thus adjured, the Pup presently stopped,
+and stared expectantly at the shack, awaiting
+the pan of warm milk. When it did not come,
+he was disgusted. He had never been kept
+waiting this way before. These men were not
+like Captain Ephraim. In a minute or two
+he rolled off the pail, flopped heavily down the
+beach, and plunged back indignantly into the
+sea. As his dark head grew smaller and
+smaller in the distance, the men in the shack
+threw open the door, and came out as if they
+needed fresh air.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I always <i>said</i> as how Dan had a good
+heart,&#8221; muttered Mike, in a shaken voice.
+&#8220;An&#8217; shure, now, ye see, Barney, he ain&#8217;t
+after bearin&#8217; no grudge.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;But ye&#8217;ll be takin&#8217; back them boots to
+young Dan, this very day of our lives,&#8221; urged
+Barney. &#8220;An&#8217; ye&#8217;ll be after makin&#8217; it all right
+wid the Widdy Sheedy, afore ye&#8217;re a day older,
+now.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Shure, an&#8217; to wanst ain&#8217;t none too quick for
+me, an&#8217; me receavin&#8217; a hint loike that!&#8221; agreed
+Mike.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></p>
+<p>As for the Pup, after this shock to his faith
+in man, he began to forget the days of his
+comfortable captivity. His own kind proved
+vastly interesting to him, and in a few weeks
+his reversion was complete. By that time his
+journeyings had led him, with his little herd,
+far up the coast of Labrador. At last he
+came to a chain of rocky islands, lying off a
+black and desolate coast. The islands were
+full of caves, and clamorous with sea-birds, and
+trodden forever by a white and shuddering
+surf. Here old memories stirred dimly but
+sweetly within him&mdash;and here he brought his
+wanderers to rest.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='LONE_WOLF' id='LONE_WOLF'></a>
+<h2>LONE WOLF</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span></div>
+<h2>Lone Wolf</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>Not, like his grim ancestors for a thousand
+generations, in some dark cave of the
+hills was he whelped, but in a narrow iron
+cage littered with straw. Two brothers and a
+sister made at the same time a like inauspicious
+entrance upon an alien and fettered existence.
+And because their silent, untamable mother
+loved too savagely the hereditary freedom of her
+race to endure the thought of bearing her young
+into a life of bondage, she would have killed
+them mercifully, even while their blind baby
+mouths were groping for her breasts. But
+the watchful keeper forestalled her. Whelps
+of the great gray timber wolf, born in captivity,
+and therefore likely to be docile, were rare and
+precious. The four little sprawlers, helpless
+and hungrily whimpering, were given into the
+care of a foster-mother, a sorrowing brown
+spaniel bitch who had just been robbed of her
+own puppies.</p>
+<p>When old enough to be weaned, the two
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+brothers and the sister, sturdy and sleek as
+any wolf cubs of the hills, were sold to a
+dealer in wild animals, who carried them off
+to Hamburg. But &#8220;Lone Wolf,&#8221; as Toomey,
+the trainer, had already named him, stayed
+with the circus. He was the biggest, the most
+intelligent, and the most teachable cub of the
+whole litter, and Toomey, who had an unerring
+eye for quality in a beast, expected to make
+of him a star performer among wolves.</p>
+<p>Job Toomey had been a hunter and a trapper
+in the backwoods of New Brunswick, where
+his instinctive knowledge of the wild kindreds
+had won him a success which presently sickened
+him. His heart revolted against the
+slaughter of the creatures which he found so
+interesting, and for a time, his occupation gone,
+he had drifted aimlessly about the settlements.
+Then, at the performance of a travelling circus,
+which boasted two trained bears and a little
+trick elephant, he had got his cue. It was
+borne in upon him that he was meant to be
+an animal trainer. Then and there he joined
+the circus at a nominal wage, and within six
+months found himself an acknowledged indispensable.
+In less than a year he had become
+a well-known trainer, employed in one of the
+biggest menageries of America. Not only for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+his wonderful comprehension and command of
+animals was he noted, but also for his pose, to
+which he clung obstinately, of giving his performances
+always in the homespun garb of a
+backwoodsman, instead of in the conventional
+evening dress.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Lone Wolf!&#8221; It seemed a somewhat imaginative
+name for the prison-born whelp, but
+as he grew out of cub-hood his character and
+his stature alike seemed to justify it. Influenced
+by the example of his gentle foster-mother, he
+was docility itself toward his tamer, whom he
+came to love well after the reticent fashion of
+his race. But toward all others, man and beast
+alike, his reserve was cold and dangerous.
+Toomey, apparently, absorbed all the affection
+which his lonely nature had to spare. In return
+for this singleness of regard, Toomey
+trained him with a firm patience which never
+forgot to be kind, and made him, by the time
+he was three years old, quite the cleverest and
+most distinguished performing wolf who had
+ever adorned a show.</p>
+<p>He was now as tall as the very tallest Great
+Dane, but with a depth of shoulder and chest,
+a punishing length and strength of jaw, that no
+dog ever could boast. When he looked at
+Toomey, his eyes wore the expression of a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+faithful and understanding follower; but when
+he answered the stares of the crowd through
+the bars of his cage, the greenish fire that flamed
+in their inscrutable depths was ominous and
+untamed. In all save his willing subjection to
+Toomey&#8217;s mastery, he was a true wolf, of the
+savage and gigantic breed of the Northwestern
+timber. To the spectators this was aggressively
+obvious; and therefore the marvel of seeing this
+sinister gray beast, with the murderous fangs, so
+submissive to Toomey&#8217;s gentlest bidding, never
+grew stale. In every audience there were always
+some spectators hopefully pessimistic, who
+vowed that the great wolf would some day turn
+upon his master and tear his throat. To be
+sure, Lone Wolf was not by any means the only
+beast whom the backwoodsman had performing
+for the delectation of his audiences. But all
+the others&mdash;the lions, the leopards, the tiger,
+the elephant, the two zebras, and the white bear&mdash;seemed
+really subdued, as it were hypnotized
+into harmlessness. It was Lone Wolf only who
+kept the air of having never yielded up his
+spirit, of being always, in some way, not the slave
+but the free collaborator.</p>
+<p>Ordinarily, in spite of the wild fire smouldering
+in his veins, Lone Wolf was well enough
+content. The show was so big and so important
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span>
+that it was accustomed to visit only the great
+centres, and to make long stops at each place.
+At such times his life contained some measure
+of freedom. He would be given a frequent
+chance of exercise, in some secure enclosure
+where he could run, and jump, and stretch his
+mighty muscles, and breathe deep. And not
+infrequently&mdash;after dark as a rule&mdash;his master
+would snap a massive chain upon his collar, and
+lead him out, on leash like a dog, into the verdurous
+freshness of park or country lane. But
+when the show was on tour, then it was very
+different. Lone Wolf hated fiercely the narrow
+cage in which he had to travel. He hated the
+harsh, incessant noise of the grinding rails, the
+swaying and lurching of the trucks, the dizzying
+procession of the landscape past the barred
+slits which served as windows to his car. Moreover,
+sometimes the unwieldy length of the circus
+train would be halted for an hour or two on
+some forest siding, to let the regular traffic of
+the line go by. Then, as his wondering eyes
+caught glimpses of shadowed glades, and mysterious
+wooded aisles, and far-off hills and horizons,
+or wild, pungent smells of fir thicket and
+cedar swamp drew in upon the wind to his uplifted
+nostrils, his veins would run hot with an
+uncomprehended but savage longing for delights
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+which he had never known, for a freedom
+of which he had never learned or guessed. At
+such times his muscles would ache and quiver,
+till he felt like dashing himself blindly against
+his bars. And if the halt happened to take
+place at night, with perhaps a white moon staring
+in upon him from over a naked hill-top, he
+would lift his lean muzzle straight up toward
+the roof of his cage and give utterance to a terrible
+sound of which he knew not the meaning,
+the long, shrill gathering cry of the pack. This
+would rouse all the other beasts to a frenzy of
+wails and screeches and growls and roars; till
+Toomey would have to come and stop his performance
+by darkening the cage with a tarpaulin.
+At the sound of Toomey&#8217;s voice,
+soothing yet overmastering, the great wolf
+would lie down quietly, and the ghostly summons
+of his far-ravaging fathers would haunt his
+spirit no more.</p>
+<p>After one of these long journeys, the show
+was halted at an inland city for a stop of many
+weeks; and to house the show a cluster of
+wooden shanties was run up on the outskirts of
+the city, forming a sort of mushroom village
+flanked by the great white exhibition tents. In
+one of these shanties, near the centre of the
+cluster, Lone Wolf&#8217;s cage was sheltered, along
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span>
+with the cages of the puma, the leopard, and
+the little black Himalayan bear. Immediately
+adjoining this shanty was the spacious open
+shed where the elephants were tethered.</p>
+<p>That same night, a little before dawn, when
+the wearied attendants were sleeping heavily,
+Lone Wolf&#8217;s nostrils caught a strange smell
+which made him spring to his feet and sniff
+anxiously at the suddenly acrid air. A strange
+reddish glow was dispersing the dark outside
+his window. From the other cages came uneasy
+mutterings and movements, and the little black
+bear, who was very wise, began to whine. The
+dull glow leaped into a glare and then the elephants
+trumpeted the alarm. Instantly the
+night was loud with shoutings, and tramplings,
+and howlings, and rushings to and fro. A cloud
+of choking smoke blew into Lone Wolf&#8217;s cage,
+making him cough and wonder anxiously why
+Toomey didn&#8217;t come. The next moment
+Toomey came, with one of the keepers, and an
+elephant. Frantically they began pushing and
+dragging out the cages. But there was a wind;
+and before the first cage, that of the puma, was
+more than clear of the door, the flames were on
+top of them like a leaping tiger. Panic-stricken,
+the elephant screamed and bolted. The keeper,
+shouting, &#8220;We can&#8217;t save any more in this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span>
+house. Let&#8217;s git the lions out!&#8221; made off with
+one arm over his eyes, doggedly dragging the
+heavy cage of the puma. The keeper was right.
+He had his work cut out for him, as it was, to
+save the screeching puma. As for Toomey,
+his escape was already almost cut off. But he
+could not endure to save himself without giving
+the imprisoned beasts a chance for their lives.
+Dashing at the three remaining cages, he tore
+them open; and then, with a summons to Lone
+Wolf to follow him, he threw his arms over his
+face and dashed through the flames.</p>
+<p>The three animals sprang out at once into
+the middle of the floor, but their position
+seemed already hopeless. The leopard, thoroughly
+cowed, leaped back into his cage and
+curled up in the farthest corner, spitting insanely.
+Lone Wolf dashed at the door by
+which Toomey had fled, but a whirl of flame
+in his face drove him back to the middle of the
+floor, where the little bear stood whimpering.
+Just at this moment a massive torrent of water
+from a fire engine crashed through the window,
+drenching Lone Wolf, and knocking the bear
+clean over. The beneficent stream was whisked
+away again in an instant, having work to do
+elsewhere than on this already doomed and
+hopeless shed. But to the wise little bear it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span>
+had shown a way of escape. Out through the
+window he scurried, and Lone Wolf went after
+him in one tremendous leap just as the flames
+swooped in and licked the floor clean, and slew
+the huddled leopard in its cage.</p>
+<p>Outside, in the awful heat, the alternations of
+dazzling glare and blinding smoke, the tumult
+of the shouting and the engines, the roar of
+the flames, the ripping crash of the streams,
+and the cries of the beasts, Lone Wolf found
+himself utterly confused. But he trusted, for
+some reason, to the sagacity of the bear, and
+followed his shaggy form, bearing diagonally
+up and across the wind. Presently a cyclone
+of suffocating smoke enveloped him, and he
+lost his guide. But straight ahead he darted,
+stretched out at top speed, belly to the ground,
+and in another moment he emerged into the
+clear air. His eyes smarting savagely, his nose
+and lips scorched, his wet fur singed, he hardly
+realized at first his escape, but raced straight on
+across the fields for several hundred yards.
+Then, at the edge of a wood, he stopped and
+looked back. The little bear was nowhere to
+be seen. The night wind here blew deliciously
+cool upon his face. But there was the mad red
+monster, roaring and raging still as if it would
+eat up the world. The terror of it was in his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
+veins. He sprang into the covert of the wood,
+and ran wildly, with the one impulse to get as
+far away as possible.</p>
+<p>Before he had gone two miles, he came out
+upon an open country of fields, and pastures,
+and farmyards, and little thickets. Straight on
+he galloped, through the gardens and the farmyards
+as well as the open fields. In the pastures
+the cattle, roused by the glare in the sky,
+stamped and snorted at him as he passed, and
+now and then a man&#8217;s voice yelled at him
+angrily as his long form tore through flowerbeds
+or trellised vines. He had no idea of
+avoiding the farmhouses, for he had at first no
+fear of men; but at length an alert farmer got
+a long shot at him with a fowling-piece, and
+two or three small leaden pellets caught him
+in the hind quarters. They did not go deep
+enough to do him serious harm, but they hurt
+enough to teach him that men were dangerous.
+Thereupon he swerved from the uncompromising
+straight line of his flight, and made for the
+waste places. When the light of the fire had
+quite died out behind him, the first of the dawn
+was creeping up the sky; and by this time he
+had come to a barren region of low thickets,
+ragged woods, and rocks thrusting up through
+a meagre, whitish soil.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span></p>
+<p>Till the sun was some hours high Lone Wolf
+pressed on, his terror of the fire now lost in a
+sense of delighted freedom. By this time he
+was growing hungry, and for an instant the
+impulse seized him to turn back and seek his
+master. But no, that way lay the scorching of
+the flames. Instead of turning, he ran on all
+the faster. Suddenly a rabbit bounded up, almost
+beneath his nose. Hitherto he had never
+tasted living prey, but with a sure instinct he
+sprang after the rabbit. To his fierce disappointment,
+however, the nimble little beast was
+so inconsiderate as to take refuge in a dense
+bramble thicket which he could not penetrate.
+His muzzle, smarting and tender from the fire,
+could not endure the harsh prickles, so after
+prowling about the thicket for a half-hour in
+the wistful hope that the rabbit might come
+out, he resumed his journey. He had no idea,
+of course, where he wanted to go, but he felt
+that there must be a place somewhere where
+there were plenty of rabbits and no bramble
+thickets.</p>
+<p>Late in the afternoon he came upon the
+fringes of a settlement, which he skirted with
+caution. In a remote pasture field, among
+rough hillocks and gnarled, fire-scarred stumps,
+he ran suddenly into a flock of sheep. For
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span>
+a moment he was puzzled at the sight, but the
+prompt flight of the startled animals suggested
+pursuit. In a moment he had borne down the
+hindermost. To reach for its throat was a
+sure instinct, and he feasted, with a growing
+zest of savagery, upon the hot flesh. Before
+he realized it, he was dragging the substantial
+remnant of his meal to a place of hiding under
+an overhanging rock. Then, well content with
+himself, he crept into a dark thicket and slept
+for several hours.</p>
+<p>When he awoke, a new-risen moon was shining,
+with something in her light which half
+bewildered him, half stung him to uncomprehended
+desires. Skulking to the crest of a
+naked knoll, he saw the landscape spread out
+all around him, with the few twinkling lights
+of the straggling village below the slopes of
+the pasture. But not for lights, or for villages,
+or for men was his concern. Sitting up very
+straight on his gaunt haunches, he stretched
+his muzzle toward the taunting moon, and began
+to sound that long, dreadful gathering cry
+of his race.</p>
+<p>It was an unknown or a long-forgotten voice
+in those neighborhoods, but none who heard
+it needed to have it explained. In half a minute
+every dog in the settlement was howling,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span>
+barking, or yelping, in rage or fear. To Lone
+Wolf all this clamor was as nothing. He
+paid no more attention to it than as if it had
+been the twittering of sparrows. Then doors
+opened, and lights flashed as men came out to
+see what was the matter. Clearly visible, silhouetted
+against the low moon, Lone Wolf
+kept up his sinister chant to the unseen. But
+presently, out of the corner of his eye, he noted
+half a dozen men approaching up the pasture,
+with the noisy dogs at their heels. Men!
+That was different! Could it be that they
+wanted him? All at once he experienced a
+qualm of conscience, so to speak, about the
+sheep he had killed. It occurred to him that
+if sheep belonged to men, there might be trouble
+ahead. Abruptly he stopped his serenading of
+the moon, slipped over the crest of the knoll,
+and made off at a long, tireless gallop which
+before morning had put leagues between himself
+and the angry villagers.</p>
+<p>After this he gave a wide berth to settlements;
+and having made his first kill, he suddenly
+found himself an accomplished hunter.
+It was as if long-buried memories had sprung
+all at once to life,&mdash;memories, indeed, not of
+his own but of his ancestors&#8217;,&mdash;and he knew,
+all at once, how to stalk the shy wild rabbits, to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+run down and kill the red deer. The country
+through which he journeyed was well stocked
+with game, and he fed abundantly as he went,
+with no more effort than just enough to give
+zest to his freedom. In this fashion he kept
+on for many days, working ever northward just
+because the wild lands stretched in that direction;
+and at last he came upon the skirts of
+a cone-shaped mountain, ragged with ancient
+forest, rising solitary and supreme out of a
+measureless expanse of wooded plain. From a
+jutting shoulder of rock his keen eyes noted
+but one straggling settlement, groups of scattered
+clearings, wide apart on the skirts of the
+great hill. They were too far off to mar the
+vast seclusion of the height; and Lone Wolf,
+finding a cave in the rocks that seemed exactly
+designed for his retreat, went no farther. He
+felt that he had come into his own domain.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p>The settlers around the skirts of Lost Mountain
+were puzzled and indignant. For six weeks
+their indignation had been growing, and the
+mystery seemed no nearer a solution. Something
+was slaughtering their sheep&mdash;something
+that knew its business and slaughtered
+with dreadful efficiency. Several honest dogs
+fell under suspicion, not because there was anything
+whatever against their reputations, but
+simply because they had the misfortune to be
+big enough and strong enough to kill a sheep
+if they wanted to, and the brooding backwoods
+mind, when troubled, will go far on the flimsiest
+evidence.</p>
+<p>Of all the wrathful settlers the most furious
+was Brace Timmins. Not only had he lost in
+those six weeks six sheep, but now his dog, a
+splendid animal, half deerhound and half collie,
+had been shot on suspicion by a neighbor, on
+no better grounds, apparently, than his long
+legs and long killing jaws. Still the slaughtering
+of the flocks went on with undiminished
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span>
+vigor. And a few days later Brace Timmins
+avenged his favorite by publicly thrashing his
+too hasty neighbor in front of the cross-roads
+store. The neighbor, pounded into exemplary
+penitence, apologized, and as far as the murdered
+dog was concerned, the score was wiped clean.
+But the problem of the sheep killing was no
+nearer solution. If not Brace Timmins&#8217; dog,
+as every one made prudent haste to acknowledge,
+then whose dog was it? The life of every
+dog in the settlement, if bigger than a wood-chuck,
+hung by a thread, which might, it seemed,
+at any moment turn into a halter. Brace Timmins
+loved dogs; and not wishing that others
+should suffer the unjust fate which had overtaken
+his own, he set his whole woodcraft to
+the discovery of the true culprit.</p>
+<p>Before he had made any great progress, however,
+on this trail, a new thing happened, and
+suspicion was lifted from the heads of all the
+dogs. Joe Anderson&#8217;s dog, a powerful beast,
+part sheep-dog and part Newfoundland, with a
+far-off streak of bull, and the champion fighter
+of the settlements, was found dead in the
+middle of Anderson&#8217;s sheep pasture, his whole
+throat fairly ripped out. He had died in defence
+of his charges, and it was plainly no
+dog&#8217;s jaws that had done such mangling. What
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+dog indeed could have mastered Anderson&#8217;s
+&#8220;Dan&#8221;?</p>
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a bear, gone mad on mutton,&#8221; pronounced
+certain of the wise ones, idling at
+the cross-roads store. &#8220;Ye see as how he
+hain&#8217;t <i>et</i> the dawg, noways, but jest bit him
+to teach him not to go interferin&#8217; as regards
+sheep.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Ye&#8217;re all off,&#8221; contradicted Timmins, with
+authority. &#8220;A bear&#8217;d hev&#8217; tore him an&#8217; batted
+him an&#8217; mauled him more&#8217;n he&#8217;d hev&#8217; bit him.
+A bear thinks more o&#8217; usin&#8217; his fore paws than
+what he does his jaws, if he gits into any kind
+of an onpleasantness. No, boys, our unknown
+friend up yonder&#8217;s a <i>wolf</i>, take my word for
+it.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Joe Anderson snorted, and spat accurately
+out through the door.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A <i>wolf</i>!&#8221; he sneered. &#8220;Go chase yerself,
+Brace Timmins. I&#8217;d like to see any wolf
+as could &#8217;a&#8217; done up my Dan that way!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, keep yer hair on, Joe,&#8221; retorted
+Timmins, easily. &#8220;I&#8217;m a-goin&#8217; after him, an&#8217;
+I&#8217;ll show him to you in a day or two, as like
+as not!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon, Joe,&#8221; interposed the storekeeper,
+leaning forward across the counter, &#8220;as how
+there be other breeds of wolf besides the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span>
+sneakin&#8217; little gray varmint of the East here,
+what&#8217;s been cleaned out of these parts fifty
+year ago. If Brace is right,&mdash;an&#8217; I reckon
+he be,&mdash;then it must sure be one of them
+big timber wolves we read about, what the
+Lord&#8217;s took it into His head to plank down
+here in our safe old woods to make us set
+up an&#8217; take notice. You better watch out,
+Brace. If ye don&#8217;t git the brute first lick, he&#8217;ll
+git you!&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;<i>I&#8217;ll</i> watch out!&#8221; drawled Timmins, confidently;
+and selecting a strong, steel trap-chain
+from a box beside the counter, he
+sauntered off to put his plans in execution.</p>
+<p>These plans were simple enough. He knew
+that he had a wide-ranging adversary to deal
+with. But he himself was a wide ranger, and
+acquainted with every cleft and crevice of Lost
+Mountain. He would find the great wolf&#8217;s
+lair, and set his traps accordingly, one in the
+runway, to be avoided if the wolf was as clever
+as he ought to be, and a couple of others a little
+aside to really do the work. Of course, he
+would carry his rifle, in case of need, but he
+wanted to take his enemy alive.</p>
+<p>For several arduous but exciting days Timmins
+searched in vain alike the dark cedar
+swamps and the high, broken spurs of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+mountain. Then, one windless afternoon, when
+the forest scents came rising to him on the
+clear air, far up the steep he found a climbing
+trail between gray, shelving ledges. Stealthy
+as a lynx he followed, expecting at the next
+turn to come upon the lair of the enemy. It
+was a just expectation, but as luck would have
+it, that next turn, which would have led him
+straight to his goal, lay around a shoulder of
+rock whose foundations had been loosened
+by the rains. With a kind of long growl, rending
+and sickening, the rock gave way, and
+sank beneath Timmins&#8217; feet.</p>
+<p>Moved by the alert and unerring instinct
+of the woodsman, Timmins leaped into the
+air. Both high and wide he sprang, and so
+escaped being engulfed in the mass which he
+had dislodged. On the top of the ruin he
+fell, but he fell far and hard; and for some
+fifteen or twenty minutes after that fall he
+lay very still, while the dust and d&eacute;bris settled
+into silence under the quiet flooding of the sun.</p>
+<p>At last he opened his eyes. For a moment
+he made no effort to move, but lay wondering
+where he was. A weight was on his
+legs, and glancing downward, he saw that he
+was half covered with earth and rubbish.
+Then he remembered. Was he badly hurt?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+He was half afraid, now, to make the effort
+to move, lest he should find himself incapable
+of it. Still, he felt no serious pain. His
+head ached, to be sure; and he saw that his
+left hand was bleeding from a gash at the
+base of the thumb. That hand still clutched
+one of the heavy traps which he had been
+carrying, and it was plainly the trap that had
+cut him, as if in a frantic effort to escape.
+But where was his rifle? Cautiously turning
+his head, he peered around for it, but in
+vain, for during the fall it had flown far aside
+into the thickets. As he stared solicitously,
+all at once his dazed and sluggish senses
+sprang to life again with a scorching throb,
+which left a chill behind it. There, not ten
+paces away, sitting up on its haunches and
+eying him contemplatively, was a gigantic
+wolf, much bigger, it seemed to him, than
+any wolf had any right to be.</p>
+<p>Timmins&#8217; first instinct was to spring to his
+feet, with a yell that would give the dreadful
+stranger to understand that he was a fellow it
+would not be well to tamper with. But his
+woodcraft stayed him. He was not by any
+means sure that he <i>could</i> spring to his feet.
+Still less was he sure that such an action would
+properly impress the great wolf, who, for the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+moment at least, seemed not actively hostile.
+Stillness, absolute immobility, was the trump-card
+to be always played in the wilderness
+when in doubt. So Timmins kept quite still,
+looking inquiringly at Lone Wolf. And Lone
+Wolf looked inquiringly at him.</p>
+<p>For several minutes this waiting game went
+on. Then, with easy nonchalance, Lone Wolf
+lifted one huge hind paw and vigorously
+scratched his ear. This very simple action
+was a profound relief to Timmins.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sartain,&#8221; he thought, &#8220;the crittur must be
+in an easy mood, or he&#8217;d never think to scratch
+his ear like that. Or mebbe he thinks I&#8217;m so
+well buried I kin wait, like an old bone!&#8221;</p>
+<p>Just then Lone Wolf got up, stretched himself,
+yawned prodigiously, came a couple of
+steps nearer, and sat down again, with his head
+cocked to one side, and a polite air of asking,
+&#8220;Do I intrude?&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Sartain sure, I&#8217;ll never ketch him in a
+better humor!&#8221; thought Timmins. &#8220;I&#8217;ll try
+the human voice on him.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Git to H&#8211;&#8211; out of that!&#8221; he commanded
+in a sharp voice.</p>
+<p>Lone Wolf cocked his head to the other side
+interrogatively. He had been spoken to by
+Toomey in that voice of authority, but the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span>
+words were new to him. He felt that he was
+expected to do something, but he knew not
+what. He liked the voice&mdash;it was something
+like Toomey&#8217;s. He liked the smell of Timmins&#8217;
+homespun shirt&mdash;it, too, was something like
+Toomey&#8217;s. He became suddenly anxious to
+please this stranger. But what was wanted of
+him? He half arose to his feet, and glanced
+around to see if, perchance, the inexplicable
+order had been addressed to some one else.
+As he turned, Timmins saw, half hidden in the
+heavy fur of the neck, a stout leather collar.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I swear!&#8221; he muttered, &#8220;if tain&#8217;t a <i>tame</i>
+wolf what&#8217;s got away!&#8221; With that he sat up;
+and pulling his legs, without any very serious
+hurt, from their covering of earth and sticks
+he got stiffly to his feet. For a moment the
+bright landscape reeled and swam before him,
+and he had a vague sense of having been hammered
+all over his body. Then he steadied
+himself. He saw that the wolf was watching
+him with the expression of a diffident but
+friendly dog who would like to make acquaintance.
+As he stood puzzling his wits, he remembered
+having read about the great fire which had
+recently done such damage to Sillaby and Hopkins&#8217;
+Circus, and he concluded that the stranger
+was one of the fugitives from that disaster.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Come here, sir! Come here, big wolf!&#8221;
+said he, holding out a confident hand.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Wolf&#8221;&mdash;that was a familiar sound to Lone
+Wolf&#8217;s ears! it was at least a part of his name!
+And the command was one he well understood.
+Wagging his tail gravely, he came at once, and
+thrust his great head under Timmins&#8217; hand for
+a caress. He had enjoyed his liberty, to be
+sure, but he was beginning to find it lonely.</p>
+<p>Timmins understood animals. His voice, as
+he talked to the redoubtable brute beside him,
+was full of kindness, but at the same time
+vibrant with authority. His touch was gentle,
+but very firm and unhesitating. Both touch
+and voice conveyed very clearly to Lone Wolf&#8217;s
+disciplined instinct the impression that this
+man, like Toomey, was a being who had to
+be obeyed, whose mastery was inevitable and
+beyond the reach of question. When Timmins
+told him to lie down, he did so at once, and
+stayed there obediently while Timmins gathered
+himself together, shook the dirt out of
+his hair and boots, recovered his cap, wiped his
+bleeding hand with leaves, and hunted up his
+scattered traps and rifle. At last Timmins
+took two bedraggled but massive pork sandwiches,
+wrapped in newspaper, from his pocket,
+and offered one to his strange associate. Lone
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+Wolf was not hungry, being full of perfectly
+good mutton, but being too polite to refuse,
+he gulped down the sandwich. Timmins took
+out the steel chain, snapped it on to Lone
+Wolf&#8217;s collar, said, &#8220;Come on!&#8221; and started
+homeward. And Lone Wolf, trained to a
+short leash, followed close at his heels.</p>
+<p>Timmins&#8217; breast swelled with exultation.
+What was the loss of one dog and half a dozen
+no-account sheep to the possession of this
+magnificent captive and the prestige of such a
+naked-handed capture? He easily inferred, of
+course, that his triumph must be due, in part
+at least, to some resemblance to the wolf&#8217;s
+former master, whose dominance had plainly
+been supreme. His only anxiety was as to
+how the great wolf might conduct himself
+toward Settlement Society in general. Assuredly
+nothing could be more lamb-like than the
+animal&#8217;s present demeanor, but Timmins remembered
+the fate of Joe Anderson&#8217;s powerful
+dog, and had his doubts. He examined Lone
+Wolf&#8217;s collar, and congratulated himself that
+both collar and chain were strong.</p>
+<p>It was getting well along in the afternoon
+when Timmins and Lone Wolf emerged from
+the thick woods into the stumpy pastures and
+rough burnt lands that spread back irregularly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+from the outlying farms. And here, while
+crossing a wide pasture known as Smith&#8217;s Lots,
+an amazing thing befell. Of course Timmins
+was not particularly surprised, because his backwoods
+philosophizing had long ago led him
+to the conclusion that when things get started
+happening, they have a way of keeping it up.
+Days, weeks, months, glide by without event
+enough to ripple the most sensitive memory.
+Then the whimsical Fates do something different,
+find it interesting, and proceed to do something
+else. So, though Timmins had been
+accustomed all his life to managing bulls, good-tempered
+and bad-tempered alike, and had
+never had the ugliest of them presume to turn
+upon him, he was not astonished now by the
+apparition of Smith&#8217;s bull, a wide-horned, carrot-red,
+white-faced Hereford, charging down
+upon him in thunderous fury from behind a
+poplar thicket. In a flash he remembered that
+the bull, which was notoriously murderous in
+temper, had been turned out into that pasture
+to act as guardian to Smith&#8217;s flocks. There
+was not a tree near big enough for refuge.
+There was not a stick big enough for a weapon.
+And he could not bring himself to shoot so
+valuable a beast as this fine thoroughbred.
+&#8220;Shucks!&#8221; he muttered in deep disgust. &#8220;I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span>
+might &#8217;a&#8217; knowed it!&#8221; Dropping Lone Wolf&#8217;s
+chain, he ran forward, waving his arms and
+shouting angrily. But that red onrushing bulk
+was quite too dull-witted to understand that it
+ought to obey. It was in the mood to charge
+an avalanche. Deeply humiliated, Timmins
+hopped aside, and reluctantly ran for the
+woods, trusting to elude his pursuer by timely
+dodging.</p>
+<p>Hitherto Lone Wolf had left all cattle severely
+alone, having got it somehow into his
+head that they were more peculiarly under
+man&#8217;s protection than the sheep. Now, however,
+he saw his duty, and duty is often a very
+well-developed concept in the brain of dog and
+wolf. His ears flattened, his eyes narrowed to
+flaming green slits, his lips wrinkled back till
+his long white fangs were clean bared, and
+without a sound he hurled himself upon the red
+bull&#8217;s flank. Looking back over his shoulder,
+Timmins saw it all. It was as if all his life
+Lone Wolf had been killing bulls, so unerring
+was that terrible chopping snap at the great
+beast&#8217;s throat. Far forward, just behind the
+bull&#8217;s jaws, the slashing fangs caught. And
+Timmins was astounded to see the bull, checked
+in mid-rush, plunge staggering forward upon
+his knees. From this position he abruptly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span>
+rolled over upon his side, thrown by his own
+impetus combined with a dexterous twist of his
+opponent&#8217;s body. Then Lone Wolf bounded
+backward, and stood expectant, ready to repeat
+the attack if necessary. But it was not necessary.
+Slowly the great red bull arose to his
+feet, and stared about him stupidly, the blood
+gushing from his throat. Then he swayed and
+collapsed. And Lone Wolf, wagging his tail
+like a dog, went back to Timmins&#8217; side for congratulations.</p>
+<p>The woodsman gazed ruefully at his slain
+foe. Then he patted his defender&#8217;s head, recovered
+the chain with a secure grip, and
+said slowly:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;I reckon, partner, ye did yer dooty as ye
+seen it, an&#8217; mebbe I&#8217;m beholden to ye fer a hul&#8217;
+skin, fer that there crittur was sartinly amazin&#8217;
+ugly an&#8217; spry on his pins. But ye&#8217;re goin&#8217; to be
+a responsibility some. Ye ain&#8217;t no suckin&#8217;
+lamb to hev aroun&#8217; the house, I&#8217;m thinkin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+<p>To these remarks, which he judged from
+their tone to be approving, Lone Wolf wagged
+assent, and the homeward journey was continued.
+Timmins went with his head down,
+buried in thought. All at once, coming to a
+convenient log, he seated himself, and made
+Lone Wolf lie down at his feet. Then he took
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
+out the remaining sandwich,&mdash;which he himself,
+still shaken from his fall, had no desire to
+eat,&mdash;and contemplatively, in small fragments,
+he fed it to the wolf&#8217;s great blood-stained jaws.
+At last he spoke, with the finality of one whose
+mind is quite made up.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Partner,&#8221; said he, &#8220;there ain&#8217;t no help for it.
+Bill Smith&#8217;s a-goin&#8217; to hold <i>me</i> responsible for
+the killin&#8217; o&#8217; that there crittur o&#8217; his&#8217;n, an&#8217; that
+means a pretty penny, it bein&#8217; a thoroughbred,
+an&#8217; imported at that. He ain&#8217;t never a-goin&#8217; to
+believe but what I let you loose on to him a
+purpose, jest to save <i>my</i> hide! Shucks! Moreover,
+ye may&#8217;s well realize y&#8217;ain&#8217;t <i>popular</i> &#8217;round
+these parts; an&#8217; first thing, when I wasn&#8217;t lookin&#8217;,
+somebody&#8217;d be a-puttin&#8217; somethin&#8217; onhealthy into
+yer vittles, partner! We&#8217;ve kind o&#8217; took to each
+other, you an&#8217; me; an&#8217; I reckon <i>we&#8217;d</i> git on together
+<i>fine</i>, me always havin&#8217; me own way, of
+course. But there ain&#8217;t no help fer it. Ye&#8217;re too
+hefty a proposition, by long odds, fer a community
+like Lost Mountain Settlement. I&#8217;m
+a-goin&#8217; to write right off to Sillaby an&#8217; Hopkins,
+an&#8217; let them have ye back, partner. An&#8217; I
+reckon the price they&#8217;ll pay&#8217;ll be enough to
+let me square myself with Bill Smith.&#8221;</p>
+<p>And thus it came about that, within a couple
+of weeks, Lone Wolf and Toomey were once
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+more entertaining delighted audiences, while
+the settlement of Lost Mountain, with Timmins&#8217;
+prestige established beyond assault, relapsed
+into its uneventful quiet.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_BEARS_FACE' id='THE_BEARS_FACE'></a>
+<h2>THE BEAR&#8217;S FACE</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span></div>
+<h2>The Bear&#8217;s Face</h2>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p>&#8220;There ain&#8217;t no denying but what you
+give us a great show, Job,&#8221; said the barkeeper,
+with that air of patronage which befits
+the man who presides over and autocratically
+controls the varied activities of a saloon in a
+Canadian lumber town.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It <i>is</i> a good show!&#8221; assented Job Toomey,
+modestly. He leaned up against the bar in
+orthodox fashion, just as if his order had been
+&#8220;whiskey fer mine!&#8221; but being a really great
+animal trainer, whose eye must be always clear
+and his nerve always steady as a rock, his glass
+contained nothing stronger than milk and
+Vichy.</p>
+<p>Fifteen years before, Job Toomey had gone
+away with a little travelling menagerie because
+he loved wild animals. He had come back
+famous, and the town of Grantham Mills, metropolis
+of his native county, was proud of him.
+He was head of the menagerie of the Sillaby
+and Hopkins&#8217; Circus, and trainer of one of the
+finest troupes of performing beasts in all
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span>
+America. It was a great thing for Grantham
+Mills to have had a visit from the Sillaby and
+Hopkins&#8217; Circus on its way from one important
+centre to another. There had been two great
+performances, afternoon and evening. And
+now, after the last performance, some of
+Toomey&#8217;s old-time acquaintances were making
+things pleasant for him in the bar of the
+Continental.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see how ye do it, Job!&#8221; said Sanderson,
+an old river-man who had formerly trapped
+and hunted with Toomey. &#8220;I mind ye was
+always kind o&#8217; slick an&#8217; understandin&#8217; with the
+wild critters; but the way them lions an&#8217;
+painters an&#8217; bears an&#8217; wolves jest folly yer eye
+an&#8217; yer nod, willin&#8217; as so many poodle dogs,
+beats me. They seem to like it, too.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;They <i>do</i>,&#8221; said Toomey. &#8220;Secret of it is,
+<i>I</i> like <i>them</i>; so by an&#8217; by they learn to like me
+well enough, an&#8217; try to please me. I make it
+worth their while, too. Also, they know I&#8217;ll
+stand no fooling. Fear an&#8217; love, rightly mixed,
+boys&mdash;plenty of love, an&#8217; jest enough fear to
+keep it from spilin&#8217;&mdash;that&#8217;s a mixture&#8217;ll carry
+a man far&mdash;leastways with animals!&#8221;</p>
+<p>The barkeeper smiled, and was about to say
+the obvious thing, but he was interrupted by
+a long, lean-jawed, leather-faced man, captain of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span>
+one of the river tugs, whose eyes had grown
+sharp as gimlets with looking out for snags
+and sandbanks.</p>
+<p>&#8220;The finest beast in the whole menagerie,
+that big grizzly,&#8221; said he, spitting accurately
+into a spacious box of sawdust, &#8220;I noticed
+as how ye didn&#8217;t have <i>him</i> in your performance,
+Mr. Toomey. Now, I kind o&#8217; thought as how
+I&#8217;d like to see you put <i>him</i> through his stunts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>Toomey was silent for a moment. Then,
+with a certain reserve in his voice, he answered&mdash;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Oh, he ain&#8217;t exactly strong on stunts.&#8221;</p>
+<p>The leather-faced captain grinned quizzically.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Which does he go shy on, Mr. Toomey,
+the love or the fear?&#8221; he asked.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Both,&#8221; said Toomey, shortly. Then his
+stern face relaxed, and he laughed good-humoredly.
+&#8220;Fact is, I think we&#8217;ll have to be
+sellin&#8217; that there grizzly to some zo&ouml;logical
+park. He&#8217;s kind of bad fer my prestige.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;How&#8217;s that, Job?&#8221; asked Sanderson, expectant
+of a story.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; replied Toomey, &#8220;to tell you the
+truth, boys,&mdash;an&#8217; I only say it because I&#8217;m here
+at home, among friends,&mdash;it&#8217;s <i>me</i> that&#8217;s afraid
+of <i>him</i>! An&#8217; he knows it. He&#8217;s the only beast
+that&#8217;s ever been able to make me feel fear&mdash;the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
+real, deep-down fear. An&#8217; I&#8217;ve never been
+able to git quit of that ugly notion. I go an&#8217;
+stand in front o&#8217; his cage; an&#8217; he jest puts that
+great face of his up agin the bars an&#8217; stares at
+me. An&#8217; I look straight into his eyes, an&#8217; remember
+what has passed between us, an&#8217; I feel
+afraid still. Yes, it wouldn&#8217;t be much use me
+tryin&#8217; to train <i>that</i> bear, boys, an&#8217; I&#8217;m free to
+acknowledge it to you all.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Tell us about it, Job!&#8221; suggested the barkeeper,
+settling his large frame precariously on
+the top of a small, high stool.</p>
+<p>An urgent chorus of approval came from all
+about the bar. Toomey took out his watch
+and considered.</p>
+<p>&#8220;We start away at 5.40 <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A.M.</span>,&#8221; said he. &#8220;An&#8217;
+I must make out to get a wink o&#8217; sleep. But I
+reckon I&#8217;ve got time enough. As you&#8217;ll see,
+however, before I git through, the drinks are
+on me, so name yer pison, boys. Meanwhile,
+you&#8217;ll excuse me if I don&#8217;t join you this time.
+A man kin hold jest about so much Vichy an&#8217;
+milk, an&#8217; I&#8217;ve got my load aboard.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It was kind of this way,&#8221; he continued, when
+the barkeeper had performed his functions.
+&#8220;You see, for nigh ten years after I left Grantham
+Mills, I&#8217;d stuck closer&#8217;n a burr to my
+business, till I began to feel I knew &#8217;most all
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span>
+there was to know about trainin&#8217; animals.
+Men do git that kind of a fool feelin&#8217; sometimes
+about lots of things harder than animal-trainin&#8217;.
+Well, nothin&#8217; would do me but I should go back
+to my old business of <i>trappin&#8217;</i> the beasts, only
+with one big difference. I wanted to go in fer
+takin&#8217; them alive, so as to sell them to menageries
+an&#8217; all that sort of thing. An&#8217; it was no
+pipe dream, fer I done well at it from the first.
+But that&#8217;s not here nor there. I was gittin&#8217;
+tired of it, after a lot o&#8217; travellin&#8217; an&#8217; some lively
+kind of scrapes; so I made up my mind to
+finish up with a grizzly, an&#8217; then git back to
+trainin&#8217;, which was what I was cut out fer, after
+all.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I wanted a grizzly; an&#8217; it wasn&#8217;t long
+before I found one. We were campin&#8217; among
+the foothills of the upper end of the Sierra
+Nevada range, in northern California. It was
+a good prospectin&#8217; ground fer grizzly, an&#8217; we
+found lots o&#8217; signs. I wanted one not too big
+fer convenience, an&#8217; not so old as to be too set
+in his ways an&#8217; too proud to larn. I had three
+good men with me, an&#8217; we scattered ourselves
+over a big bit o&#8217; ground, lookin&#8217; fer a likely
+trail. When I stumbled on to that chap in the
+cage yonder, what Captain Bird admires so, I
+knew right off <i>he</i> wasn&#8217;t what I was after. But
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span>
+the queer thing was that <i>he</i> didn&#8217;t seem to feel
+that way about <i>me</i>. He was after me before I
+had time to think of anything jest suitable to
+the occasion.&#8221;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Where in thunder was yer gun?&#8221; demanded
+the river-man.</p>
+<p>&#8220;That was jest the trouble!&#8221; answered
+Toomey. &#8220;Ye see, I&#8217;d stood the gun agin a tree,
+in a dry place, while I stepped over a bit o&#8217; boggy
+ground, intendin&#8217; to lay down an&#8217; drink out of
+a leetle spring. Well, the bear was handier to
+that gun than I was. When he come fer me,
+I tell ye I didn&#8217;t go back fer the gun. I ran
+straight up the hill, an&#8217; him too close at my
+heels fer convenience. Then I remembered
+that a grizzly don&#8217;t run his best when he goes
+up hill on a slant, so on the slant I went. It
+worked, I reckon, fer though I couldn&#8217;t say I
+gained on him much, it was soothin&#8217; to observe
+that he didn&#8217;t seem to gain on me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fer maybe well on to three hundred yards
+it was a fine race, and I was beginnin&#8217; to wonder
+if the bear was gittin&#8217; as near winded as I
+was, when slap, I come right out on the crest
+of the ridge, which jest ahead o&#8217; me jutted out
+in a sort of elbow. What there was on the
+other side I couldn&#8217;t see, and couldn&#8217;t take time
+to inquire. I jest had to chance it, hopin&#8217; it might
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span>
+be somethin&#8217; less than a thousand foot drop. I
+ran straight to the edge, and jest managed to
+throw myself flat on my face an&#8217; clutch at the
+grasses like mad to keep from pitchin&#8217; clean out
+into space. It <i>was</i> a drop, all right,&mdash;two
+hundred foot or more o&#8217; sheer cliff.</p>
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; the bear was not thirty yards behind
+me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I looked at the bear, as I laid there clutchin&#8217;
+the grass-roots. Then I looked down over the
+edge. I didn&#8217;t feel frightened exactly, so fur;
+didn&#8217;t <i>know</i> enough, maybe, to be <i>frightened</i> of
+<i>any</i> animal. But jest at this point I was mighty
+anxious. You&#8217;ll believe, then, it was kind o&#8217;
+good to me to see, right below, maybe twenty
+foot down, a little pocket of a ledge full o&#8217; grass
+an&#8217; blossomin&#8217; weeds. There was no time to
+calculate. I could let myself drop, an&#8217; maybe,
+if I had luck, I could stop where I fell, in the
+pocket, instead of bouncin&#8217; out an&#8217; down, to be
+smashed into flinders. Or, on the other hand,
+I could stay where I was, an&#8217; be ripped into
+leetle frayed ravellin&#8217;s by the bear; an&#8217; that
+would be in about three seconds, at the rate he
+was comin&#8217;. Well, I let myself over the edge
+till I jest hung by the fingers, an&#8217; then dropped,
+smooth as I could, down the rock face, kind of
+clutchin&#8217; at every leetle knob as I went to check
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span>
+the fall. I lit true in the pocket, an&#8217; I lit pretty
+hard, as ye might know, but not hard enough
+to knock the wits out o&#8217; me, the grass an&#8217; weeds
+bein&#8217; fairly soft. An&#8217; clawin&#8217; out desperate with
+both hands, I caught, an&#8217; stayed put. Some
+dirt an&#8217; stones come down, kind o&#8217; smart, on my
+head, an&#8217; when they&#8217;d stopped I looked up.
+There was the bear, his big head stuck down,
+with one ugly paw hangin&#8217; over beside it, starin&#8217;
+at me. I was so tickled at havin&#8217; fooled him, I
+didn&#8217;t think o&#8217; the hole I was in, but sez to him,
+saucy as you please, &#8216;Thou art so near, an&#8217; yet
+so far.&#8217; At this he give a grunt, which might
+have meant anything, an&#8217; disappeared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Ye know enough to know when you&#8217;re
+euchred,&#8217; says I. An&#8217; then I turned to considerin&#8217;
+the place I was in, an&#8217; how I was to git
+out of it.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To git out of it, indeed! The more I considered,
+the more I wondered how I&#8217;d ever
+managed to stay in it. It wasn&#8217;t bigger than
+three foot by two, or two an&#8217; a half, maybe, in
+width, out from the cliff-face. On my left, as I
+sat with my back agin the cliff, a wall o&#8217; rock
+ran out straight, closin&#8217; off the pocket to that
+side clean an&#8217; sharp, though with a leetle kind
+of a roughness, so to speak&mdash;nothin&#8217; more than
+a roughness&mdash;which I calculated <i>might</i> do, on
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span>
+a pinch, fer me to hang on to if I wanted to try
+to climb round to the other side. I <i>didn&#8217;t</i> want
+to jest yet, bein&#8217; still shaky from the drop, which,
+as things turned out, was just as well for me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;To my right a bit of a ledge, maybe six or
+eight inches wide, ran off along the cliff-face
+for a matter of ten or a dozen feet, then slanted
+up, an&#8217; widened out agin to another little pocket,
+or shelf like, of bare rock, about level with the
+top o&#8217; my head. From this shelf a narrow crack,
+not more than two or three inches wide, kind o&#8217;
+zigzagged away till it reached the top o&#8217; the
+cliff, perhaps forty foot off. It wasn&#8217;t much,
+but it looked like somethin&#8217; I could git a good
+finger-hold into, if only I could work my way
+along to that leetle shelf. I was figurin&#8217; hard
+on this, an&#8217; had about made up my mind to try
+it, an&#8217; was reachin&#8217; out, in fact, to start, when I
+stopped sudden.</p>
+<p>&#8220;A good, healthy-lookin&#8217; rattler, his diamond-pattern
+back bright in the sun, come out of the
+crevice an&#8217; stopped on the shelf to take a look
+at the weather.</p>
+<p>&#8220;It struck me right off that he was on his
+way down to this pocket o&#8217; mine, which was
+maybe his favorite country residence. I didn&#8217;t
+like one bit the idee o&#8217; his comin&#8217; an&#8217; findin&#8217;
+me there, when I&#8217;d never been invited. I felt
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+right bad about it, you bet; and I&#8217;d have got
+away if I could. But not bein&#8217; able to, there
+was nothin&#8217; fer me to do but try an&#8217; make myself
+onpleasant. I grabbed up a handful o&#8217; dirt
+an&#8217; threw it at the rattler. It scattered all &#8217;round
+him, of course, an&#8217; some of it hit him. Whereupon
+he coiled himself like a flash, with head
+an&#8217; tail both lifted, an&#8217; rattled indignantly.
+There was nothin&#8217; big enough to do him any
+damage with, an&#8217; I was mighty oneasy lest he
+might insist on comin&#8217; home to see who his
+impident caller was. But I kept on flingin&#8217;
+dirt as long as there was any handy, while he
+kept on rattlin&#8217;, madder an&#8217; madder. Then I
+stopped, to think what I&#8217;d better do next. I
+was jest startin&#8217; to take off my boot, to hit him
+with as he come along the narrow ledge, when
+suddenly he uncoiled an&#8217; slipped back into the
+crevice.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Either it was very hot, or I&#8217;d been a bit
+more anxious than I&#8217;d realized, for I felt my
+forehead wet with sweat; I drew my sleeve
+across it, all the time keeping my eyes glued
+on the spot where the rattler&#8217;d disappeared.
+Jest then, seemed to me, I felt a breath on the
+back o&#8217; my neck. A kind o&#8217; cold chill crinkled
+down my backbone, an&#8217; I turned my face &#8217;round
+sharp.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span></p>
+<p>&#8220;Will you believe it, boys? I was nigh
+jumpin&#8217; straight off that there ledge, right into
+the landscape an&#8217; eternity! There, starin&#8217;
+&#8217;round the wall o&#8217; rock, not one inch more than
+a foot away from mine, was the face o&#8217; the bear.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, I was scared. There&#8217;s no gittin&#8217;
+round that fact. There was something so onnatural
+about that big, wicked face hangin&#8217; there
+over that awful height, an&#8217; starin&#8217; so close into
+mine. I jest naturally scrooged away as fur as
+I could git, an&#8217; hung on tight to the rock so&#8217;s
+not to go over. An&#8217; <i>then</i> my face wasn&#8217;t more&#8217;n
+two feet away, do the best I could; an&#8217; that was
+the time I found what it felt like to be right
+down scared. I believe if that face had come
+much closer, I&#8217;d have <i>bit</i> at it, that minute, like
+a rat in a hole.</p>
+<p>&#8220;For maybe thirty seconds we jest stared.
+Then, I kind o&#8217; got a holt of myself, an&#8217; cursed
+myself good fer bein&#8217; such a fool; an&#8217; my blood
+got to runnin&#8217; agin. I fell to studyin&#8217; how the
+bear could have got there; an&#8217; pretty soon I
+reckoned it out as how there must be a big ledge
+runnin&#8217; down the cliff face, jest the other side
+o&#8217; the wall o&#8217; the pocket. An&#8217; I hugged myself
+to think I hadn&#8217;t managed to climb &#8217;round on to
+that ledge jest before the bear arrived. I got
+this all figgered out, an&#8217; it took some time.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span>
+But still that face, hangin&#8217; out there over the
+height, kept starin&#8217; at me; an&#8217; I never saw a
+wickeder look than it had on to it, steady an&#8217;
+unwinkin&#8217; as a nightmare. It is curious how
+long a beast <i>kin</i> look at one without winkin&#8217;.
+At last, it got on to my nerves so I jest couldn&#8217;t
+stand it; an&#8217; snatching a bunch of weeds (I&#8217;d
+already flung away all the loose dirt, flingin&#8217; it
+at the rattler), I whipped &#8217;em across them devilish
+leetle eyes as hard as I could. It was a
+kind of a child&#8217;s trick, or a woman&#8217;s, but it
+worked all right, fer it made the eyes blink.
+That proved they were real eyes, an&#8217; I felt easier.
+After all, it <i>was</i> only a bear; an&#8217; he couldn&#8217;t
+git any closer than he was. But that was a
+mite too close, an&#8217; I wished he&#8217;d move. An&#8217;
+jest then, not to be gittin&#8217; <i>too</i> easy in my mind,
+I remembered the rattler.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Another cold chill down my backbone! I
+looked &#8217;round right smart. But the rattler
+wasn&#8217;t anywhere in sight. That, however, put
+me in mind of what I&#8217;d been goin&#8217; to do to <i>him</i>.
+A boot wasn&#8217;t much of a weapon agin a bear,
+but it was the only thing handy, so I reckoned
+I&#8217;d have to make it do. I yanked it off, took it
+by the toe, an&#8217; let that wicked face have the
+heel of it as hard as I could. I hadn&#8217;t any
+room to swing, so I couldn&#8217;t hit very hard. But
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+a bear&#8217;s nose is tender, on the tip; an&#8217; it was
+jest there, of course, I took care to land. There
+was a big snort, kind o&#8217; surprised like, an&#8217; the
+face disappeared.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I felt a sight better.</p>
+<p>&#8220;Fer maybe five minutes nothin&#8217; else happened.
+I sat there figgerin&#8217; how I was goin&#8217; to
+git out o&#8217; that hole; an&#8217; my figgerin&#8217; wasn&#8217;t
+anyways satisfactory. I knew the bear was a
+stayer, all right. There&#8217;d be no such a thing
+as tryin&#8217; to crawl &#8217;round that shoulder o&#8217; rock
+till I was blame sure <i>he</i> wasn&#8217;t on t&#8217;other side;
+an&#8217; how I was goin&#8217; to find <i>that</i> out was more
+than I could git at. There was no such a thing
+as climbin&#8217; <i>up</i>. There was no such a thing as
+climbin&#8217; <i>down</i>. An&#8217; as fer that leetle ledge an&#8217;
+crevice leadin&#8217; off to the right,&mdash;well, boys,
+when there&#8217;s a rattler layin&#8217; low fer ye in a
+crevice, ye&#8217;re goin&#8217; to keep clear o&#8217; that crevice.
+It wanted a good three hours of sundown, an&#8217;
+I knew my chaps wouldn&#8217;t be missin&#8217; me before
+night. When I didn&#8217;t turn up for dinner, of
+course they&#8217;d begin to suspicion somethin&#8217;,
+because they knew I was takin&#8217; things rather
+easy an&#8217; not followin&#8217; up any long trails. It
+looked like I was there fer the night; an&#8217; I
+didn&#8217;t like it, I tell you. There wasn&#8217;t room to
+lay down, and if I fell asleep settin&#8217; up, like as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span>
+not I&#8217;d roll off the ledge. There was nothing
+fer it but to set up a whoop an&#8217; a yell every
+once in a while, in hopes that one or other of
+the boys <i>might</i> be cruisin&#8217; &#8217;round near enough
+to hear me. So I yelled some half a dozen
+times, stoppin&#8217; between each yell to listen. Gittin&#8217;
+no answer, at last I decided to save my
+throat a bit an try agin after a spell o&#8217; restin&#8217;
+an&#8217; worryin&#8217;. Jest then I turned my head;
+an&#8217; I forgot, right off, to worry about fallin&#8217; off
+the ledge. There, pokin&#8217; his ugly head out o&#8217;
+the crevice, was the rattler. I chucked a bunch
+o&#8217; weeds at him, an&#8217; he drew back in agin. But
+the thing that jarred me now was, how would I
+keep him off when it got too dark fer me to see
+him. He&#8217;d be slippin&#8217; home quiet like, thinkin&#8217;
+maybe I was gone, an&#8217; mad when he found
+I wasn&#8217;t, fer, ye see, <i>he</i> hadn&#8217;t no means of
+knowin&#8217; that I couldn&#8217;t go <i>up</i> the rock jest as
+easy as I come down. I feared there was goin&#8217;
+to be trouble after dark. An&#8217; while I was
+figgerin&#8217; on that till the sweat come out on my
+forehead, I turned agin, an&#8217; there agin was the
+bear&#8217;s face starin&#8217; round the rock not more&#8217;n a
+foot away.</p>
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll understand how my nerves was on
+the jumps, when I tell you, boys, that I was scared
+an&#8217; startled all over again, like the first time I&#8217;d
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+seen it. With a yell, I fetched a swipe at it
+with my boot; but it was gone, like a shadow,
+before I hit it; an&#8217; the boot flew out o&#8217; my hand
+an&#8217; went over the cliff, an&#8217; me pretty nigh after
+it. I jest caught myself, an&#8217; hung on, kind o&#8217;
+shaky, fer a minute. Next thing, I heard a
+great scratchin&#8217; at the other side o&#8217; the rock,
+as if the brute was tryin&#8217; to git a better toehold
+an&#8217; work some new dodge on me. Then the
+face appeared agin, an&#8217; maybe, though perhaps
+that was jest my excited imagination, it was
+some two or three inches closer this time.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I lit out at it with my fist, not havin&#8217; my
+other boot handy. But Lord, a bear kin dodge
+the sharpest boxer. That face jest wasn&#8217;t
+there, before I could hit it. Then, five seconds
+more, an&#8217; it was back agin starin&#8217; at me.
+I wouldn&#8217;t give it the satisfaction o&#8217; tryin&#8217;
+to swipe it agin, so I jest kept still, pretendin&#8217;
+to ignore it; an&#8217; in a minute or two
+it disappeared. But then, a minute or two
+more an&#8217; it was back agin. An&#8217; so it went on,
+disappearin&#8217;, comin&#8217; back, goin&#8217; away, comin&#8217;
+back, an&#8217; always jest when I <i>wasn&#8217;t</i> expectin&#8217;
+it, an&#8217; always sudden an&#8217; quick as a shadow,
+till <i>that</i> kind o&#8217; got on to my nerves too, an&#8217; I
+wished he&#8217;d stay one way or t&#8217;other, so as I could
+know what I was up against. At last, settlin&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span>
+down as small as I could, I made up my mind
+I jest wouldn&#8217;t look that way at all, face or no
+face, but give all my attention to watchin&#8217; for
+the rattler, an&#8217; yellin&#8217; fer the boys. Judgin&#8217;
+by the sun,&mdash;which went mighty slow that day,&mdash;I
+kept that game up for an hour or more;
+an&#8217; then, as the rattler didn&#8217;t come any more
+than the boys, I got tired of it, an&#8217; looked
+&#8217;round for the bear&#8217;s face. Well, that time it
+wasn&#8217;t there. But in place of it was a big
+brown paw, reachin&#8217; round the edge of the rock
+all by itself, an&#8217; clawin&#8217; quietly within about a
+foot o&#8217; my ear. That was all the farthest it
+would reach, however, so I tried jest to keep
+my mind off it. In a minute or two it disappeared;
+an&#8217; then back come the face.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t like it. I preferred the paw. But
+then, it kept the situation from gittin&#8217; monotonous.</p>
+<p>&#8220;I suppose it was about this time the bear
+remembered somethin&#8217; that wanted seein&#8217; to
+down the valley. The face disappeared once
+more, and this time it didn&#8217;t come back. After
+I hadn&#8217;t seen it fer a half-hour, I began to think
+maybe it had <i>really</i> gone away; but I knew
+how foxy a bear could be, an&#8217; thought jest as
+like as not he was waitin&#8217;, patient as a cat, on
+the other side o&#8217; the rock fer me to look round
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+so&#8217;s he could git a swipe at me that would jest
+wipe my face clean off. I didn&#8217;t try to look
+round. But I kept yellin&#8217; every little while;
+an&#8217; all at once a voice answered right over my
+head. I tell you it sounded good, if <i>&#8217;twasn&#8217;t</i>
+much of a voice. It was Steevens, my packer,
+lookin&#8217; down at me.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Hello, what in h&#8211;&#8211; are ye doin&#8217; down
+there, Job?&#8217; he demanded.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Waiting fer you to git a rope an&#8217; hoist me
+up!&#8217; says I. &#8216;But look out fer the bear!&#8217;</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Bear nothin&#8217;!&#8217; says he.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Chuck an eye down the other side,&#8217; says I.</p>
+<p>&#8220;He disappeared, but came right back.
+&#8216;Bear nothin&#8217;,&#8217; says he agin, havin&#8217; no originality.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Well, he <i>was</i> there, &#8217;an&#8217; he stayed all the
+afternoon,&#8217; says I.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;Reckon he must &#8217;a&#8217; heard ye was an animal
+trainer, an&#8217; got skeered!&#8217; says Steevens. But
+I wasn&#8217;t jokin&#8217; jest then.</p>
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;You cut fer camp, an&#8217; bring a rope, an&#8217; git
+me out o&#8217; this, <i>quick</i>, d&#8217;ye hear?&#8217; says I.
+&#8216;There&#8217;s a rattler lives here, an&#8217; he&#8217;s comin&#8217;
+back presently, an&#8217; I don&#8217;t want to meet him.
+Slide!&#8217;</p>
+<p>&#8220;Well, boys, that&#8217;s all. That bear <i>wasn&#8217;t</i>
+jest what I&#8217;d wanted; but feelin&#8217; ugly about
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+him, I decided to take him an&#8217; break him in.
+We trailed him, an&#8217; after a lot o&#8217; trouble we
+trapped him. He was a sight more trouble
+after we&#8217;d got him, I tell you. But afterwards,
+when I set myself to tryin&#8217; to train him, why,
+I might jest as well have tried to train an earthquake.
+Do you suppose that grizzly was goin&#8217;
+to be afraid o&#8217; <i>me?</i> He&#8217;d seen me afraid o&#8217;
+<i>him</i>, all right. He&#8217;d seen it in my eyes! An&#8217;
+what&#8217;s more, <i>I</i> couldn&#8217;t forgit it; but when I&#8217;d
+look at him I&#8217;d <i>feel</i>, every time, the nightmare
+o&#8217; that great wicked face hangin&#8217; there over the
+cliff, close to mine. So, he don&#8217;t perform.
+What&#8217;ll ye take, boys? It&#8217;s hot milk, this
+time, fer mine.&#8221;</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
+<a name='THE_DUEL_ON_THE_TRAIL' id='THE_DUEL_ON_THE_TRAIL'></a>
+<h2>THE DUEL ON THE TRAIL</h2>
+</div>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span></div>
+<h2>The Duel on the Trail</h2>
+<p>White and soft over the wide, sloping
+upland lay the snow, marked across
+with the zigzag gray lines of the fences, and
+spotted here and there with little clumps of
+woods or patches of bushy pasture. The
+sky above was white as the earth below, being
+mantled with snow-laden cloud not yet ready
+to spill its feathery burden on the world. One
+little farm-house, far down the valley, served
+but to emphasize the spacious emptiness of the
+silent winter landscape.</p>
+<p>Out from one of the snow-streaked thickets
+jumped a white rabbit, its long ears waving
+nervously, and paused for a second to look
+back with a frightened air. It had realized
+that some enemy was on its trail, but what that
+enemy was, it did not know. After this moment
+of perilous hesitation, it went leaping forward
+across the open, leaving a vivid track in the
+soft surface snow. The little animal&#8217;s discreet
+alarm, however, was dangerously corrupted by
+its curiosity; and at the lower edge of the field,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+before going through a snake fence and entering
+another thicket, it stopped, stood up as erect as
+possible on its strong hind quarters, and again
+looked back. As it did so, the unknown enemy
+again revealed himself, just emerging, a slender
+and sinister black shape, from the upper thicket.
+A quiver of fear passed over the rabbit&#8217;s nerves.
+Its curiosity all effaced, it went through the
+fence with an elongated leap and plunged into
+the bushes in a panic. Here it doubled upon
+itself twice in a short circle, trusting by this
+well-worn device to confuse the unswerving
+pursuer. Then, breaking out upon the lower
+side of the thicket, it resumed its headlong
+flight across the fields.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the enemy, a large mink, was following
+on the trail with the dogged persistence
+of a sleuth-hound. Sure of his methods, he did
+not pause to see what the quarry was doing,
+but kept his eyes and nose occupied with the
+fresh tracks. His speed was not less than that
+of the rabbit, and his endurance was vastly
+greater. Being very long in the body, and extremely
+short in the legs, he ran in a most peculiar
+fashion, arching his lithe back almost
+like a measuring-worm and straightening out
+like a steel spring suddenly released. These
+sinuous bounds were grotesque enough in appearance,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span>
+but singularly effective. The trail
+they made, overlapping that of the rabbit, but
+quite distinct from it, varied according to the
+depth of the surface snow. Where the snow
+lay thin, just deep enough to receive an imprint,
+the mink&#8217;s small feet left a series of delicate,
+innocent-looking marks, much less formidable
+in appearance than those of the pad-footed
+fugitive. But where the loose snow had gathered
+deeper the mink&#8217;s long body and sinewy
+tail from time to time stamped themselves
+unmistakably.</p>
+<p>When the mink reached the second thicket,
+his keen and experienced craft penetrated at
+once the poor ruses of the fugitive. Cutting
+across the circlings of the trail, he picked it up
+again with implacable precision, making almost
+a straight line through the underbrush. When
+he emerged again into the open, the rabbit was
+in full view ahead.</p>
+<p>The next strip of woodland in the fugitive&#8217;s
+path was narrow and dense. Below it, in a
+patch of hillocky pasture ground, sloping to a
+pond of steel-bright ice, a red fox was diligently
+hunting. He ran hither and thither, furtive,
+but seemingly erratic, poking his nose into
+half-covered moss-tufts and under the roots of
+dead stumps, looking for mice or shrews. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+found a couple of the latter, but these were small
+satisfaction to his vigorous winter appetite.
+Presently he paused, lifted his narrow, cunning
+nose toward the woods, and appeared to ponder
+the advisability of going on a rabbit hunt.
+His fine, tawny, ample brush of a tail gently
+swept the light snow behind him as he stood
+undecided.</p>
+<p>All at once he crouched flat upon the snow,
+quivering with excitement, like a puppy about
+to jump at a wind-blown leaf. He had seen
+the rabbit emerging from the woods. Absolutely
+motionless he lay, so still that, in spite
+of his warm coloring, he might have been taken
+for a fragment of dead wood. And as he
+watched, tense with anticipation, he saw the
+rabbit run into a long, hollow log, which lay
+half-veiled in a cluster of dead weeds. Instantly
+he darted forward, ran at top speed, and crouched
+before the lower end of the log, where he knew
+the rabbit must come out.</p>
+<p>Within a dozen seconds the mink arrived,
+and followed the fugitive straight into his ineffectual
+retreat. Such narrow quarters were
+just what the mink loved. The next instant
+the rabbit shot forth&mdash;to be caught in mid-air
+by the waiting fox, and die before it had time
+to realize in what shape doom had come upon it.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span></p>
+<p>All unconscious that he was trespassing upon
+another&#8217;s hunt, the fox, with a skilful jerk of
+his head, flung the limp and sprawling victim
+across his shoulder, holding it by one leg, and
+started away down the slope toward his lair on
+the other side of the pond.</p>
+<p>As the mink&#8217;s long body darted out from the
+hollow log he stopped short, crouched flat upon
+the snow with twitching tail, and stared at the
+triumphant intruder with eyes that suddenly
+blazed red. The trespass was no less an insult
+than an injury; and many of the wild kindreds
+show themselves possessed of a nice sensitiveness
+on the point of their personal dignity.
+For an animal of the mink&#8217;s size the fox was an
+overwhelmingly powerful antagonist, to be
+avoided with care under all ordinary circumstances.
+But to the disappointed hunter, his
+blood hot from the long, exciting chase, this
+present circumstance seemed by no means ordinary.
+Noiseless as a shadow, and swift and
+stealthy as a snake, he sped after the leisurely
+fox, and with one snap bit through the great
+tendon of his right hind leg, permanently laming
+him.</p>
+<p>As the pang went through him, and the
+maimed leg gave way beneath his weight, the
+fox dropped his burden and turned savagely
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+upon his unexpected assailant. The mink, however,
+had sprung away, and lay crouched in
+readiness on the snow, eying his enemy malignantly.
+With a fierce snap of his long, punishing
+jaws the fox rushed upon him. But&mdash;the
+mink was not there. With a movement so
+quick as fairly to elude the sight, he was now
+crouching several yards away, watchful, vindictive,
+menacing. The fox made two more short
+rushes, in vain; then he, too, crouched, considering
+the situation, and glaring at his slender
+black antagonist. The mink&#8217;s small eyes were
+lit with a smouldering, ruddy glow, sinister and
+implacable; while rage and pain had cast over
+the eyes of the fox a peculiar green opalescence.</p>
+<p>For perhaps half a minute the two lay motionless,
+though quivering with the intensity of restraint
+and expectation. Then, with lightning
+suddenness, the fox repeated his dangerous
+rush. But again the mink was not there. As
+composed as if he had never moved a hair, he
+was lying about three yards to one side, glaring
+with that same immutable hate.</p>
+<p>At this the fox seemed to realize that it was
+no use trying to catch so elusive a foe. The
+realization came to him slowly&mdash;and slowly,
+sullenly, he arose and turned away, ignoring the
+prize which he could not carry off. With an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span>
+awkward limp, he started across the ice, seeming
+to scorn his small but troublesome antagonist.</p>
+<p>Having thus recovered the spoils, and succeeded
+in scoring his point over so mighty an
+adversary, the mink might have been expected
+to let the matter rest and quietly reap the profit
+of his triumph. But all the vindictiveness of
+his ferocious and implacable tribe was now
+aroused. Vengeance, not victory, was his craving.
+When the fox had gone about a dozen
+feet, all at once the place where the mink had
+been crouching was empty. Almost in the
+same instant, as it seemed, the fox was again,
+and mercilessly, bitten through the leg.</p>
+<p>This time, although the fox had seemed to
+be ignoring the foe, he turned like a flash to
+meet the assault. Again, however, he was just
+too late. His mad rush, the snapping of his
+long jaws, availed him nothing. The mink
+crouched, eying him, ever just beyond his
+reach. A gleam of something very close to
+fear came into his furious eyes as he turned
+again to continue his reluctant retreat.</p>
+<p>Again, and again, and yet again, the mink
+repeated his elusive attack, each time inflicting
+a deep and disastrous wound, and each time
+successfully escaping the counter-assault. The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span>
+trail of the fox was now streaked and flecked
+with scarlet, and both his hind legs dragged
+heavily. He reached the edge of the smooth
+ice and turned at bay. The mink drew back,
+cautious for all his hate. Then the fox started
+across the steel-gray glair, picking his steps that
+he might have a firm foothold.</p>
+<p>A few seconds later the mink once more delivered
+his thrust. Feinting towards the enemy&#8217;s
+right, he swerved with that snake-like
+celerity of his, and bit deep into the tender
+upper edge of the fox&#8217;s thigh, where it plays
+over the groin.</p>
+<p>It was a cunning and deadly stroke. But in
+recovering from it, to dart away again to safe
+distance, his feet slipped, ever so little, on the
+shining surface of the ice. The delay was only
+for the minutest fraction of a second. But in
+that minutest fraction lay the fox&#8217;s opportunity.
+His wheel and spring were this time not too
+late. His jaws closed about the mink&#8217;s slim
+backbone and crunched it to fragments. The
+lean, black shape straightened out with a sharp
+convulsion and lay still on the ice.</p>
+<p>Though fully aware of the efficacy and finality
+of that bite, the fox set his teeth, again and
+again, with curious deliberation of movement,
+into the limp and unresisting form. Then, with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span>
+his tongue hanging a little from his bloody jaws,
+he lifted his head and stared, with a curious,
+wavering, anxiously doubtful look, over the
+white familiar fields. The world, somehow,
+looked strange and blurry to him. He turned,
+leaving the dead mink on the ice, and painfully
+retraced his deeply crimsoned trail. Just
+ahead was the opening in the log, the way to
+that privacy which he desperately craved. The
+code of all the aristocrats of the wild kindred,
+subtly binding even in that supreme hour, forbade
+that he should consent to yield himself
+to death in the garish publicity of the open.
+With the last of his strength he crawled into
+the log, till just the bushy tip of his tail protruded
+to betray him. There he lay down
+with one paw over his nose, and sank into the
+long sleep. For an hour the frost bit hard
+upon the fields, stiffening to stone the bodies
+but now so hot with eager life. Then the
+snow came thick and silent, filling the emptiness
+with a moving blur, and buried away all
+witness of the fight.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 0'>Charles G. D. Roberts&#8217;</p>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>THE BACKWOODSMEN</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Illustrated Cloth 12mo $1.50</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;&#8216;The Backwoodsmen&#8217; shows that the writer knows the backwoods
+as the sailor knows the sea. Indeed, his various studies of wild life in
+general, whether cast in the world of short sketch or story or full-length
+narrative, have always secured an interested public....
+Mr. Roberts possesses a keen artistic sense which is especially
+marked when he is rounding some story to its end. There is never
+a word too much, and he invariably stops when the stop should be
+made.... Few writers exhibit such entire sympathy with the nature
+of beasts and birds as he.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Herald.</i></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;When placed by the side of the popular novel, the strength of these
+stories causes them to stand out like a huge primitive giant by the
+side of a simpering society miss, and while the grace and beauty
+of the girl may please the eye for a moment, it is to the rugged
+strength of the primitive man your eyes will turn to glory in his power
+and simplicity. In simple, forceful style Mr. Roberts takes the reader
+with him out into the cold, dark woods, through blizzards, stalking
+game, encountering all the dangers of the backwoodsmen&#8217;s life, and
+enjoying the close contact with Nature in all her moods. His descriptions
+are so vivid that you can almost feel the tang of the frosty air,
+the biting sting of the snowy sleet beating on your face, you can hear
+the crunch of the snow beneath your feet, and when, after heartlessly
+exposing you to the elements, he lets you wander into camp with the
+characters of the story, you stretch out and bask in the warmth and
+cheer of the fire.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Western Review.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 0'>L. W. Brownell&#8217;s</p>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>PHOTOGRAPHY FOR THE SPORTSMAN NATURALIST</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;It often occurs that he who finds delight in woodcraft finds also
+a pleasure in preserving by photography what he finds to interest
+him in his wanderings in the open. To such this book appeals with
+a peculiar force, for the author is evidently at once familiar with wood
+and field life and an adept with the camera.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+<p><span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Photography for the Sportsman Naturalist</span> is in</p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'>THE AMERICAN SPORTSMAN LIBRARY SERIES<br /></p>
+<p>The other volumes in the series are <i>The American Thoroughbred</i>, <i>American
+Yachting</i>, <i>Bass, Pike, Perch, and other Fish</i>, <i>Big Game Fishes of the United
+States</i>, <i>The Deer Family</i>, <i>Guns, Ammunition, and Tackle</i>, <i>Lawn Tennis and
+Lacrosse</i>, <i>Musk-Ox, Bison, Sheep, and Goat</i>, <i>Riding and Driving</i>, <i>Rowing
+and Track Athletics</i>, <i>Salmon and Trout</i>, <i>The Sporting Dog</i>, <i>The Trotting
+and the Pacing Horse</i>, <i>Upland Game Birds</i>, <i>and The Water Fowl Family</i>.</p>
+<p>The price of each volume is $2.00 net.</p>
+</div>
+<p class='tp'>
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>PUBLISHED BY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:1em;'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</span></p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 0'>Ernest Ingersoll&#8217;s</p>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>LIFE OF ANIMALS: THE MAMMALS</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:center'><i>Colored Plates and Photographic Illustrations</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Cloth 8vo $2.00 net</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;Bountifully illustrated with new colored plates drawn and painted
+by the author&#8217;s daughter, and with more than a hundred photographs,
+many of them taken by the author himself, the text of the
+volume gives a succinct and lucid account of the life of the mammals,...
+their ancestry, their place in nature, their means of livelihood,
+and their general characteristics.&#8221;&mdash;<i>New York Herald.</i></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;An exceedingly entertaining and informing book containing the
+latest information concerning the whole group of mammals, that
+branch of animal creation most interesting to man because he is one
+himself. There are numberless works on this topic or related ones,
+but we know of none that is so comprehensive as this in a single
+volume.... There is an amazing amount of information written
+simply but with authority. Every man, woman, and child who takes
+up this book will hate to put it down for a moment.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Philadelphia
+Inquirer.</i></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;There are pictures and anecdotes for the little ones of the family,
+adventures and curious habits to attract the eager minds of older
+lads, guiding information and suggestion for the student, and the
+whole is treated in the light of the latest facts. Many novelties, apart
+from the simple, homely, almost humorous method of handling a
+truly scientific subject, characterize the volume. Nowhere else is so
+intelligently traced the relation between the past (fossil history) and
+the present of the families in this most important of all animal tribes;
+nowhere else will be found explained many curious customs, such
+as the origin of the habit of storing winter food, how the opossum
+came to &#8216;play &#8217;possum,&#8217; and why beavers dam up streams. The book
+is written from the American point of view, yet the whole world is
+covered and the newest material has been utilized. It would be difficult
+to find a book on natural history which could make a stronger
+appeal to the reader, old or young, who is interested in natural history
+than this volume by Ernest Ingersoll.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Brooklyn Daily Eagle.</i></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;There is not a page of the whole volume but is full of interest, and
+the many splendid photographs of the existing and prehistoric mammals
+add greatly to the value of the book. One lays it down with
+reluctance and with the feeling that the author has added largely to
+the sum of human knowledge.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Toronto Globe.</i></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;A large and admirable book.... Interesting as fiction, scientifically
+exact, simply expressed, this well-prepared volume will almost
+literally repeople the earth for many readers. Those who already
+love natural history will rejoice in its fascinating richness of information,
+while it would be difficult to imagine a more readable and
+comprehensive introduction to the numerous big and little brethren
+of the woods and fields.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago Record-Herald.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p class='tp'>
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>PUBLISHED BY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:1em;'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</span></p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 0'>Lieut.-Col. J. H. Patterson&#8217;s</p>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>IN THE GRIP OF THE NYIKA</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;Nyika merely means wilderness, and its grip is conveyed very
+forcefully to the pages of Colonel Patterson&#8217;s book, which holds the
+reader as closely as the Nyika holds those who venture into it....
+Colonel Patterson has a particularly interesting way of describing
+things he sees.... The whole volume is filled with exciting incidents
+and many illustrations from photographs of odd animals and
+queer people.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Boston Transcript.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>THE MAN-EATERS OF TSAVO AND OTHER<br />EAST AFRICAN ADVENTURES<br />
+<span style='font-size:smaller;'>With Foreword by Mr. <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Frederick C. Selous</span></span></p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;The account of how Colonel Patterson overcame the many difficulties
+that confronted him in building his bridge across the Tsavo
+River makes excellent reading, while the courage he displayed in
+attacking, single-handed, lions, as well as rhinoceroses and other
+animal foes, was surpassed by his pluck, tact, and determination in
+quelling a formidable mutiny which once broke out among his native
+workers.&#8221;&mdash;<i>New York Herald.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 0'>Theodore S. Van Dyke&#8217;s</p>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>THE STILL HUNTER</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Illustrated, Cloth 8vo $1.75 net</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;A vivid account of the most exciting sport in the world.... The
+record of years of experience.... It is crammed full of valuable
+advice for the deer hunter, and has the advantage of having been
+written before hunting became more of a pastime than a serious
+business, requiring untiring energy, great patience, cool nerves, and
+perfect sight.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago Tribune.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 0'>Edwyn Sandys&#8217;</p>
+<p style='margin:0 auto 0 1em'>SPORTING SKETCHES</p>
+<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
+<p style='margin-left:0.0em; margin-right:0.0em; text-align:right'><i>Cloth 12mo $1.75 net</i><br /></p>
+<p style='margin-left:2.0em; margin-right:0.0em; '>&#8220;Mr. Sandys is a real sportsman with a wide experience, and he
+writes agreeably and without effort to make his work unusual or
+picturesque. It is just the sort of description you would expect from
+a man who had really done the things narrated.... He describes
+in such manner that even one who has never held gun or rod cannot
+but partake of something of the writer&#8217;s enthusiasm.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Chicago
+Tribune.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p class='tp'>
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>PUBLISHED BY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:1em;'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</span></p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='margin-top:10px;font-size:smaller;'>OUTDOOR STORIES FOR BOYS AND GIRLS</p>
+
+<hr class='p20' />
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By J. W. Fortescue<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;THE STORY OF A RED DEER</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller;'><i>Cloth, 16mo, $.80; Leather, $1.25</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By Jack London<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;TALES OF THE FISH PATROL</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'>Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>G. Varian</span> <i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.50</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By Charles Major<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;THE BEARS OF BLUE RIVER</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'>Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>A. B. Frost</span> <i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.50</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>&nbsp;&nbsp;UNCLE TOM ANDY BILL</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'><i>Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo, $1.50</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By Edwyn Sandys<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;SPORTSMAN JOE</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'><i>Illustrated. 12mo, $1.50</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>&nbsp;&nbsp;TRAPPER JIM</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'><i>Illustrated. 12mo, $1.50</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By Ernest Ingersoll<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;AN ISLAND IN THE AIR</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'>Illustrated by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>William McCullough</span> <i>Cloth, 12mo $1.50</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By Stewart Edward White<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;THE MAGIC FOREST</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'>Colored Illustrations by <span style='font-variant:small-caps'>Joseph Gleeson</span> <i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.20 net</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>By Mabel Osgood Wright<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;DOGTOWN</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller'>Illustrated with Photographs <i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net</i></p>
+
+<p style='margin-bottom:0'>&nbsp;&nbsp;GRAY LADY AND THE BIRDS</p>
+<p style='margin-top:0; text-align:right;font-size:smaller;margin-bottom:1em;'>Colored Illustrations <i>Cloth, 12mo, $1.75 net</i></p>
+
+<hr class='p20' />
+
+<p class='tp'>
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>PUBLISHED BY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:1em;'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
+<span style='font-size:0.8em;'>64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Kings in Exile, by Sir Charles George
+Douglas Roberts
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Kings in Exile
+
+
+Author: Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts
+
+
+
+Release Date: April 7, 2009 [eBook #28530]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KINGS IN EXILE***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 28530-h.htm or 28530-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/5/3/28530/28530-h/28530-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/8/5/3/28530/28530-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+KINGS IN EXILE
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+The MacMillan Company
+New York . Boston . Chicago
+Dallas . San Francisco
+
+MacMillan & Co., Limited
+London . Bombay . Calcutta
+Melbourne
+
+The MacMillan Co. Of Canada, Ltd.
+Toronto
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "The Gray Master."]
+
+
+KINGS IN EXILE
+
+by
+
+CHARLES G. D. ROBERTS
+
+Author of "The Backwoodsmen," Etc.
+
+Illustrated
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New York
+The MacMillan Company
+1912
+
+All rights reserved
+
+Copyright by Perry, Mason & Co. (1907), The Curtis
+Publishing Co. (1908-1909), The Associated Sunday
+Magazines (1908), The Red Book Magazine (1908).
+
+Copyright, 1910,
+By The MacMillan Company.
+
+Set up and electrotyped. Published February, 1910. Reprinted
+June, 1910; July, December, 1912.
+
+Norwood Press
+
+J. S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co.
+Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+ PAGE
+
+ Last Bull 1
+
+ The King of the Flaming Hoops 25
+
+ The Monarch of Park Barren 70
+
+ The Gray Master 107
+
+ The Sun-Gazer 140
+
+ The Lord of the Glass House 177
+
+ Back to the Water World 196
+
+ Lone Wolf 243
+
+ The Bear's Face 276
+
+ The Duel on the Trail 297
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ "The Gray Master." _Frontispiece_
+
+ "Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a
+ little knoll in his pasture." 6
+
+ "Only to be hurled back again with a vigor that
+ brought him to his knees." 10
+
+ "When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little
+ dark eyes glowed suddenly red." 32
+
+ "Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet
+ distant, crouched, ready to spring, the biggest
+ puma he had ever seen." 64
+
+ "He reached the tree just in time to swing well
+ up among the branches." 72
+
+ "For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was
+ able to keep up this almost incredible pace." 90
+
+ "Then the second puma pounced." 134
+
+ "He launched himself on a long, splendid sweep
+ over the gulf." 144
+
+ "After this the eagle came regularly every three
+ or four hours with food for the prisoner." 160
+
+ "And the writhing tentacles composed themselves
+ once more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting
+ the next careless passer-by." 176
+
+ "Without the slightest hesitation he whipped up
+ two writhing tentacles and seized him." 188
+
+
+
+
+LAST BULL
+
+
+
+
+LAST BULL
+
+
+That was what two grim old sachems of the Dacotahs had dubbed him; and
+though his official title, on the lists of the Zoological Park, was
+"Kaiser," the new and more significant name had promptly supplanted
+it. The Park authorities--people of imagination and of sentiment, as
+must all be who would deal successfully with wild animals--had felt at
+once that the name aptly embodied the tragedies and the romantic
+memories of his all-but-vanished race. They had felt, too, that the
+two old braves who had been brought East to adorn a city pageant, and
+who had stood gazing stoically for hours at the great bull buffalo
+through the barrier of the steel-wire fence, were fitted, before all
+others, to give him a name. Between him and them there was surely a
+tragic bond, as they stood there islanded among the swelling tides of
+civilization which had already engulfed their kindreds. "Last Bull"
+they had called him, as he answered their gaze with little, sullen,
+melancholy eyes from under his ponderous and shaggy front. "Last
+Bull"--and the passing of his race was in the name.
+
+Here, in his fenced, protected range, with a space of grassy meadow,
+half a dozen clumps of sheltering trees, two hundred yards of the run
+of a clear, unfailing brook, and a warm shed for refuge against the
+winter storms, the giant buffalo ruled his little herd of three tawny
+cows, two yearlings, and one blundering, butting calf of the season.
+He was a magnificent specimen of his race--surpassing, it was said,
+the finest bull in the Yellowstone preserves or in the guarded
+Canadian herd of the North. Little short of twelve feet in length, a
+good five foot ten in height at the tip of his humped and huge
+fore-shoulders, he seemed to justify the most extravagant tales of
+pioneer and huntsman. His hind-quarters were trim and fine-lined,
+built apparently for speed, smooth-haired, and of a grayish
+lion-color. But his fore-shoulders, mounting to an enormous hump, were
+of an elephantine massiveness, and clothed in a dense, curling,
+golden-brown growth of matted hair. His mighty head was carried low,
+almost to the level of his knees, on a neck of colossal strength,
+which was draped, together with the forelegs down to the knees, in a
+flowing brown mane tipped with black. His head, too, to the very
+muzzle, wore the same luxuriant and sombre drapery, out of which
+curved viciously the keen-tipped crescent of his horns. Dark, huge,
+and ominous, he looked curiously out of place in the secure and
+familiar tranquillity of his green pasture.
+
+For a distance of perhaps fifty yards, at the back of the pasture, the
+range of the buffalo herd adjoined that of the moose, divided from it
+by that same fence of heavy steel-wire mesh, supported by iron posts,
+which surrounded the whole range. One sunny and tingling day in late
+October--such a day as makes the blood race full red through all
+healthy veins--a magnificent stranger was brought to the Park, and
+turned into the moose-range.
+
+The newcomer was a New Brunswick bull moose, captured on the Tobique
+during the previous spring when the snow was deep and soft, and
+purchased for the Park by one of the big Eastern lumber-merchants. The
+moose-herd had consisted, hitherto, of four lonely cows, and the
+splendid bull was a prize which the Park had long been coveting. He
+took lordly possession, forthwith, of the submissive little herd, and
+led them off at once from the curious crowds about the gate to explore
+the wild-looking thickets at the back of the pasture. But no sooner
+had he fairly entered these thickets than he found his further
+progress barred by the steel-meshed fence. This was a bitter
+disappointment, for he had expected to go striding through miles of
+alder swamp and dark spruce woods, fleeing the hated world of men and
+bondage, before setting himself to get acquainted with his new
+followers. His high-strung temper was badly jarred. He drew off,
+shaking his vast antlers, and went shambling with spacious stride down
+along the barrier towards the brook. The four cows, in single file,
+hurried after him anxiously, afraid he might be snatched away from
+them.
+
+Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a little knoll in his
+pasture, caught sight of the strange, dark figure of the running
+moose. A spark leapt into his heavy eyes. He wheeled, pawed the sod,
+put his muzzle to the ground, and bellowed a sonorous challenge. The
+moose stopped short and stared about him, the stiff hair lifting
+angrily along the ridge of his massive neck. Last Bull lowered his
+head and tore up the sod with his horns.
+
+[Illustration: "Last Bull, standing solitary and morose on a little knoll
+in his pasture."]
+
+This vehement action caught the eyes of the moose. At first he stared
+in amazement, for he had never seen any creature that looked like Last
+Bull. The two were only about fifty or sixty yards apart, across the
+little valley of the bushy swamp. As he stared, his irritation
+speedily overcame his amazement. The curious-looking creature over
+there on the knoll was defying him, was challenging him. At this time
+of year his blood was hot and quick for any challenge. He gave vent to
+a short, harsh, explosive cry, more like a grumbling bleat than a
+bellow, and as unlike the buffalo's challenge as could well be
+imagined. Then he fell to thrashing the nearest bushes violently with
+his antlers. This, for some reason unknown to the mere human
+chronicler, seemed to be taken by Last Bull as a crowning insolence.
+His long, tasselled tail went stiffly up into the air, and he charged
+wrathfully down the knoll. The moose, with his heavy-muzzled head
+stuck straight out scornfully before him, and his antlers laid flat
+along his back, strode down to the encounter with a certain deadly
+deliberation. He was going to fight. There was no doubt whatever on
+that score. But he had not quite made up his wary mind as to how he
+would deal with this unknown and novel adversary.
+
+They looked not so unequally matched, these two, the monarch of the
+Western plains, and the monarch of the northeastern forests. Both had
+something of the monstrous, the uncouth, about them, as if they
+belonged not to this modern day, but to some prehistoric epoch when
+Earth moulded her children on more lavish and less graceful lines. The
+moose was like the buffalo in having his hind-quarters relatively
+slight and low, and his back sloping upwards to a hump over the
+immensely developed fore-shoulders. But he had much less length of
+body, and much less bulk, though perhaps eight or ten inches more of
+height at the tip of the shoulder. His hair was short, and darker than
+that of his shaggy rival, being almost black except on legs and belly.
+Instead of carrying his head low, like the buffalo, for feeding on the
+level prairies, he bore it high, being in the main a tree-feeder. But
+the greatest difference between the two champions was in their heads
+and horns. The antlers of the moose formed a huge, fantastic, flatly
+palmated or leaflike structure, separating into sharp prongs along the
+edges, and spreading more than four feet from tip to tip. To compare
+them with the short, polished crescent of the horns of Last Bull was
+like comparing a two-handed broadsword to a bowie-knife. And his head,
+instead of being short, broad, ponderous, and shaggy, like Last
+Bull's, was long, close-haired, and massively horse-faced, with a
+projecting upper lip heavy and grim.
+
+Had there been no impregnable steel barrier between them, it is hard
+to say which would have triumphed in the end, the ponderous weight and
+fury of Last Bull, or the ripping prongs and swift wrath of the moose.
+The buffalo charged down the knoll at a thundering gallop; but just
+before reaching the fence he checked himself violently. More than once
+or twice before had those elastic but impenetrable meshes given him
+his lesson, hurling him back with humiliating harshness when he dashed
+his bulk against them. He had too lively a memory of past
+discomfitures to risk a fresh one now in the face of this insolent
+foe. His matted front came against the wire with a force so cunningly
+moderated that he was not thrown back by the recoil. And the keen
+points of his horns went through the meshes with a vehemence which
+might indeed have done its work effectively had they come in contact
+with the adversary. As it was, however, they but prodded empty air.
+
+The moose, meanwhile, had been in doubt whether to attack with his
+antlers, as was his manner when encountering foes of his own kind, or
+with his knife-edged fore-hoofs, which were the weapons he used
+against bears, wolves, or other alien adversaries. Finally he seemed
+to make up his mind that Last Bull, having horns and a most
+redoubtable stature, must be some kind of moose. In that case, of
+course, it became a question of antlers. Moreover, in his meetings
+with rival bulls it had never been his wont to depend upon a blind,
+irresistible charge,--thereby leaving it open to an alert opponent to
+slip aside and rip him along the flank,--but rather to fence warily
+for an advantage in the locking of antlers, and then bear down his foe
+by the fury and speed of his pushing. It so happened, therefore, that
+he, too, came not too violently against the barrier. Loudly his vast
+spread of antlers clashed upon the steel meshes; and one short prong,
+jutting low over his brow, pierced through and furrowed deeply the
+matted forehead of the buffalo.
+
+As the blood streamed down over his nostrils, obscuring one eye, Last
+Bull quite lost his head with rage. Drawing off, he hurled himself
+blindly upon the barrier--only to be hurled back again with a vigor
+that brought him to his knees. But at the same time the moose, on the
+other side of the fence, got a huge surprise. Having his antlers
+against the barrier when Last Bull charged, he was forced back
+irresistibly upon his haunches, with a rudeness quite unlike anything
+that he had ever before experienced. His massive neck felt as if a
+pine tree had fallen upon it, and he came back to the charge quite
+beside himself with bewilderment and rage.
+
+[Illustration: "Only to be hurled back again with a vigor that brought
+him to his knees."]
+
+By this time, however, the keepers and Park attendants were arriving
+on the scene, armed with pitchforks and other unpleasant executors of
+authority. Snorting, and bellowing, and grunting, the monstrous
+duellists were forced apart; and Last Bull, who had been taught
+something of man's dominance, was driven off to his stable and
+imprisoned. He was not let out again for two whole days. And by that
+time another fence, parallel with the first and some five or six feet
+distant from it, had been run up between his range and that of the
+moose. Over this impassable zone of neutrality, for a few days, the
+two rivals flung insult and futile defiance, till suddenly, becoming
+tired of it all, they seemed to agree to ignore each other's
+existence.
+
+After this, Last Bull's sullenness of temper appeared to grow upon
+him. He was fond of drawing apart from the little herd, and taking up
+his solitary post on the knoll, where he would stand for an hour at a
+time motionless except for the switching of his long tail, and
+staring steadily westward as if he knew where the great past of his
+race had lain. In that direction a dense grove of chestnuts, maples,
+and oaks bounded the range, cutting off the view of the city roofs,
+the roar of the city traffic. Beyond the city were mountains and wide
+waters which he could not see; but beyond the waters and the mountains
+stretched the green, illimitable plains--which perhaps (who knows?) in
+some faint vision inherited from the ancestors whose myriads had
+possessed them, his sombre eyes, in some strange way, _could_ see.
+Among the keepers and attendants generally it was said, with anxious
+regret, that perhaps Last Bull was "going bad." But the head-keeper,
+Payne, himself a son of the plains, repudiated the idea. _He_ declared
+sympathetically that the great bull was merely homesick, pining for
+the wind-swept levels of the open country (God's country, Payne called
+it!) which his imprisoned hoofs had never trodden.
+
+Be this as it may, the fact could not be gainsaid that Last Bull was
+growing more and more morose. The spectators, strolling along the wide
+walk which skirted the front of his range, seemed to irritate him, and
+sometimes, when a group had gathered to admire him, he would turn his
+low-hung head and answer their staring eyes with a kind of heavy fury,
+as if he burned to break forth upon them and seek vengeance for
+incalculable wrongs. This smouldering indignation against humanity
+extended equally, if not more violently, to all creatures who appeared
+to him as servants or allies of humanity. The dogs whom he sometimes
+saw passing, held in leash by their masters or mistresses, made him
+paw the earth scornfully if he happened to be near the fence. The
+patient horses who pulled the road-roller or the noisy lawn-mower made
+his eyes redden savagely. And he hated with peculiar zest the roguish
+little trick elephant, Bong, who would sometimes, his inquisitive
+trunk swinging from side to side, go lurching lazily by with a load of
+squealing children on his back.
+
+Bong, who was a favored character, amiable and trustworthy, was
+allowed the freedom of the Park in the early morning, before visitors
+began to arrive who might be alarmed at seeing an elephant at large.
+He was addicted to minding his own business, and never paid the
+slightest attention to any occupants of cage or enclosure. He was
+quite unaware of the hostility which he had aroused in the perverse
+and brooding heart of Last Bull.
+
+One crisp morning in late November, when all the grass in the Park had
+been blackened by frost, and the pools were edged with silver rims of
+ice, and mists were white and saffron about the scarce-risen sun, and
+that autumn thrill was in the air which gives one such an appetite,
+Bong chanced to be strolling past the front of Last Bull's range. He
+did not see Last Bull, who was nothing to him. But, being just as
+hungry as he ought to be on so stimulating a morning, he did see, and
+note with interest, some bundles of fresh hay on the other side of the
+fence.
+
+Now, Bong was no thief. But hay had always seemed to him a free
+largess, like grass and water, and this looked like very good hay. So
+clear a conscience had he on the subject that he never thought of
+glancing around to see if any of the attendants were looking.
+Innocently he lurched up to the fence, reached his lithe trunk
+through, gathered a neat wisp of the hay, and stuffed it happily into
+his curious, narrow, pointed mouth. Yes, he had not been mistaken. It
+was good hay. With great satisfaction he reached in for another
+mouthful.
+
+Last Bull, as it happened, was standing close by, but a little to one
+side. He had been ignoring, so far, his morning ration. He was not
+hungry. And, moreover, he rather disapproved of the hay because it had
+the hostile man-smell strong upon it. Nevertheless, he recognized it
+very clearly as his property, to be eaten when he should feel inclined
+to eat it. His wrath, then, was only equalled by his amazement when he
+saw the little elephant's presumptuous gray trunk reach in and coolly
+help itself. For a moment he forgot to do anything whatever about it.
+But when, a few seconds later, that long, curling trunk of Bong's
+insinuated itself again and appropriated another bundle of the now
+precious hay, the outraged owner bestirred himself. With a curt roar,
+that was more of a cough or a grunt than a bellow, he lunged forward
+and strove to pin the intruding trunk to the ground.
+
+With startled alacrity Bong withdrew his trunk, but just in time to
+save it from being mangled. For an instant he stood with the member
+held high in air, bewildered by what seemed to him such a gratuitous
+attack. Then his twinkling little eyes began to blaze, and he
+trumpeted shrilly with anger. The next moment, reaching over the
+fence, he brought down the trunk on Last Bull's hump with such a
+terrible flail-like blow that the great buffalo stumbled forward upon
+his knees.
+
+He was up again in an instant and hurling himself madly against the
+inexorable steel which separated him from his foe. Bong hesitated for
+a second, then, reaching over the fence once more, clutched Last Bull
+maliciously around the base of his horns and tried to twist his neck.
+This enterprise, however, was too much even for the elephant's titanic
+powers, for Last Bull's greatest strength lay in the muscles of his
+ponderous and corded neck. Raving and bellowing, he plunged this way
+and that, striving in vain to wrench himself free from that
+incomprehensible, snake-like thing which had fastened upon him. Bong,
+trumpeting savagely, braced himself with widespread pillars of legs,
+and between them it seemed that the steel fence must go down under
+such cataclysmic shocks as it was suffering. But the noisy violence of
+the battle presently brought its own ending. An amused but angry squad
+of attendants came up and stopped it, and Bong, who seemed plainly the
+aggressor, was hustled off to his stall in deep disgrace.
+
+Last Bull was humiliated. In this encounter things had happened which
+he could in no way comprehend; and though, beyond an aching in neck
+and shoulders, he felt none the worse physically, he had nevertheless
+a sense of having been worsted, of having been treated with ignominy,
+in spite of the fact that it was his foe, and not he, who had retired
+from the field. For several days he wore a subdued air and kept about
+meekly with his docile cows. Then his old, bitter moodiness reasserted
+itself, and he resumed his solitary broodings on the crest of the
+knoll.
+
+When the winter storms came on, it had been Last Bull's custom to let
+himself be housed luxuriously at nightfall, with the rest of the herd,
+in the warm and ample buffalo-shed. But this winter he made such
+difficulty about going in that at last Payne decreed that he should
+have his own way and stay out. "It will do him no harm, and may cool
+his peppery blood some!" had been the keeper's decision. So the door
+was left open, and Last Bull entered or refrained, according to his
+whim. It was noticed, however,--and this struck a chord of answering
+sympathy in the plainsman's imaginative temperament,--that, though on
+ordinary nights he might come in and stay with the herd under shelter,
+on nights of driving storm, if the tempest blew from the west or
+northwest, Last Bull was sure to be out on the naked knoll to face it.
+When the fine sleet or stinging rain drove past him, filling his
+nostrils with their cold, drenching his matted mane, and lashing his
+narrowed eyes, what visions swept through his troubled,
+half-comprehending brain, no one may know. But Payne, with
+understanding born of sympathy and a common native soil, catching
+sight of his dark bulk under the dark of the low sky, was wont to
+declare that _he_ knew. He would say that Last Bull's eyes discerned,
+black under the hurricane, but lit strangely with the flash of keen
+horns and rolling eyes and frothed nostrils, the endless and
+innumerable droves of the buffalo, with the plains wolf skulking on
+their flanks, passing, passing, southward into the final dark. In the
+roar of the wind, declared Payne, Last Bull, out there in the night,
+listened to the trampling of all those vanished droves. And though the
+other keepers insisted to each other, quite privately, that their
+chief talked a lot of nonsense about "that there mean-tempered old
+buffalo," they nevertheless came gradually to look upon Last Bull with
+a kind of awe, and to regard his surly whims as privileged.
+
+It chanced that winter that men were driving a railway tunnel beneath
+a corner of the Park. The tunnel ran for a short distance under the
+front of Last Bull's range, and passed close by the picturesque
+cottage occupied by Payne and two of his assistants. At this point the
+level of the Park was low, and the shell of earth was thin above the
+tunnel roof.
+
+There came a Sunday afternoon, after days of rain and penetrating
+January thaw, when sun and air combined to cheat the earth with an
+illusion of spring. The buds and the mould breathed of April, and gay
+crowds flocked to the Park, to make the most of winter's temporary
+repulse. Just when things were at their gayest, with children's voices
+clamoring everywhere like starlings, and Bong, the little elephant,
+swinging good-naturedly up the broad white track with all the load he
+had room for on his back, there came an ominous jar and rumble, like
+the first of an earthquake, which ran along the front of Last Bull's
+range.
+
+With sure instinct, Bong turned tail and fled with his young charges
+away across the grassland. The crowds, hardly knowing what they fled
+from, with screams and cries and blanched faces, followed the
+elephant's example. A moment later and, with a muffled crash, all
+along the front of the range, the earth sank into the tunnel, carrying
+with it half a dozen panels of Last Bull's hated fence.
+
+Almost in a moment the panic of the crowd subsided. Every one realized
+just what had happened. Moreover, thanks to Bong's timely alarm, every
+one had got out of the way in good season. All fear of earthquake
+being removed, the crowd flocked back eagerly to stare down into the
+wrecked tunnel, which formed now a sort of gaping, chaotic ditch, with
+sides at some points precipitous and at others brokenly sloping. The
+throng was noisy with excited interest and with relief at having
+escaped so cleanly. The break had run just beneath one corner of the
+keepers' cottage, tearing away a portion of the foundation and
+wrenching the structure slightly aside without overthrowing it. Payne,
+who had been in the midst of his Sunday toilet, came out upon his
+twisted porch, half undressed and with a shaving-brush covered with
+lather in his hand. He gave one look at the damage which had been
+wrought, then plunged indoors again to throw his clothes on, at the
+same time sounding the hurry call for the attendants in other quarters
+of the Park.
+
+Last Bull, who had been standing on his knoll, with his back to the
+throngs, had wheeled in astonishment at the heavy sound of the
+cave-in. For a few minutes he had stared sullenly, not grasping the
+situation. Then very slowly it dawned on him that his prison walls
+had fallen. Yes, surely, there at last lay his way to freedom, his
+path to the great open spaces for which he dumbly and vaguely
+hungered. With stately deliberation he marched down from his knoll to
+investigate.
+
+But presently another idea came into his slow mind. He saw the
+clamorous crowds flocking back and ranging themselves along the edge
+of the chasm. These were his enemies. They were coming to balk him. A
+terrible madness surged through all his veins. He bellowed savage
+warning and came thundering down the field, nose to earth, dark,
+mountainous, irresistible.
+
+The crowd yelled and shrank back. "He can't get across!" shouted some.
+But others cried: "He can! He's coming! Save yourselves!" And with
+shrieks they scattered wildly across the open, making for the kiosks,
+the pavilions, the trees, anything that seemed to promise hiding or
+shelter from that onrushing doom.
+
+At the edge of the chasm--at this point forming not an actual drop,
+but a broken slide--Last Bull hardly paused. He plunged down, rolled
+over in the debris, struggled to his feet again instantly, and went
+ploughing and snorting up the opposite steep. As his colossal front,
+matted with mud, loomed up over the brink, his little eyes rolling
+and flaming, and the froth flying from his red nostrils, he formed a
+very nightmare of horror to those fugitives who dared to look behind
+them.
+
+Surmounting the brink, he paused. There were so many enemies, he knew
+not which to pursue first. But straight ahead, in the very middle of
+the open, and far from any shelter, he saw a huddled group of children
+and nurses fleeing impotently and aimlessly. Shrill cries came from
+the cluster, which danced with colors, scarlet and yellow and blue and
+vivid pink. To the mad buffalo, these were the most conspicuous and
+the loudest of his foes, and therefore the most dangerous. With a
+bellow he flung his tail straight in the air, and charged after them.
+
+An appalling hush fell, for a few heart-beats, all over the field.
+Then from different quarters appeared uniformed attendants, racing and
+shouting frantically to divert the bull's attention. From fleeing
+groups black-coated men leapt forth, armed only with their
+walking-sticks, and rushed desperately to defend the flock of
+children, who now, in the extremity of their terror, were tumbling as
+they ran. Some of the nurses were fleeing far in front, while others,
+the faithful ones, with eyes starting from their heads, grabbed up
+their little charges and struggled on under the burden.
+
+Already Last Bull was halfway across the space which divided him from
+his foes. The ground shook under his ponderous gallop. At this moment
+Payne reappeared on the broken porch.
+
+One glance showed him that no one was near enough to intervene. With a
+face stern and sorrowful he lifted the deadly .405 Winchester which he
+had brought out with him. The spot he covered was just behind Last
+Bull's mighty shoulder.
+
+The smokeless powder spoke with a small, venomous report, unlike the
+black powder's noisy reverberation. Last Bull stumbled. But recovering
+himself instantly, he rushed on. He was hurt, and he felt it was those
+fleeing foes who had done it. A shade of perplexity darkened Payne's
+face. He fired again. This time his aim was true. The heavy expanding
+bullet tore straight through bone and muscle and heart, and Last Bull
+lurched forward upon his head, ploughing up the turf for yards. As his
+mad eyes softened and filmed, he saw once more, perhaps,--or so the
+heavy-hearted keeper who had slain him would have us believe,--the
+shadowy plains unrolling under the wild sky, and the hosts of his
+vanished kindred drifting past into the dark.
+
+
+
+
+THE KING OF THE FLAMING HOOPS
+
+
+
+
+THE KING OF THE FLAMING HOOPS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The white, scarred face of the mountain looked straight east, over a
+vast basin of tumbled, lesser hills, dim black forests, and steel-blue
+loops of a far-winding water. Here and there long, level strata of
+pallid mist seemed to support themselves on the tree-tops, their edges
+fading off into the startling transparency that comes upon the air
+with the first of dawn. But that was in the lower world. Up on the
+solitary summit of White Face the daybreak had arrived. The jagged
+crest of the peak shot sudden radiances of flame-crimson, then bathed
+itself in a flow of rose-pinks and thin, indescribable reds and
+pulsating golds. Swiftly, as the far horizon leapt into blaze, the
+aerial flood spread down the mountain-face, revealing and
+transforming. It reached the mouth of a cave on a narrow ledge. As the
+splendor poured into the dark opening, a tawny shape, long and lithe
+and sinewy, came padding forth, noiseless as itself, as if to meet
+and challenge it.
+
+Half emerging from the entrance upon the high rock-platform which
+formed its threshold, the puma halted, head uplifted and forepaws
+planted squarely to the front. With wide, palely bright eyes she
+stared out across the tremendous and mysterious landscape. As the
+colored glory rushed down the mountain, rolling back the blue-gray
+transparency of shadow, those inscrutable eyes swept every suddenly
+revealed glade, knoll, and waterside where deer or elk might by chance
+be pasturing.
+
+She was a magnificent beast, this puma, massive of head and shoulder
+almost as a lioness, and in her calm scrutiny of the spaces unrolling
+before her gaze was a certain air of overlordship, as if her supremacy
+had gone long unquestioned. Suddenly, however, her attitude changed.
+Her eyes narrowed, her mighty muscles drew themselves together like
+springs being upcoiled, she half crouched, and her head turned sharply
+to the left, listening. Far down the narrow ledge which afforded the
+trail to her den she had caught the sound of something approaching.
+
+As she listened, she crouched lower and lower, and her eyes began to
+burn with a thin, green flame. Her ears would flatten back savagely,
+then lift themselves again to interrogate the approaching sounds. Her
+anger at the intrusion upon her private domain was mixed with some
+apprehension, for behind her, in a warm corner of the den, curled up
+in a soft and furry ball like kittens, were her two sleeping cubs.
+
+Her trail being well marked and with her scent strong upon it, she
+knew it could be no ignorant blunderer that drew near. It was plainly
+an enemy, and an arrogant enemy, since it made no attempt at stealth.
+The steps were not those of any hunter, white man or Indian, of that
+she presently assured herself. With this assurance, her anxiety
+diminished and her anger increased. Her tail, long and thick, doubled
+in thickness and began to jerk sharply from side to side. Crouching to
+the belly, she crept all the way out upon the ledge and peered
+cautiously around a jutting shoulder of rock.
+
+The intruder was not yet in sight, because the front of White Face,
+though apparently a sheer and awful precipice when viewed from the
+valley, was in fact wrinkled with gullies and buttresses and bucklings
+of the tortured strata. But the sound of his coming was now quite
+intelligible to her. That softly ponderous tread, that careless
+displacing of stones, those undisguised sniffings and mumblings could
+come only from a bear, and a bear frankly looking for trouble. Well,
+he was going to find what he was looking for. With an antagonism
+handed down to her by a thousand ancestors, the great puma hated
+bears.
+
+Many miles north of White Face, on the other side of that ragged
+mountain-ridge to which he formed an isolated and towering outpost,
+there was a fertile valley which had just been invaded by settlers. On
+every hand awoke the sharp barking of the axe. Rifle-shots startled
+the echoes. Masterful voices and confident human laughter filled all
+the wild inhabitants with wonder and dismay. The undisputed lord of
+the range was an old silver-tip grizzly, of great size and evil
+temper. Furious at the unexpected trespass on his sovereignty, yet
+well aware of his powerlessness against the human creature that could
+strike from very far off with lightning and thunder, he had made up
+his mind at once to withdraw to some remoter range. Nevertheless, he
+had lingered for some days, sullenly expecting he knew not what. These
+formless expectations were most unpleasantly fulfilled when he came
+upon a man in a canoe paddling close in by the steep shore of the
+lake. He had hurled himself blindly down the bank, raging for
+vengeance, but when he reached the water's edge, the man was far out
+of reach. Then, while he stood there wavering, half minded to swim in
+pursuit, the man had spoken with the lightning and the thunder, after
+the terrifying fashion of his kind. The bear had felt himself stung
+near the tip of the shoulder, as if by a million wasps at once, and
+the fiery anguish had brought him to his senses.
+
+It was no use trying to fight man, so he had dashed away into the
+thickets, and not halted till he had put miles between himself and the
+inexplicable enemy.
+
+For two days, with occasional stops to forage or to sleep, the angry
+grizzly had travelled southward, heading towards the lonely peak of
+White Face. As the distance from his old haunts increased, his fears
+diminished; but his anger grew under the ceaseless fretting of that
+wound on his neck just where he could not reach to lick and soothe it.
+The flies, however, could reach it very well, and did. As a
+consequence, by the time he reached the upper slopes of White Face, he
+was in a mood to fight anything. He would have charged a regiment, had
+he suddenly found one in his path.
+
+When he turned up a stone for the grubs, beetles, and scorpions which
+lurked beneath it, he would send it flying with a savage sweep of his
+paw. When he caught a rabbit, he smashed it flat in sheer fury, as if
+he cared more to mangle than to eat.
+
+At last he stumbled upon the trail of a puma. As he sniffed at it, he
+became, if possible, more angry than ever. Pumas he had always hated.
+He had never had a chance to satisfy his grudge, for never had one
+dared to face his charge; but they had often snarled down defiance at
+him from some limb of oak or pine beyond his reach. He flung himself
+forward upon the trail with vengeful ardor. When he realized, from the
+fact that it was a much-used trail and led up among the barren rocks,
+that it was none other than the trail to the puma's lair, his
+satisfaction increased. He would be sure to find either the puma at
+home or the puma's young unguarded.
+
+[Illustration: "When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little dark eyes
+glowed suddenly red."]
+
+When the puma, at last, saw him emerge around a curve of the trail,
+and noted his enormous stature, she gave one longing, wistful look
+back over her shoulder to the shadowed nook wherein her cubs lay
+sleeping. Had there been any chance to get them both safely away, she
+would have shirked the fight, for their sakes. But she could not carry
+them both in her mouth at once up the face of the mountain. She would
+not desert either one. She hesitated a moment, as if doubtful whether
+or not to await attack in the mouth of the cave. Then she crept
+farther out, where the ledge was not three feet wide, and crouched
+flat, silent, watchful, rigid, in the middle of the trail.
+
+When the grizzly saw her, his wicked little dark eyes glowed suddenly
+red, and he came up with a lumbering rush. With his gigantic, furry
+bulk, it looked as if he must instantly annihilate the slim, light
+creature that opposed him. It was a dreadful place to give battle, on
+that straight shelf of rock overhanging a sheer drop of perhaps a
+thousand feet. But scorn and rage together blinded the sagacity of the
+bear. With a grunt he charged.
+
+Not until he was within ten feet of her did the crouching puma stir.
+Then she shot into the air, as if hurled up by the release of a mighty
+spring. Quick as a flash the grizzly shrank backward upon his haunches
+and swept up a huge black paw to parry the assault. But he was not
+quite quick enough. The puma's spring overreached his guard. She
+landed fairly upon his back, facing his tail; but in the fraction of
+a second she had whirled about and was tearing at his throat with
+teeth and claws, while the terrible talons of her hinder paws ripped
+at his flanks.
+
+With a roar of pain and amazement the grizzly struggled to shake her
+off, clutching and striking at her with paws that at one blow could
+smash in the skull of the most powerful bull. But he could not reach
+her. Then he reared up, and threw himself backwards against the face
+of the rock, striving to crush her under his enormous weight. And in
+this he almost succeeded. Just in time, she writhed around and
+outward, but not quite far enough, for one paw was caught and ground
+to a pulp. But at the next instant, thrust back from the rock by his
+own effort, the bear toppled outward over the brink of the shelf.
+Grappling madly to save himself, he caught only the bowed loins of the
+puma, who now sank her teeth once more into his throat, while her
+rending claws seemed to tear him everywhere at once. He crushed her in
+his grip; and in a dreadful ball of screeching, roaring, biting,
+mangling rage the two plunged downward into the dim abyss. Once, still
+locked in the death-grip, they struck upon a jutting rock, and bounded
+far out into space. Then, as the ball rolled over in falling, it came
+apart; and separated now, though still very close together, the two
+bodies fell sprawlingly, and vanished into the blue-shadowed deeps
+which the dawn had not yet reached.
+
+Upon this sudden and terrible ending of the fight appeared a bearded
+frontiersman who had been trailing the grizzly for half an hour and
+waiting for light enough to secure a sure shot. With something like
+awe in his face he came, and knelt down, with hands gripping
+cautiously, and peered over the dreadful brink. "Gee! But that there
+cat was game!" he muttered, drawing back and sweeping a comprehensive
+gaze across the stupendous landscape, as if challenging denial of his
+statement. Obviously the silences were of the same opinion, for there
+came no suggestion of dissent. Carefully he rose to his feet and
+pressed on towards the cave.
+
+Without hesitation he entered, for he knew that the puma's mate some
+weeks before had been shot, far down in the valley. He found the
+kittens asleep and began to fondle them. At his touch, and the smell
+of him, they awoke, spitting and clawing with all their mother's
+courage. Young as they were, their claws drew blood abundantly.
+"Gritty little devils!" growled the man good-naturedly, snatching
+back his hand and wiping the blood on his trouser-leg. Then he took
+off his coat, threw it over the troublesome youngsters, rolled them in
+it securely, so that not one protesting claw could get out, and
+started back to the camp with the grumbling and uneasy bundle in his
+arms.
+
+Three months later, the two puma cubs, sleek, fat, full of gayety as
+two kittens of like age, and convinced by this time that man was the
+source and origin of all good things, were sold to a travelling
+collector. One, the female, was sent down to a zoological garden on
+the Pacific coast. The other, the male, much the larger and at the
+same time the more even-tempered and amenable to teaching, found its
+way to the cages of an animal-trainer in the East.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+"King's kind of ugly to-night, seems to me; better keep yer eyes
+peeled!" said Andy Hansen, the assistant trainer, the big,
+yellow-haired Swede who knew not fear. Neither did he know impatience
+or irritability; and so all the animals, as a rule, were on their good
+behavior under his calm, masterful, blue eye. Yet he was tactful with
+the beasts, and given to humoring their moods as far as convenient
+without ever letting them guess it.
+
+"Oh, you go chase yourself, Andy!" replied Signor Tomaso, the trainer,
+with a strong New England accent. "If I got to look out for King, I'd
+better quit the business. Don't you go trying to make trouble between
+friends, Andy."
+
+"Of course, Bill, I know he'd never try to maul _you_," explained
+Hansen seriously, determined that he should not be misunderstood in
+the smallest particular. "But he's acting curious. Look out he don't
+get into a scrap with some of the other animals."
+
+"I reckon I kin keep 'em all straight," answered the trainer dryly, as
+he turned away to get ready for the great performance which the
+audience, dimly heard beyond the canvas walls, was breathlessly
+awaiting.
+
+The trainer's name was William Sparks, and his birthplace Big
+Chebeague, Maine; but his lean, swarthy face and piercing, green-brown
+eyes, combined with the craving of his audiences for a touch of the
+romantic, had led him to adopt the more sonorous pseudonym of "Signor
+Tomaso." He maintained that if he went under his own name, nobody
+would ever believe that what he did could be anything wonderful.
+Except for this trifling matter of the name, there was no fake about
+Signor Tomaso. He was a brilliant animal-trainer, as unacquainted with
+fear as the Swede, as dominant of eye, and of immeasurably greater
+experience. But being, at the same time, more emotional, more
+temperamental than his phlegmatic assistant, his control was sometimes
+less steady, and now and again he would have to assert his authority
+with violence. He was keenly alive to the varying personalities of his
+beasts, naturally, and hence had favorites among them. His especial
+favorite, who heartily reciprocated the attachment, was the great
+puma, King, the most intelligent and amiable of all the wild animals
+that had ever come under his training whip.
+
+As Hansen's success with the animals, during the few months of his
+experience as assistant, had been altogether phenomenal, his chief
+felt a qualm of pique upon being warned against the big puma. He had
+too just an appreciation of Hansen's judgment, however, to quite
+disregard the warning, and he turned it over curiously in his mind as
+he went to his dressing-room. Emerging a few minutes later in the
+black-and-white of faultless evening dress, without a speck on his
+varnished shoes, he moved down along the front of the cages,
+addressing to the occupant of each, as he passed, a sharp,
+authoritative word which brought it to attention.
+
+With the strange, savage smell of the cages in his nostrils, that
+bitter, acrid pungency to which his senses never grew blunted, a new
+spirit of understanding was wont to enter Tomaso's brain. He would
+feel a sudden kinship with the wild creatures, such a direct and
+instant comprehension as almost justified his fancy that in some
+previous existence he had himself been a wild man of the jungle and
+spoken in their tongue. As he looked keenly into each cage, he knew
+that the animal whose eyes for that moment met his was in untroubled
+mood. This, till he came to the cage containing the latest addition to
+his troupe, a large cinnamon bear, which was rocking restlessly to
+and fro and grumbling to itself. The bear was one which had been long
+in captivity and well trained. Tomaso had found him docile, and clever
+enough to be admitted at once to the performing troupe. But to-night
+the beast's eyes were red with some ill-humor. Twice the trainer spoke
+to him before he heeded; but then he assumed instantly an air of
+mildest subservience. The expression of a new-weaned puppy is not more
+innocently mild than the look which a bear can assume when it so
+desires.
+
+"Ah, ha! old sport! So it's you that's got a grouch on to-night; I'll
+keep an eye on you!" he muttered to himself. He snapped his heavy whip
+once, and the bear obediently sat up on its haunches, its great paws
+hanging meekly. Tomaso looked it sharply in the eye. "Don't forget,
+now, and get funny!" he admonished. Then he returned to the first
+cage, which contained the puma, and went up close to the bars. The
+great cat came and rubbed against him, purring harshly.
+
+"There ain't nothing the matter with _you_, boy, I reckon," said
+Tomaso, scratching him affectionately behind the ears. "Andy must have
+wheels in his head if he thinks I've got to keep my eyes peeled on
+_your_ account."
+
+Out beyond the iron-grilled passage, beyond the lighted canvas walls,
+the sharp, metallic noises of the workmen setting up the great
+performing-cage came to a stop. There was a burst of music from the
+orchestra. That, too, ceased. The restless hum of the unseen masses
+around the arena died away into an expectant hush. It was time to go
+on. At the farther end of the passage, by the closed door leading to
+the performing cage, Hansen appeared. Tomaso opened the puma's cage.
+King dropped out with a soft thud of his great paws, and padded
+swiftly down the passage, his master following. Hansen slid wide the
+door, admitting a glare of light, a vast, intense rustle of
+excitement; and King marched majestically out into it, eying calmly
+the tier on climbing tier of eager faces. It was his customary
+privilege, this, to make the entrance alone, a good half minute ahead
+of the rest of the troupe; and he seemed to value it. Halfway around
+the big cage he walked, then mounted his pedestal, sat up very
+straight, and stared blandly at the audience. A salvo of clapping ran
+smartly round the tiers--King's usual tribute, which he had so learned
+to expect that any failure of it would have dispirited him for the
+whole performance.
+
+Signor Tomaso had taken his stand, whip in hand, just inside the cage,
+with Hansen opposite him, to see that the animals, on entry, went each
+straight to his own bench or pedestal. Any mistake in this connection
+was sure to lead to trouble, each beast being almost childishly
+jealous of its rights. Inside the long passage an attendant was
+opening one cage after another; and in a second more the animals began
+to appear in procession, filing out between the immaculate Signor and
+the roughly clad Swede. First came a majestic white Angora goat,
+carrying high his horned and bearded head, and stepping most daintily
+upon slim, black hoofs. Close behind, and looking just ready to pounce
+upon him but for dread of the Signor's eye, came slinking stealthily a
+spotted black-and-yellow leopard, ears back and tail twitching. He
+seemed ripe for mischief, as he climbed reluctantly on to his pedestal
+beside the goat; but he knew better than to even bare a claw. And as
+for the white goat, with his big golden eyes superciliously half
+closed, he ignored his dangerous neighbor completely, while his jaws
+chewed nonchalantly on a bit of brown shoe-lace which he had picked up
+in the passage.
+
+Close behind the leopard came a bored-looking lion, who marched with
+listless dignity straight to his place. Then another lion, who paused
+in the doorway and looked out doubtfully, blinking with distaste at
+the strong light. Tomaso spoke sharply, like the snap of his whip,
+whereupon the lion ran forward in haste. But he seemed to have
+forgotten which was his proper pedestal, for he hopped upon the three
+nearest in turn, only to hop down again with apologetic alacrity at
+the order of the cracking whip. At last, obviously flustered, he
+reached a pedestal on which he was allowed to remain. Here he sat,
+blinking from side to side and apparently much mortified.
+
+The lion was followed by a running wolf, who had shown his teeth
+savagely when the lion, for a moment, trespassed upon his pedestal.
+This beast was intensely interested in the audience, and, as soon as
+he was in his place, turned his head and glared with green, narrowed
+eyes at the nearest spectators, as if trying to stare them out of
+countenance. After the wolf come a beautiful Bengal tiger, its
+black-and-golden stripes shining as if they had been oiled. He glided
+straight to his stand, sniffed at it superciliously, and then lay down
+before it. The whip snapped sharply three times, but the tiger only
+shut his eyes tight. The audience grew hushed. Tomaso ran forward,
+seized the beast by the back of the neck, and shook him roughly.
+Whereupon the tiger half rose, opened his great red mouth like a
+cavern, and roared in his master's face. The audience thrilled from
+corner to corner, and a few cries came from frightened women.
+
+The trainer paused for an instant, to give full effect to the
+situation. Then, stooping suddenly, he lifted the tiger's
+hind-quarters and deposited them firmly on the pedestal, and left him
+in that awkward position.
+
+"There," he said in a loud voice, "that's all the help you'll get from
+me!"
+
+The audience roared with instant and delighted appreciation. The tiger
+gathered up the rest of himself upon his pedestal, wiped his face with
+his paw, like a cat, and settled down complacently with a pleased
+assurance that he had done the trick well.
+
+At this moment the attention of the audience was drawn to the
+entrance, where there seemed to be some hitch. Tomaso snapped his whip
+sharply, and shouted savage orders, but nothing came forth. Then the
+big Swede, with an agitated air, snatched up the trainer's pitchfork,
+which stood close at hand in case of emergency, made swift passes at
+the empty doorway, and jumped back. The audience was lifted fairly to
+its feet with excitement. What monster could it be that was giving so
+much trouble? The next moment, while Tomaso's whip hissed in vicious
+circles over his head, a plump little drab-colored pug-dog marched
+slowly out upon the stage, its head held arrogantly aloft. Volleys of
+laughter crackled around the arena, and the delighted spectators
+settled, tittering, back into their seats.
+
+The pug glanced searchingly around the cage, then selecting the
+biggest of the lions as a worthy antagonist, flew at his pedestal,
+barking furious challenge. The lion glanced down at him, looked bored
+at the noise, and yawned. Apparently disappointed, the pug turned away
+and sought another adversary. He saw King's big tail hanging down
+beside his pedestal. Flinging himself upon it, he began to worry it as
+if it were a rat. The next moment the tail threshed vigorously, and
+the pug went rolling end over end across the stage.
+
+Picking himself up and shaking the sawdust from his coat, the pug
+growled savagely and curled his little tail into a tighter screw.
+Bristling with wrath, he tiptoed menacingly back toward the puma's
+pedestal, determined to wipe out the indignity. This time his
+challenge was accepted. Tomaso's whip snapped, but the audience was
+too intent to hear it. The great puma slipped down from his pedestal,
+ran forward a few steps, and crouched.
+
+With a shrill snarl the pug rushed in. At the same instant the puma
+sprang, making a splendid tawny curve through the air, and alighted
+ten feet behind his antagonist's tail. There he wheeled like lightning
+and crouched. But the pug, enraged at being balked of his vengeance,
+had also wheeled, and charged again in the same half second. In the
+next, he had the puma by the throat. With a dreadful screech the great
+beast rolled over on his side and stiffened out his legs. The pug drew
+off, eyed him critically to make sure that he was quite dead, then
+ran, barking shrill triumph, to take possession of the victim's place.
+Then the whip cracked once more. Whereupon the puma got up, trotted
+back to his pedestal, mounted it, and tucked the pug protectingly away
+between his great forepaws.
+
+The applause had not quite died away when a towering, sandy-brown bulk
+appeared in the entrance to the cage. Erect upon its hind legs, and
+with a musket on its shoulder, it marched ponderously and slowly
+around the circle, eying each of the sitting beasts--except the
+wolf--suspiciously as it passed. The watchful eyes of both Signor
+Tomaso and Hansen noted that it gave wider berth to the puma than to
+any of the others, and also that the puma's ears, at the moment, were
+ominously flattened. Instantly the long whip snapped its terse
+admonition to good manners. Nothing happened, except that the pug,
+from between the puma's legs, barked insolently. The sandy-brown bulk
+reached its allotted pedestal,--which was quite absurdly too small for
+it to mount,--dropped the musket with a clatter, fell upon all fours
+with a loud _whoof_ of relief, and relapsed into a bear.
+
+The stage now set to his satisfaction, Signor Tomaso advanced to the
+centre of it. He snapped his whip, and uttered a sharp cry which the
+audience doubtless took for purest Italian. Immediately the animals
+all descended from their pedestals, and circled solemnly around him in
+a series of more or less intricate evolutions, all except the bear,
+who, not having yet been initiated into this beast quadrille, kept his
+place and looked scornful. At another signal the evolutions ceased,
+and all the beasts, except one of the lions, hurried back to their
+places. The lion, with the bashful air of a boy who gets up to "speak
+his piece" at a school examination, lingered in the middle of the
+stage. A rope was brought. The Swede took one end of it, the
+attendant who had brought it took the other, and between them they
+began to swing it, very slowly, as a great skipping-rope. At an
+energetic command from Signor Tomaso the lion slipped into the
+swinging circle, and began to skip in a ponderous and shamefaced
+fashion. The house thundered applause. For perhaps half a minute the
+strange performance continued, the whip snapping rhythmically with
+every descent of the rope. Then all at once, as if he simply could not
+endure it for another second, the lion bolted, head down, clambered
+upon his pedestal, and shut his eyes hard as if expecting a whipping.
+But as nothing happened except a roar of laughter from the seats, he
+opened them again and glanced from side to side complacently, as if to
+say, "Didn't I get out of that neatly?"
+
+The next act was a feat of teetering. A broad and massive teeter-board
+was brought in, and balanced across a support about two feet high. The
+sulky leopard, at a sign from Tomaso, slouched up to it, pulled one
+end to the ground, and mounted. At the centre he balanced cautiously
+for a moment till it tipped, then crept on to the other end, and
+crouched there, holding it down as if his very life depended on it.
+Immediately the white goat dropped from his pedestal, minced daintily
+over, skipped up upon the centre of the board, and mounted to the
+elevated end. His weight was not sufficient to lift, or even to
+disturb, the leopard, who kept the other end anchored securely. But
+the goat seemed to like his high and conspicuous position, for he
+maintained it with composure and stared around with great
+condescension upon the other beasts.
+
+The goat having been given time to demonstrate his unfitness for the
+task he had undertaken, Tomaso's whip cracked again. Instantly King
+descended from his pedestal, ran over to the teeter-board, and mounted
+it at the centre. The goat, unwilling to be dispossessed of his high
+place, stamped and butted at him indignantly, but with one scornful
+sweep of his great paw the puma brushed him off to the sawdust, and
+took his place at the end of the board. Snarling and clutching at the
+cleats, the leopard was hoisted into the air, heavily outweighed. The
+crowd applauded; but the performance, obviously, was not yet perfect.
+Now came the white goat's opportunity. He hesitated a moment, till he
+heard a word from Tomaso. Then he sprang once more upon the centre of
+the board, faced King, and backed up inch by inch towards the leopard
+till the latter began to descend. At this point of balance the white
+goat had one forefoot just on the pivot of the board. With a dainty,
+dancing motion, and a proud tossing of his head, he now threw his
+weight slowly backward and forward. The great teeter worked to
+perfection. Signor Tomaso was kept bowing to round after round of
+applause while the leopard, the goat, and King returned proudly to
+their places.
+
+After this, four of the red-and-yellow uniformed attendants ran in,
+each carrying a large hoop. They stationed themselves at equal
+distances around the circumference of the cage, holding the hoops out
+before them at a height of about four feet from the ground. At the
+command of Tomaso, the animals all formed in procession--though not
+without much cracking of the whip and vehement command--and went
+leaping one after the other through the hoops--all except the pug, who
+tried in vain to jump so high, and the bear, who, not knowing how to
+jump at all, simply marched around and pretended not to see that the
+hoops were there. Then four other hoops, covered with white paper,
+were brought in, and head first through them the puma led the way.
+When it came to the bear's turn, the whip cracked a special signal.
+Whereupon, instead of ignoring the hoop as he had done before, he
+stuck his head through it and marched off with it hanging on his neck.
+All four hoops he gathered up in this way, and, retiring with them to
+his place, stood shuffling restlessly and grunting with impatience
+until he was relieved of the awkward burden.
+
+A moment later four more hoops were handed to the attendants. They
+looked like the first lot; but the attendants took them with hooked
+handles of iron and held them out at arm's length. Touched with a
+match, they burst instantly into leaping yellow flames; whereupon all
+the beasts, except King, stirred uneasily on their pedestals. The whip
+snapped with emphasis; and all the beasts--except King, who sat eying
+the flames tranquilly, and the bear, who whined his disapproval, but
+knew that he was not expected to take part in this act--formed again
+in procession, and ran at the flaming hoops as if to jump through them
+as before. But each, on arriving at a hoop, crouched flat and scurried
+under it like a frightened cat--except the white goat, which pranced
+aside and capered past derisively. Pretending to be much disappointed
+in them, Signor Tomaso ordered them all back to their places, and,
+folding his arms, stood with his head lowered as if wondering what to
+do about it. Upon this, King descended proudly from his pedestal and
+approached the blazing terrors. With easiest grace and nonchalance he
+lifted his lithe body, and went bounding lightly through the hoops,
+one after the other. The audience stormed its applause. Twice around
+this terrifying circuit he went, as indifferent to the writhing flames
+as if they had been so much grass waving in the wind. Then he stopped
+abruptly, turned his head, and looked at Tomaso in expectation. The
+latter came up, fondled his ears, and assured him that he had done
+wonders. Then King returned to his place, elation bristling in his
+whiskers.
+
+While the flaming hoops were being rushed from the ring and the
+audience was settling down again to the quiet of unlimited
+expectation, a particularly elaborate act was being prepared. A
+massive wooden stand, with shelves and seats at various heights, was
+brought in. Signor Tomaso, coiling the lash of his whip and holding
+the heavy handle, with its loaded butt, as a sceptre, took his place
+on a somewhat raised seat at the centre of the frame. Hansen, with his
+pitchfork in one hand and a whip like Tomaso's in the other, drew
+nearer; and the audience, with a thrill, realized that something more
+than ordinarily dangerous was on the cards. The tiger came and
+stretched itself at full length before Tomaso, who at once
+appropriated him as a footstool. The bear and the biggest of the lions
+posted themselves on either side of their master, rearing up like the
+armorial supporters of some illustrious escutcheon, and resting their
+mighty forepaws apparently on their master's shoulders, though in
+reality on two narrow little shelves placed there for the purpose.
+Another lion came and laid his huge head on Tomaso's knees, as if
+doing obeisance. By this time all the other animals were prowling
+about the stand, peering this way and that, as if trying to remember
+their places; and the big Swede was cracking his whip briskly, with
+curt, deep-toned commands, to sharpen up their memories. Only King
+seemed quite clear as to what he had to do--which was to lay his tawny
+body along the shelf immediately over the heads of the lion and the
+bear; but as he mounted the stand from the rear, his ears went back
+and he showed a curious reluctance to fulfil his part. Hansen's keen
+eyes noted this at once, and his whip snapped emphatically in the air
+just above the great puma's nose. Still King hesitated. The lion paid
+no attention whatever, but the bear glanced up with reddening eyes and
+a surly wagging of his head. It was all a slight matter, too slight to
+catch the eye or the uncomprehending thoughts of the audience. But a
+grave, well-dressed man, with copper-colored face, high cheek-bones
+and straight, coal-black hair, who sat close to the front, turned to a
+companion and said:--
+
+"Those men are good trainers, but they don't know everything about
+pumas. _We_ know that there is a hereditary feud between the pumas and
+the bears, and that when they come together there's apt to be
+trouble."
+
+The speaker was a full-blooded Sioux, and a graduate of one of the big
+Eastern universities. He leaned forward with a curious fire in his
+deep-set, piercing eyes, as King, unwillingly obeying the mandates of
+the whip, dropped down and stretched out upon his shelf, his nervous
+forepaws not more than a foot above the bear's head. His nostrils were
+twitching as if they smelled something unutterably distasteful, and
+his thick tail looked twice its usual size. The Sioux, who, alone of
+all present, understood these signs, laid an involuntary hand of
+warning upon his companion's knee.
+
+Just what positions the other animals were about to take will never be
+known. King's sinews tightened. "Ha-ow!" grunted the Sioux, reverting
+in his excitement to his ancient utterance. There was a lightning
+sweep of King's paw, a shout from Hansen, a _wah_ of surprise and
+pain from the bear. King leaped back to the top of the stand to avoid
+the expected counter-stroke. But not against him did the bear's rage
+turn. The maddened beast seemed to conclude that his master had
+betrayed him. With a roar he struck at Tomaso with the full force of
+his terrible forearm. Tomaso was in the very act of leaping forward
+from his seat, when the blow caught him full on the shoulder,
+shattering the bones, ripping the whole side out of his coat, and
+hurling him senseless to the floor.
+
+The change in the scene was instantaneous and appalling. Most of the
+animals, startled, and dreading immediate punishment, darted for their
+pedestals,--_any_ pedestals that they found within reach,--and fought
+savagely for the possession of the first they came to. The bear fell
+furiously upon the body of Tomaso. Cries and shrieks arose from the
+spectators. Hansen rushed to the rescue, his fork clutched in both
+hands. Attendants, armed with forks or iron bars, seemed to spring up
+from nowhere. But before any one could reach the spot, an appalling
+screech tore across the uproar, and King's yellow body, launched from
+the top of the stand, fell like a thunderbolt upon the bear's back.
+
+The shock rolled the bear clean over. While he was clawing about
+wildly, in the effort to grapple with his assailant, Hansen dragged
+aside the still unconscious Tomaso, and two attendants carried him
+hurriedly from the stage.
+
+Audience and stage alike were now in a sort of frenzy. Animals were
+fighting here and there in tangled groups; but for the moment all eyes
+were riveted on the deadly struggle which occupied the centre of the
+stage.
+
+For all that he had less than a quarter the weight and nothing like a
+quarter the bulk of his gigantic adversary, the puma, through the
+advantage of his attack, was having much the best of the fight. Hansen
+had no time for sentiment, no time to concern himself as to whether
+his chief was dead or alive. His business was to save valuable
+property by preventing the beasts from destroying each other. It
+mattered not to him, now, that King had come so effectively to
+Tomaso's rescue. Prodding him mercilessly with his fork, and raining
+savage blows upon his head, he strove, in a cold rage, to drive him
+off; but in vain. But other keepers, meanwhile, had run in with ropes
+and iron bars. A few moments more and both combatants were securely
+lassoed. Then they were torn apart by main force, streaming with
+blood. Blinded by blankets thrown over their heads, and hammered into
+something like subjection, they were dragged off at a rush and slammed
+unceremoniously into their dens. With them out of the way, it was a
+quick matter to dispose of the other fights, though not till after the
+white goat had been killed to satisfy that ancient grudge of the
+leopard's, and the wolf had been cruelly mauled for having refused to
+give up his pedestal to one of the excited lions. Only the pug had
+come off unscathed, having had the presence of mind to dart under the
+foundations of the frame at the first sign of trouble, and stay there.
+When all the other animals had been brought to their senses and driven
+off, one by one, to their cages, he came forth from his hiding and
+followed dejectedly, the curl quite taken out of his confident tail.
+Then word went round among the spectators that Tomaso was not
+dead--that, though badly injured, he would recover; and straightway
+they calmed down, with a complacent sense of having got the value of
+their money. The great cage was taken apart and carried off. The stage
+was speedily transformed. And two trick comedians, with slippers that
+flapped a foot beyond their toes, undertook to wipe out the memory of
+what had happened.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+The show was touring the larger towns of the Northwest. On the
+following day it started, leaving Tomaso behind in hospital, with a
+shattered shoulder and bitter wrath in his heart. At the next town,
+Hansen took Tomaso's place, but, for two reasons, with a sadly maimed
+performance. He had not yet acquired sufficient control of the animals
+to dare all Tomaso's acts; and the troupe was lacking some of its most
+important performers. The proud white goat was dead. The bear, the
+wolf, and one of the lions were laid up with their wounds. And as for
+the great puma, though _he_ had come off with comparatively little
+hurt, his temper had apparently been quite transformed. Hansen could
+do nothing with him. Whether it was that he was sick for Tomaso, whom
+he adored, or that he stewed in a black rage over the blows and
+pitchforkings, hitherto unknown to him, no one could surely say. He
+would do nothing but crouch, brooding, sullen and dangerous, at the
+back of his cage. Hansen noted the green light flickering fitfully
+across his pale, wide eyes, and prudently refrained from pressing
+matters.
+
+He was right. For, as a matter of fact, it was against the big Swede
+exclusively, and not against man in general, that King was nursing his
+grudge. In a dim way it had got into his brain that Hansen had taken
+sides with the bear against him and Tomaso, and he thirsted for
+vengeance. At the same time, he felt that Tomaso had deserted him. Day
+by day, as he brooded, the desire for escape--a desire which he had
+never known before--grew in his heart. Vaguely, perhaps, he dreamed
+that he would go and find Tomaso. At any rate, he would go--somewhere,
+anywhere, away from this world which had turned unfriendly to him.
+When this feeling grew dominant, he would rise suddenly and go
+prowling swiftly up and down behind the bars of his cage like a wild
+creature just caught.
+
+Curiously enough--for it is seldom indeed that Fate responds to the
+longing of such exiles from the wild--his opportunity came. Late at
+night the show reached a little town among the foothills. The train
+had been delayed for hours. The night was dark. Everything was in
+confusion, and all nerves on edge. The short road from the station to
+the field where the tents were to be set up was in bad repair, or had
+never been really a road. It ran along the edge of a steep gully. In
+the darkness one wheel of the van containing King's cage dropped to
+the hub into a yawning rut. Under the violence of the jolt a section
+of the edge of the bank gave way and crashed down to the bottom of the
+gully, dragging with it the struggling and screaming horses. The cage
+roof was completely smashed in.
+
+To King's eyes the darkness was but a twilight, pleasant and
+convenient. He saw an opening big enough to squeeze through; and
+beyond it, beyond the wild shouting and the flares of swung lanterns,
+a thick wood dark beneath the paler sky. Before any one could get down
+to the wreck, he was out and free and away. Crouching with belly to
+the earth, he ran noiselessly, and gained the woods before any one
+knew he had escaped. Straight on he ran, watchful but swift, heading
+for the places where the silence lay heaviest. Within five minutes
+Hansen had half the men of the show, with ropes, forks, and lanterns,
+hot on the trail. Within fifteen minutes, half the male population of
+the town was engaged in an enthusiastic puma hunt. But King was
+already far away, and making progress that would have been impossible
+to an ordinary wild puma. His life among men had taught him nothing
+about trees, so he had no unfortunate instinct to climb one and hide
+among the branches to see what his pursuers would be up to. His idea
+of getting away--and, perhaps, of finding his vanished master--was to
+keep right on. And this he did, though of course not at top speed, the
+pumas not being a race of long-winded runners like the wolves. In an
+hour or two he reached a rocky and precipitous ridge, quite impassable
+to men except by day. This he scaled with ease, and at the top, in the
+high solitude, felt safe enough to rest a little while. Then he made
+his way down the long, ragged western slopes, and at daybreak came
+into a wild valley of woods and brooks.
+
+By this time King was hungry. But game was plentiful. After two or
+three humiliating failures with rabbits--owing to his inexperience in
+stalking anything more elusive than a joint of dead mutton, he caught
+a fat wood-chuck, and felt his self-respect return. Here he might have
+been tempted to halt, although, to be sure, he saw no sign of Tomaso,
+but beyond the valley, still westward, he saw mountains, which drew
+him strangely. In particular, one uplifted peak, silver and sapphire
+as the clear day, and soaring supreme over the jumble of lesser
+summits, attracted him. He knew now that that was where he was going,
+and thither he pressed on with singleness of purpose, delaying only
+when absolutely necessary, to hunt or to sleep. The cage, the stage,
+the whip, Hansen, the bear, even the proud excitement of the flaming
+hoops, were swiftly fading to dimness in his mind, overwhelmed by the
+inrush of new, wonderful impressions. At last, reaching the lower,
+granite-ribbed flanks of old White Face itself, he began to feel
+curiously content, and no longer under the imperative need of haste.
+
+Here it was good hunting. Yet, though well satisfied, he made no
+effort to find himself a lair to serve as headquarters, but kept
+gradually working his way onward up the mountain. The higher he went,
+the more content he grew, till even his craving for his master was
+forgotten. Latent instincts began to spring into life, and he lapsed
+into the movements and customs of the wild puma. Only when he came
+upon a long, massive footprint in the damp earth by a spring, or a
+wisp of pungent-smelling fur on the rubbed and clawed bark of a tree,
+memory would rush back upon him fiercely. His ears would flatten
+down, his eyes would gleam green, his tail would twitch, and crouching
+to earth he would glare into every near-by thicket for a sight of his
+mortal foe. He had not yet learned to discriminate perfectly between
+an old scent and a new.
+
+About this time a hunter from the East, who had his camp a little
+farther down the valley, was climbing White Face on the trail of a
+large grizzly. He was lithe of frame, with a lean, dark, eager face,
+and he followed the perilous trail with a lack of prudence which
+showed a very inadequate appreciation of grizzlies. The trail ran
+along a narrow ledge cresting an abrupt but bushy steep. At the foot
+of the steep, crouched along a massive branch and watching for game of
+some sort to pass by, lay the big puma. Attracted by a noise above his
+head he glanced up, and saw the hunter. It was certainly not Tomaso,
+but it looked like him; and the puma's piercing eyes grew almost
+benevolent. He had no ill-feeling to any man but the Swede.
+
+Other ears than those of the puma had heard the unwary hunter's
+footsteps. The grizzly had caught them and stopped to listen. Yes, he
+was being followed. In a rage he wheeled about and ran back
+noiselessly to see who it was that could dare such presumption.
+Turning a shoulder of rock, he came face to face with the hunter, and
+at once, with a deep, throaty grunt, he charged.
+
+The hunter had not even time to get his heavy rifle to his shoulder.
+He fired once, point blank, from the hip. The shot took effect
+somewhere, but in no vital spot evidently, for it failed to check,
+even for one second, that terrific charge. To meet the charge was to
+be blasted out of being instantly. There was but one way open. The
+hunter sprang straight out from the ledge with a lightning vision of
+thick, soft-looking bushes far below him. The slope was steep, but by
+no means perpendicular, and he struck in a thicket which broke the
+full shock of the fall. His rifle flew far out of his hands. He
+rebounded, clutching at the bushes; but he could not check himself.
+Rolling over and over, his eyes and mouth choked with dust and leaves,
+he bumped on down the slope, and brought up at last, dazed but
+conscious, in a swampy hole under the roots of a huge over-leaning
+tree.
+
+[Illustration: "Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet distant,
+crouched, ready to spring, the biggest puma he had ever
+seen."]
+
+Striving to clear his eyes and mouth, his first realization was that
+he could not lift his left arm. The next, that he seemed to have
+jumped from the frying-pan into the fire. His jaws set themselves
+desperately, as he drew the long hunting-knife from his belt and
+struggled up to one knee, resolved to at least make his last fight a
+good one. Almost over his head, on a limb not six feet distant,
+crouched, ready to spring, the biggest puma he had ever seen. At this
+new confronting of doom his brain cleared, and his sinews seemed to
+stretch with fresh courage. It was hopeless, of course, as he knew,
+but his heart refused to recognize the fact. Then he noted with wonder
+that not at him at all was the puma looking, but far over his head. He
+followed that look, and again his heart sank, this time quite beyond
+the reach of hope. There was the grizzly coming headlong down the
+slope, foam slavering from his red jaws.
+
+Bewildered, and feeling like a rat in a hole, the hunter tried to slip
+around the base of the tree, desperately hoping to gain some post of
+vantage whence to get home at least two or three good blows before the
+end. But the moment he moved, the grizzly fairly hurled himself
+downwards. The hunter jumped aside and wheeled, with his knife lifted,
+his disabled left arm against the tree trunk. But in that same
+instant, a miracle! Noiselessly the puma's tawny length shot out
+overhead and fell upon the bear in the very mid-rush of the charge.
+
+At once it seemed as if some cataclysmic upheaval were in progress.
+The air, as it were, went mad with screeches, yells, snarls, and
+enormous thick gruntings. The bushes went down on every side. Now the
+bear was on top, now the puma. They writhed over and over, and for
+some seconds the hunter stared with stupefaction. Then he recovered
+his wits. He saw that the puma, for some inexplicable reason, had come
+to his help. But he saw, also, that the gigantic grizzly must win.
+Instead of slipping off and leaving his ally to destruction, he ran
+up, waited a moment for the perfect opportunity, and drove his knife
+to the hilt into the very centre of the back of the bear's neck, just
+where it joined the skull. Then he sprang aside.
+
+Strangely the noise died away. The huge bulk of the grizzly sank
+slowly into a heap, the puma still raking it with the eviscerating
+weapons of his hinder claws. A moment more and he seemed to realize
+that he had achieved a sudden triumph. Bleeding, hideously mangled,
+but still, apparently, full of fighting vigor, he disengaged himself
+from the unresisting mass and looked around him proudly. His wild
+eyes met those of the hunter, and the hunter had an anxious moment.
+But the great beast looked away again at once, and seemed, in fact, to
+forget all about the man's existence. He lay down and commenced
+licking assiduously at his wounds. Filled with astonishment, and just
+now beginning to realize the anguish in his broken arm, the hunter
+stole discreetly away.
+
+After an hour or two the puma arose, rather feebly, passed the body of
+his slain foe without a glance, and clambered up the slope to the
+ledge. He wanted a place of refuge now, a retreat that would be safe
+and cool and dark. Up and up he followed the winding of that narrow
+trail, and came out at last upon a rocky platform before a
+black-mouthed cave. He knew well enough that he had killed the owner
+of the cave, so he entered without hesitation.
+
+Here, for two days, he lay in concealment, licking his wounds. He had
+no desire to eat; but two or three times, because the wounds fevered
+him, he came forth and descended the trail a little way to where he
+had seen a cold spring bubbling from the rocks. His clean blood, in
+that high, clean air, quickly set itself to the healing of the hurts,
+and strength flowed back swiftly into his torn sinews. At dawn of the
+third day he felt himself suddenly hungry, and realizing that he must
+seek some small game, even though not yet ready for any difficult
+hunting, he crept forth, just as the first thin glory of rose light
+came washing into the cave. But before he started down the trail he
+paused, and stood staring, with some dim half memory, out across the
+transparent, hollow spaces, the jumbled hilltops, misty, gray-green
+forests, and steel-bright loops of water to which he had at last come
+home.
+
+
+
+
+THE MONARCH OF PARK BARREN
+
+
+
+
+THE MONARCH OF PARK BARREN
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+From the cold spring lakes and sombre deeps of spruce forest, over
+which the bald granite peak of Old Saugamauk kept endless guard, came
+reports of a moose of more than royal stature, whose antlers beggared
+all records for symmetry and spread. From a home-coming lumber cruiser
+here, a wandering Indian there, the word came straggling in, till the
+settlements about the lower reaches of the river began to believe
+there might be some truth behind the wild tales. Then--for it was
+autumn, the season of gold and crimson falling leaves, and battles on
+the lake-shores under the white full moon--there followed stories of
+other moose seen fleeing in terror, with torn flanks and bleeding
+shoulders; and it was realized that the prowess of the great moose
+bull was worthy of his stature and his adornment. Apparently he was
+driving all the other bulls off the Saugamauk ranges.
+
+By this time the matter became of interest to the guides. The stories
+gathered in from different quarters, so it was hard to guess just
+where the gigantic stranger was most likely to be found. To north and
+northeast of the mountain went the two Armstrongs, seeking the
+stranger's trail; while to south and southeastward explored the
+Crimmins boys. If real, the giant bull had to be located; if a myth,
+he had to be exploded before raising impossible hopes in the hearts of
+visiting sportsmen.
+
+Then suddenly arrived corroboration of all the stories. It came from
+Charley Crimmins. He was able to testify with conviction that the
+giant bull was no figment of Indian's imagination or lumberman's
+inventive humor. For it was he whose search had been successful.
+
+In fact, he might have been content to have it just a shade less
+overwhelmingly successful. That there is such a thing as an
+embarrassment of success was borne in upon him when he found himself
+jumping madly for the nearest tree, with a moose that seemed to have
+the stature of an elephant crashing through the thickets close behind
+him. He reached the tree just in time to swing well up among its
+branches. Then the tree quivered as the furious animal flung his bulk
+against it. Crimmins had lost his rifle in the flight. He could do
+nothing but sit shivering on his branch, making remarks so
+uncomplimentary that the great bull, if he could have appreciated
+them, would probably have established himself under that tree till
+vengeance was accomplished. But not knowing that he had been insulted,
+he presently grew tired of snorting at his captive, and wandered off
+through the woods in search of more exciting occupation. Then,
+indignant beyond words, Charley descended from his retreat, and took
+his authoritative report in to the Settlements.
+
+[Illustration: "He reached the tree just in time to swing well up among
+the branches."]
+
+At first it was thought that there would be great hunting around Old
+Saugamauk, till those tremendous antlers should fall a prize to some
+huntsman not only lucky but rich. For no one who could not pay right
+handsomely for the chance might hope to be guided to the range where
+such an unequalled trophy was to be won. But when the matter, in all
+its authenticated details, came to the ears of Uncle Adam, dean of the
+guides of that region, he said "_No_" with an emphasis that left no
+room for argument. There should be no hunting around the slopes of
+Saugamauk for several seasons. If the great bull was the terror they
+made him out to be, then he had driven all the other bulls from his
+range, and there was nothing to be hunted but his royal self. "Well,"
+decreed the far-seeing old guide, "we'll let him be for a bit, till
+his youngsters begin to grow up like him. Then there'll be no heads in
+all the rest of New Brunswick like them that comes from Old
+Saugamauk." This decree was accepted, the New Brunswick guides being
+among those who are wise enough to cherish the golden-egged goose.
+
+In the course of that season the giant moose was seen several times by
+guides and woodsmen--but usually from a distance, as the inconsiderate
+impetuosity of his temper was not favorable to close or calm
+observation. The only people who really knew him were those who, like
+Charley Crimmins, had looked down upon his grunting wrath from the
+branches of a substantial tree.
+
+Upon certain important details, however, all observers agreed. The
+stranger (for it was held that, driven by some southward wandering
+instinct, he had come down from the wild solitudes of the Gaspe
+Peninsula) was reckoned to be a good eight inches taller at the
+shoulders than any other moose of New Brunswick record, and several
+hundredweight heavier. His antlers, whose symmetry and palmation
+seemed perfect, were estimated to have a spread of sixty inches at
+least. That was the conservative estimate of Uncle Adam, who had made
+his observations with remarkable composure from a tree somewhat less
+lofty and sturdy than he would have chosen had he had the time for
+choice.
+
+In color the giant was so dark that his back and flanks looked black
+except in the strongest sunlight. His mighty head, with long, deeply
+overhanging muzzle, was of a rich brown; while the under parts of his
+body, and the inner surfaces of his long, straight legs, were of a
+rusty fawn color. His "bell"--as the shaggy appendix that hangs from
+the neck of a bull moose, a little below the throat, is called--was of
+unusual development, and the coarse hair adorning it peculiarly
+glossy. To bring down such a magnificent prize, and to carry off such
+a trophy as that unmatched head and antlers, the greatest sportsmen of
+America would have begrudged no effort or expense. But though the fame
+of the wonderful animal was cunningly allowed to spread to the ears of
+all sportsmen, its habitat seemed miraculously elusive. It was heard
+of on the Upsalquitch, the Nipisiguit, the Dungarvan, the Little
+Sou'west, but never, by some strange chance, in the country around Old
+Saugamauk. Visiting sportsmen hunted, spent money, dreamed dreams,
+followed great trails and brought down splendid heads, all over the
+Province; but no stranger with a rifle was allowed to see the proud
+antlers of the monarch of Saugamauk.
+
+The right of the splendid moose to be called the Monarch of Saugamauk
+was settled beyond all question one moonlight night when the surly old
+bear who lived in a crevasse far up under the stony crest of the
+mountain came down and attempted to dispute it. The wild kindreds, as
+a rule, are most averse to unnecessary quarrels. Unless their food or
+their mates are at stake, they will fight only under extreme
+provocation, or when driven to bay. They are not ashamed to run away,
+rather than press matters too far and towards a doubtful issue. A bull
+moose and a bear are apt to give each other a wide berth, respecting
+each other's prowess. But there are exceptions to all rules,
+especially where bears, the most individual of our wild cousins, are
+concerned. And this bear was in a particularly savage mood. Just in
+the mating season he had lost his mate, who had been shot by an
+Indian. The old bear did not know what had happened to her, but he was
+ready to avenge her upon any one who might cross his path.
+
+Unluckily for him, it was the great moose who crossed his path; and
+the luck was all Charley Crimmins's, who chanced to be the spectator
+of what happened there beside the moonlit lake.
+
+Charley was on his way over to the head of the Nipisiguit, when it
+occurred to him that he would like to get another glimpse of the great
+beast who had so ignominiously discomfited him. Peeling a sheet of
+bark from the nearest white birch, he twisted himself a "moose-call,"
+then climbed into the branches of a willow which spread out over the
+edge of the shining lake. From this concealment he began to utter
+persuasively the long, uncouth, melancholy call by which the moose cow
+summons her mate.
+
+Sometimes these vast northern solitudes seem, for hours together, as
+if they were empty of all life. It is as if a wave of distrust had
+passed simultaneously over all the creatures of the wild. At other
+times the lightest occasion suffices to call life out of the
+stillness. Crimmins had not sounded more than twice his deceptive
+call, when the bushes behind the strip of beech crackled sharply. But
+it was not the great bull that stepped forth into the moonlight. It
+was a cow moose. She came out with no effort at concealment, and
+walked up and down the beach, angrily looking for her imagined rival.
+
+When the uneasy animal's back was towards him, Crimmins called again,
+a short, soft call. The cow jumped around as if she had been struck,
+and the stiff hair along her neck stood up with jealous rage. But
+there was no rival anywhere in sight, and she stood completely
+mystified, shaking her ungainly head, peering into the dark
+undergrowth, and snorting tempestuously as if challenging the
+invisible rival to appear. Then suddenly her angry ridge of hair sank
+down, she seemed to shrink together upon herself, and with a
+convulsive bound she sprang away from the dark undergrowth, landing
+with a splash in the shallow water along shore. At the same instant
+the black branches were burst apart, and a huge bear, forepaws
+upraised and jaws wide open, launched himself forth into the open.
+
+Disappointed at missing his first spring, the bear rushed furiously
+upon his intended victim, but the cow, for all her apparent
+awkwardness, was as agile as a deer. Barely eluding his rush, she went
+shambling up the shore at a terrific pace, plunged into the woods, and
+vanished. The bear checked himself at the water's edge, and turned,
+holding his nose high in the air, as if disdaining to acknowledge that
+he had been foiled.
+
+Crimmins hesitatingly raised his rifle. Should he bag this bear, or
+should he wait and sound his call again a little later, in the hope of
+yet summoning the great bull? As he hesitated, and the burly black
+shape in the moonlight also stood hesitating, the thickets rustled and
+parted almost beneath him, and the mysterious bull strode forth with
+his head held high.
+
+He had come in answer to what he thought was the summons of his mate;
+but when he saw the bear, his rage broke all bounds. He doubtless
+concluded that the bear had driven his mate away. With a bawling roar
+he thundered down upon the intruder.
+
+The bear, as we have seen, was in no mood to give way. His small eyes
+glowed suddenly red with vengeful fury, as he wheeled and gathered
+himself, half crouching upon his haunches, to meet the tremendous
+attack. In this attitude all his vast strength was perfectly poised,
+ready for use in any direction. The moose, had he been attacking a
+rival of his own kind, would have charged with antlers down, but
+against all other enemies the weapons he relied upon were his gigantic
+hoofs, edged like chisels. As he reached his sullenly waiting
+antagonist he reared on his hind-legs, towering like a black rock
+about to fall and crush whatever was in its path. Like pile-drivers
+his fore-hoofs struck downwards, one closely following the other.
+
+The bear swung aside as lightly as a weasel, and eluded, but only by a
+hair's breadth, that destructive stroke. As he wheeled he delivered a
+terrific, swinging blow, with his armed forepaw, upon his assailant's
+shoulder.
+
+The blow was a fair one. Any ordinary moose bull would have gone down
+beneath it, with his shoulder-joint shattered to splinters. But this
+great bull merely staggered, and stood for a second in amazement. Then
+he whipped about and darted upon the bear with a sort of hoarse
+scream, his eyes flashing with a veritable madness. He neither reared
+to strike, nor lowered his antlers to gore, but seemed intent upon
+tearing the foe with his teeth, as a mad horse might. At the sight of
+such resistless fury Crimmins involuntarily tightened his grip on his
+branch and muttered: "That ain't no _moose_! It's a--" But before he
+could finish his comparison, astonishment stopped him. The bear,
+unable with all his strength and weight to withstand the shock of that
+straight and incredibly swift charge, had been rolled over and over
+down the gentle slope of the beach. At the same moment the moose,
+blinded by his rage and unable to check himself, had tripped over a
+log that lay hidden in the bushes, and fallen headlong on his nose.
+
+Utterly cowed by the overwhelming completeness of this overthrow, the
+bear was on his feet again before his conqueror, and scurrying to
+refuge like a frightened rat. He made for the nearest tree, and that
+nearest tree, to Crimmins's dismay, was Crimmins's. The startled guide
+swung himself hastily to a higher branch which stretched well out over
+the water.
+
+Before the great bull could recover his footing, the fugitive had
+gained a good start. But desperately swift though he was, the doom
+that thundered behind him was swifter, and caught him just as he was
+scrambling into the tree. Those implacable antlers ploughed his
+hind-quarters remorselessly, till he squealed with pain and terror.
+His convulsive scrambling raised him, the next instant, beyond reach
+of that punishment; but immediately the great bull reared, and struck
+him again and again with his terrible hoofs, almost crushing the
+victim's maimed haunches. The bear bawled again, but maintained his
+clutch of desperation, and finally drew himself up to a safe height,
+where he crouched on a branch, whimpering pitifully, while the victor
+raged below.
+
+At this moment the bear caught sight of Crimmins eying him steadily.
+To the cowed beast this was a new peril menacing him. With a
+frightened glance he crawled out on another branch, as far as it could
+be trusted to support his weight. And there he clung, huddled and
+shivering like a beaten puppy, looking from the man to the moose, from
+the moose to the man, as if he feared they might both jump at him
+together.
+
+But the sympathies of Crimmins were now entirely with the unfortunate
+bear, his fellow-prisoner, and he looked down at the arrogant tyrant
+below with a sincere desire to humble his pride with a rifle-bullet.
+But he was too far-seeing a guide for that. He contented himself with
+climbing a little lower till he attracted the giant's attention to
+himself, and then dropping half a handful of tobacco, dry and powdery,
+into those snorting red nostrils.
+
+It was done with nice precision, just as the giant drew in his breath.
+He got the fullest benefit of the pungent dose; and such trivial
+matters as bears and men were instantly forgotten in the paroxysms
+which seized him. His roaring sneezes seemed as if they would rend
+his mighty bulk asunder. He fairly stood upon his head, burrowing his
+muzzle into the moist leafage, as he strove to purge the exasperating
+torment from his nostrils. Crimmins laughed till he nearly fell out of
+the tree, while the bear forgot to whimper as he stared in terrified
+bewilderment. At last the moose stuck his muzzle up in the air and
+began backing blindly over stones and bushes, as if trying to get away
+from his own nose. Plump into four or five feet of icy water he
+backed. The shock seemed to give him an idea. He plunged his head
+under, and fell to wallowing and snorting and raising such a
+prodigious disturbance that all the lake shores rang with it. Then he
+bounced out upon the beach again, and dashed off through the woods as
+if a million hornets were at his ears.
+
+Weak with laughter, Crimmins climbed down out of his refuge, waved an
+amiable farewell to the stupefied bear, and resumed the trail for the
+Nipisiguit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+For the next two years the fame of the great moose kept growing,
+adding to itself various wonders and extravagances till it assumed
+almost the dimensions of a myth. Sportsmen came from all over the
+world in the hope of bagging those unparalleled antlers. They shot
+moose, caribou, deer, and bear, and went away disappointed only in one
+regard. But at last they began to swear that the giant was a mere
+fiction of the New Brunswick guides, designed to lure the hunters. The
+guides, therefore, began to think it was time to make good and show
+their proofs. Even Uncle Adam was coming around to this view, when
+suddenly word came from the Crown Land Department at Fredericton that
+the renowned moose must not be allowed to fall to any rifle. A special
+permit had been issued for his capture and shipment out of the
+country, that he might be the ornament of a famous Zoological Park and
+a lively proclamation of what the New Brunswick forests could
+produce.
+
+The idea of taking the King of Saugamauk alive seemed amusing to the
+guides, and to Crimmins particularly. But Uncle Adam, whose colossal
+frame and giant strength seemed to put him peculiarly in sympathy with
+the great moose bull, declared that it could and should be done, for
+he would do it. Upon this, scepticism vanished, even from the smile of
+Charley Crimmins, who voiced the general sentiment when he said,--
+
+"Uncle Adam ain't the man to bite off any more than he can chew!"
+
+But Uncle Adam was in no hurry. He had such a respect for his
+adversary that he would not risk losing a single point in the
+approaching contest. He waited till the mating season and the hunting
+season were long past, and the great bull's pride and temper somewhat
+cooled. He waited, moreover, for the day to come--along towards
+midwinter--when those titanic antlers should loosen at their roots,
+and fall off at the touch of the first light branch that might brush
+against them. This, the wise old woodsman knew, would be the hour of
+the King's least arrogance. Then, too, the northern snows would be
+lying deep and soft and encumbering, over all the upland slopes
+whereon the moose loved to browse.
+
+Along toward mid-February word came to Uncle Adam that the Monarch had
+"yarded up," as the phrase goes, on the southerly slope of Old
+Saugamauk, with three cows and their calves of the previous spring
+under his protection. This meant that, when the snow had grown too
+deep to permit the little herd to roam at will, he had chosen a
+sheltered area where the birch, poplar, and cherry, his favorite
+forage, were abundant, and there had trodden out a maze of deep paths
+which led to all the choicest browsing, and centred about a cluster of
+ancient firs so thick as to afford covert from the fiercest storms.
+The news was what the wise old woodsman had been waiting for. With
+three of his men, a pair of horses, a logging-sled, axes, and an
+unlimited supply of rope, he went to capture the King.
+
+It was a clear, still morning, so cold that the great trees snapped
+sharply under the grip of the bitter frost. The men went on snowshoes,
+leaving the teams hitched in a thicket on the edge of a logging road
+some three or four hundred yards from the "moose-yard." The sun
+glittered keenly on the long white alleys which led this way and that
+at random through the forest. The snow, undisturbed and accumulating
+for months, was heaped in strange shapes over hidden bushes, stumps,
+and rocks. The tread of the snowshoes made a furtive crunching sound
+as it rhythmically broke the crisp surface.
+
+Far off through the stillness the great moose, lying with the rest of
+the herd in their shadowy covert, caught the ominous sound. He lurched
+to his feet and stood listening, while the herd watched him anxiously,
+awaiting his verdict as to whether that strange sound meant peril or
+no.
+
+For reasons which we have seen, the giant bull knew little of man, and
+that little not of a nature to command any great respect.
+Nevertheless, at this season of the year, his blood cool, his august
+front shorn of its ornament and defence, he was seized with an
+incomprehensible apprehension. After all, as he felt vaguely, there
+was an unknown menace about man; and his ear told him that there were
+several approaching. A few months earlier he would have stamped his
+huge hoofs, thrashed the bushes with his colossal antlers, and stormed
+forth to chastise the intruders. But now, he sniffed the sharp air,
+snorted uneasily, drooped his big ears, and led a rapid but dignified
+retreat down one of the deep alleys of his maze.
+
+This was exactly what Uncle Adam had looked for. His object was to
+force the herd out of the maze of alleys, wherein they could move
+swiftly, and drive them floundering through the deep, soft snow, which
+would wear them out before they could go half a mile. Spreading his
+men so widely that they commanded all trails by which the fugitives
+might return, he followed up the flight at a run. And he accompanied
+the pursuit with a riot of shouts and yells and laughter, designed to
+shake his quarry's heart with the fear of the unusual. Wise in all
+woodcraft, Uncle Adam knew that one of the most daunting of all
+sounds, to the creatures of the wild, was that of human laughter, so
+inexplicable and seemingly so idle.
+
+At other times the great bull would merely have been enraged at this
+blatant clamor and taken it as a challenge. But now he retreated to
+the farthest corner of his maze. From this point there were but two
+paths of return, and along both the uproar was closing in upon him.
+Over the edge of the snow--which was almost breast-high to him, and
+deep enough to bury the calves, hopelessly deep, indeed, for any of
+the herd but himself to venture through--he gave a wistful look
+towards the depths of the cedar swamps in the valley, where he
+believed he could baffle all pursuers. Then his courage--but without
+his autumnal fighting rage--came back to him. His herd was his care.
+He crowded the cows and calves between himself and the snow, and
+turned to face his pursuers as they came running and shouting through
+the trees.
+
+When Uncle Adam saw that the King was going to live up to his kingly
+reputation and fight rather than be driven off into the deep snow, he
+led the advance more cautiously till his forces were within
+twenty-five or thirty paces of the huddling herd. Here he paused, for
+the guardian of the herd was beginning to stamp ominously with his
+great, clacking hoofs, and the reddening light in his eyes showed that
+he might charge at any instant.
+
+He did not charge, however, because his attention was diverted by the
+strange action of the men, who had stopped their shouting and begun to
+chop trees. It amazed him to see the flashing axes bite savagely into
+the great trunks and send the white chips flying. The whole herd
+watched with wide eyes, curious and apprehensive; till suddenly a tree
+toppled, swept the hard blue sky, and came down with a crashing roar
+across one of the runways. The cows and calves bounded wildly, clear
+out into the snow. But the King, though his eyes dilated with
+amazement, stood his ground and grunted angrily.
+
+A moment more and another tree, huge-limbed and dense, came down
+across the other runway. Two more followed, and the herd was cut off
+from its retreat. The giant bull, of course, with his vast stride and
+colossal strength, could have smashed his way through and over the
+barrier; but the others, to regain the safe mazes of the "yard," would
+have had to make a detour through the engulfing snow.
+
+Though the King was now fairly cornered, Uncle Adam was puzzled to
+know what to do next. In his hesitation, he felled some more trees,
+dropping the last one so close that the herd was obliged to crowd back
+to avoid being struck by the falling top. This, at last, was too much
+for the King, who had never before known what it was to be crowded.
+While his followers plunged away in terror, burying themselves
+helplessly before they had gone a dozen yards, he bawled with fury and
+charged upon his tormentors.
+
+[Illustration: "For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was able to
+keep up this almost incredible pace."]
+
+Though the snow, as we have seen, came up to his chest, the giant's
+strength and swiftness were such that the woodsmen were taken by
+surprise, and Uncle Adam, who was in front, was almost caught. In
+spite of his bulk, he turned and sprang away with the agility of a
+wildcat; but if his snowshoes had turned and hindered him for one half
+second, he would have been struck down and trodden to a jelly in the
+smother of snow. Seeing the imminence of his peril, the other woodsmen
+threw up their rifles; but Uncle Adam, though extremely busy for the
+moment, saw them out of the corner of his eye as he ran, and angrily
+ordered them not to shoot. He knew what he was about, and felt quite
+sure of himself, though the enemy was snorting at his very heels.
+
+For perhaps thirty or forty yards the bull was able to keep up this
+almost incredible pace. Then the inexorable pull of the snow began to
+tell, even upon such thews as his, and his pace slackened. But his
+rage showed no sign of cooling. So, being very accommodating, Uncle
+Adam slackened his own pace correspondingly, that his pursuer might
+not be discouraged. And the chase went on. But it went slower, and
+slower, and slower, till at last it stopped with Uncle Adam still just
+about six feet in the lead, and the great moose still blind-mad, but
+too exhausted to go one foot farther. Then Uncle Adam chuckled softly
+and called for the ropes. There was kicking, of course, and furious
+lunging and wild snorting, but the woodsmen were skilful and patient,
+and the King of Old Saugamauk was conquered. In a little while he lay
+upon his side, trussed up as securely and helplessly as a papoose in
+its birch-bark carrying-cradle. There was nothing left of his kingship
+but to snort regal defiance, to which his captors offered not the
+slightest retort. In his bonds he was carried off to the settlements,
+on the big logging-sled, drawn by the patient horses whom he scorned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+After this ignominy, for days the King was submissive, with the sullen
+numbness of despair. Life for him became a succession of stunning
+shocks and roaring change. He would be put into strange box-prisons,
+which would straightway begin to rush terribly through the world with
+a voice of thunder. Through the cracks in the box he would watch trees
+and fields and hills race by in madness of flight. He would be taken
+out of the box, and murmuring crowds would gape at him till the black
+mane along his neck would begin to rise in something of his old anger.
+Then some one would drive the crowd away, and he would slip back into
+his stupor. He did not know which he hated most,--the roaring boxes,
+the fleeing landscapes, or the staring crowds. At last he came to a
+loud region where there were no trees, but only what seemed to him
+vast, towering, naked rocks, red, gray, yellow, brown, full of holes
+from which issued men in swarms. These terrible rocks ran in endless
+rows, and through them he came at last to a wide field, thinly
+scattered with trees. There was no seclusion in it, no deep, dark,
+shadowy hemlock covert to lie down in; but it was green, and it was
+spacious, and it was more or less quiet. So when he was turned loose
+in it, he was almost glad. He lifted his head, with a spark of the old
+arrogance returning to his eyes. And through dilating nostrils he
+drank the free air till his vast lungs thrilled with almost forgotten
+life.
+
+The men who had brought him to the park--this bleak barren he would
+have called it, had he had the faculty of thinking in terms of human
+speech, this range more fitted for the frugal caribou than for a
+ranger of the deep forests like himself--these men stood watching him
+curiously after they had loosed him from his bonds. For a few minutes
+he forgot all about them. Then his eyes fell on them, and a heat crept
+slowly into his veins as he looked. Slowly he began to resume his
+kingship. His eyes changed curiously, and a light, fiery and fearless,
+flamed in their depths. His mane began to bristle.
+
+"It's time for us to get out of this. That fellow's beginning to
+remember he has some old scores to settle up!" remarked the Director
+coolly to the head-keeper and his assistants; and they all stepped
+backwards, with a casual air, towards the big gate, which stood ajar
+to receive them. Just as they reached it, the old fire and fury surged
+back into the exile's veins, but heated seven fold by the ignominies
+which he had undergone. With a hoarse and bawling roar, such as had
+never before been heard in those guarded precincts, he launched
+himself upon his gaolers. But they nimbly slipped through the gate and
+dropped the massive bars into their sockets.
+
+They were just in time. The next instant the King had hurled himself
+with all his weight upon the barrier. The sturdy ironwork and the
+panels on either side of the posts clanged, groaned, and even yielded
+a fraction of an inch beneath the shock. But in the rebound they
+thrust their assailant backward with startling violence. Bewildered,
+he glared at the obstacle, which looked so slender, yet was so strong
+to balk him of his vengeance. Then, jarred and aching, he withdrew
+haughtily to explore his new domain. The Director, gazing after him,
+nodded with supreme satisfaction.
+
+"Those fellows up in New Brunswick told no lies!" said he.
+
+"He certainly is a peach!" assented the head-keeper heartily. "When
+he grows his new antlers, I reckon we will have to enlarge the park."
+
+The great exile found his new range interesting to explore, and began
+to forget his indignation. Privacy it had not, for the trees at this
+season were all leafless, and there were no dense fir or spruce
+thickets into which he could withdraw, to look forth unseen upon this
+alien landscape. But there were certain rough boulders behind which he
+could lurk. And there were films of ice, and wraiths of thin snow in
+the hollows, the chill touch of which helped him to feel more or less
+at home. In the distance he caught sight of a range of those high,
+square rocks wherein the men dwelt; and hating them deeply, he turned
+and pressed on in the opposite direction over a gentle rise and across
+a little valley; till suddenly, among the trees, he came upon a
+curious barrier of meshed stuff, something like a gigantic cobweb.
+Through the meshes he could distinctly see the country beyond, and it
+seemed to be just the country he desired, more wooded and inviting
+than what he had traversed. Confidently he pushed upon the woven
+obstacle; but to his amazement it did not give way before him. He eyed
+it resentfully. How absurd that so frail a thing should venture to
+forbid him passage! He thrust upon it again, more brusquely, to be
+just as brusquely denied. The hot blood blazed to his head, and he
+dashed himself upon it with all his strength. The impenetrable but
+elastic netting yielded for a space, then sprang back with an
+impetuosity that flung him clear off his feet. He fell with a loud
+grunt, lay for a moment dismayed, then got up and eyed his
+incomprehensible adversary with a blank stare. He was learning so many
+strange lessons that it was difficult to assimilate them all at once.
+
+The following morning, when he was feasting on a pile of the willow
+and poplar forage which he loved, and which had appeared as if by
+magic close beside the mysterious barrier, he saw some men, perhaps a
+hundred yards away, throw open a section of the barrier. Forgetting to
+be angry at their intrusion on his range, he watched them curiously. A
+moment more, and a little herd of his own kind, apparently quite
+indifferent to the men, followed them into the range. He was not
+surprised at their appearance, for his nose had already told him there
+were moose about. But he was surprised to see them on friendly terms
+with man.
+
+There were several cows in the herd, with a couple of awkward
+yearlings; and the King, much gratified, ambled forward with huge
+strides to meet them and take them under his gracious protection. But
+a moment later two fine young bulls came into his view, following the
+rest of the herd at a more dignified pace. The King stopped, lowered
+his mighty front, laid back his ears like an angry stallion, and
+grunted a hoarse warning. The stiff black hair along his neck slowly
+arose and stood straight up.
+
+The two young bulls stared in stupid astonishment at this tremendous
+apparition. It was not the fighting season, so they had no jealousy,
+and felt nothing but a cold indifference toward the stranger. But as
+he came striding down the field his attitude was so menacing, his
+stature so formidable, that they could not but realize there was
+trouble brewing. It was contrary to all traditions that they should
+take the trouble to fight in midwinter, when they had no antlers and
+their blood was sluggish. Nevertheless, they could not brook to be so
+affronted, as it were, in their own citadel.
+
+Their eyes began to gleam angrily, and they advanced, shaking their
+heads, to meet the insolent stranger. The keepers, surprised, drew
+together close by the gate; while one of them left hurriedly and ran
+towards a building which stood a little way off among the trees.
+
+As the King swept down upon the herd, bigger and blacker than any bull
+they had ever seen before, the cows shrank away and stood staring
+placidly. They were well fed, and for the time indifferent to all else
+in their sheltered world. Still, a fight is a fight, and if there was
+going to be one, they were ready enough to look on.
+
+Alas for the right of possession when it runs counter to the right of
+might! The two young bulls were at home and in the right, and their
+courage was sound. But when that black whirlwind from the fastnesses
+of Old Saugamauk fell upon them, it seemed that they had no more
+rights at all.
+
+Side by side they confronted the onrushing doom. At the moment of
+impact, they reared and struck savagely with their sharp hoofs. But
+the gigantic stranger troubled himself with no such details. He merely
+fell upon them, like a blind but raging force, irresistible as a
+falling hillside and almost as disastrous. They both went down before
+him like calves, and rolled over and over, stunned and sprawling.
+
+The completeness of this victory, establishing his supremacy beyond
+cavil, should have satisfied the King, especially as this was not the
+mating season and there could be no question of rivalry. But his heart
+was bursting with injury, and his thirst for vengeance was raging to
+be glutted. As the vanquished bulls struggled to recover their feet,
+he bounded upon the nearest and trod him down again mercilessly. The
+other, meanwhile, fled for his life, stricken with shameless terror;
+and the exile, leaving his victim, went thundering in pursuit,
+determined that both should be annihilated. It was a terrifying sight,
+the black giant, mane erect, neck out-thrust, mouth open, eyes glaring
+with implacable fury, sweeping down upon the fugitive with his
+terrific strides.
+
+But just then, when another stride would have sufficed, a strange
+thing happened! A flying noose settled over the pursuer's head,
+tightened, jerked his neck aside, and threw him with a violence that
+knocked the wind clean out of his raging body. While his vast lungs
+sobbed and gasped to recover the vital air, other nooses whipped about
+his legs; and before he could recover himself even enough to struggle,
+he was once more trussed up as he had been by Uncle Adam amid the
+snows of Saugamauk.
+
+In this ignominious position, his heart bursting with shame and
+impotence, he was left lying while his two battered victims were
+lassoed and led away. Since it was plain that the King would not
+suffer them to live in his kingdom, even as humble subjects, they were
+to be removed to some more modest domain; for the King, whether he
+deserved it or not, was to have the best reserved for him.
+
+It was little kingly he felt, the fettered giant, as he lay there
+panting on his side. The cows came up and gazed at him with a kind of
+placid scorn, till his furious snortings and the undaunted rage that
+flamed in his eyes made them draw back apprehensively. Then, the men
+who had overthrown him returned. They dragged him unceremoniously up
+to the gate, slipped his bonds, and discreetly put themselves on the
+other side of the barrier before he could get to his feet. With a
+grunt he wheeled and faced them with such hate in his eyes that they
+thought he would once more hurl himself upon the bars. But he had
+learned his lesson. For a few moments he stood quivering. Then, as if
+recognizing at last a mastery too absolute even for him to challenge,
+he shook himself violently, turned away, and stalked off to join the
+herd.
+
+That evening, about sundown, it turned colder. Clouds gathered
+heavily, and there was the sense of coming snow in the air. A great
+wind, rising fitfully, drew down out of the north. Seeing no covert to
+his liking, the King led his little herd to the top of a naked knoll,
+where he could look about and choose a shelter. But that great wind
+out of the north, thrilling in his nostrils, got into his heart and
+made him forget what he had come for. Out across the alien gloom he
+stared, across the huddled, unknown masses of the dark, till he
+thought he saw the bald summit of Old Saugamauk rising out of its
+forests, till he thought he heard the wind roar in the spruce tops,
+the dead branches clash and crack. The cows, for a time, huddled close
+to his massive flanks, expecting some new thing from his vast
+strength. Then, as the storm gathered, they remembered the shelter
+which man had provided for them, and the abundant forage it contained.
+One after the other they turned and filed away slowly down the slopes,
+through the dim trees, towards the corner where they knew a gate would
+stand open for them, and then a door into a warm-smelling shed. The
+King, lost in his dream, did not notice their going. But suddenly,
+feeling himself alone, he started and looked about. The last of the
+yearlings, at its mother's heels, was just vanishing through the windy
+gloom. He hesitated, started to follow, then stopped abruptly. Let
+them go! They would return to him probably. Turning back to his
+station on the knoll, he stood with his head held high, his nostrils
+drinking the cold, while the winter night closed in upon him, and the
+wind out of his own north rushed and roared solemnly in his face.
+
+
+
+
+THE GRAY MASTER
+
+
+
+
+THE GRAY MASTER
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Why he was so much bigger, more powerful, and more implacably savage
+than the other members of the gray, spectral pack, which had appeared
+suddenly from the north to terrorize their lone and scattered
+clearings, the settlers of the lower Quah-Davic Valley could not
+guess. Those who were of French descent among them, and full of the
+old Acadian superstitions, explained it simply enough by saying he was
+a _loup-garou_, or "wer-wolf," and resigned themselves to the
+impossibility of contending against a creature of such supernatural
+malignity and power. But their fellows of English speech, having no
+such tradition to fall back upon, were mystified and indignant. The
+ordinary gray, or "cloudy," wolf of the East they knew, though he was
+so rare south of Labrador that few of them had ever seen one. They
+dismissed them all, indifferently, as "varmin." But this unaccountable
+gray ravager was bigger than any two such wolves, fiercer and more
+dauntless than any ten. Though the pack he led numbered no more than
+half a dozen, he made it respected and dreaded through all the wild
+leagues of the Quah-Davic. To make things worse, this long-flanked,
+long-jawed marauder was no less cunning than fierce. When the
+settlers, seeking vengeance for sheep, pigs, and cattle slaughtered by
+his pack, went forth to hunt him with dogs and guns, it seemed that
+there was never a wolf in the country. Nevertheless, either that same
+night or the next, it was long odds that one or more of those same
+dogs who had been officious in the hunt would disappear. As for traps
+and poisoned meat, they proved equally futile. They were always
+visited, to be sure, by the pack, at some unexpected and
+indeterminable moment, but treated always with a contumelious scorn
+which was doubtless all that such clumsy tactics merited. Meanwhile
+the ravages went on, and the children were kept close housed at night,
+and cool-eyed old woodsmen went armed and vigilant along the lonely
+roads. The French _habitant_ crossed himself, and the Saxon cursed his
+luck; and no one solved the mystery.
+
+Yet, after all, as Arthur Kane, the young schoolmaster at Burnt Brook
+Cross-Roads, began dimly to surmise, the solution was quite simple. A
+lucky gold-miner, returning from the Klondike, had brought with him
+not only gold and an appetite, but also a lank, implacable, tameless
+whelp from the packs that haunt the sweeps of northern timber. The
+whelp had gnawed his way to freedom. He had found, fought, thrashed,
+and finally adopted, a little pack of his small, Eastern kin. He had
+thriven, and grown to the strength and stature that were his rightful
+heritage. And "the Gray Master of the Quah-Davic," as Kane had dubbed
+him, was no _loup-garou_, no outcast human soul incarcerate in wolf
+form, but simply a great Alaskan timber-wolf.
+
+But this, when all is said, is quite enough. A wolf that can break the
+back of a full-grown collie at one snap of his jaws, and gallop off
+with the carcass as if it were a chipmunk, is about as undesirable a
+neighbor, in the night woods, as any _loup-garou_ ever devised by the
+_habitant's_ excitable imagination.
+
+All up and down the Quah-Davic Valley the dark spruce woods were full
+of game,--moose, deer, hares, and wild birds innumerable,--with roving
+caribou herds on the wide barren beyond the hill-ridge. Nevertheless,
+the great gray wolf would not spare the possessions of the settlers.
+His pack haunted the fringes of the settlements with a needless
+tenacity which seemed to hold a challenge in it, a direct and insolent
+defiance. And the feeling of resentment throughout the Valley was on
+the point of crystallizing into a concerted campaign of vengeance
+which would have left even so cunning a strategist as the Gray Master
+no choice but to flee or fall, when something took place which quite
+changed the course of public sentiment. Folk so disagreed about it
+that all concerted action became impossible, and each one was left to
+deal with the elusive adversary in his own way.
+
+This was what happened.
+
+In a cabin about three miles from the nearest neighbor lived the Widow
+Baisley, alone with her son Paddy, a lad under ten years old, and
+little for his age. One midwinter night she was taken desperately ill,
+and Paddy, reckless of the terrors of the midnight solitudes, ran
+wildly to get help. The moon was high and full, and the lifeless
+backwoods road was a narrow, bright, white thread between the silent
+black masses of the spruce forest. Now and then, as he remembered
+afterwards, his ear caught a sound of light feet following him in the
+dark beyond the roadside. But his plucky little heart was too full of
+panic grief about his mother to have any room for fear as to himself.
+Only the excited amazement of his neighbors, over the fact that he had
+made the journey in safety, opened his eyes to the hideous peril he
+had come through. Willing helpers hurried back with him to his
+mother's bedside. And on the way one of them, a keen huntsman who had
+more than once pitted his woodcraft in vain against that of the Gray
+Master, had the curiosity to step off the road and examine the snow
+under the thick spruces. Perhaps imagination misled him, when he
+thought he caught a glimpse of savage eyes, points of green flame,
+fading off into the black depths. But there could be no doubt as to
+the fresh tracks he found in the snow. There they were,--the
+footprints of the pack, like those of so many big dogs,--and among
+them the huge trail of the great, far-striding leader. All the way,
+almost from his threshold, these sinister steps had paralleled those
+of the hurrying child. Close to the edge of the darkness they
+ran,--close, within the distance of one swift leap,--yet never any
+closer!
+
+Why had the great gray wolf, who faced and pulled down the bull moose,
+and from whose voice the biggest dogs in the settlements ran like
+whipped curs--why had he and his stealthy pack spared this easy prey?
+It was inexplicable, though many had theories good enough to be
+laughed to scorn by those who had none. The _habitants_, of course,
+had all their superstitions confirmed, and with a certain respect and
+refinement of horror added: Here was a _loup-garou_ so crafty as to
+spare, on occasion! He must be conciliated, at all costs. They would
+hunt him no more, his motives being so inexplicable. Let him take a
+few sheep, or a steer, now and then, and remember that _they_, at
+least, were not troubling him. As for the English-speaking settlers,
+their enmity cooled down to the point where they could no longer get
+together any concentrated bitterness. It was only a big rascal of a
+wolf, anyway, scared to touch a white man's child, and certainly
+nothing for a lot of grown men to organize about. Some of the women
+jumped to the conclusion that a certain delicacy of sentiment had
+governed the wolves in their strange forbearance, while others
+honestly believed that the pack had been specially sent by Providence
+to guard the child through the forest on his sacred errand. But all,
+whatever their views, agreed in flouting the young schoolteacher's
+uninteresting suggestion that perhaps the wolves had not happened, at
+the moment, to be hungry.
+
+As it chanced, however, even this very rational explanation of Kane's
+was far from the truth. The truth was that the great wolf had profited
+by his period of captivity in the hands of a masterful man. Into his
+fine sagacity had penetrated the conception--hazy, perhaps, but none
+the less effective--that man's vengeance would be irresistible and
+inescapable if once fairly aroused. This conception he had enforced
+upon the pack. It was enough. For, of course, even to the most
+elementary intelligence among the hunting, fighting kindreds of the
+wild, it was patent that the surest way to arouse man's vengeance
+would be to attack man's young. The intelligence lying behind the
+wide-arched skull of the Gray Master was equal to more intricate and
+less obvious conclusions than that.
+
+Among all the scattered inhabitants of the Quah-Davic Valley there was
+no one who devoted quite so much attention to the wonderful gray wolf
+as did the young school-teacher. His life at the Burnt Brook
+Cross-Roads, his labors at the little Burnt Brook School, were neither
+so exacting nor so exciting but that he had time on his hands. His
+preferred expedients for spending that time were hunting, and
+studying the life of the wild kindreds. He was a good shot with both
+rifle and camera, and would serve himself with one weapon or the other
+as the mood seized him. When life, or his dinner, went ill with him,
+or he found himself fretting hopelessly for the metropolitan
+excitement of the little college city where he had been educated, he
+would choose his rifle. And so wide-reaching, so mysterious, are the
+ties which enmesh all created beings, that it would seem to even
+matters up and relieve his feelings wonderfully just to kill
+something, if only a rabbit or a weasel.
+
+But at other times he preferred the camera.
+
+Naturally Kane was interested in the mysterious gray wolf more than in
+all the other prowlers of the Quah-Davic put together. He was quite
+unreasonably glad when the plans for a concerted campaign against the
+marauder so suddenly fell through. That so individual a beast should
+have its career cut short by an angry settler's bullet, to avenge a
+few ordinary pigs or sheep, was a thing he could hardly contemplate
+with patience. To scatter the pack would be to rob the Quah-Davic
+solitudes of half their romance. He determined to devote himself to a
+study of the great wolf's personality and characteristics, and to
+foil, as far as this could be done without making himself unpopular,
+such plots as might be laid for the beast's undoing.
+
+Recognizing, however, that this friendly interest might not be
+reciprocated, Kane chose his rifle rather than his camera as a weapon,
+on those stinging, blue-white nights when he went forth to seek
+knowledge of the gray wolf's ways. His rifle was a well-tried
+repeating Winchester, and he carried a light, short-handled axe in his
+belt besides the regulation knife; so he had no serious misgivings as
+he trod the crackling, moonlit snow beneath the moose-hide webbing of
+his snowshoes. But not being utterly foolhardy, he kept to the open
+stretches of meadow, or river-bed, or snow-buried lake, rather than in
+the close shadows of the forest.
+
+But now, when he was so expectant, the wolf-pack seemed to find
+business elsewhere. For nights not a howl had been heard, not a fresh
+track found, within miles of Burnt Brook Cross-Roads. Then,
+remembering that a watched pot takes long to boil, Kane took
+fishing-lines and bait, and went up the wide, white brook-bed to the
+deep lake in the hills, whence it launches its shallow flood towards
+the Quah-Davic. He took with him also for companionship, since this
+time he was not wolf-hunting, a neighbor's dog that was forever after
+him--a useless, yellow lump of mongrel dog-flesh, but friendly and
+silent. After building a hasty shelter of spruce boughs some distance
+out from shore in the flooding light, he chopped holes through the ice
+and fell to fishing for the big lake trout that inhabited those deep
+waters. He had luck. And soon, absorbed in the new excitement, he had
+forgotten all about the great gray wolf.
+
+It was late, for Kane had slept the early part of the night, waiting
+for moonrise before starting on his expedition. The air was tingling
+with windless cold, and ghostly white with the light of a crooked,
+waning moon. Suddenly, without a sound, the dog crept close against
+Kane's legs. Kane felt him tremble. Looking up sharply, his eyes fell
+on a tall, gray form, sitting erect on the tip of a naked point, not a
+hundred yards away, and staring, not at him, but at the moon.
+
+In spite of himself, Kane felt a pricking in his cheeks, a creeping of
+the skin under his hair. The apparition was so sudden, and, above all,
+the cool ignoring of his presence was so disconcerting. Moreover,
+through that half-sinister light, his long muzzle upstretched towards
+the moon, and raised as he was a little above the level on which Kane
+was standing, the wolf looked unnaturally and impossibly tall. Kane
+had never heard of a wolf acting in this cool, self-possessed,
+arrogantly confident fashion, and his mind reverted obstinately to the
+outworn superstitions of his _habitants_ friends. But, after all, it
+was this wolf, not an ordinary brush-fence wolf, that he was so
+anxious to study; and the unexpected was just what he had most reason
+to expect! He was getting what he came for.
+
+Kane knew that the way to study the wild creatures was to keep still
+and make no noise. So be stiffened into instant immobility, and
+regretted that he had brought the dog with him. But he need not have
+worried about the dog, for that intelligent animal showed no desire to
+attract the Gray Master's notice. He was crouched behind Kane's legs,
+and motionless except for his shuddering.
+
+For several minutes no one stirred--nothing stirred in all that frozen
+world. Then, feeling the cold begin to creep in upon him in the
+stillness, Kane had to lift his thick-gloved hands to chafe his ears.
+He did it cautiously, but the caution was superfluous. The great wolf
+apparently had no objection to his moving as much as he liked. Once,
+indeed, those green, lambent eyes flamed over him, but casually, in
+making a swift circuit of the shores of the lake and the black fringe
+of the firs; but for all the interest which their owner vouchsafed
+him, Kane might as well have been a juniper bush.
+
+Knowing very well, however, that this elaborate indifference could not
+be other than feigned, Kane was patient, determined to find out what
+the game was. At the same time, he could not help the strain beginning
+to tell on him. Where was the rest of the pack? From time to time he
+glanced searchingly over his shoulder towards the all-concealing fir
+woods.
+
+At last, as if considering himself utterly alone, the great wolf
+opened his jaws, stretched back his neck, and began howling his
+shrill, terrible serenade to the moon. As soon as he paused, came
+far-off nervous barkings and yelpings from dogs who hated and trembled
+in the scattered clearings. But no wolf-howl made reply. The pack, for
+all the sign they gave, might have vanished off the earth. And Kane
+wondered what strong command from their leader could have kept them
+silent when all their ancient instincts bade them answer.
+
+As if well satisfied with his music, the great wolf continued to
+beseech the moon so persistently that at last Kane lost patience. He
+wanted more variety in the programme. Muttering, "I'll see if I can't
+rattle your fine composure a bit, my friend!" he raised his rifle and
+sent a bullet whining over the wolf's head. The wolf cocked his ears
+slightly and looked about carelessly, as if to say, "What's that?"
+then coolly resumed his serenade.
+
+Nettled by such ostentatious nonchalance, Kane drove another bullet
+into the snow within a few inches of the wolf's forefeet. This proved
+more effective. The great beast looked down at the place where the
+ball had struck, sniffed at it curiously, got up on all fours, and
+turned and stared steadily at Kane for perhaps half a minute. Kane
+braced himself for a possible onslaught. But it never came. Whirling
+lightly, the Gray Master turned his back on the disturber of his song,
+and trotted away slowly, without once looking back. He did not make
+directly for the cover, but kept in full view and easy gunshot for
+several hundred yards. Then he disappeared into the blackness of the
+spruce woods. Thereupon the yellow mongrel, emerging from his shelter
+behind Kane's legs, pranced about on the snow before him with every
+sign of admiration and relief.
+
+But Kane was too puzzled to be altogether relieved. It was not
+according to the books for any wolf, great or small, to conduct
+himself in this supercilious fashion. Looking back along the white
+bed of the brook, the path by which he must return, he saw that the
+sinking of the moon would very soon involve it in thick shadow. This
+was not as he wished it. He had had enough of fishing. Gathering up
+his now frozen prizes, and strapping the bag that contained them over
+his shoulder, so as to leave both hands free, he set out for home at
+the long, deliberate, yet rapid lope of the experienced snowshoer; and
+the yellow dog, confidence in his companion's prowess now thoroughly
+established, trotted on heedlessly three or four paces ahead.
+
+Already the shadow of the woods lay halfway across the bed of the
+brook, but down the middle of the strip of brightness, still some five
+or six paces in breadth, Kane swung steadily. As he went, he kept a
+sharp eye on the shadowed edge of his path. He had gone perhaps a
+mile, when all at once he felt a tingling at the roots of his hair,
+which seemed to tell him he was being watched from the darkness. Peer
+as he would, however, he could catch no hint of moving forms; strain
+his ears as he might, he could hear no whisper of following feet.
+Moreover, he trusted to the keener senses, keener instincts, of the
+dog, to give him warning of any furtive approach; and the dog was
+obviously at ease.
+
+He was just beginning to execrate himself for letting his nerves get
+too much on edge, when suddenly out from the black branches just ahead
+shot a long, spectral shape and fell upon the dog. There was one
+choked yelp--and the dog and the terrible shape vanished together,
+back into the blackness.
+
+It was all so instantaneous that before Kane could get his rifle up
+they were gone. Startled and furious, he fired at random, three times,
+into cover. Then he steadied himself, remembering that the number of
+cartridges in his chamber was not unlimited. Seeing to it that his axe
+and knife were both loose for instant action, he stopped and
+replenished his Winchester. Then he hurried on as fast as he could
+without betraying haste.
+
+As he went, he was soon vividly conscious that the wolves--not the
+Gray Master alone, but the whole pack also--were keeping pace with him
+through the soundless dark beyond the rim of the spruces. But not a
+hint of their grim companioning could he see or hear. He felt it
+merely in the creeping of his skin, the elemental stirring of the hair
+at the back of his neck. From moment to moment he expected the swift
+attack, the battle for his life. But he was keyed up to it. It was not
+fear that made his nerves tingle, but the tense, trembling excitement
+of the situation. Even against these strange, hidden forces of the
+forest, his spirit felt sure of victory. He felt as if his rifle would
+go up and speak, almost of itself, unerringly at the first instant of
+attack, even before the adversary broke into view. But through all the
+drawn-out length of those last three miles his hidden adversaries gave
+no sign, save that once a dead branch, concealed under the snow,
+snapped sharply. His rifle was at his shoulder, it seemed to him,
+almost before the sound reached his ear. But nothing came of it. Then
+a panic-mad rabbit, stretched straight out in flight, darted across
+the fast narrowing brightness of his path. But nothing followed. And
+at last, after what seemed to him hours, he came out upon the open
+pastures overlooking Burnt Brook Settlement. Here he ran on a little
+way; and then, because the strain had been great, he sat down suddenly
+upon a convenient stump and burst into a peal of laughter which must
+have puzzled the wolves beyond measure.
+
+After this, though well aware that the Gray Master's inexplicable
+forbearance had saved him a battle which, for all his confidence,
+might quite conceivably have gone against him, Kane's interest in the
+mysterious beast was uncompromisingly hostile. He was bitter on
+account of the dog. He felt that the great wolf had put a dishonor
+upon him; and for a few days he was no longer the impartial student of
+natural history, but the keen, primitive hunter with the blood-lust
+hot in his veins. Then this mood passed, or, rather, underwent a
+change. He decided that the Gray Master was, indeed, too individual a
+beast to be just snuffed out, but, at the same time, far too dangerous
+to be left at liberty.
+
+And now all the thought and effort that could be spared from his daily
+duties at the Cross-Roads were bent to the problem of capturing the
+great wolf alive. He would be doing a service to the whole Quah-Davic
+Valley. And he would have the pleasure of presenting the splendid
+captive to his college town, at that time greatly interested in the
+modest beginnings of a zoological garden which its citizens were
+striving to inaugurate. It thrilled his fancy to imagine a tin placard
+on the front of a cage in the little park, bearing the inscription--
+
+ CANIS OCCIDENTALIS.
+ EASTERN NORTH AMERICA.
+ PRESENTED BY ARTHUR KANE, ESQ.
+
+After a few weeks of assiduous trapping, however, Kane felt bound to
+acknowledge that this modest ambition of his seemed remote from
+fulfilment. Every kind of trap he could think of, that would take a
+beast alive, he tried in every kind of way. And having run the whole
+insidious gamut, he would turn patiently to run it all over again. Of
+course, the result was inevitable, for no beast, not even such a one
+as the Gray Master, is a match, in the long run, for a man who is in
+earnest. Yet Kane's triumph, when it blazed upon his startled eyes at
+last, was indirect. In avoiding, and at the same time uncovering and
+making mock of, Kane's traps, the great wolf put his foot into
+another, a powerful bear-trap, which a cunning old trapper had hidden
+near by, without bait. The trap was secured to a tree by a stout
+chain--and rage, strain, tear as he might, the Gray Master found
+himself snared. In his silent fury he would probably have gnawed off
+the captive foot, for the sake of freedom. But before he came to that,
+Kane arrived and occupied his attention fully.
+
+Kane's disappointment, at finding the splendid prize in another trap
+than his own, was but momentary. He knew his successful rival would
+readily part with his claims, for due consideration. But he was
+puzzled as to what should be done in the immediate emergency. He
+wanted to go back home for help, for ropes, straps, and a muzzle with
+which he had provided himself; but he was afraid lest, in his absence,
+the trapper might arrive and shoot the captive, for the sake of the
+pelt and the bounty. In his uncertainty he waited, hoping that the
+trapper might come soon; and by way of practice for the serious
+enterprise that would come later, as well as to direct the prisoner's
+mind a little from his painful predicament, Kane began trying to lasso
+him with a coil of heavy cord which he carried.
+
+His efforts in this direction were not altogether successful, but the
+still fury which they aroused in the great wolf's breast doubtless
+obscured the mordant anguish in his foot. One terrific leap at his
+enemy, resulting in an ignominious overthrow as the chain stopped him
+in mid-air, had convinced the subtle beast of the vanity of such
+tactics. Crouching back, he eyed his adversary in silence, with eyes
+whose hatred seemed to excoriate. But whenever the running noose at
+the end of the cord came coiling swiftly at his head, with one
+lightning snap of his long teeth he would sever it as with a knife. By
+the time Kane had grown tired of this diversion the cord was so full
+of knots that no noose would any longer run.
+
+But at this point the old trapper came slouching up on his snowshoes,
+a twinkle of elation in his shrewd, frosty, blue eyes.
+
+"I reckon we'll show the varmint now as how he ain't no _loup-garou_!"
+he remarked, lightly swinging his axe.
+
+But Kane hastily intervened.
+
+"_Please_ don't kill him, Dave!" he begged. "_I_ want him, bad!
+What'll you take for him?"
+
+"Just as he stands?" demanded the old trapper, with a chuckle. "I
+ain't a-goin' to deliver the goods to yer door, ye know!"
+
+"No," laughed Kane, "just as he stands, right here!"
+
+"Well, seein' as it's you, I don't want no more'n what his pelt'ld
+fetch, an' the bounty on his nose," answered the trapper.
+
+"All right," said Kane. "You wait here a bit, will you, an' keep him
+amused so's he won't gnaw his paw off; an' I'll run back to the
+Cross-Roads and get some rope and things I guess I'll be needing."
+
+When he got back with rope, straps, a big mastiff-muzzle, and a
+toboggan, he found Dave in a very bad humor, and calling the
+watchful, silent, crouching beast hard names. In his efforts to amuse
+himself by stirring that imperturbable and sinister quiet into action,
+he had come just within the range of the Gray Master's spring. Swift
+as that spring was, that of the alert backwoodsman was just swift
+enough to elude it--in part. Dave's own hide had escaped, but his
+heavy jacket of homespun had had the back ripped clean out of it.
+
+But now, for all his matchless strength, courage, and craft, the Gray
+Master's game was played out. The fickle Fates of the wild had
+pronounced against him. He could not parry two flying nooses at once.
+And presently, having been choked for a few moments into
+unconsciousness, he awoke to find himself bound so that he could not
+move a leg, and his mighty jaws imprisoned in a strange cage of straps
+and steel. He was tied upon the toboggan, and being dragged swiftly
+through the forest--that free forest of which he had so long felt
+himself master--at the heels of his two conquerors. His only poor
+consolation was that the hideous, crunching thing had been removed
+from his bleeding paw, which, however, anguished cruelly for the
+soothing of his tongue.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+During the strenuous and dangerous weeks while Kane was gaoler to his
+dreaded captive, his respect for the grim beast's tameless spirit by
+no means diminished; but he had no shadow of misgiving as to the
+future to which he destined his victim. He felt that in sending the
+incomparable wolf to the gardens, where he would be well cared for,
+and at the same time an educative influence, he was being both just
+and kind. And it was with feelings of unmixed delight that he received
+a formal resolution of gratitude from the zoological society for his
+valued and in some respects unique donation.
+
+It was about a year and a half later that Kane had occasion to revisit
+the city of his Alma Mater. As soon as possible he hurried to inspect
+the little gardens, which had already marched so far towards success
+as to be familiarly styled "The Zoo." There were two or three paddocks
+of deer, of different North American species--for the society was
+inclined to specialize on the wild kindreds of native origin. There
+were moose, caribou, a couple of bears, raccoons, foxes, porcupines,
+two splendid pumas, a rather flea-bitten and toothless tiger, and the
+Gray Master, solitary in his cage!
+
+A sure instinct led Kane straight to that cage, which immediately
+adjoined the big double cage of the pumas. As he approached, he caught
+sight of a tall, gray shape pacing, pacing, pacing, pacing to and fro
+behind the bars with a sort of measured restlessness that spoke an
+immeasurable monotony. When he reached the front of the cage, Kane saw
+that the great wolf's eyes were noting nothing of what was about him,
+but dim with some far-off vision. As he marked the look in them, and
+thought of what they must be remembering and aching for, his heart
+began to smite him. He felt his first pang of self-reproach, for
+having doomed to ignominious exile and imprisonment this splendid
+creature who had deserved, at least, to die free. As he mused over
+this point, half angrily, the Gray Master suddenly paused, and his
+thin nostrils wrinkled. Perhaps there still clung about Kane's clothes
+some scent of the spruce woods, some pungent breath of the cedar
+swamps. He turned and looked Kane straight in the eyes.
+
+There was unmistakable recognition in that deep stare. There was
+also, to Kane's sensitive imagination, a tameless hate and an
+unspeakable but dauntless despair. Convicted in his own mind of a
+gross and merciless misunderstanding of his wild kindreds, whom he
+professed to know so well, he glanced up and saw the painted placard
+staring down at him, exactly as he had anticipated----
+
+ CANIS OCCIDENTALIS.
+ EASTERN NORTH AMERICA.
+ PRESENTED BY ARTHUR KANE, ESQ.
+
+The sight sickened him. He had a foolish impulse to tear it down and
+to abase himself with a plea for pardon before the silent beast behind
+the bars. But when he looked again, the Gray Master had turned away,
+and was once more, with indrawn, far-off vision in his eyes, pacing,
+pacing, pacing to and fro. Kane felt overwhelmed with the intolerable
+weariness of it, as if it had been going on, just like that, ever
+since he had pronounced this doom upon his vanquished adversary, and
+as if it would go on like that forever. In vain by coaxing word, by
+sharp, sudden whistle, by imitations of owl, loon, and deer calls,
+which brought all the boys in the place admiringly about him, did he
+strive to catch again the attention of the captive. But not once
+more, even for the fleeting fraction of a second, would the Gray
+Master turn his eyes. And presently, angry and self-reproachful, Kane
+turned on his heel and went home, pursued by the enthusiasm of the
+small boys.
+
+After this, Kane went nearly every day to the little "Zoo"; but never
+again did he win the smallest hint of notice from the Gray Master. And
+ever that tireless pacing smote him with bitterest self-reproach. Half
+unconsciously he made it a sort of penance to go and watch his victim,
+till at last he found himself indulging in sentimental, idiotic
+notions of trying to ransom the prisoner. Realizing that any such
+attempt would make him supremely ridiculous, and that such a dangerous
+and powerful creature could not be set free anywhere, he consoled
+himself with a resolve that never again would he take captive any of
+the freedom-loving, tameless kindreds of the wilderness. He would kill
+them and have cleanly done with it, or leave them alone.
+
+One morning, thinking to break the spell of that eternal, hopeless
+pacing by catching the Gray Master at his meals, Kane went up to the
+gardens very early, before any of the usual visitors had arrived. He
+found that the animals had already been fed. The cages were being
+cleaned. He congratulated himself on his opportune arrival, for this
+would give him a new insight into the ways of the beasts with their
+keepers.
+
+The head-keeper, as it chanced, was a man of long experience with wild
+animals, in one of the chief zoological parks of the country. Long
+familiarity, however, had given him that most dangerous gift,
+contempt. And he had lost his position through that fault most
+unforgivable in an animal keeper, drunkenness. Owing to this fact, the
+inexperienced authorities of this little "Zoo" had been able to obtain
+his services at a comparatively moderate wage--and were congratulating
+themselves on the possession of a treasure.
+
+On this particular morning, Biddell was not by any means himself. He
+was cleaning the cage of the two pumas, and making at the same time
+desperate efforts to keep his faculties clear and avoid betraying his
+condition. The two big cats seemed to observe nothing peculiar in his
+manner, and obeyed him, sulkily, as usual; but Kane noticed that the
+great wolf, though pacing up and down according to his custom, had his
+eyes on the man in the next cage, instead of upon his own secret
+visions. Biddell had driven the two pumas back through the door which
+led from the open cage to the room which served them for a den, and
+closed the door on them. Then, having finished his duties there, he
+unfastened the strong door between this cage and that of the Gray
+Master, and stepped through, leaving the door slightly ajar.
+
+Biddell was armed, of course, with a heavy-pronged fork, but he
+carried it carelessly as he went about his work, as if he had long
+since taught the sombre wolf to keep at a distance. But to-day the
+wolf acted curiously. He backed away in silence, as usual, but eyed
+the man fixedly with a look which, as it seemed to Kane, showed
+anything rather than fear. The stiff hair rose slightly along his neck
+and massive shoulders. Kane could not help congratulating himself that
+he was not in the keeper's place. But he felt sure everything was all
+right, as Biddell was supposed to know his business.
+
+When Biddell came to the place where the wolf was standing, the latter
+made way reluctantly, still backing, and staring with that sinister
+fixity which Kane found so impressive. He wondered if Biddell noticed.
+He was just on the point of speaking to him about it, through the
+bars, when he chanced to glance aside to the cage of the pumas.
+Biddell, in his foggy state of mind, had forgotten to close an inner
+door connecting the two rooms in the rear. The pumas had quietly
+passed through, and emerged again into their cage by the farther
+entrance. Catching sight of the door into the wolf's cage standing
+ajar, they had crept up to it; and now, with one great noiseless paw,
+the leader of the two was softly pushing it open.
+
+Kane gave an inarticulate yell of warning. No words were needed to
+translate that warning to the keeper, who was sobered completely as he
+flashed round and saw what was happening. With a sharp command he
+rushed to drive the pumas back and close the gate. But one was already
+through, and the other blocked the way.
+
+At this tense instant, while Kane glanced swiftly aside to see if any
+help were in sight, the Gray Master launched himself across the cage.
+Kane could not see distinctly, so swiftly did it happen, whether the
+man or the intruding puma was the object of that mad rush. But in the
+next second the man was down, on his face, with the silent wolf and
+the screeching puma locked in a death grapple on top of him.
+
+[Illustration: "Then the second puma pounced."]
+
+Horrified, and yelling for help, Kane tore at the bars, but there was
+no way of getting in, the door being locked. He saw that the wolf had
+secured a hold upon the puma's throat, but that the great cat's claws
+were doing deadly work. Then the second puma pounced, with a screech,
+upon the Gray Master's back, bearing him down.
+
+At this moment Biddell rolled out from under the raving, writhing
+heap, and staggered to his feet, bleeding, but apparently uninjured.
+With his fork and his booted foot he threw himself upon the combatants
+furiously, striving to separate them. After what seemed to Kane an age
+he succeeded in forcing off the second puma and driving it through the
+gate, which he shut. Then he returned to the fight.
+
+But he had little more to do now, for the fight was over. Though no
+wolf is supposed to be a fair match for a puma, the Gray Master, with
+his enormous strength and subtle craft, might perhaps have held his
+own against his first antagonist alone. But against the two he was
+powerless. The puma, badly torn, now crouched snarling upon his
+unresisting body. Biddell forced the victor off and drove him into a
+corner, where he lay lashing his sides with heavy, twitching tail.
+
+The keeper was sober enough now. One long look at the great wolf's
+body satisfied him it was all over. He turned and saw Kane's white
+face pressed against the bars. With a short laugh he shook himself,
+to make sure he was all sound, then pushed the body of the Gray Master
+gently with his foot. Yet there was respect, not disrespect, in the
+gesture.
+
+"I wouldn't have had that happen for a thousand dollars, Mr. Kane!"
+said he in a voice of keen regret. "That was a great beast, an' we'll
+never get another wolf to match him."
+
+Kane was on the point of saying that it would _not_ have happened but
+for certain circumstances which it was unnecessary for him to specify.
+He realized, however, that he was glad it had happened, glad the long
+pacing, pacing, pacing was at an end, glad the load of his
+self-reproach was lifted off. So he said something quite different.
+
+"Well, Biddell, he's _free_! And maybe, when all's said, that was just
+what he was after!"
+
+Then he turned and strode hurriedly away, more content in his heart
+than he had felt for days.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN-GAZER
+
+
+
+
+THE SUN-GAZER
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+To Jim Horner it seemed as if the great, white-headed eagle was in
+some way the uttered word of the mountain and the lake--of the lofty,
+solitary, granite-crested peak, and of the deep, solitary water at its
+base. As his canoe raced down the last mad rapid, and seemed to snatch
+breath again as it floated out upon the still water of the lake, Jim
+would rest his paddle across the gunwales and look upward expectantly.
+First his keen, far-sighted, gray eyes would sweep the blue arc of
+sky, in search of the slow circling of wide, motionless wings. Then,
+if the blue was empty of this far shape, his glance would range at
+once to a dead pine standing sole on a naked and splintered shoulder
+of the mountain which he knew as "Old Baldy." There he was almost sure
+to see the great bird sitting, motionless and majestic, staring at the
+sun. Floating idly and smoking, resting after his long battle with
+the rapids, he would watch, till the immensity and the solitude would
+creep in upon his spirit and oppress him. Then, at last, a shrill
+yelp, far off and faint, but sinister, would come from the pine-top;
+and the eagle, launching himself on open wings from his perch, would
+either wheel upward into the blue, or flap away over the serried
+fir-tops to some ravine in the cliffs that hid his nest.
+
+One day, when Jim came down the river and stopped, as usual, to look
+for the great bird, he scanned in vain both sky and cliff-side. At
+last he gave up the search and paddled on down the lake with a sense
+of loss. Something had vanished from the splendor of the solitude. But
+presently he heard, close overhead, the beat and whistle of vast
+wings, and looking up, he saw the eagle passing above him, flying so
+low that he could catch the hard, unwinking, tameless stare of its
+black and golden eyes as they looked down upon him with a sort of
+inscrutable challenge. He noted also a peculiarity which he had never
+seen in any other eagle. This one had a streak of almost black
+feathers immediately over its left eye, giving it a heavy and sinister
+eyebrow. The bird carried in the clutch of its talons a big,
+glistening lake trout, probably snatched from the fish-hawk; and Jim
+was able to take note of the very set of its pinion-feathers as the
+wind hummed in their tense webs. Flying with a massive power quite
+unlike the ease of his soaring, the eagle mounted gradually up the
+steep, passed the rocky shoulder with its watch-tower pine, and
+disappeared over the edge of a ledge which looked to Horner like a
+mere scratch across the face of the mountain.
+
+"There's where his nest is, sure!" muttered Horner to himself. And
+remembering that cold challenge in the bird's yellow stare, he
+suddenly decided that he wanted to see an eagle's nest. He had plenty
+of time. He was in no particular hurry to get back to the settlement
+and the gossip of the cross-roads store. He turned his canoe to land,
+lifted her out and hid her in the bushes, and struck back straight for
+the face of "Old Baldy."
+
+The lower slope was difficult to climb, a tangle of tumbled boulders
+and fallen trunks, mantled in the soundless gloom of the fir-forest.
+Skilled woodsman though he was, Horner's progress was so slow, and the
+windless heat became so oppressive to his impatience, that he was
+beginning to think of giving up the idle venture, when suddenly he
+came face to face with a perpendicular and impassable wall of cliff.
+This curt arrest to his progress was just what was needed to stiffen
+his wavering resolution. He understood the defiance which his ready
+fancy had found in the stare of the eagle. Well, he had accepted the
+challenge. He would not be baffled by a rock. If he could not climb
+over it, he would go round it; but he would find the nest.
+
+With an obstinate look in his eyes, Horner began to work his way along
+the foot of the cliff towards the right. Taking advantage of every
+inch of ascent that he could gain, he at last found, to his
+satisfaction, that he had made sufficient height to clear the gloom of
+the woods. As he looked out over their tops, a light breeze cooled his
+wet forehead, and he pressed on with fresh vigor. Presently the slope
+grew a trifle easier, the foothold surer, and he mounted more rapidly.
+The steely lake, and the rough-ridged, black-green sea of the fir-tops
+began to unroll below him. At last he rounded an elbow of the steep,
+and there before him, upthrust perhaps a hundred feet above his head,
+stood the outlying shoulder of rock, crowned with its dead pine, on
+which he was accustomed to see the eagle sitting. Even as he looked,
+motionless, there came a rushing of great wings; and suddenly there
+was the eagle himself, erect on his high perch, and staring, as it
+seemed to Horner, straight into the sun.
+
+When Horner resumed his climbing, the great bird turned his head and
+gazed down upon him with an ironic fixity which betrayed neither dread
+nor wonder. Concluding that the nest would be lying somewhere within
+view of its owner's watch-tower, Horner now turned his efforts towards
+reaching the dead pine. With infinite difficulty, and with a few
+bruises to arm and leg, he managed to cross the jagged crevice which
+partly separated the jutting rock-pier from the main face of the
+cliff. Then, laboriously and doggedly, he dragged himself up the
+splintered slope, still being forced around to the right, till there
+fell away below him a gulf into which it was not good for the nervous
+to look. Feeling that a fate very different from that of Lot's wife
+might be his if he should let himself look back too indiscreetly, he
+kept his eyes upon the lofty goal and pressed on upwards with a haste
+that now grew a trifle feverish. It began to seem to him that the
+irony of the eagle's changeless stare might perhaps not be
+unjustified.
+
+Not till Horner had conquered the steep and, panting but elated,
+gained the very foot of the pine, did the eagle stir. Then, spreading
+his wings with a slow disdain, as if not dread but aversion to this
+unbidden visitor bade him go, he launched himself on a long, splendid
+sweep over the gulf, and then mounted on a spacious spiral to his
+inaccessible outlook in the blue. Leaning against the bleached and
+scarred trunk of the pine, Horner watched this majestic departure for
+some minutes, recovering his breath and drinking deep the cool and
+vibrant air. Then he turned and scanned the face of the mountain.
+
+[Illustration: "He launched himself on a long, splendid sweep over the
+gulf."]
+
+There it lay, in full view--the nest which he had climbed so far to
+find. It was not more than a hundred yards away. Yet, at first sight,
+it seemed hopelessly out of reach. The chasm separating the ledge on
+which it clung from the outlying rock of the pine was not more than
+twenty feet across; but its bottom was apparently somewhere in the
+roots of the mountain. There was no way of passing it at this point.
+But Horner had a faith that there was a way to be found over or around
+every obstacle in the world, if only one kept on looking for it
+resolutely enough. To keep on looking for a path to the eagle's nest,
+he struggled forward, around the outer slope of the buttress, down a
+ragged incline, and across a narrow and dizzy "saddle-back," which
+brought him presently upon another angle of the steep, facing
+southeast. Clinging with his toes and one hand, while he wiped his
+dripping forehead with his sleeve, he looked up--and saw the whole
+height of the mountain, unbroken and daunting, stretched skyward above
+him.
+
+But to Horner the solemn sight was not daunting in the least.
+
+"Gee!" he exclaimed, grinning with satisfaction. "I _hev_ circumvented
+that there cervice, sure's death!"
+
+Of the world below he had now a view that was almost overpoweringly
+unrestricted; but of the mountain, and his scene of operations, he
+could see only the stretch directly above him. A little calculation
+convinced him, however, that all he had to do was to keep straight on
+up for perhaps a hundred and fifty feet, then, as soon as the slope
+would permit, work around to his left, and descend upon the nest from
+above. Incidentally, he made up his mind that his return journey
+should be made by another face of the mountain--any other, rather than
+that by which he had rashly elected to come.
+
+It seemed to Horner like a mile, that last hundred and fifty feet; but
+at last he calculated that he had gained enough in height. At the same
+time he felt the slope grow easier. Making his way towards the left,
+he came upon a narrow ledge, along which he could move easily
+side-wise, by clinging to the rock. Presently it widened to a path by
+which he could walk almost at ease, with the wide, wild solitude, dark
+green laced with silver watercourses, spread like a stupendous
+amphitheatre far below him. It was the wilderness which he knew so
+well in detail, yet had never before seen as a whole; and the sight,
+for a few moments, held him in a kind of awed surprise. When, at last,
+he tore his gaze free from the majestic spectacle, there, some ten or
+twelve yards below his feet, he saw the object of his quest.
+
+It was nothing much to boast of in the way of architecture, this nest
+of the Kings of the Air--a mere cart-load of sticks and bark and
+coarse grass, apparently tumbled at haphazard upon the narrow ledge.
+But in fact its foundations were so skilfully wedged into the crevices
+of the rock, its structure was so cunningly interwoven, that the
+fiercest winds which scourged that lofty seat were powerless against
+it. It was a secure throne, no matter what tempests might rage around
+it.
+
+Sitting half erect on the nest were two eaglets, almost full grown,
+and so nearly full feathered that Horner wondered why they did not
+take wing at his approach. He did not know that the period of
+helplessness with these younglings of royal birth lasted even after
+they looked as big and well able to take care of themselves as their
+parents. It was a surprise to him, also, to see that they were quite
+unlike their parents in color, being black all over from head to tail,
+instead of a rich brown with snow-white head, neck, and tail. As he
+stared, he slowly realized that the mystery of the rare "black eagle"
+was explained. He had seen one once, flying heavily just above the
+tree-tops, and imagined it a discovery of his own. But now he reached
+the just conclusion that it had been merely a youngster in its first
+plumage.
+
+As he stared, the two young birds returned his gaze with interest,
+watching him with steady, yellow, undaunted eyes from under their
+flat, fierce brows; with high-shouldered wings half raised, they
+appeared quite ready to resent any familiarity which the strange
+intruder might be contemplating.
+
+Horner lay face downward on his ledge, and studied the perpendicular
+rock below him for a way to reach the next. He had no very definite
+idea what he wanted to do when he got there; possibly, if the
+undertaking seemed feasible, he might carry off one of the royal brood
+and amuse himself with trying to domesticate it. But, at any rate, he
+hoped to add something, by a closer inspection, to his rather
+inadequate knowledge of eagles.
+
+And this hope, indeed, as he learned the next moment, was not
+unjustified. Cautiously he was lowering himself over the edge, feeling
+for the scanty and elusive foothold, when all at once the air was
+filled with a rush of mighty wings, which seemed about to overwhelm
+him. A rigid wing-tip buffeted him so sharply that he lost his hold on
+the ledge. With a yell of consternation, which caused his assailant to
+veer off, startled, he fell backwards, and plunged down straight upon
+the nest.
+
+It was the nest only that saved him from instant death. Tough and
+elastic, it broke his fall; but at the same time its elasticity threw
+him off, and on the rebound he went rolling and bumping on down the
+steep slopes below the ledge, with the screaming of the eagles in his
+ears, and a sickening sense in his heart that the sunlit world
+tumbling and turning somersaults before his blurred sight was his last
+view of life. Then, to his dim surprise, he was brought up with a
+thump; and clutching desperately at a bush which scraped his face, he
+lay still. At the same moment a flapping mass of feathers and fierce
+claws landed on top of him, but only to scramble off again as swiftly
+as possible with a hoarse squawk. He had struck one of the young
+eagles in his fall, hurled it from the nest, and brought it down with
+him to this lower ledge which had given him so timely a refuge.
+
+For several minutes, perhaps, he lay clutching the bush desperately
+and staring straight upwards. There he saw both parent eagles whirling
+excitedly, screaming, and staring down at him; and then the edge of
+the nest, somewhat dilapidated by his strange assault, overhanging the
+ledge about thirty feet above. At length his wits came back to him,
+and he cautiously turned his head to see if he was in danger of
+falling if he should relax his hold on the bush. He was in bewildering
+pain, which seemed distributed all over him; but in spite of it he
+laughed aloud, to find that the bush, to which he hung so desperately,
+was in a little hollow on a spacious platform, from which he could not
+have fallen by any chance. At that strange, uncomprehended sound of
+human laughter the eagles ceased their screaming for a few moments and
+wheeled farther aloof.
+
+With great difficulty and anguish Horner raised himself to a sitting
+position and tried to find out how seriously he was hurt. One leg was
+quite helpless. He felt it all over, and came to the conclusion that
+it was not actually broken; but for all the uses of a leg, for the
+present at least, it might as well have been putty, except for the
+fact that it pained him abominably. His left arm and shoulder, too,
+seemed to be little more than useless encumbrances, and he wondered
+how so many bruises and sprains could find place on one human body of
+no more than average size. However, having assured himself, with
+infinite relief, that there were no bones broken, he set his teeth
+grimly and looked about to take account of the situation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+The ledge on which he had found refuge was apparently an isolated one,
+about fifty or sixty feet in length, and vanishing into the face of
+the sheer cliff at either end. It had a width of perhaps twenty-five
+feet; and its surface, fairly level, held some soil in its rocky
+hollows. Two or three dark-green seedling firs, a slim young silver
+birch, a patch or two of wind-beaten grass, and some clumps of
+harebells, azure as the clear sky overhead, softened the bareness of
+this tiny, high-flung terrace. In one spot, at the back, a spread of
+intense green and a handbreadth of moisture on the rock showed where a
+tiny spring oozed from a crevice to keep this lonely oasis in the
+granite alive and fresh.
+
+At the farthest edge of the shelf, and eying him with savage dread,
+sat the young eagle which had fallen with him. Horner noticed, with a
+kind of sympathy, that even the bird, for all his wings, had not come
+out of the affair without some damage; for one of its black wings was
+not held up so snugly as the other. He hoped it was not broken. As he
+mused vaguely upon this unimportant question, his pain so exhausted
+him that he sank back and lay once more staring up at the eagles, who
+were still wheeling excitedly over the nest. In an exhaustion that was
+partly sleep and partly coma, his eyes closed. When he opened them
+again, the sun was hours lower and far advanced towards the west, so
+that the ledge was in shadow. His head was now perfectly clear; and
+his first thought was of getting himself back to the canoe. With
+excruciating effort he dragged himself to the edge of the terrace and
+looked down. The descent, at this point, was all but perpendicular for
+perhaps a hundred feet. In full possession of his powers, he would
+find it difficult enough. In his present state he saw clearly that he
+might just as well throw himself over as attempt it.
+
+Not yet disheartened, however, he dragged himself slowly towards the
+other end of the terrace, where the young eagle sat watching him. As
+he approached, the bird lifted his wings, as if about to launch
+himself over and dare the element which he had not yet learned to
+master. But one wing drooped as if injured, and he knew the attempt
+would be fatal. Opening his beak angrily, he hopped away to the other
+end of the terrace. But Horner was paying no heed to birds at that
+moment. He was staring down the steep, and realizing that this ledge
+which had proved his refuge was now his prison, and not unlikely to
+become also his tomb.
+
+Sinking back against a rock, and grinding his teeth with pain, he
+strove to concentrate his attention upon the problem that confronted
+him. Was he to die of thirst and hunger on this high solitude before
+he could recover sufficiently to climb down? The thought stirred all
+his dogged determination. He _would_ keep alive, and that was all
+there was about it. He _would_ get well, and then the climbing down
+would be no great matter. This point settled, he dismissed it from his
+consideration and turned his thoughts to ways and means. After all,
+there was that little thread of a spring trickling from the rock! He
+would have enough to drink. And as for food--how much worse it would
+have been had the ledge been a bare piece of rock! Here he had some
+grass, and the roots of the herbs and bushes. A man could keep himself
+alive on such things if he had will enough. And, as a last resource,
+there was the young eagle! This idea, however, was anything but
+attractive to him; and it was with eyes of good-will rather than of
+appetite that he glanced at his fellow-prisoner sitting motionless at
+the other extremity of the ledge.
+
+"It'ld be hard lines, pardner, ef I should hev to eat you, after all!"
+he muttered, with a twisted kind of grin. "We're both of us in a hole,
+sure enough, an' I'll play fair as long as I kin!"
+
+As he mused, a great shadow passed over his head, and looking up, he
+saw one of the eagles hovering low above the ledge. It was the male,
+his old acquaintance, staring down at him from under that strange,
+black brow. He carried a large fish in his talons, and was plainly
+anxious to feed his captive young, but not quite ready to approach
+this mysterious man-creature who had been able to invade his eyrie as
+if with wings. Horner lay as still as a stone, watching through
+half-closed lids. The young eagle, seeing food so near, opened its
+beak wide and croaked eagerly; while the mother bird, larger but
+wilder and less resolute than her mate, circled aloof with sharp cries
+of warning. At last, unable any longer to resist the appeals of his
+hungry youngster, the great bird swooped down over him, dropped the
+fish fairly into his clutches, and slanted away with a hurried
+flapping which betrayed his nervousness.
+
+As the youngster fell ravenously upon his meal, tearing it and
+gulping the fragments, Horner drew a deep breath.
+
+"There's where I come in, pardner," he explained. "When I kin git up
+an appetite for that sort of vittles, I'll go shares with you, ef
+y'ain't got no objection!"
+
+Having conceived this idea, Horner was seized with a fear that the
+captive might presently gain the power of flight and get away. This
+was a thought under which he could not lie still. In his pocket he
+always carried a bunch of stout salmon-twine and a bit of copper
+rabbit-wire, apt to be needed in a hundred forest emergencies. He
+resolved to catch the young eagle and tether it securely to a bush.
+
+His first impulse was to set about this enterprise at once. With
+excruciating effort he managed to pull off his heavy woollen
+hunting-shirt, intending to use it as the toreador uses his mantle, to
+entangle the dangerous weapons of his adversary. Then he dragged
+himself across to the other end of the ledge and attempted to corner
+the captive. For this he was not quite quick enough, however. With a
+flop and a squawk the bird eluded him, and he realized that he had
+better postpone the undertaking till the morrow. Crawling back to his
+hollow by the bush, he sank down, utterly exhausted. Not till the
+sharp chill which comes with sunset warned him of its necessity, was
+he able to grapple with the long, painful problem of getting his shirt
+on again.
+
+Through the night he got some broken sleep, though the hardness of his
+bed aggravated every hurt he had suffered. On the edge of dawn he saw
+the male eagle come again--this time more confidently and
+deliberately--to feed the captive. After he was gone, Horner tried to
+move, but found himself now, from the night's chill and the austerity
+of his bed, altogether helpless. Not till the sun was high enough to
+warm him through and through, and not till he had manipulated his legs
+and arms assiduously for more than an hour, did his body feel as if it
+could ever again be of any service to him. Then he once more got off
+his shirt and addressed himself to the catching of the indignant bird
+whom he had elected to be his preserver.
+
+Though the anguish caused by every movement was no less intense than
+it had been the afternoon before, he was stronger now and more in
+possession of his faculties. Before starting the chase, he cut a strip
+from his shirt to wind around the leg of the young eagle, in order
+that he might be able to tether it tightly without cutting the flesh.
+The bird had suddenly become most precious to him!
+
+Very warily he made his approaches, sidling down the ledge so as to
+give his quarry the least possible room for escape. As he drew near,
+the bird turned and faced him, with its one uninjured wing lifted
+menacingly and its formidable beak wide open. Holding the heavy shirt
+ready to throw, Horner crept up cautiously, so intent now upon the
+game that the anguish in the leg which he dragged stiffly behind him
+was almost forgotten. The young bird, meanwhile, waited, motionless
+and vigilant, its savage eyes hard as glass.
+
+At last a faint quiver and shrinking in the bird's form, an
+involuntary contracting of the feathers, gave warning to Horner's
+experienced eye that it was about to spring aside. On the instant he
+flung the shirt, keeping hold of it by the sleeve. By a singular piece
+of luck, upon which he had not counted at all, it opened as he threw
+it, and settled right over the bird's neck and disabled wing, blinding
+and baffling it completely. With a muffled squawk it bounced into the
+air, both talons outspread and clawing madly; but in a second Horner
+had it by the other wing, pulling it down, and rolling himself over
+upon it so as to smother those dangerous claws. He felt them sink
+once into his injured leg, but that was already anguishing so
+vehemently that a little more or less did not matter. In a few moments
+he had his captive bundled up with helplessness, and was dragging it
+to a sturdy bush near the middle of the terrace. Here, without much
+further trouble, he wrapped one of its legs with the strip of flannel
+from his shirt, twisted on a hand-length of wire, and then tethered it
+safely with a couple of yards of his doubled and twisted cord.
+
+Just as he had accomplished this to his satisfaction, and was about to
+undo the imprisoning shirt, it flashed across his mind that it was
+lucky the old eagles had not been on hand to interfere. He glanced
+upward--and saw the dark form dropping like a thunderbolt out of the
+blue. He had just time to fling himself over on his back, lifting his
+arm to shield his face, and his foot to receive the attack, when the
+hiss of that lightning descent filled his ears. Involuntarily he half
+closed his eyes. But no shock came, except a great buffet of air on
+his face. Not quite daring to grapple with that ready defence, the
+eagle had opened its wings when within a few feet of the ledge, and
+swerved upward again, where it hung hovering and screaming. Horner saw
+that it was the female, and shook his fist at her in defiance. Had it
+been his old acquaintance and challenger, the male, he felt sure that
+he would not have got off so easily.
+
+Puzzled and alarmed, the mother now perched herself beside the other
+eaglet, on the edge of the nest. Then, keeping a careful eye upon her,
+lest she should return to the attack, Horner dexterously unrolled the
+shirt, and drew back just in time to avoid a vicious slash from the
+talons of his indignant prisoner. The latter, after some violent
+tugging and flopping at his tether and fierce biting at the wire,
+suddenly seemed to conclude that such futile efforts were undignified.
+He settled himself like a rock and stared unwinkingly at his captor.
+
+It was perhaps an hour after this, when the sun had grown hot, and
+Horner, having slaked his thirst at the spring in the rock, had tried
+rather ineffectually to satisfy his hunger on grass roots, that the
+male eagle reappeared, winging heavily from the farthest end of the
+lake. From his talons dangled a limp form, which Horner presently made
+out to be a duck.
+
+"Good!" he muttered to himself. "I always did like fowl better'n
+fish."
+
+When the eagle arrived, he seemed to notice something different in
+the situation, for he wheeled slowly overhead for some minutes,
+uttering sharp yelps of interrogation. But the appeals of the
+youngster at last brought him down, and he delivered up the prize. The
+moment he was gone, Horner crept up to where the youngster was already
+tearing the warm body to pieces. Angry and hungry, the bird made a
+show of fighting for his rights; but his late experience with his
+invincible conqueror had daunted him. Suddenly he hopped away, the
+full length of his tether; and Horner picked up the mangled victim.
+But his appetite was gone by this time; he was not yet equal to a diet
+of raw flesh. Tossing the prize back to its rightful owner, he
+withdrew painfully to grub for some more grass roots.
+
+[Illustration: "After this the eagle came regularly every three or four
+hours with food for the prisoner."]
+
+After this the eagle came regularly every three or four hours with
+food for the prisoner. Sometimes it was a fish--trout, or brown
+sucker, or silvery chub--sometimes a duck or a grouse, sometimes a
+rabbit or a muskrat. Always it was the male, with that grim black
+streak across the side of his white face, who came. Always Horner made
+a point of taking the prize at once from the angry youngster, and then
+throwing it back to him, unable to stomach the idea of the raw flesh.
+At last, on the afternoon of the third day of his imprisonment, he
+suddenly found that it was not the raw flesh, but the grass roots,
+which he loathed. While examining a fine lake-trout, he remembered
+that he had read of raw fish being excellent food under the right
+conditions. This was surely one of those right conditions. Picking
+somewhat fastidiously, he nevertheless managed to make so good a meal
+off that big trout that there was little but head and tail to toss
+back to his captor.
+
+"Never mind, pardner!" he said seriously. "I'll divide fair nex' time.
+But you know you've been havin' more'n your share lately."
+
+But the bird was so outraged that for a long time he would not look at
+these remnants, and only consented to devour them, at last, when
+Horner was not looking.
+
+After this Horner found it easy enough to partake of his prisoner's
+meals, whether they were of fish, flesh, or fowl; and with the
+ice-cold water from the little spring, and an occasional mouthful of
+leaves and roots, he fared well enough to make progress towards
+recovery. The male eagle grew so accustomed to his presence that he
+would alight beside the prisoner, and threatened Horner with that old,
+cold stare of challenge, and frequently Horner had to drive him off
+in order to save his share of the feast from the rapacity of the
+eaglet. But as for the female, she remained incurably suspicious and
+protesting. From the upper ledge, where she devoted her care to the
+other nestling, she would yelp down her threats and execrations, but
+she never ventured any nearer approach.
+
+For a whole week the naked hours of day and dark had rolled over the
+peak before Horner began to think himself well enough to try the
+descent. His arm and shoulder were almost well, but his leg, in spite
+of ceaseless rubbing and applications of moist earth, remained
+practically helpless. He could not bear his weight on it for a second.
+His first attempt at lowering himself showed him that he must not be
+in too great haste. It was nearly a week more before he could feel
+assured, after experiments at scaling the steep above him, that he was
+fit to face the terrible steep below. Then he thought of the eaglet,
+his unwilling and outraged preserver! After a sharp struggle, of which
+both his arms and legs bore the marks for months, he caught the bird
+once more and examined the injured wing. It was not broken; and he saw
+that its owner would be able to fly all right in time, perhaps as
+soon as his more fortunate brother in the nest above. Satisfied on
+this point, he loosed all the bonds and jumped back to avoid the
+indomitable youngster's retort of beak and claws. Unamazed by his
+sudden freedom, the young eagle flopped angrily away to the farther
+end of the ledge; and Horner, having resumed his useful shirt, started
+to climb down the mountain, whose ascent he had so heedlessly
+adventured nearly two weeks before. As he lowered himself over the
+dizzy brink, he glanced up, to see the male eagle circling slowly
+above him, gazing down at him with the old challenge in his unwinking,
+golden eyes.
+
+"I reckon you win!" said Horner, waving the imperturbable bird a grave
+salutation. "But you're a gentleman, an' I thank you fer your kind
+hospitality."
+
+It was still early morning when Horner started to descend the
+mountain. It was dusk when he reached the lake and flung himself down,
+prostrated with fatigue and pain and strain of nerve, beside his
+canoe. From moment to moment, through spells of reeling faintness and
+spasmodic exhaustion, the silent gulfs of space had clutched at him,
+as if the powers of the solitude and the peak had but spared him so
+long to crush him inexorably in the end. At last, more through the
+sheer indomitableness of the human spirit than anything else, he had
+won. But never afterwards could he think of that awful descent without
+a sinking of the heart. For three days more he made his camp by the
+lake, recovering strength and nerve before resuming his journey down
+the wild river to the settlements. And many times a day his
+salutations would be waved upward to that great, snowy-headed,
+indifferent bird, wheeling in the far blue, or gazing at the sun from
+his high-set watch-tower of the pine.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Two or three years later, it fell in Horner's way to visit a great
+city, many hundreds of miles from the gray peak of "Old Baldy." He was
+in charge of an exhibit of canoes, snowshoes, and other typical
+products of his forest-loving countrymen. In his first morning of
+leisure, his feet turned almost instinctively to the wooded gardens
+wherein the city kept strange captives, untamed exiles of the
+wilderness, irreconcilable aliens of fur and hide and feather, for the
+crowds to gape at through their iron bars.
+
+He wandered aimlessly past some grotesque, goatish-looking deer which
+did not interest him, and came suddenly upon a paddock containing a
+bull moose, two cows, and a yearling calf. The calf looked ungainly
+and quite content with his surroundings. The cows were faded and
+moth-eaten, but well fed. He had no concern for them at all. But the
+bull, a splendid, black-shouldered, heavy-muffled fellow, with the new
+antlers just beginning to knob out from his massive forehead, appealed
+to him strongly. The splendid, sullen-looking beast stood among his
+family, but towered over and seemed unconscious of them. His long,
+sensitive muzzle was held high to catch a breeze which drew coolly
+down from the north, and his half-shut eyes, in Horner's fancy, saw
+not the wires of his fence, but the cool, black-green fir thickets of
+the north, the gray rampikes of the windy barrens, the broad lily
+leaves afloat in the sheltered cove, the wide, low-shored lake water
+gleaming rose-red in the sunset.
+
+"It's a shame," growled Horner, "to keep a critter like that shut up
+in a seven-by-nine chicken-pen!" And he moved on, feeling as if he
+were himself a prisoner, and suddenly homesick for a smell of the
+spruce woods.
+
+It was in this mood that he came upon the great dome-roofed cage
+containing the hawks and eagles. It was a dishevelled, dirty place,
+with a few uncanny-looking dead trees stuck up in it to persuade the
+prisoners that they were free. Horner gave a hasty glance and then
+hurried past, enraged at the sight of these strong-winged adventurers
+of the sky doomed to so tame a monotony of days. But just as he got
+abreast of the farther extremity of the cage, he stopped, with a queer
+little tug at his heart-strings. He had caught sight of a great,
+white-headed eagle, sitting erect and still on a dead limb close to
+the bars, and gazing through them steadily, not at him, but straight
+into the eye of the sun.
+
+"Shucks! It ain't possible! There's millions o' bald eagles in the
+world!" muttered Horner discontentedly.
+
+It was the right side of the bird's head that was turned towards him,
+and that, of course, was snowy white. Equally, of course, it was as,
+Horner told himself, the height of absurdity to think that this grave,
+immobile prisoner gazing out through the bars at the sun could be his
+old friend of the naked peak. Nevertheless, something within his heart
+insisted it was so. If only the bird would turn his head! At last
+Horner put two fingers between his mouth, and blew a whistle so
+piercing that every one stared rebukingly, and a policeman came
+strolling along casually to see if any one had signalled for help. But
+Horner was all unconscious of the interest which he had excited. In
+response to his shrill summons the eagle had slowly, very
+deliberately, turned his head, and looked him steadily in the eyes.
+Yes, there was the strange black bar above the left eye, and there,
+unbroken by defeat and captivity, was the old look of imperturbable
+challenge!
+
+Horner could almost have cried, from pity and homesick sympathy. Those
+long days on the peak, fierce with pain, blinding bright with sun,
+wind-swept and solitary, through which this great, still bird had kept
+him alive, seemed to rush over his spirit all together.
+
+"Gee, old pardner!" he murmured, leaning as far over the railing as he
+could. "But ain't you got the grit! I'd like to know who it was served
+this trick on you. But don't you fret. I'll get you out o' this, ef it
+takes a year's arnings to do it! You wait an' see!" And with his jaws
+set resolutely he turned and strode from the gardens. That bird should
+not stay in there another night if he could help it.
+
+Horner's will was set, but he did not understand the difficulties he
+had to face. At first he was confronted, as by a stone wall, by the
+simple and unanswerable fact that the bird was not for sale at any
+price. And he went to bed that night raging with disappointment and
+baffled purpose. But in the course of his efforts and angry
+protestations he had let out a portion of his story--and this, as a
+matter of interest, was carried to the president of the society which
+controlled the gardens. To this man, who was a true naturalist and not
+a mere dry-as-dust cataloguer of bones and teeth, the story made a
+strong appeal, and before Horner had quite made up his mind whether to
+get out a writ of _habeas corpus_ for his imprisoned friend, or commit
+a burglary on the cage, there came a note inviting him to an interview
+at the president's office. The result of this interview was that
+Horner came away radiant, convinced at last that there was heart and
+understanding in the city as well as in the country. He had agreed to
+pay the society simply what it might cost to replace the captive by
+another specimen of his kind; and he carried in his pocket an order
+for the immediate delivery of the eagle into his hands.
+
+To the practical backwoodsman there was no fuss or ceremony now to be
+gone through. He admired the expeditious fashion in which the keeper
+of the bird-house handled his dangerous charge, coming out of the
+brief tussle without a scratch. Trussed up as ignominiously as a
+turkey--proud head hooded, savage talons muffled, and skyey wings
+bound fast, the splendid bird was given up to his rescuer, who rolled
+him in a blanket without regard to his dignity, and carried him off
+under his arm like a bundle of old clothes.
+
+Beyond the outskirts of the city Horner had observed a high, rocky,
+desolate hill which seemed suited to his purpose. He took a street
+car and travelled for an hour with the bundle on his knees. Little his
+fellow-passengers guessed of the wealth of romance, loyalty, freedom,
+and spacious memory hidden in that common-looking bundle on the knees
+of the gaunt-faced, gray-eyed man. At the foot of the hill, at a space
+of bare and ragged common, Horner got off. By rough paths, frequented
+by goats, he made his way up the rocky slope, through bare ravines and
+over broken ridges, and came at last to a steep rock in a solitude,
+whence only far-off roofs could be seen, and masts, and bridges, and
+the sharp gleam of the sea in the distance.
+
+This place satisfied him. On the highest point of the rock he
+carefully unfastened the bonds of his prisoner, loosed him, and jumped
+back with respect and discretion. The great bird sat up very straight,
+half raised and lowered his wings as if to regain his poise, looked
+Horner dauntlessly in the eye, then stared slowly about him and above,
+as if to make sure that there were really no bars for him to beat his
+wings against. For perhaps a full minute he sat there. Then, having
+betrayed no unkingly haste, he spread his wings to their full splendid
+width and launched himself from the brink. For a few seconds he
+flapped heavily, as if his wings had grown unused to their function.
+Then he got his rhythm, and swung into a wide, mounting spiral, which
+Horner watched with sympathetic joy. At last, when he was but a
+wheeling speck in the pale blue dome, he suddenly turned and sailed
+off straight towards the northeast, with a speed which carried him out
+of sight in a moment.
+
+Horner drew a long breath, half wistful, half glad.
+
+"Them golden eyes of yourn kin see a thunderin' long ways off,
+pardner," he muttered, "but I reckon even you can't make out the top
+of 'Old Baldy' at this distance. It's the eyes o' your heart ye must
+have seen it with, to make for it so straight!"
+
+
+
+
+THE LORD OF THE GLASS HOUSE
+
+
+
+
+THE LORD OF THE GLASS HOUSE
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+In the sheltered Caribbean cove the water was warm as milk, green and
+clear as liquid beryl, and shot through with shimmering sun. Under
+that stimulating yet mitigated radiance the bottom of the cove was
+astir with strange life, grotesque in form, but brilliant as jewels or
+flowers. Long, shining weeds, red, yellow, amber, purple, and olive,
+waved sinuously among the weed-like sea-anemones which outshone them
+in colored sheen. Fantastic pink-and-orange crabs sidled awkwardly but
+nimbly this way and that. Tiny sea-horses, yet more fantastic, slipped
+shyly from one weed-covert to another, aware of a possible peril in
+every gay but menacing bloom. And just above this eccentric life of
+the shoal sea-floor small fishes of curious form shot hither and
+thither, live, darting gleams of gold and azure and amethyst. Now and
+again a long, black shadow would sail slowly over the scene of
+freakish life--the shadow of a passing albacore or barracouta.
+Instantly the shining fish would hide themselves among the shining
+shells, and every movement, save that of the unconsciously waving
+weeds, would be stilled. But the sinister shadow would go by, and
+straightway the sea-floor would be alive again, busy with its affairs
+of pursuit and flight.
+
+The floor of the cove was uneven, by reason of small, shell-covered
+rocks and stones being strewn over it at haphazard. From under the
+slightly overhanging base of one of these stones sprouted what seemed
+a cluster of yellowish gray, pink-mottled weed-stems, which sprawled
+out inertly upon the mottled bottom. Over the edge of the stone came
+swimming slowly one of the gold-and-azure fish, its jewelled,
+impassive eyes on the watch for some small prey. Up from the bottom,
+swift as a whip-lash, darted one of those inert-looking weed-stems,
+and fastened about the bright fish just behind the gills.
+
+Fiercely the shining one struggled, lashing with tail and fins till
+the water swirled to a boil over the shell-covered rock, and the
+sea-anemones all about shut their gorgeous, greedy flower-cups in a
+panic. But the struggle was a vain one. Slowly, inexorably, that
+mottled tentacle curled downward with its prey, and a portion of the
+under side of the rock became alive! Two ink-black eyes appeared,
+bulging, oval, implacable; and between them opened a great, hooked
+beak, like a giant parrot's. There was no separate head behind this
+gaping beak, but eyes and beak merely marked the blunt end of a
+mottled, oblong, sac-like body.
+
+[Illustration: "And the writhing tentacles composed themselves once more
+to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting the next careless
+passer-by."]
+
+As the victim was drawn down to the waiting beak, among the bases of
+the tentacles, all the tentacles awoke to dreadful life, writhing in
+aimless excitement, although there was no work for them to do. In a
+few seconds the fish was torn asunder and engulfed--those inky eyes
+the while unwinking and unmoved. A darker, livid hue passed fleetingly
+over the pallid body of the octopus. Then it slipped back under the
+shelter of the rock; and the writhing tentacles composed themselves
+once more to stillness upon the bottom, awaiting the next careless
+passer-by. Once more they seemed mere inert trailers of weed, not
+worth the notice of fish or crab. And soon the anemones near by
+reopened their treacherous blooms of yellow and crimson.
+
+Whether because there was something in the gold-and-azure fish that
+disturbed his inward content, or because his place of ambush had
+somehow grown distasteful to his soft, unarmored body, the octopus
+presently bestirred himself and crawled forth into the open, walking
+awkwardly on the incurled tips of his tentacles. It looked about as
+comfortable a method of progression as for a baby to creep on the back
+of its hands. The traveller himself did not seem to find it altogether
+satisfactory, for all at once he sprang upward nimbly, clear of the
+bottom, and gathered his eight tentacles into a compact parallel bunch
+extending straight out past his eyes. In this attitude he was no
+longer clumsy, but trim and swift-looking. Beneath the bases of the
+tentacles, on the under side of the body, a sort of valve opened
+spasmodically and took in a huge gulp of water, which was at once
+ejected with great force through a tube among the tentacles. Driven by
+the strange propulsion of this pulsating stream, the elongated shape
+shot swiftly on its way, but travelling backward instead of forward.
+The traveller had apparently taken his direction with care before he
+started, however, for he made his way straight to another rock,
+weedier and more overhanging than the first. Here he stopped, settled
+downward, and let his tentacles once more sprawl wide, preparatory to
+backing his spotted body-sac into its new quarters.
+
+This was the moment when he was least ready for attack or defence;
+and just at this moment a foraging dolphin, big-jawed and hungry, shot
+down upon him through the lucent green, mistaking him, perhaps, for an
+overgrown but unretaliating squid. The assailant aimed at the big,
+succulent-looking body, but missed his aim, and caught instead one of
+the tentacles which had reared themselves instantly to ward off the
+attack. Before he realized what was happening, another tentacle had
+curled about his head, clamping his jaws firmly together so that he
+could not open them to release his hold; while yet others had wrapped
+themselves securely about his body.
+
+The dolphin was a small one; and such a situation as this had never
+come within range of his experience. In utter panic he lashed out with
+his powerful tail and darted forward, carrying the octopus with him.
+But the weight upon his head, the crushing encumbrance about his body,
+were too much for him, and bore him slowly downward. Suddenly two
+tentacles, which had been trailing for an anchorage, got grip upon the
+bottom--and the dolphin's frantic flight came to a stop abruptly. He
+lashed, plunged, whirled in a circle, but all to no purpose. His
+struggles grew weaker. He was drawn down, inexorably, till he lay
+quivering on the sand. Then the great beak of the octopus made an end
+of the matter, and the prey was dragged back to the lair beneath the
+weed-covered rock.
+
+A long time after this, a shadow bigger and blacker than that of any
+albacore--bigger than that of any shark or saw-fish--drifted over the
+cove. There was a splash, and a heavy object came down upon the
+bottom, spreading the swift stillness of terror for yards about. The
+shadow ceased drifting, for the boat had come to anchor. Then in a
+very few minutes, because the creatures of the sea seem unable to fear
+what does not move, the life of the sea-floor again bestirred itself,
+and small, misshapen forms that did not love the sunlight began to
+convene in the shadow of the boat.
+
+Presently, from over the side of the boat descended a dark tube, with
+a bright tip that seemed like a kind of eye. The tube moved very
+slowly this way and that, as if to let the eye scan every hiding-place
+on the many-colored bottom. As it swept over the rock that sheltered
+the octopus, it came to a stop. Those inert, sprawling things that
+looked like weeds appeared to interest it. Then it was softly
+withdrawn.
+
+A few moments later, a large and tempting fish appeared at the surface
+of the water, and began slowly sinking straight downward in a most
+curious fashion. The still eyes of the octopus took note at once. They
+had never seen a fish behave that way before; but it plainly was a
+fish. A quiver of eagerness passed through the sprawling tentacles,
+for their owner was already hungry again. But the prize was still too
+far away, and the tentacles did not move. The curious fish, however,
+seemed determined to come no nearer, and at last the waiting tentacles
+came stealthily to life. Almost imperceptibly they drew themselves
+forward, writhing over the bottom as casually as weeds adrift in a
+light current. And behind them those two great, inky, impassive eyes,
+and then the fat, mottled, sac-like body, emerged furtively from under
+the rock.
+
+The bottom, just at this point, was covered with a close brown weed,
+and almost at once the body of the octopus and his tentacles began to
+change to the same hue. When the change was complete, the gliding
+monster was almost invisible. He was now directly beneath that
+incomprehensible fish; but the fish had gently risen, so that it was
+still out of reach.
+
+For a few seconds the octopus crouched, staring upward with motionless
+orbs, and gathering himself together. Then he sprang straight up, like
+a leaping spider. He fixed two tentacles upon the tantalizing prey;
+then the other tentacles straightened out, and with a sharp jet of
+water from his propulsion tube he essayed to dart back to his lair.
+
+To his amazement, the prey refused to come. In some mysterious way it
+managed to hold itself--or was held--just where it was. Amazement gave
+way to rage. The monster wrapped his prize in three more tentacles,
+and then plunged his beak into it savagely. The next instant he was
+jerked to the surface of the water. A blaze of fierce sun blinded him,
+and strong meshes enclosed him, binding and entangling his tentacles.
+
+In such an appalling crisis most creatures of sea or land would have
+been utterly demoralized by terror. Not so the octopus. Maintaining
+undaunted the clutch of one tentacle upon his prize, he turned the
+others, along with the effectual menace of his great beak, to the
+business of battle. The meshes fettered him in a way that drove him
+frantic with rage, but two of his tentacles managed to find their way
+through, and writhed madly this way and that in search of some
+tangible antagonist on which to fasten themselves. While they were yet
+groping vainly for a grip, he felt himself lifted bodily forth into
+the strangling air, and crowded--net, prey, and all--into a dark and
+narrow receptacle full of water.
+
+This fate, of course, was not to be tamely endured. Though he was
+suffocating in the unnatural medium, and though his great, unwinking
+eyes could see but vaguely outside their native element, he was all
+fight. One tentacle clutched the rim of the metal vessel; and one
+fixed its deadly suckers upon the bare black arm of a half-seen
+adversary who was trying to crowd him down into the dark prison. There
+was a strident yell. A sharp, authoritative voice exclaimed: "Look
+out! Don't hurt him! _I'll_ make him let go!" But the next instant the
+frightened darky had whipped out a knife and sliced off a good foot of
+the clutching tentacle. As the injured stump shrank back upon its
+fellows like a spade-cut worm, the other tentacle was deftly twisted
+loose from its hold on the rim, and the captive felt himself forced
+down into the narrow prison. A cover was clapped on, and he found
+himself in darkness, with his prey still gripped securely. Upset and
+raging though he was, there was nothing to be done about it, so he
+fell to feasting indignantly upon the prize for which he had paid so
+dear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Left to himself, the furious prisoner by and by disentangled himself
+from the meshes of the net, and composed himself as well as he could
+in his straitened quarters. Then for days and days thereafter there
+was nothing but tossing and tumbling, blind feeding, and
+uncomprehended distress; till at last his prison was turned upside
+down and he was dropped unceremoniously into a great tank of glass and
+enamel that glowed with soft light. Bewildered though he was, he took
+in his surroundings in an instant, straightened his tentacles out
+before him, and darted backwards to the shelter of an overhanging rock
+which he had marked on the floor of the tank. Having backed his
+defenceless body under that shield, he flattened his tentacles
+anxiously among the stones and weeds that covered the tank-bottom, and
+impassively stared about.
+
+It was certainly an improvement on the black hole from which he had
+just escaped. Light came down through the clear water, but a cold,
+white light, little like the green and gold glimmer that illumined
+the slow tide in his Caribbean home. The floor about him was not
+wholly unfamiliar. The stones, the sand, the colored weeds, the
+shells,--they were like, yet unlike, those from which he had been
+snatched away. But on three sides there were white, opaque walls, so
+near that he could have touched them by stretching out a tentacle.
+Only on the fourth side was there space--but a space of gloom and
+inexplicable moving confusion from which he shrank. In this direction
+the floor of sand and stones and weeds ended with a mysterious
+abruptness; and the vague openness beyond filled him with uneasiness.
+Pale-colored shapes, with eyes, would drift up, sometimes in crowds,
+and stare in at him fixedly. It daunted him as nothing else had ever
+done, this drift of peering faces. It was long before he could teach
+himself to ignore them. When food came to him,--small fish and crabs,
+descending suddenly from the top of the water,--at such times the
+faces would throng tumultuously in that open space, and for a long
+time the many peering eyes would so disconcert him as almost to spoil
+his appetite. But at last he grew accustomed even to the faces and the
+eyes, and disregarded them as if they were so much passing seaweed,
+borne by the tide. His investigating tentacles had shown him that
+between him and the space of confusion there was an incomprehensible
+barrier fixed, which he could see through but not pass; and that if he
+could not get out, neither could the faces get in to trouble him.
+
+Thus, well fed and undisturbed, the octopus grew fairly content in his
+glass house, and never guessed the stormy life of the great city
+beyond his walls. For all he knew, his comfortable prison might have
+been on the shore of one of his own Bahaman Keys. He was undisputed
+lord of his domain, narrow though it was; and the homage he received
+from the visitors who came to pay him court was untiring.
+
+His lordship had been long unthreatened, when one day, had he not been
+too indifferent to notice them, he might have seen that the faces in
+the outer gloom were unusually numerous, the eyes unusually intent.
+Suddenly there was the accustomed splash in the water above him. That
+splash had come to him to mean just food, unresisting victims, and his
+tentacles were instantly alert to seize whatever should come within
+reach.
+
+This time the splash was unusually heavy, and he was surprised to see
+a massive, roundish creature, with a little, pointed tail sticking
+out behind, a small, snake-like head stretched out in front, and two
+little flippers outspread on each side. With these four flippers the
+stranger came swimming down calmly towards him. He had never seen
+anything at all like this daring stranger; but without the slightest
+hesitation he whipped up two writhing tentacles and seized him. The
+faces beyond the glass surged with excitement.
+
+When that abrupt and uncompromising clutch laid hold upon the turtle,
+his tail, head, and flippers vanished as if they had never been, and
+his upper and lower shells closed tight together till he seemed
+nothing more than a lifeless box of horn. Absolutely unresisting, he
+was drawn down to the impassive eyes and gaping beak of his captor.
+The tentacles writhed all over him, stealthily but eagerly
+investigating. Then the great parrot-beak laid hold on the shell,
+expecting to crush it. Making no impression, however, it slid
+tentatively all over the exasperating prize, seeking, but in vain, for
+a weak point.
+
+[Illustration: "Without the slightest hesitation he whipped up two
+writhing tentacles and seized him."]
+
+This went on for several minutes, while the watching faces outside the
+glass gazed in tense expectancy. Then at last the patience of the
+octopus gave way. In a sudden fury he threw himself upon the
+exasperating shell, tumbling it over and over, biting at it madly,
+wrenching it insanely with all his tentacles. And the faces beyond the
+glass surged thrillingly, wondering how long the turtle would stand
+such treatment.
+
+Shut up within his safe armor, the turtle all at once grew tired of
+being tumbled about, and his wise discretion forsook him. He did not
+mind being shut up, but he objected to being knocked about. Some
+prudence he had, to be sure, but not enough to control his short
+temper. Out shot his narrow, vicious-looking head, with its dull eyes
+and punishing jaws, and fastened with the grip of a bulldog upon the
+nearest of the tentacles, close to its base. A murmur arose outside
+the glass.
+
+The rage of the octopus swelled to a frenzy, and in his contortions
+the locked fighters bumped heavily against the glass, making the faces
+shrink back. The small stones on the bottom were scattered this way
+and that, and the fine silt rose in a cloud that presently obscured
+the battle.
+
+Had the turtle had cunning to match his courage, the lordship of the
+glass house might have changed holders in that fight. Had he fixed his
+unbreakable grip in the head of his foe, just above the beak, he
+would have conquered in the end. But as it was, he had now a
+vulnerable point, and at last the octopus found it. His beak closed
+upon the exposed half of the turtle's head, and slowly, inexorably,
+sheared it clean off just behind the eyes. The stump shrank instantly
+back into the shell; and the shell became again the unresisting
+plaything of the tentacles, which presently, as if realizing that it
+had no more power to retaliate, flung it aside. In a few minutes the
+silt settled. Then the eager faces beyond the glass saw the lord of
+the tank crouching motionless before his lair, his ink-like eyes as
+impassive and implacable as ever, while the turtle lay bottom side up
+against the glass, no more to be taken account of than a stone.
+
+
+
+
+BACK TO THE WATER WORLD
+
+
+
+
+BACK TO THE WATER WORLD
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+An iron coast, bleak, black, and desolate, without harborage for so
+much as a catboat for leagues to north or south. A coast so pitiless,
+so lashed forever by the long, sullen rollers of the North Atlantic,
+so tormented by the shifting and treacherous currents of the tide
+between its chains of outlying rocky islets, that no ship ever
+ventured willingly within miles of its uncompromising menace. A coast
+so little favored by summer that even in glowing August the sun could
+reach it seldom through its cold and drenching fogs.
+
+Perhaps half a mile off shore lay the islands--some of them, indeed,
+mere ledges, deathtraps for ships, invisible except at low tide, but
+others naked hills of upthrust rock, which the highest tides and
+wildest hurricanes could not overwhelm. Even on the loftiest of them
+there was neither grass, bush, nor tree to break the jagged outlines,
+but day and night, summer and winter long, the sea-birds clamored
+over them, and brooded by the myriad on their upper ledges.
+
+These islands were fretted, on both their landward and their seaward
+sides, by innumerable caves. In one of these caves, above the reach of
+the highest tide, and facing landward, so that even in the wildest
+storms no waves could invade it, the pup of the seal first opened his
+mild eyes upon the misty northern daylight.
+
+Of all the younglings of the wild, he was perhaps the most winsome,
+with his soft, whitish, shadowy-toned, close, woolly coat, his round,
+babyish head, his dark, gentle eyes wide with wonder at everything to
+be seen from the cave mouth. He lay usually very near the entrance,
+but partly hidden from view by a ragged horn of rock. While
+alone--which was a good part of the time, indeed, like most
+fishermen's children--he would lie so still that his woolly little
+form was hardly to be distinguished from the rock that formed his
+couch. He had no desire to attract public attention--for the only
+public that might have been attracted to attend consisted of the pair
+of great sea eagles whose shadows sometimes swooped aross the ledge,
+or of an occasional southward-wandering white bear. As for the
+innumerable gulls, and gannets, and terns, and lesser auks, which
+made the air forever loud about these lonely islets, nothing could
+have induced them to pay him any attention whatever. They knew him,
+and his people, to be harmless; and that was all their winged and
+garrulous companies were concerned to know.
+
+But to the little seal, on the other hand, the noisy birds were
+incessantly interesting. Filled with insatiable curiosity, his mild
+eyes gazed out upon the world. The sea just below the cave was, of
+course, below his line of vision; but at a distance of some hundred
+yards or so--a distance which varied hugely with the rising and
+falling of the tide--he caught sight of the waves, and felt himself
+strangely drawn to them. Whether leaden and menacing under the drift
+of rain and the brooding of gray clouds, or green-glinting under the
+sheen of too rare sunshine, he loved them and found them always
+absorbing. The sky, too, was worth watching, especially when white
+fleeces chased each other across a patch of blue, or wonderful colors,
+pallid yet intense, shot up into it at dawn from behind a far-off line
+of saw-toothed rocks.
+
+The absences of the mother seal were sometimes long, for it required
+many fish to satisfy her appetite and keep warm her red blood in
+those ice-cold arctic currents. Fish were abundant, to be sure, along
+that coast, where the invisible fruitfulness of the sea made
+compensation for the blank barrenness of the land; but they were swift
+and wary, and had to be caught, one at a time, outwitted and
+outspeeded in their own element. The woolly cub, therefore, was often
+hungry before his mother returned. But when, at last, she came,
+flopping awkwardly up the rocky slope, and pausing for an instant to
+reconnoitre, as her round, glistening head appeared over the brink of
+the ledge, the youngster's delight was not all in the satisfying of
+his hunger and in the mothering of his loneliness. As he snuggled
+under her caress, the salty drip from her wet, sleek sides thrilled
+him with a dim sense of anticipation. He connected it vaguely with
+that endless, alluring dance of the waves beyond his threshold.
+
+When he had grown a few days older, the little seal began to turn his
+attention from the brighter world outside to the shadows that
+surrounded him in his cave. His interest was caught at once by a
+woolly gray creature like himself, only somewhat smaller, which lay
+perhaps seven or eight feet away, at the other side of the cave, and
+farther back. He had not realized before that his narrow retreat was
+the home of two families. Being of a companionable disposition, he
+eyed his newly discovered neighbor with immense good-will. Finding no
+discouragement in the mild gaze that answered his, he presently raised
+himself on his flippers, and with laborious, ungainly effort flopped
+himself over to make acquaintance. Both youngsters were too
+unsophisticated for ceremony, too trusting for shyness, so in a very
+few minutes they were sprawling over each other in great content.
+
+In this baby comradeship the stranger's mother, returning to her
+household duties, found them. She was smaller and younger than our
+Pup's dam, but with the same kindly eyes and the same salty-dripping
+coat. So, when her own baby fell to nursing, the Pup insisted
+confidently on sharing the entertainment. The young mother protested,
+and drew herself away uneasily, with little threatening grunts; but
+the Pup, refusing to believe she was in earnest, pressed his point so
+pertinaciously that at length he got his way. When, half an hour
+later, the other mother returned to her charge, well filled with fish
+and well disposed toward all the world, she showed no discontent at
+the situation. She belonged to the tribe of the "Harbor Seals," and,
+unlike her pugnacious cousins, the big "Hoods," she was always
+inclined towards peace and a good understanding. There was probably
+nothing that could have brought the flame of wrath into her confiding
+eyes, except an attack upon her young, on whose behalf she would have
+faced the sea-serpent himself. Without a moment's question, she joined
+the group; and henceforth the cave was the seat of a convenient
+partnership in mothers.
+
+It was perhaps a week or two later, when the islands were visited by a
+wonderful spell of sun and calm. It was what would have been called,
+farther south, Indian summer. All along the ledges, just above the
+mark of the diminished surf, the seals lay basking in the glow. The
+gulls and mews clamored rapturously, and squabbled with gay zest over
+the choicer prizes of their fishing. It appeared to be generally known
+that the bears, displeased at the warmth, had withdrawn farther north.
+The sea took on strange hues of opal and lilac and thrice-diluted
+sapphire. Even the high black cliffs across the charmed water veiled
+their harshness in a skyey haze. It was a time for delicious
+indolence, for the slackening of vigilance, for the forgetfulness of
+peril. And it was just at this very time that it came the young
+seal's way to get his first lesson in fear.
+
+He was lying beside his mother, about a dozen feet out from the mouth
+of the cave. A few steps away basked his little cave-mate--alone for
+the moment, because its mother had flung herself vehemently down the
+slope to capture a wounded fish which had just been washed ashore. As
+she reached the water's edge, a wide shadow floated across the rocks.
+She wheeled like a flash and scrambled frantically up the steep. But
+she was too late. She saw the other mothers near by throw their bodies
+over those of their young, and lift their faces skyward with bared,
+defiant fangs. She saw her own little one, alone in the bright open,
+gaze around in helpless bewilderment and alarm. He saw her coming, and
+lifting himself on his weak flippers, started towards her with a
+little cry. Then came a terrible hissing of wings in the air above,
+and he cowered, trembling. The next instant, with a huge buffet of
+wind in all the upturned faces, a pair of vast, dark pinions were
+outspread above the trembler; great clutching talons reached down and
+seized him by neck and back; and his tiny life went out in a throttled
+whimper. The nearest seal, the mother of the Pup, reared on her
+flippers and lunged savagely at the marauder. But all she got was a
+blinding slash of rigid wing-tips across her face. Then, launching
+himself from the brink of the slope, the eagle flapped scornfully away
+across the water toward the black cliffs, his victim hanging limply
+from his claws. And all along the ledges the seals barked furiously
+after him.
+
+The Pup, whom death had brushed so closely, could not be persuaded for
+hours to leave the shelter of his mother's side, even after she had
+led him back to the cave. But now he found himself the exclusive
+proprietor of two mothers; for the bereaved dam, thenceforth, was no
+less assiduously devoted to him than his own parent. With such care,
+and with so abundant nourishment, he throve amazingly, outstripping in
+growth all the other youngsters of his age along the ledges. His
+terror quickly passed away from him; but the results of the lesson
+long remained, in the vigilance with which his glance would sweep the
+sky, and question every approach of wings more wide than those of gull
+or gannet.
+
+It was not long after this grim chance that the Pup's woolly coat
+began to change. A straight, close-lying under-fur pushed swiftly into
+view, and the wool dropped out--a process which a certain sense of
+irritation in his skin led him to hasten by rubbing his back and
+sides against the rock. In an astonishingly short time his coat grew
+like his mother's--a yellowish gray, dotted irregularly with blackish
+spots, and running to a creamy tone under the belly. As soon as this
+change was completed to his mother's satisfaction, he was led down
+close to the water's edge, where he had never been allowed before.
+
+Eagerly as he loved the sight of the waves, and the salty savor of
+them, when the first thin crest splashed up and soused him he shrank
+back daunted. It was colder, too, that first slap in his face, than he
+had expected. He turned, intending to retreat a little way up the
+rocks and consider the question, in spite of the fact that there was
+his little mother in the water, swimming gayly a few feet out from
+shore and coaxing him with soft cries. He was anxious to join her--but
+not just yet. Then, all at once the question was decided for him. His
+real mother, who was just behind him, suddenly thrust her muzzle under
+his flank, and sent him rolling into deep water.
+
+He came up at once, much startled. Straightway he found that he could
+move in the water much more easily and naturally than on shore--and he
+applied the discovery to getting ashore again with all possible
+haste. But his mother, awaiting him at the edge, shoved him off
+relentlessly.
+
+Feeling much injured, he turned and swam out to his other mother. Here
+the first one joined him; and in a few minutes amazement and
+resentment alike were lost in delight, as he began to realize that
+this, at last, was life. Here, and not sprawling half helplessly on
+the rocks, was where he belonged. He swam, and dived, and darted like
+a fish, and went wild with childish ecstasy. He had come to his own
+element. After this, he hardly ever returned to the cave, but slept
+close at the side of one or the other of his mothers, on the open
+rocks just a few feet above the edge of tide.
+
+A little later came a period of mad weather, ushering in the autumn
+storms. Snow and sleet drove down out of the north, and lay in great
+patches over the more level portions of the islets above tide. The
+wind seemed as if it would lift the islets bodily and sweep them away.
+The vast seas, green and black and lead-color, thundered down upon the
+rocks as if they would batter them to fragments. The ledges shuddered
+under the incessant crashing. When the snow stopped, on its heels came
+the vanguard of the arctic cold. The ice formed instantly in all the
+pools left by the tide. Along the edges of the tide it was ground to a
+bitter slush by the perpetual churning of the waves.
+
+After a week or two of this violence, the seals--who, unlike their
+polar cousins, the "Harps" and the "Hoods," were no great lovers of
+storm and the fiercer cold--began to feel discontented. Presently a
+little party of them, not more than a score in all, with a few of the
+stronger youngsters of that season, on a sudden impulse left their
+stormy ledges and started southward. The Pup, who, thanks to his
+double mothering, was far bigger and more capable than any of his
+mates, went with his partner-mothers in the very forefront of the
+migration.
+
+Straight down along the roaring coast they kept, usually at a distance
+of not more than half a mile from shore. They had, of course, no
+objection to going farther out, but neither had they any object in
+doing so, since the fish-life on which they fed as they journeyed was
+the more abundant where the sea began to shoal. With their slim,
+sleek, rounded bodies, thickest at the fore flippers and tapering
+finely to tail and muzzle, each a lithe and close-knit structure of
+muscle and nerve-energy, they could swim with astounding speed; and
+therefore, although there was no hurry whatever, they went along at
+the pace of a motor-boat.
+
+All this time the gale was lashing the coast, but it gave them little
+concern. Down in the black troughs of the gigantic rollers there was
+always peace from the yelling of the wind--a tranquillity wherein the
+gulls and mews would snatch their rest after being buffeted too long
+about the sky. Near the tops of the waves, of course, it was not good
+to be, for the gale would rip the crests off bodily and tear them into
+shreds of whipping spray. But the seals could always dive and slip
+smoothly under these tormented regions. Moreover, if weary of the
+tossing surfaces and the tumult of the gale, they had only to sink
+themselves down, down, into the untroubled gloom beneath the
+wave-bases, where greenish lights gleamed or faded with the passing of
+the rollers overhead, and where strange, phosphorescent shapes of life
+crawled or clung among the silent rocks. Longer than any other
+red-blooded animal, except the whale, could their lungs go without
+fresh oxygen; so, though they knew nothing of those great depths where
+the whales sometimes frequent, it was easy for them to go deep enough
+to get below the storm.
+
+Sometimes a break in the coast-line, revealing the mouth of an inlet,
+would tempt the little band of migrants. Hastening shoreward, they
+would push their way inland between the narrowing banks, often as far
+as the head of tide, gambolling in the quiet water, and chasing the
+salmon fairly out upon the shoals. Like most discriminating creatures,
+they were very fond of salmon, but it was rarely, except on such
+occasions as this, that they had a chance to gratify their taste.
+
+After perhaps a week of this southward journeying, the travellers
+found themselves one night at the head of a little creek where the
+tide lapped pleasantly on a smooth, sandy beach. They were already
+getting into milder weather, and here, a half mile inland, there was
+no wind. The sky was overcast, and the seals lay in contented security
+along the edge of the water. The blacker darkness of a fir forest came
+down to within perhaps fifty paces of their resting-place. But they
+had no anxieties. The only creatures that they had learned to fear on
+shore besides man were the polar bears; and they knew they were now
+well south of that deadly hunter's range. As for eagles, they did not
+hunt at night; and, moreover, they were a terror only in the
+woolly-coated, baby stage of a seal's existence.
+
+But it often enough happens that wild animals, no less than human
+beings, may be ignorant of something which their health requires them
+to know. There was another bear in Labrador--a smallish, rusty-coated,
+broad-headed, crafty cousin of the ordinary American black bear. And
+one of these, who had acquired a taste for seal, along with some
+cleverness in gratifying that taste, had his headquarters, as it
+chanced, in that near-neighboring fir wood.
+
+The Pup lay crowded in snugly between his two mothers. He liked the
+warmth of being crowded; for the light breeze, drawing up from the
+water, was sharp with frost. There is such a thing, however, as being
+just a little too crowded, and presently, waking up with a protest, he
+pushed and wriggled to get more space. As he did so, he raised his
+head. His keen young eyes fell upon a black something a little blacker
+than the surrounding gloom.
+
+The black something was up the slope halfway between the water and the
+wood. It looked like a mass of rock. But the Pup had a vague feeling
+that there had been no rock thereabouts when he went to sleep. A
+thrill of apprehension went up and down his spine, raising the
+stiffish hairs along his neck. Staring with all his eyes through the
+dimness, he presently saw the black shape move. Yes, it was drawing
+nearer. With a shrill little bark of terror he gave the alarm, at the
+same time struggling free and hurling himself toward the water.
+
+In that same instant the bear rushed, coming down the slope as it were
+in one plunging jump. The seals, light sleepers all, were already
+awake and floundering madly back to the water. But for one of them,
+and that one the Pup's assistant mother, the alarm came too late. Just
+as she was turning, bewildered with terror of she knew not what, the
+dark bulk of the bear landed upon her, crushing her down. A terrific
+blow on the muzzle broke her skull, and she collapsed into a quivering
+mass. The rest of the band, after a moment of loud splashing, swam off
+noiselessly for the safe retreat of the outer ledges. And the bear,
+after shaking the body of his victim to make sure it was quite dead,
+dragged it away with a grunt of satisfaction into the fir wood.
+
+After this tragedy, though the travellers continued to ascend the
+creeks and inlets when the whim so moved them, they took care to
+choose for sleep the ruder security of outlying rocks and islands,
+and cherished, by night and by day, a wholesome distrust of
+dark fir woods. But for all their watchfulness their journeying was
+care-free and joyous, and from time to time, as they went, their
+light-heartedness would break out into aimless gambols, or something
+very like a children's game of tag. Nothing, however, checked their
+progress southward, and presently, turning into the Belle Isle
+Straits, they came to summer skies and softer weather. At this point,
+under the guidance of an old male who had followed the southward track
+before, they forsook the Labrador shore-line and headed fearlessly out
+across the strait till they reached the coast of Newfoundland. This
+coast they followed westward till they gained the Gulf of St.
+Lawrence, then, turning south, worked their way down the southwest
+coast of the great Island Province, past shores still basking in the
+amethystine light of Indian summer, through seas so teeming with fish
+that they began to grow lazy with fatness. Here the Pup and other
+younger members of the company felt inclined to stay. But their elders
+knew that winter, with the long cold, and the scanty sun, and the
+perilous grinding of tortured ice-floes around the shore-rocks, would
+soon be upon them; so the journey was continued. On they pressed,
+across the wide gateway of the Gulf, from Cape Ray to North Cape, the
+eastern point of Nova Scotia. Good weather still waited upon their
+wayfaring, and they loitered onward gayly, till, arriving at the
+myriad-islanded bay of the Tuskets, near the westernmost tip of the
+peninsula, they could not, for sheer satisfaction, go farther. Here
+was safe seclusion, with countless inaccessible retreats. Here was
+food in exhaustless plenty; and here was weather benignant enough for
+any reasonable needs.
+
+It was just here, off the Tuskets, that the Pup got another lesson.
+Hitherto his ideas of danger had been altogether associated with the
+land where eagles swooped out of a clear sky and bears skulked in the
+darkness, and where, moreover, he himself was incapable of swift
+escape. But now he found that the sea, too, held its menace for the
+gentle kindred of the seals. It was a still, autumnal morning, blue
+and clear, with a sunny sparkle on sea and air. The seals were most of
+them basking luxuriously on the seaward ledges of one of the outermost
+islands, while half a dozen of the more energetic were amusing
+themselves with their game of tag in the deep water. Pausing for a
+moment to take breath, after a sharp wrestling-match far down among
+the seaweeds, the Pup's observant eyes caught sight of a small, black
+triangular object cutting swiftly the smooth surface of the swells.
+He stared at it curiously. It was coming towards him, but it did not,
+to his uninitiated eyes, look dangerous. Then he became conscious of a
+scurrying of alarm all about him; and cries of sharp warning reached
+him from the sentinels on the ledge. Like a flash he dived, at an
+acute angle to the line of approach of the mysterious black object.
+Even in the instant, it was close upon him, and he caught sight of a
+long, terrible, gray shape, thrice as long as a seal, which turned on
+one side in its rush, showing a whitish belly, and a gaping,
+saw-toothed mouth big enough to take him in at one gulp. Only by a
+hair's-breadth did he avoid that awful rush, carrying with him as he
+passed the sound of the snapping jaws and the cold gleam of the
+shark's small, malignant eye.
+
+Hideously frightened, he doubled this way and that, with a nimbleness
+that his huge pursuer could not hope to match. It took the shark but a
+few seconds to realize that this was a vain chase. An easier quarry
+caught his eye. He darted straight shoreward, where the deep water ran
+in abruptly to the very lip of the ledge. The Pup came to the surface
+to watch. One of the younger seals, losing its wits utterly with
+fright, and forgetting that its safety lay in the deep water where it
+could twist and dodge, was struggling frantically to clamber out upon
+the rocks. It had almost succeeded, indeed. It was just drawing up its
+narrow, tail-like hind flippers, when the great, rounded snout of the
+shark shot into the air above it. The monstrous shape descended upon
+it, and fell back with it into the water, leaving only a splash and
+trickle of blood upon the lip of the ledge. The other seals tossed
+their heads wildly, jumped about on their fore-flippers, and barked in
+lively dismay; and in a few moments, as if the matter had been put to
+vote and carried unanimously, they betook themselves in haste to one
+of the inner islands, where they knew that the shark, who hates shoal
+water, would not venture to follow them.
+
+In this sheltered archipelago the little herd might well have passed
+the winter. But after a few weeks of content the southing spirit again
+seized upon the old male who had hitherto been the unquestioned
+leader. At this point, however, his authority went to pieces. When he
+resumed the southward wandering, less than half the herd accompanied
+him. But among those faithful were the Pup and his mild-eyed mother.
+
+Rounding the extremity of Nova Scotia, the travellers crossed the
+wide mouth of the Bay of Fundy, and lingered a few days about the
+lofty headlands of Grand Manan. By this time they had grown so
+accustomed to ships of all kinds, from the white-sailed fishing-smack
+to the long, black, churning bulk of the ocean liner, that they no
+longer heeded them any more than enough to give them a wide berth. One
+and all, these strange apparitions appeared quite indifferent to
+seals, so very soon the seals became almost indifferent to them. Off
+the island of Campobello, however, something mysterious occurred which
+put an end to this indifference, although none of the band could
+comprehend it.
+
+A beautiful, swift, white craft, with yellow gleams flashing here and
+there from her deck as the sun caught her polished brasswork, was
+cleaving the light waves northward. The seals, their round, dark heads
+bobbing above the water at a distance of perhaps three hundred yards
+from her port-quarter, gazed at the spectacle with childlike interest.
+They saw a group of men eying them from the deck of the swift monster.
+All at once from this group spurted two thin jets of flame. The Pup
+heard some tiny vicious thing go close over his head with a cruel
+whine, and _zip_ sharply through a wave-crest just beyond. On the
+instant, even before the sharp clatter of the two reports came to
+their ears, all the seals dived, and swam desperately to get as far
+away as possible from the terrifying bright monster. When they came to
+the surface again, they were far out of range. But the restless old
+male, their leader, was not among them. The white yacht was steaming
+away into the distance, with its so-called sportsmen congratulating
+themselves that they had almost certainly killed something. The little
+band of seals waited about the spot for an hour or two, expecting the
+return of their chief; and then, puzzled and apprehensive, swam away
+toward the green-crested shore-line of Maine.
+
+Here, lacking a leader, their migration came to an end. There seemed
+no reason to go farther, since here was everything they wanted. The
+Pup, by this time an expert pursuer of all but the swiftest fish, was
+less careful now to keep always within his mother's reach, though the
+affection between the two was still ardent. One day, while he was
+swimming some little distance apart from the herd, he noticed a
+black-hulled boat rocking idly on the swells near by. It was too near
+for his comfort, so he dived at once, intending to seek a safer
+neighborhood. But as luck would have it, he had hardly plunged below
+the surface when he encountered an enormous school of young herring.
+What throngs of them there were! And how crowded together! Never had
+he seen anything like it. They were darting this way and that in
+terrific excitement. He himself went wild at once, dashing hither and
+thither among them with snapping jaws, destroying many more than he
+could eat. And still they seemed to throng about him ever the more
+closely. At last he got tired of it, and dashed straight ahead to
+clear the shoal. The next moment, to his immeasurable astonishment, he
+was checked and flung back by a fine, invisible barrier. No, it was
+not quite invisible. He could see a network of meshes before him.
+Puzzled and alarmed, he shot up to the surface to reconnoitre.
+
+As his head rose above the water, his heart fairly stopped for a
+second with dismay. The black side of the fishing boat was just above
+him, and the terrifying eyes of men looked straight down into his.
+Instantly he dived again, through the ever thickening masses of the
+herring. But straightway again he met the fine, invincible barrier of
+the net. Frantically he struggled to break through it, but only
+succeeded in coiling it about him till he could not move a flipper.
+And while he wriggled there impotently, under the squirming myriads of
+the fish, he was lifted out into the air and dragged into the boat.
+
+Seeing the damage he had wrought in their catch, the fishermen were
+for knocking their captive straightway on the nose. But as he lay
+there, looking up with innocent eyes of wonder and appeal through the
+meshes, something in his baby helplessness softened the captain's
+heart.
+
+"Hold hard, Jim," he ordered, staying a big sailor's hand. "Blamed if
+the little varmint ain't got eyes most as soft as my Libby's. I reckon
+he'll make a right purty pet fer the kid, an' kind of keep her from
+frettin' after her canary what died last Sunday."
+
+"He don't much resemble a canary, Ephraim," laughed Jim, dropping the
+belaying-pin.
+
+"I reckon he'll fill the bill fine, all the same," said the captain.
+
+So the Pup was carried prisoner to Eastport.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+As it happened, Miss Libby was a child of decided views. One of the
+most decided of her views proved to be that a seal pup, with very
+little voice and that little by no means melodious, was no substitute
+for a canary. She refused to look at the Pup at all, until her father,
+much disappointed, assured her that she should have a canary also
+without further delay. And even then, though she could not remain
+quite indifferent to the Pup's soft eyes and confiding friendliness,
+she never developed any real enthusiasm for him. She would minister
+amiably to his wants, and laugh at his antics, and praise his good
+temper, and stroke his sleek, round head, but she stuck resolutely to
+her first notion, that he was quite too "queer" for her to really
+love. She could never approve of his having flippers instead of fore
+paws, and of his lying down all the time even when he walked. As for
+his hind feet, which stuck out always straight behind him and close
+together, like a sort of double-barrelled tail, she was quite sure
+they had been fixed that way by mistake, and she could not, in spite
+of all her father's explanations as to the advantages, for a seal, of
+that arrangement, ever bring herself to accept them as normal.
+
+Miss Libby's mother proved even less cordial. Her notions of natural
+history being of the most primitive, at first view she had jumped to
+the conclusion that the Pup was a species of fish; and in this opinion
+nothing could ever shake her.
+
+"Well, I never!" she had exclaimed. "If that ain't just like you, Eph
+Barnes. As if it wa'n't enough to have to eat fish, an' talk fish, an'
+smell fish, year in an' year out, but you must go an' bring a live
+fish home to flop aroun' the house an' keep gittin' under a body's
+feet every way they turn! An' what's he goin' to eat, anyways, I'd
+like to know?"
+
+"He eats _fish_, but he ain't no manner of fish himself, mother, no
+more than you nor I be!" explained Captain Ephraim, with a grin. "An'
+he won't be in your way a mite, for he'll live out in the yard, an'
+I'll sink the half of a molasses hogshead out there an' fill it with
+salt water for him to play in. He's an amusin' little beggar, an'
+gentle as a kitten."
+
+"Well, I'd have you know that _I_ wash my hands of him, Ephraim!"
+declared Mrs. Barnes, with emphasis. And so it came about that the
+Pup presently found himself, not Libby's special pet, but Captain
+Ephraim's.
+
+Two important members of the Barnes family were a large yellow cat and
+a small, tangle-haired, blue-gray mop of a Skye terrier. At the first
+glimpse of the Pup, the yellow cat had fled, with tail as big as a
+bottle-brush, to the top of the kitchen dresser, where she crouched
+growling, with eyes like green full moons. The terrier, on the other
+hand, whose name was Toby, had shown himself rather hospitable to the
+mild-eyed stranger. Unacquainted with fear, and always inclined to be
+scornful of whatever conduct the yellow cat might indulge in, he had
+approached the newcomer with a friendly wagging of his long-haired
+stump of a tail, and sniffed at him with pleased curiosity. The Pup,
+his lonely heart hungering for comradeship, had met this civil advance
+with effusion; and thenceforward the two were fast friends.
+
+By the time the yellow cat and Mrs. Barnes had both got over regarding
+the Pup as a stranger, he had become an object of rather distant
+interest to them. When he played at wrestling matches with Toby in the
+yard,--which always ended by the Pup rolling indulgently on his back,
+while Toby, with yelps of excitement, mounted triumphantly between
+his fanning flippers,--the yellow cat would crouch upon the woodpile
+close by and regard the proceedings with intent but non-committal eye.
+Mrs. Barnes, for her part, would open the kitchen door and
+surreptitiously coax the Pup in, with the lure of a dish of warm milk,
+which he loved extravagantly. Then--this being while Libby was at
+school and Captain Ephraim away on the water--she would seat herself
+in the rocking-chair by the window with her knitting and watch the Pup
+and Toby at their play. The young seal was an endless source of
+speculation to her.
+
+"To think, now," she would mutter to herself, "that I'd be a-settin'
+here day after day a-studyin' out a critter like that, what's no
+more'n jest plain _fish_ says I, if he _do_ flop roun' the house an'
+drink milk like a cat. He's right uncanny; but there ain't no denyin'
+but what he's as good as a circus when he gits to playin' with Toby."
+
+As Mrs. Barnes had a very good opinion of Toby's intelligence,
+declaring him to be the smartest dog in Maine, she gradually imbibed a
+certain degree of respect for Toby's friend. And so it came about that
+the Pup acquired a taste which no seal was ever intended to
+acquire--a taste for the luxurious glow of the kitchen fire.
+
+When at last the real Atlantic winter had settled down upon the coast,
+binding it with bitter frost and scourging it with storm, then Captain
+Ephraim spent most of his time at home in his snug cottage. He had
+once, on a flying visit to New York, seen a troupe of performing
+seals, which had opened his eyes to the marvellous intelligence of
+these amphibians. It now became his chief occupation, in the long
+winter evenings, to teach tricks to the Pup. And stimulated by
+abundant prizes in the shape of fresh herrings and warm milk, right
+generously did the Pup respond. He learned so fast that before spring
+the accomplished Toby was outstripped; and as for the canary,--an
+aristocratic golden fellow who had come all the way from Boston,--Miss
+Libby was constrained to admit that, except when it came to a question
+of singing, her pet was "not in it" with her father's. Mrs. Barnes'
+verdict was that "canaries seemed more natural-like, but couldn't
+rightly be called so interestin'."
+
+Between Libby and her father there was always a lot of gay banter
+going on, and now Captain Ephraim declared that he would teach the Pup
+to sing as well as the canary. The obliging animal had already
+acquired a repertoire of tricks that would have made him something of
+a star in any troupe. The new demand upon his wits did not disturb
+him, so long as it meant more fish, more milk, and more petting.
+Captain Ephraim took a large tin bucket, turned it upside down on the
+floor, and made the Pup rest his chest upon the bottom. Then, tying a
+tin plate to each flipper, he taught the animal to pound the plates
+vigorously against the sides of the bucket, with a noise that put the
+shrill canary to shamefaced silence and drove the yellow cat in
+frantic amazement from the kitchen. This lesson it took weeks to
+perfect, because the Pup himself always seemed mortified at the
+blatant discords which he made. When it was all achieved, however, it
+was not singing, but mere instrumental music, as Libby triumphantly
+proclaimed. Her father straightway swore that he was not to be downed
+by any canary. A few weeks more, and he had taught the Pup to point
+his muzzle skyward and emit long, agonizing groans, the while he kept
+flapping the two tin plates against the bucket. It was a wonderful
+achievement, which made Toby retreat behind the kitchen stove and gaze
+forth upon his friend with grieved surprise. But it obliged Libby, who
+was a fair-minded child, to confess to her father that she and her
+pet were vanquished.
+
+All this while the Pup was growing, as perhaps no harbor seal of his
+months had grown before. When spring came, he saw less of Captain
+Ephraim, but he had compensation, for the good captain now diverted
+into his modest grounds a no-account little brook which was going
+begging, and dug a snug little basin at the foot of the garden for the
+Pup to disport himself therein. All through the summer he continued to
+grow and was happy, playing with Toby, offending the yellow cat,
+amusing Miss Libby, and affording food for speculation to Mrs. Barnes
+over her knitting. In the winter Captain Ephraim polished him up in
+his old tricks, and taught him some new ones. But by this time he had
+grown so big that Mrs. Barnes began to grumble at him for taking up
+too much room. He was, as ever, a model of confiding amiability, in
+spite of his ample jaws and formidable teeth. But one day toward
+spring he showed that this good nature of his would not stand the test
+of seeing a friend ill-used.
+
+It happened in this way. Toby, who was an impudent little dog, had
+managed to incur the enmity of a vicious half-breed mastiff, which
+lived on a farm some distance out of Eastport. The brute was known to
+have killed several smaller dogs; so whenever he passed the Barnes'
+gate, and snarled his threats at Toby, Toby would content himself with
+a scornful growl from the doorstep.
+
+But one morning, as the big mongrel went by at the tail of his
+master's sled, Toby chanced to be very busy in the snow near the gate
+digging up a precious buried bone. The big dog crept up on tiptoe, and
+went over the gate with a scrambling bound. Toby had just time to lift
+his shaggy little head out of the snow and turn to face the assault.
+His heart was great, and there was no terror in the growl with which
+he darted under the foe's huge body and sank his teeth strategically
+into the nearest hind paw. But the life would have been crushed out of
+him in half a minute, had not the Pup, at this critical juncture, come
+flopping up awkwardly to see how his little friend was faring.
+
+Now the Pup, as we have seen, was simply overflowing with good-will
+towards dogs, and cats, and every one. But that was because he thought
+they were all friendly. He was amazed to find here a dog that seemed
+unfriendly. Then all at once he realized that something very serious
+was happening to his playmate. His eyes reddened and blazed; and with
+one mighty lunge he flung himself forward upon the enemy. With that
+terrific speed of action which could snap up a darting mackerel, he
+caught the mastiff in the neck, close behind the jaw. His teeth were
+built to hold the writhings of the biggest salmon, and his grip was
+that of a bulldog--except that it cut far deeper.
+
+The mastiff yelped, snapped wildly at his strange antagonist, and
+then, finding himself held so that he could not by any possibility get
+a grip, strove to leap into the air and shake his assailant off. But
+the Pup held him down inexorably, his long teeth cutting deeper and
+deeper with every struggle. For perhaps half a minute the fight
+continued, the mad contortions of the entangled three (for Toby still
+clung to his grip on the foe's hind paw) tearing up the snow for a
+dozen feet in every direction. The snow was flecked with crimson,--but
+suddenly, with a throbbing gush, it was flooded scarlet. The Pup's
+teeth had torn through the great artery of his opponent's neck. With a
+cough the brute fell over, limp and unresisting as a half-filled bran
+sack.
+
+At this moment the mastiff's owner, belatedly aware that the tables
+were being turned on his vicious favorite, came yelling and cursing
+over the gate, brandishing a sled stake in his hands. But at the same
+time arrived Captain Ephraim, rushing bareheaded from the kitchen, and
+stepped in front of the new arrival. One glance had shown him that the
+fight was over.
+
+"Hold hard there, Baiseley!" he ordered in curt tones. Then he
+continued more slowly--"It ain't no use makin' a fuss. That murderin'
+brute of yourn begun it, an' come into my yard to kill my own little
+tike here. He's got just what he deserved. An' if the Pup here hadn't
+'a' done it, I'd 'a' done it myself. See?"
+
+Baiseley, like his mongrel follower, was a bully. But he had
+discretion. He calmed down.
+
+"That there dog o' mine, Captain Ephraim, was a good dog, an' worth
+money. I reckon ye'll hev to pay me ten dollars for that dog, an'
+we'll call it square."
+
+"Reckon I'll have to owe it to ye, Hank! Mebbe I'll pay it some day
+when you git han'somer 'n you are now!" laughed Captain Ephraim dryly.
+He gave a piercing whistle through his teeth. Straightway Toby, sadly
+bedraggled, came limping up to him. The Pup let go of his dead enemy,
+and lifted his head to eye his master inquiringly. His whole front was
+streaming with blood.
+
+"Go wash yerself!" ordered the captain picking up a chip and hurling
+it into the pond, which was now half empty of ice.
+
+The Pup floundered off obediently to get the chip, and Baiseley,
+muttering inarticulate abuse, slouched away to his sled.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Toward the end of April there came a great change in the Pup's
+affairs. Primarily, the change was in Captain Ephraim's. Promoted to
+the command of a smart schooner engaged in cod-fishing on the Grand
+Banks, he sold his cottage at Eastport and removed his family to
+Gloucester, Massachusetts. At the same time, recognizing with many a
+pang that a city like Gloucester was no place for him to keep a seal
+in, he sold the Pup, at a most consoling price indeed, to the agent of
+an English animal trainer. With the prospect of shortly becoming the
+cynosure of all eyes at Shepherd's Bush or Earl's Court, the Pup was
+shipped on a freighter for Liverpool.
+
+With his pervasive friendliness, and seeking solace for the absence of
+Toby and Captain Ephraim, the Pup proved a most privileged and popular
+passenger. All went well till the ship came off Cape Race,
+Newfoundland. Then that treacherous and implacable promontory made
+haste to justify its reputation; and in a blind sou'wester the ship
+was driven on the ledges. While she was pounding to pieces, the crew
+got away in their boats, and presently the Pup found himself reviving
+half-forgotten memories amid the buffeting of the huge Atlantic
+rollers.
+
+He felt amazingly at home, but very lonely. Bobbing his head as high
+as he could above the water, he stared about him in every direction,
+dimly hoping to catch sight of Captain Ephraim or Toby--or even of the
+unsociable yellow cat. They were nowhere to be seen. Well, company he
+must have. After fish, of which there was no lack in those teeming
+waters, company was his urgent demand. He headed impatiently for the
+coast, which he could not see indeed, but which he felt clearly in the
+distance.
+
+The first land he encountered was a high hogback of rock which proved
+to be an island. Swimming around under its lea, he ran into a little
+herd of seals of his own kind, and hastened confidently to fraternize
+with them.
+
+The strangers, mostly females and young males, met his advances with a
+good-natured indifference. One of the herd, however, a big dog-seal
+who seemed to consider himself the chief, would have none of him, but
+grumbled and showed his teeth in a most unpleasant manner. The Pup
+avoided him politely, and crawled out upon the rocks, about twenty
+feet away, beside two friendly females. He wanted to get acquainted,
+that was all. But the old male, after grumbling for several minutes,
+got himself worked up into a rage, and came floundering over the rocks
+to do up the visitor. Roughly he pushed the two complaisant females
+off into the water, and then, with a savage lunge, he fell upon the
+Pup.
+
+But in this last step the old male was ill-advised. Hitherto the Pup
+had felt diffident in the face of such a reception, but now a sudden
+red rage flared into his eyes. Young as he was, he was as big as his
+antagonist, and, here on land, a dozen times more nimble. Here came in
+the advantage of Captain Ephraim's training. When the old male lunged
+upon him, he simply wasn't there. He had shot aside, and wheeled like
+a flash, and secured a hold at the root of his assailant's flipper. Of
+course in this position he too received some sharp punishment. But he
+held on like a bulldog, worrying, worrying mercilessly, till all at
+once the other squealed, and threw up his muzzle, and struggled to get
+away. The Pup, satisfied with this sign of submission, let him go at
+once, and he flounced off furiously into the water.
+
+As a prompt result of this victory, the Pup found himself undisputed
+leader of the little herd, his late antagonist, after a vain effort to
+effect a division, having slipped indolently into a subordinate place.
+This suited the Pup exactly, who was happy himself, and wanted
+everybody else to be so likewise.
+
+As spring advanced, the herd worked their way northward along the
+Newfoundland coast, sometimes journeying hurriedly, sometimes
+lingering for days in the uninhabited inlets and creek mouths. The Pup
+was in a kind of ecstasy over his return to the water world, and
+indulged in antics that seemed perhaps frivolous in the head of so
+important a family. But once in a while a qualm of homesickness would
+come over him, for Toby, and the Captain, and a big tin basin of warm
+milk. And in one of these moods he was suddenly confronted by men.
+
+The herd was loitering off a point which marked the entrance to a
+shallow cove, when round the jutting rocks slid a row-boat, with two
+fishermen coming out to set lines. They had no guns with them,
+fortunately. They saw the seals dive and vanish at the first glimpse
+of them, as was natural. But to their amazement, one seal--the
+biggest, to their astonished eyes, in the whole North Atlantic--did
+not vanish with the rest. Instead of that, after eying them
+fearlessly at a distance of some fifty feet, he swam deliberately
+straight toward them.
+
+Now there is nothing very terrifying, except to a fish, in the aspect
+of even the biggest harbor seal; but to these fishermen, who knew the
+shyness of the seals, it was terrifying to the last degree that one
+should conduct himself in this unheard-of way. They stopped rowing,
+and stared with superstitious eyes.
+
+"Howly Mother!" gasped one, "that b'ain't no seal, Mike!"
+
+"What d'ye s'pose he wants wid us, Barney, annyhow?" demanded Mike, in
+an awed voice.
+
+"Sure, an' it's a _sign_ for the one or t'other of us. It's gittin'
+back to shore we'd better be," suggested Barney, pulling round hard on
+the bow oar.
+
+As the mysterious visitor was still advancing, this counsel highly
+commended itself to Mike, who would have faced a polar bear with no
+weapon but his oar, but had no stomach for a parley with the
+supernatural. In another moment the boat was rushing back up the cove
+with all the speed their practised muscles could impart. But still,
+swimming leisurely in their wake, with what seemed to them a dreadful
+deliberation, the Pup came after them.
+
+"Don't ye be comin' nigh _me_!" cried Mike, somewhat hysterically, "or
+I'll bash yer face wid the oar, mind!"
+
+"Whisht!" said Barney, "don't ye be after talkin' that way to a
+sperrit, or maybe he'll blast ye!"
+
+"I'm thinkin', now," said Mike, presently, in a hushed voice, "as
+maybe it be Dan Sheedy's sperrit, comin' back to ha'nt me coz I didn't
+give up them boots o' his to his b'y, accordin' to me promise."
+
+"Shure an' why not that?" agreed Barney, cheered by the hope that the
+visitation was not meant for him.
+
+A moment more and the boat reached the beach with an abruptness that
+hurled both rowers from their seats. Scrambling out upon the shingle,
+they tugged wildly at the boat to draw her up. But the Pup, his eyes
+beaming affection, was almost on their heels. With a yell of dismay
+Mike dashed up the shore toward their shack; but Barney, having less
+on his conscience, delayed to snatch out of the bow the precious tin
+pail in which they carried their bait. Then he followed Mike. But
+looking back over his shoulder, he saw his mysterious pursuer ascend
+from the water and come flopping up the shore at a pace which
+assuredly no _mortal_ seal could ever accomplish on dry land. At that
+he fell over a boulder, dropped the pail of bait, picked himself up
+with a startled yell, and made a dash for the shack as if all the
+fiends were chasing him.
+
+Slamming the door behind them, the two stared fearfully out of the
+window. Their guns, loaded with slugs, leaned against the wall, but
+they would never be guilty of such perilous impiety as to use them.
+
+When he came to the tin pail and the spilled bait the Pup was pleased.
+He knew very well what the pail was for, and what the men expected of
+him. He had no objection to being paid in advance, so he gobbled the
+bait at once. It was not much, but he had great hopes that, if he
+acquitted himself well, he might get a pan of warm milk. Cheerfully he
+hoisted his massive chest upon the pail, and then, pounding jerkily
+with his flippers as hard as he could, he lifted his muzzle heavenward
+and delivered himself of a series of prolonged and anguished groans.
+
+This was too much for his audience.
+
+"Howly Mother, save us!" sobbed Barney, dropping upon his knees, and
+scrabbling desperately in his untidy memory for some fragments of his
+childhood's prayers.
+
+"Don't, Dan, don't!" pleaded Mike, gazing out with wild eyes at the
+Pup's mystical performance. "I'll give back them boots to the b'y.
+I'll give 'em back, Dan! Let me be now, won't 'ee, old mate?"
+
+Thus adjured, the Pup presently stopped, and stared expectantly at the
+shack, awaiting the pan of warm milk. When it did not come, he was
+disgusted. He had never been kept waiting this way before. These men
+were not like Captain Ephraim. In a minute or two he rolled off the
+pail, flopped heavily down the beach, and plunged back indignantly
+into the sea. As his dark head grew smaller and smaller in the
+distance, the men in the shack threw open the door, and came out as if
+they needed fresh air.
+
+"I always _said_ as how Dan had a good heart," muttered Mike, in a
+shaken voice. "An' shure, now, ye see, Barney, he ain't after bearin'
+no grudge."
+
+"But ye'll be takin' back them boots to young Dan, this very day of
+our lives," urged Barney. "An' ye'll be after makin' it all right wid
+the Widdy Sheedy, afore ye're a day older, now."
+
+"Shure, an' to wanst ain't none too quick for me, an' me receavin' a
+hint loike that!" agreed Mike.
+
+As for the Pup, after this shock to his faith in man, he began to
+forget the days of his comfortable captivity. His own kind proved
+vastly interesting to him, and in a few weeks his reversion was
+complete. By that time his journeyings had led him, with his little
+herd, far up the coast of Labrador. At last he came to a chain of
+rocky islands, lying off a black and desolate coast. The islands were
+full of caves, and clamorous with sea-birds, and trodden forever by a
+white and shuddering surf. Here old memories stirred dimly but sweetly
+within him--and here he brought his wanderers to rest.
+
+
+
+
+LONE WOLF
+
+
+
+
+LONE WOLF
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Not, like his grim ancestors for a thousand generations, in some dark
+cave of the hills was he whelped, but in a narrow iron cage littered
+with straw. Two brothers and a sister made at the same time a like
+inauspicious entrance upon an alien and fettered existence. And
+because their silent, untamable mother loved too savagely the
+hereditary freedom of her race to endure the thought of bearing her
+young into a life of bondage, she would have killed them mercifully,
+even while their blind baby mouths were groping for her breasts. But
+the watchful keeper forestalled her. Whelps of the great gray timber
+wolf, born in captivity, and therefore likely to be docile, were rare
+and precious. The four little sprawlers, helpless and hungrily
+whimpering, were given into the care of a foster-mother, a sorrowing
+brown spaniel bitch who had just been robbed of her own puppies.
+
+When old enough to be weaned, the two brothers and the sister, sturdy
+and sleek as any wolf cubs of the hills, were sold to a dealer in wild
+animals, who carried them off to Hamburg. But "Lone Wolf," as Toomey,
+the trainer, had already named him, stayed with the circus. He was the
+biggest, the most intelligent, and the most teachable cub of the whole
+litter, and Toomey, who had an unerring eye for quality in a beast,
+expected to make of him a star performer among wolves.
+
+Job Toomey had been a hunter and a trapper in the backwoods of New
+Brunswick, where his instinctive knowledge of the wild kindreds had
+won him a success which presently sickened him. His heart revolted
+against the slaughter of the creatures which he found so interesting,
+and for a time, his occupation gone, he had drifted aimlessly about
+the settlements. Then, at the performance of a travelling circus,
+which boasted two trained bears and a little trick elephant, he had
+got his cue. It was borne in upon him that he was meant to be an
+animal trainer. Then and there he joined the circus at a nominal wage,
+and within six months found himself an acknowledged indispensable. In
+less than a year he had become a well-known trainer, employed in one
+of the biggest menageries of America. Not only for his wonderful
+comprehension and command of animals was he noted, but also for his
+pose, to which he clung obstinately, of giving his performances always
+in the homespun garb of a backwoodsman, instead of in the conventional
+evening dress.
+
+"Lone Wolf!" It seemed a somewhat imaginative name for the prison-born
+whelp, but as he grew out of cub-hood his character and his stature
+alike seemed to justify it. Influenced by the example of his gentle
+foster-mother, he was docility itself toward his tamer, whom he came
+to love well after the reticent fashion of his race. But toward all
+others, man and beast alike, his reserve was cold and dangerous.
+Toomey, apparently, absorbed all the affection which his lonely nature
+had to spare. In return for this singleness of regard, Toomey trained
+him with a firm patience which never forgot to be kind, and made him,
+by the time he was three years old, quite the cleverest and most
+distinguished performing wolf who had ever adorned a show.
+
+He was now as tall as the very tallest Great Dane, but with a depth of
+shoulder and chest, a punishing length and strength of jaw, that no
+dog ever could boast. When he looked at Toomey, his eyes wore the
+expression of a faithful and understanding follower; but when he
+answered the stares of the crowd through the bars of his cage, the
+greenish fire that flamed in their inscrutable depths was ominous and
+untamed. In all save his willing subjection to Toomey's mastery, he
+was a true wolf, of the savage and gigantic breed of the Northwestern
+timber. To the spectators this was aggressively obvious; and therefore
+the marvel of seeing this sinister gray beast, with the murderous
+fangs, so submissive to Toomey's gentlest bidding, never grew stale.
+In every audience there were always some spectators hopefully
+pessimistic, who vowed that the great wolf would some day turn upon
+his master and tear his throat. To be sure, Lone Wolf was not by any
+means the only beast whom the backwoodsman had performing for the
+delectation of his audiences. But all the others--the lions, the
+leopards, the tiger, the elephant, the two zebras, and the white
+bear--seemed really subdued, as it were hypnotized into harmlessness.
+It was Lone Wolf only who kept the air of having never yielded up his
+spirit, of being always, in some way, not the slave but the free
+collaborator.
+
+Ordinarily, in spite of the wild fire smouldering in his veins, Lone
+Wolf was well enough content. The show was so big and so important
+that it was accustomed to visit only the great centres, and to make
+long stops at each place. At such times his life contained some
+measure of freedom. He would be given a frequent chance of exercise,
+in some secure enclosure where he could run, and jump, and stretch his
+mighty muscles, and breathe deep. And not infrequently--after dark as
+a rule--his master would snap a massive chain upon his collar, and
+lead him out, on leash like a dog, into the verdurous freshness of
+park or country lane. But when the show was on tour, then it was very
+different. Lone Wolf hated fiercely the narrow cage in which he had to
+travel. He hated the harsh, incessant noise of the grinding rails, the
+swaying and lurching of the trucks, the dizzying procession of the
+landscape past the barred slits which served as windows to his car.
+Moreover, sometimes the unwieldy length of the circus train would be
+halted for an hour or two on some forest siding, to let the regular
+traffic of the line go by. Then, as his wondering eyes caught glimpses
+of shadowed glades, and mysterious wooded aisles, and far-off hills
+and horizons, or wild, pungent smells of fir thicket and cedar swamp
+drew in upon the wind to his uplifted nostrils, his veins would run
+hot with an uncomprehended but savage longing for delights which he
+had never known, for a freedom of which he had never learned or
+guessed. At such times his muscles would ache and quiver, till he felt
+like dashing himself blindly against his bars. And if the halt
+happened to take place at night, with perhaps a white moon staring in
+upon him from over a naked hill-top, he would lift his lean muzzle
+straight up toward the roof of his cage and give utterance to a
+terrible sound of which he knew not the meaning, the long, shrill
+gathering cry of the pack. This would rouse all the other beasts to a
+frenzy of wails and screeches and growls and roars; till Toomey would
+have to come and stop his performance by darkening the cage with a
+tarpaulin. At the sound of Toomey's voice, soothing yet overmastering,
+the great wolf would lie down quietly, and the ghostly summons of his
+far-ravaging fathers would haunt his spirit no more.
+
+After one of these long journeys, the show was halted at an inland
+city for a stop of many weeks; and to house the show a cluster of
+wooden shanties was run up on the outskirts of the city, forming a
+sort of mushroom village flanked by the great white exhibition tents.
+In one of these shanties, near the centre of the cluster, Lone Wolf's
+cage was sheltered, along with the cages of the puma, the leopard,
+and the little black Himalayan bear. Immediately adjoining this shanty
+was the spacious open shed where the elephants were tethered.
+
+That same night, a little before dawn, when the wearied attendants
+were sleeping heavily, Lone Wolf's nostrils caught a strange smell
+which made him spring to his feet and sniff anxiously at the suddenly
+acrid air. A strange reddish glow was dispersing the dark outside his
+window. From the other cages came uneasy mutterings and movements, and
+the little black bear, who was very wise, began to whine. The dull
+glow leaped into a glare and then the elephants trumpeted the alarm.
+Instantly the night was loud with shoutings, and tramplings, and
+howlings, and rushings to and fro. A cloud of choking smoke blew into
+Lone Wolf's cage, making him cough and wonder anxiously why Toomey
+didn't come. The next moment Toomey came, with one of the keepers, and
+an elephant. Frantically they began pushing and dragging out the
+cages. But there was a wind; and before the first cage, that of the
+puma, was more than clear of the door, the flames were on top of them
+like a leaping tiger. Panic-stricken, the elephant screamed and
+bolted. The keeper, shouting, "We can't save any more in this house.
+Let's git the lions out!" made off with one arm over his eyes,
+doggedly dragging the heavy cage of the puma. The keeper was right. He
+had his work cut out for him, as it was, to save the screeching puma.
+As for Toomey, his escape was already almost cut off. But he could not
+endure to save himself without giving the imprisoned beasts a chance
+for their lives. Dashing at the three remaining cages, he tore them
+open; and then, with a summons to Lone Wolf to follow him, he threw
+his arms over his face and dashed through the flames.
+
+The three animals sprang out at once into the middle of the floor, but
+their position seemed already hopeless. The leopard, thoroughly cowed,
+leaped back into his cage and curled up in the farthest corner,
+spitting insanely. Lone Wolf dashed at the door by which Toomey had
+fled, but a whirl of flame in his face drove him back to the middle of
+the floor, where the little bear stood whimpering. Just at this moment
+a massive torrent of water from a fire engine crashed through the
+window, drenching Lone Wolf, and knocking the bear clean over. The
+beneficent stream was whisked away again in an instant, having work to
+do elsewhere than on this already doomed and hopeless shed. But to the
+wise little bear it had shown a way of escape. Out through the window
+he scurried, and Lone Wolf went after him in one tremendous leap just
+as the flames swooped in and licked the floor clean, and slew the
+huddled leopard in its cage.
+
+Outside, in the awful heat, the alternations of dazzling glare and
+blinding smoke, the tumult of the shouting and the engines, the roar
+of the flames, the ripping crash of the streams, and the cries of the
+beasts, Lone Wolf found himself utterly confused. But he trusted, for
+some reason, to the sagacity of the bear, and followed his shaggy
+form, bearing diagonally up and across the wind. Presently a cyclone
+of suffocating smoke enveloped him, and he lost his guide. But
+straight ahead he darted, stretched out at top speed, belly to the
+ground, and in another moment he emerged into the clear air. His eyes
+smarting savagely, his nose and lips scorched, his wet fur singed, he
+hardly realized at first his escape, but raced straight on across the
+fields for several hundred yards. Then, at the edge of a wood, he
+stopped and looked back. The little bear was nowhere to be seen. The
+night wind here blew deliciously cool upon his face. But there was the
+mad red monster, roaring and raging still as if it would eat up the
+world. The terror of it was in his veins. He sprang into the covert
+of the wood, and ran wildly, with the one impulse to get as far away
+as possible.
+
+Before he had gone two miles, he came out upon an open country of
+fields, and pastures, and farmyards, and little thickets. Straight on
+he galloped, through the gardens and the farmyards as well as the open
+fields. In the pastures the cattle, roused by the glare in the sky,
+stamped and snorted at him as he passed, and now and then a man's
+voice yelled at him angrily as his long form tore through flowerbeds
+or trellised vines. He had no idea of avoiding the farmhouses, for he
+had at first no fear of men; but at length an alert farmer got a long
+shot at him with a fowling-piece, and two or three small leaden
+pellets caught him in the hind quarters. They did not go deep enough
+to do him serious harm, but they hurt enough to teach him that men
+were dangerous. Thereupon he swerved from the uncompromising straight
+line of his flight, and made for the waste places. When the light of
+the fire had quite died out behind him, the first of the dawn was
+creeping up the sky; and by this time he had come to a barren region
+of low thickets, ragged woods, and rocks thrusting up through a
+meagre, whitish soil.
+
+Till the sun was some hours high Lone Wolf pressed on, his terror of
+the fire now lost in a sense of delighted freedom. By this time he was
+growing hungry, and for an instant the impulse seized him to turn back
+and seek his master. But no, that way lay the scorching of the flames.
+Instead of turning, he ran on all the faster. Suddenly a rabbit
+bounded up, almost beneath his nose. Hitherto he had never tasted
+living prey, but with a sure instinct he sprang after the rabbit. To
+his fierce disappointment, however, the nimble little beast was so
+inconsiderate as to take refuge in a dense bramble thicket which he
+could not penetrate. His muzzle, smarting and tender from the fire,
+could not endure the harsh prickles, so after prowling about the
+thicket for a half-hour in the wistful hope that the rabbit might come
+out, he resumed his journey. He had no idea, of course, where he
+wanted to go, but he felt that there must be a place somewhere where
+there were plenty of rabbits and no bramble thickets.
+
+Late in the afternoon he came upon the fringes of a settlement, which
+he skirted with caution. In a remote pasture field, among rough
+hillocks and gnarled, fire-scarred stumps, he ran suddenly into a
+flock of sheep. For a moment he was puzzled at the sight, but the
+prompt flight of the startled animals suggested pursuit. In a moment
+he had borne down the hindermost. To reach for its throat was a sure
+instinct, and he feasted, with a growing zest of savagery, upon the
+hot flesh. Before he realized it, he was dragging the substantial
+remnant of his meal to a place of hiding under an overhanging rock.
+Then, well content with himself, he crept into a dark thicket and
+slept for several hours.
+
+When he awoke, a new-risen moon was shining, with something in her
+light which half bewildered him, half stung him to uncomprehended
+desires. Skulking to the crest of a naked knoll, he saw the landscape
+spread out all around him, with the few twinkling lights of the
+straggling village below the slopes of the pasture. But not for
+lights, or for villages, or for men was his concern. Sitting up very
+straight on his gaunt haunches, he stretched his muzzle toward the
+taunting moon, and began to sound that long, dreadful gathering cry of
+his race.
+
+It was an unknown or a long-forgotten voice in those neighborhoods,
+but none who heard it needed to have it explained. In half a minute
+every dog in the settlement was howling, barking, or yelping, in rage
+or fear. To Lone Wolf all this clamor was as nothing. He paid no more
+attention to it than as if it had been the twittering of sparrows.
+Then doors opened, and lights flashed as men came out to see what was
+the matter. Clearly visible, silhouetted against the low moon, Lone
+Wolf kept up his sinister chant to the unseen. But presently, out of
+the corner of his eye, he noted half a dozen men approaching up the
+pasture, with the noisy dogs at their heels. Men! That was different!
+Could it be that they wanted him? All at once he experienced a qualm
+of conscience, so to speak, about the sheep he had killed. It occurred
+to him that if sheep belonged to men, there might be trouble ahead.
+Abruptly he stopped his serenading of the moon, slipped over the crest
+of the knoll, and made off at a long, tireless gallop which before
+morning had put leagues between himself and the angry villagers.
+
+After this he gave a wide berth to settlements; and having made his
+first kill, he suddenly found himself an accomplished hunter. It was
+as if long-buried memories had sprung all at once to life,--memories,
+indeed, not of his own but of his ancestors',--and he knew, all at
+once, how to stalk the shy wild rabbits, to run down and kill the red
+deer. The country through which he journeyed was well stocked with
+game, and he fed abundantly as he went, with no more effort than just
+enough to give zest to his freedom. In this fashion he kept on for
+many days, working ever northward just because the wild lands
+stretched in that direction; and at last he came upon the skirts of a
+cone-shaped mountain, ragged with ancient forest, rising solitary and
+supreme out of a measureless expanse of wooded plain. From a jutting
+shoulder of rock his keen eyes noted but one straggling settlement,
+groups of scattered clearings, wide apart on the skirts of the great
+hill. They were too far off to mar the vast seclusion of the height;
+and Lone Wolf, finding a cave in the rocks that seemed exactly
+designed for his retreat, went no farther. He felt that he had come
+into his own domain.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+The settlers around the skirts of Lost Mountain were puzzled and
+indignant. For six weeks their indignation had been growing, and the
+mystery seemed no nearer a solution. Something was slaughtering their
+sheep--something that knew its business and slaughtered with dreadful
+efficiency. Several honest dogs fell under suspicion, not because
+there was anything whatever against their reputations, but simply
+because they had the misfortune to be big enough and strong enough to
+kill a sheep if they wanted to, and the brooding backwoods mind, when
+troubled, will go far on the flimsiest evidence.
+
+Of all the wrathful settlers the most furious was Brace Timmins. Not
+only had he lost in those six weeks six sheep, but now his dog, a
+splendid animal, half deerhound and half collie, had been shot on
+suspicion by a neighbor, on no better grounds, apparently, than his
+long legs and long killing jaws. Still the slaughtering of the flocks
+went on with undiminished vigor. And a few days later Brace Timmins
+avenged his favorite by publicly thrashing his too hasty neighbor in
+front of the cross-roads store. The neighbor, pounded into exemplary
+penitence, apologized, and as far as the murdered dog was concerned,
+the score was wiped clean. But the problem of the sheep killing was no
+nearer solution. If not Brace Timmins' dog, as every one made prudent
+haste to acknowledge, then whose dog was it? The life of every dog in
+the settlement, if bigger than a wood-chuck, hung by a thread, which
+might, it seemed, at any moment turn into a halter. Brace Timmins
+loved dogs; and not wishing that others should suffer the unjust fate
+which had overtaken his own, he set his whole woodcraft to the
+discovery of the true culprit.
+
+Before he had made any great progress, however, on this trail, a new
+thing happened, and suspicion was lifted from the heads of all the
+dogs. Joe Anderson's dog, a powerful beast, part sheep-dog and part
+Newfoundland, with a far-off streak of bull, and the champion fighter
+of the settlements, was found dead in the middle of Anderson's sheep
+pasture, his whole throat fairly ripped out. He had died in defence of
+his charges, and it was plainly no dog's jaws that had done such
+mangling. What dog indeed could have mastered Anderson's "Dan"?
+
+"It's a bear, gone mad on mutton," pronounced certain of the wise
+ones, idling at the cross-roads store. "Ye see as how he hain't _et_
+the dawg, noways, but jest bit him to teach him not to go interferin'
+as regards sheep."
+
+"Ye're all off," contradicted Timmins, with authority. "A bear'd hev'
+tore him an' batted him an' mauled him more'n he'd hev' bit him. A
+bear thinks more o' usin' his fore paws than what he does his jaws, if
+he gits into any kind of an onpleasantness. No, boys, our unknown
+friend up yonder's a _wolf_, take my word for it."
+
+Joe Anderson snorted, and spat accurately out through the door.
+
+"A _wolf_!" he sneered. "Go chase yerself, Brace Timmins. I'd like to
+see any wolf as could 'a' done up my Dan that way!"
+
+"Well, keep yer hair on, Joe," retorted Timmins, easily. "I'm a-goin'
+after him, an' I'll show him to you in a day or two, as like as not!"
+
+"I reckon, Joe," interposed the storekeeper, leaning forward across
+the counter, "as how there be other breeds of wolf besides the
+sneakin' little gray varmint of the East here, what's been cleaned out
+of these parts fifty year ago. If Brace is right,--an' I reckon he
+be,--then it must sure be one of them big timber wolves we read about,
+what the Lord's took it into His head to plank down here in our safe
+old woods to make us set up an' take notice. You better watch out,
+Brace. If ye don't git the brute first lick, he'll git you!"
+
+"_I'll_ watch out!" drawled Timmins, confidently; and selecting a
+strong, steel trap-chain from a box beside the counter, he sauntered
+off to put his plans in execution.
+
+These plans were simple enough. He knew that he had a wide-ranging
+adversary to deal with. But he himself was a wide ranger, and
+acquainted with every cleft and crevice of Lost Mountain. He would
+find the great wolf's lair, and set his traps accordingly, one in the
+runway, to be avoided if the wolf was as clever as he ought to be, and
+a couple of others a little aside to really do the work. Of course, he
+would carry his rifle, in case of need, but he wanted to take his
+enemy alive.
+
+For several arduous but exciting days Timmins searched in vain alike
+the dark cedar swamps and the high, broken spurs of the mountain.
+Then, one windless afternoon, when the forest scents came rising to
+him on the clear air, far up the steep he found a climbing trail
+between gray, shelving ledges. Stealthy as a lynx he followed,
+expecting at the next turn to come upon the lair of the enemy. It was
+a just expectation, but as luck would have it, that next turn, which
+would have led him straight to his goal, lay around a shoulder of rock
+whose foundations had been loosened by the rains. With a kind of long
+growl, rending and sickening, the rock gave way, and sank beneath
+Timmins' feet.
+
+Moved by the alert and unerring instinct of the woodsman, Timmins
+leaped into the air. Both high and wide he sprang, and so escaped
+being engulfed in the mass which he had dislodged. On the top of the
+ruin he fell, but he fell far and hard; and for some fifteen or twenty
+minutes after that fall he lay very still, while the dust and debris
+settled into silence under the quiet flooding of the sun.
+
+At last he opened his eyes. For a moment he made no effort to move,
+but lay wondering where he was. A weight was on his legs, and glancing
+downward, he saw that he was half covered with earth and rubbish. Then
+he remembered. Was he badly hurt? He was half afraid, now, to make
+the effort to move, lest he should find himself incapable of it.
+Still, he felt no serious pain. His head ached, to be sure; and he saw
+that his left hand was bleeding from a gash at the base of the thumb.
+That hand still clutched one of the heavy traps which he had been
+carrying, and it was plainly the trap that had cut him, as if in a
+frantic effort to escape. But where was his rifle? Cautiously turning
+his head, he peered around for it, but in vain, for during the fall it
+had flown far aside into the thickets. As he stared solicitously, all
+at once his dazed and sluggish senses sprang to life again with a
+scorching throb, which left a chill behind it. There, not ten paces
+away, sitting up on its haunches and eying him contemplatively, was a
+gigantic wolf, much bigger, it seemed to him, than any wolf had any
+right to be.
+
+Timmins' first instinct was to spring to his feet, with a yell that
+would give the dreadful stranger to understand that he was a fellow it
+would not be well to tamper with. But his woodcraft stayed him. He was
+not by any means sure that he _could_ spring to his feet. Still less
+was he sure that such an action would properly impress the great wolf,
+who, for the moment at least, seemed not actively hostile. Stillness,
+absolute immobility, was the trump-card to be always played in the
+wilderness when in doubt. So Timmins kept quite still, looking
+inquiringly at Lone Wolf. And Lone Wolf looked inquiringly at him.
+
+For several minutes this waiting game went on. Then, with easy
+nonchalance, Lone Wolf lifted one huge hind paw and vigorously
+scratched his ear. This very simple action was a profound relief to
+Timmins.
+
+"Sartain," he thought, "the crittur must be in an easy mood, or he'd
+never think to scratch his ear like that. Or mebbe he thinks I'm so
+well buried I kin wait, like an old bone!"
+
+Just then Lone Wolf got up, stretched himself, yawned prodigiously,
+came a couple of steps nearer, and sat down again, with his head
+cocked to one side, and a polite air of asking, "Do I intrude?"
+
+"Sartain sure, I'll never ketch him in a better humor!" thought
+Timmins. "I'll try the human voice on him."
+
+"Git to H---- out of that!" he commanded in a sharp voice.
+
+Lone Wolf cocked his head to the other side interrogatively. He had
+been spoken to by Toomey in that voice of authority, but the words
+were new to him. He felt that he was expected to do something, but he
+knew not what. He liked the voice--it was something like Toomey's. He
+liked the smell of Timmins' homespun shirt--it, too, was something
+like Toomey's. He became suddenly anxious to please this stranger. But
+what was wanted of him? He half arose to his feet, and glanced around
+to see if, perchance, the inexplicable order had been addressed to
+some one else. As he turned, Timmins saw, half hidden in the heavy fur
+of the neck, a stout leather collar.
+
+"I swear!" he muttered, "if tain't a _tame_ wolf what's got away!"
+With that he sat up; and pulling his legs, without any very serious
+hurt, from their covering of earth and sticks he got stiffly to his
+feet. For a moment the bright landscape reeled and swam before him,
+and he had a vague sense of having been hammered all over his body.
+Then he steadied himself. He saw that the wolf was watching him with
+the expression of a diffident but friendly dog who would like to make
+acquaintance. As he stood puzzling his wits, he remembered having read
+about the great fire which had recently done such damage to Sillaby
+and Hopkins' Circus, and he concluded that the stranger was one of the
+fugitives from that disaster.
+
+"Come here, sir! Come here, big wolf!" said he, holding out a
+confident hand.
+
+"Wolf"--that was a familiar sound to Lone Wolf's ears! it was at least
+a part of his name! And the command was one he well understood.
+Wagging his tail gravely, he came at once, and thrust his great head
+under Timmins' hand for a caress. He had enjoyed his liberty, to be
+sure, but he was beginning to find it lonely.
+
+Timmins understood animals. His voice, as he talked to the redoubtable
+brute beside him, was full of kindness, but at the same time vibrant
+with authority. His touch was gentle, but very firm and unhesitating.
+Both touch and voice conveyed very clearly to Lone Wolf's disciplined
+instinct the impression that this man, like Toomey, was a being who
+had to be obeyed, whose mastery was inevitable and beyond the reach of
+question. When Timmins told him to lie down, he did so at once, and
+stayed there obediently while Timmins gathered himself together, shook
+the dirt out of his hair and boots, recovered his cap, wiped his
+bleeding hand with leaves, and hunted up his scattered traps and
+rifle. At last Timmins took two bedraggled but massive pork
+sandwiches, wrapped in newspaper, from his pocket, and offered one to
+his strange associate. Lone Wolf was not hungry, being full of
+perfectly good mutton, but being too polite to refuse, he gulped down
+the sandwich. Timmins took out the steel chain, snapped it on to Lone
+Wolf's collar, said, "Come on!" and started homeward. And Lone Wolf,
+trained to a short leash, followed close at his heels.
+
+Timmins' breast swelled with exultation. What was the loss of one dog
+and half a dozen no-account sheep to the possession of this
+magnificent captive and the prestige of such a naked-handed capture?
+He easily inferred, of course, that his triumph must be due, in part
+at least, to some resemblance to the wolf's former master, whose
+dominance had plainly been supreme. His only anxiety was as to how the
+great wolf might conduct himself toward Settlement Society in general.
+Assuredly nothing could be more lamb-like than the animal's present
+demeanor, but Timmins remembered the fate of Joe Anderson's powerful
+dog, and had his doubts. He examined Lone Wolf's collar, and
+congratulated himself that both collar and chain were strong.
+
+It was getting well along in the afternoon when Timmins and Lone Wolf
+emerged from the thick woods into the stumpy pastures and rough burnt
+lands that spread back irregularly from the outlying farms. And here,
+while crossing a wide pasture known as Smith's Lots, an amazing thing
+befell. Of course Timmins was not particularly surprised, because his
+backwoods philosophizing had long ago led him to the conclusion that
+when things get started happening, they have a way of keeping it up.
+Days, weeks, months, glide by without event enough to ripple the most
+sensitive memory. Then the whimsical Fates do something different,
+find it interesting, and proceed to do something else. So, though
+Timmins had been accustomed all his life to managing bulls,
+good-tempered and bad-tempered alike, and had never had the ugliest of
+them presume to turn upon him, he was not astonished now by the
+apparition of Smith's bull, a wide-horned, carrot-red, white-faced
+Hereford, charging down upon him in thunderous fury from behind a
+poplar thicket. In a flash he remembered that the bull, which was
+notoriously murderous in temper, had been turned out into that pasture
+to act as guardian to Smith's flocks. There was not a tree near big
+enough for refuge. There was not a stick big enough for a weapon. And
+he could not bring himself to shoot so valuable a beast as this fine
+thoroughbred. "Shucks!" he muttered in deep disgust. "I might 'a'
+knowed it!" Dropping Lone Wolf's chain, he ran forward, waving his
+arms and shouting angrily. But that red onrushing bulk was quite too
+dull-witted to understand that it ought to obey. It was in the mood to
+charge an avalanche. Deeply humiliated, Timmins hopped aside, and
+reluctantly ran for the woods, trusting to elude his pursuer by timely
+dodging.
+
+Hitherto Lone Wolf had left all cattle severely alone, having got it
+somehow into his head that they were more peculiarly under man's
+protection than the sheep. Now, however, he saw his duty, and duty is
+often a very well-developed concept in the brain of dog and wolf. His
+ears flattened, his eyes narrowed to flaming green slits, his lips
+wrinkled back till his long white fangs were clean bared, and without
+a sound he hurled himself upon the red bull's flank. Looking back over
+his shoulder, Timmins saw it all. It was as if all his life Lone Wolf
+had been killing bulls, so unerring was that terrible chopping snap at
+the great beast's throat. Far forward, just behind the bull's jaws,
+the slashing fangs caught. And Timmins was astounded to see the bull,
+checked in mid-rush, plunge staggering forward upon his knees. From
+this position he abruptly rolled over upon his side, thrown by his
+own impetus combined with a dexterous twist of his opponent's body.
+Then Lone Wolf bounded backward, and stood expectant, ready to repeat
+the attack if necessary. But it was not necessary. Slowly the great
+red bull arose to his feet, and stared about him stupidly, the blood
+gushing from his throat. Then he swayed and collapsed. And Lone Wolf,
+wagging his tail like a dog, went back to Timmins' side for
+congratulations.
+
+The woodsman gazed ruefully at his slain foe. Then he patted his
+defender's head, recovered the chain with a secure grip, and said
+slowly:--
+
+"I reckon, partner, ye did yer dooty as ye seen it, an' mebbe I'm
+beholden to ye fer a hul' skin, fer that there crittur was sartinly
+amazin' ugly an' spry on his pins. But ye're goin' to be a
+responsibility some. Ye ain't no suckin' lamb to hev aroun' the house,
+I'm thinkin'."
+
+To these remarks, which he judged from their tone to be approving,
+Lone Wolf wagged assent, and the homeward journey was continued.
+Timmins went with his head down, buried in thought. All at once,
+coming to a convenient log, he seated himself, and made Lone Wolf lie
+down at his feet. Then he took out the remaining sandwich,--which he
+himself, still shaken from his fall, had no desire to eat,--and
+contemplatively, in small fragments, he fed it to the wolf's great
+blood-stained jaws. At last he spoke, with the finality of one whose
+mind is quite made up.
+
+"Partner," said he, "there ain't no help for it. Bill Smith's a-goin'
+to hold _me_ responsible for the killin' o' that there crittur o'
+his'n, an' that means a pretty penny, it bein' a thoroughbred, an'
+imported at that. He ain't never a-goin' to believe but what I let you
+loose on to him a purpose, jest to save _my_ hide! Shucks! Moreover,
+ye may's well realize y'ain't _popular_ 'round these parts; an' first
+thing, when I wasn't lookin', somebody'd be a-puttin' somethin'
+onhealthy into yer vittles, partner! We've kind o' took to each other,
+you an' me; an' I reckon _we'd_ git on together _fine_, me always
+havin' me own way, of course. But there ain't no help fer it. Ye're
+too hefty a proposition, by long odds, fer a community like Lost
+Mountain Settlement. I'm a-goin' to write right off to Sillaby an'
+Hopkins, an' let them have ye back, partner. An' I reckon the price
+they'll pay'll be enough to let me square myself with Bill Smith."
+
+And thus it came about that, within a couple of weeks, Lone Wolf and
+Toomey were once more entertaining delighted audiences, while the
+settlement of Lost Mountain, with Timmins' prestige established beyond
+assault, relapsed into its uneventful quiet.
+
+
+
+
+THE BEAR'S FACE
+
+
+
+
+THE BEAR'S FACE
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+"There ain't no denying but what you give us a great show, Job," said
+the barkeeper, with that air of patronage which befits the man who
+presides over and autocratically controls the varied activities of a
+saloon in a Canadian lumber town.
+
+"It _is_ a good show!" assented Job Toomey, modestly. He leaned up
+against the bar in orthodox fashion, just as if his order had been
+"whiskey fer mine!" but being a really great animal trainer, whose eye
+must be always clear and his nerve always steady as a rock, his glass
+contained nothing stronger than milk and Vichy.
+
+Fifteen years before, Job Toomey had gone away with a little
+travelling menagerie because he loved wild animals. He had come back
+famous, and the town of Grantham Mills, metropolis of his native
+county, was proud of him. He was head of the menagerie of the Sillaby
+and Hopkins' Circus, and trainer of one of the finest troupes of
+performing beasts in all America. It was a great thing for Grantham
+Mills to have had a visit from the Sillaby and Hopkins' Circus on its
+way from one important centre to another. There had been two great
+performances, afternoon and evening. And now, after the last
+performance, some of Toomey's old-time acquaintances were making
+things pleasant for him in the bar of the Continental.
+
+"I don't see how ye do it, Job!" said Sanderson, an old river-man who
+had formerly trapped and hunted with Toomey. "I mind ye was always
+kind o' slick an' understandin' with the wild critters; but the way
+them lions an' painters an' bears an' wolves jest folly yer eye an'
+yer nod, willin' as so many poodle dogs, beats me. They seem to like
+it, too."
+
+"They _do_," said Toomey. "Secret of it is, _I_ like _them_; so by an'
+by they learn to like me well enough, an' try to please me. I make it
+worth their while, too. Also, they know I'll stand no fooling. Fear
+an' love, rightly mixed, boys--plenty of love, an' jest enough fear to
+keep it from spilin'--that's a mixture'll carry a man far--leastways
+with animals!"
+
+The barkeeper smiled, and was about to say the obvious thing, but he
+was interrupted by a long, lean-jawed, leather-faced man, captain of
+one of the river tugs, whose eyes had grown sharp as gimlets with
+looking out for snags and sandbanks.
+
+"The finest beast in the whole menagerie, that big grizzly," said he,
+spitting accurately into a spacious box of sawdust, "I noticed as how
+ye didn't have _him_ in your performance, Mr. Toomey. Now, I kind o'
+thought as how I'd like to see you put _him_ through his stunts."
+
+Toomey was silent for a moment. Then, with a certain reserve in his
+voice, he answered--
+
+"Oh, he ain't exactly strong on stunts."
+
+The leather-faced captain grinned quizzically.
+
+"Which does he go shy on, Mr. Toomey, the love or the fear?" he
+asked.
+
+"Both," said Toomey, shortly. Then his stern face relaxed, and he
+laughed good-humoredly. "Fact is, I think we'll have to be sellin'
+that there grizzly to some zoological park. He's kind of bad fer my
+prestige."
+
+"How's that, Job?" asked Sanderson, expectant of a story.
+
+"Well," replied Toomey, "to tell you the truth, boys,--an' I only say
+it because I'm here at home, among friends,--it's _me_ that's afraid
+of _him_! An' he knows it. He's the only beast that's ever been able
+to make me feel fear--the real, deep-down fear. An' I've never been
+able to git quit of that ugly notion. I go an' stand in front o' his
+cage; an' he jest puts that great face of his up agin the bars an'
+stares at me. An' I look straight into his eyes, an' remember what has
+passed between us, an' I feel afraid still. Yes, it wouldn't be much
+use me tryin' to train _that_ bear, boys, an' I'm free to acknowledge
+it to you all."
+
+"Tell us about it, Job!" suggested the barkeeper, settling his large
+frame precariously on the top of a small, high stool.
+
+An urgent chorus of approval came from all about the bar. Toomey took
+out his watch and considered.
+
+"We start away at 5.40 A.M.," said he. "An' I must make out to get a
+wink o' sleep. But I reckon I've got time enough. As you'll see,
+however, before I git through, the drinks are on me, so name yer
+pison, boys. Meanwhile, you'll excuse me if I don't join you this
+time. A man kin hold jest about so much Vichy an' milk, an' I've got
+my load aboard.
+
+"It was kind of this way," he continued, when the barkeeper had
+performed his functions. "You see, for nigh ten years after I left
+Grantham Mills, I'd stuck closer'n a burr to my business, till I began
+to feel I knew 'most all there was to know about trainin' animals.
+Men do git that kind of a fool feelin' sometimes about lots of things
+harder than animal-trainin'. Well, nothin' would do me but I should go
+back to my old business of _trappin'_ the beasts, only with one big
+difference. I wanted to go in fer takin' them alive, so as to sell
+them to menageries an' all that sort of thing. An' it was no pipe
+dream, fer I done well at it from the first. But that's not here nor
+there. I was gittin' tired of it, after a lot o' travellin' an' some
+lively kind of scrapes; so I made up my mind to finish up with a
+grizzly, an' then git back to trainin', which was what I was cut out
+fer, after all.
+
+"Well, I wanted a grizzly; an' it wasn't long before I found one. We
+were campin' among the foothills of the upper end of the Sierra Nevada
+range, in northern California. It was a good prospectin' ground fer
+grizzly, an' we found lots o' signs. I wanted one not too big fer
+convenience, an' not so old as to be too set in his ways an' too proud
+to larn. I had three good men with me, an' we scattered ourselves over
+a big bit o' ground, lookin' fer a likely trail. When I stumbled on to
+that chap in the cage yonder, what Captain Bird admires so, I knew
+right off _he_ wasn't what I was after. But the queer thing was that
+_he_ didn't seem to feel that way about _me_. He was after me before I
+had time to think of anything jest suitable to the occasion."
+
+"Where in thunder was yer gun?" demanded the river-man.
+
+"That was jest the trouble!" answered Toomey. "Ye see, I'd stood the
+gun agin a tree, in a dry place, while I stepped over a bit o' boggy
+ground, intendin' to lay down an' drink out of a leetle spring. Well,
+the bear was handier to that gun than I was. When he come fer me, I
+tell ye I didn't go back fer the gun. I ran straight up the hill, an'
+him too close at my heels fer convenience. Then I remembered that a
+grizzly don't run his best when he goes up hill on a slant, so on the
+slant I went. It worked, I reckon, fer though I couldn't say I gained
+on him much, it was soothin' to observe that he didn't seem to gain on
+me.
+
+"Fer maybe well on to three hundred yards it was a fine race, and I
+was beginnin' to wonder if the bear was gittin' as near winded as I
+was, when slap, I come right out on the crest of the ridge, which jest
+ahead o' me jutted out in a sort of elbow. What there was on the other
+side I couldn't see, and couldn't take time to inquire. I jest had to
+chance it, hopin' it might be somethin' less than a thousand foot
+drop. I ran straight to the edge, and jest managed to throw myself
+flat on my face an' clutch at the grasses like mad to keep from
+pitchin' clean out into space. It _was_ a drop, all right,--two
+hundred foot or more o' sheer cliff.
+
+"An' the bear was not thirty yards behind me.
+
+"I looked at the bear, as I laid there clutchin' the grass-roots. Then
+I looked down over the edge. I didn't feel frightened exactly, so fur;
+didn't _know_ enough, maybe, to be _frightened_ of _any_ animal. But
+jest at this point I was mighty anxious. You'll believe, then, it was
+kind o' good to me to see, right below, maybe twenty foot down, a
+little pocket of a ledge full o' grass an' blossomin' weeds. There was
+no time to calculate. I could let myself drop, an' maybe, if I had
+luck, I could stop where I fell, in the pocket, instead of bouncin'
+out an' down, to be smashed into flinders. Or, on the other hand, I
+could stay where I was, an' be ripped into leetle frayed ravellin's by
+the bear; an' that would be in about three seconds, at the rate he was
+comin'. Well, I let myself over the edge till I jest hung by the
+fingers, an' then dropped, smooth as I could, down the rock face, kind
+of clutchin' at every leetle knob as I went to check the fall. I lit
+true in the pocket, an' I lit pretty hard, as ye might know, but not
+hard enough to knock the wits out o' me, the grass an' weeds bein'
+fairly soft. An' clawin' out desperate with both hands, I caught, an'
+stayed put. Some dirt an' stones come down, kind o' smart, on my head,
+an' when they'd stopped I looked up. There was the bear, his big head
+stuck down, with one ugly paw hangin' over beside it, starin' at me. I
+was so tickled at havin' fooled him, I didn't think o' the hole I was
+in, but sez to him, saucy as you please, 'Thou art so near, an' yet so
+far.' At this he give a grunt, which might have meant anything, an'
+disappeared.
+
+"'Ye know enough to know when you're euchred,' says I. An' then I
+turned to considerin' the place I was in, an' how I was to git out of
+it.
+
+"To git out of it, indeed! The more I considered, the more I wondered
+how I'd ever managed to stay in it. It wasn't bigger than three foot
+by two, or two an' a half, maybe, in width, out from the cliff-face.
+On my left, as I sat with my back agin the cliff, a wall o' rock ran
+out straight, closin' off the pocket to that side clean an' sharp,
+though with a leetle kind of a roughness, so to speak--nothin' more
+than a roughness--which I calculated _might_ do, on a pinch, fer me
+to hang on to if I wanted to try to climb round to the other side. I
+_didn't_ want to jest yet, bein' still shaky from the drop, which, as
+things turned out, was just as well for me.
+
+"To my right a bit of a ledge, maybe six or eight inches wide, ran off
+along the cliff-face for a matter of ten or a dozen feet, then slanted
+up, an' widened out agin to another little pocket, or shelf like, of
+bare rock, about level with the top o' my head. From this shelf a
+narrow crack, not more than two or three inches wide, kind o'
+zigzagged away till it reached the top o' the cliff, perhaps forty
+foot off. It wasn't much, but it looked like somethin' I could git a
+good finger-hold into, if only I could work my way along to that
+leetle shelf. I was figurin' hard on this, an' had about made up my
+mind to try it, an' was reachin' out, in fact, to start, when I
+stopped sudden.
+
+"A good, healthy-lookin' rattler, his diamond-pattern back bright in
+the sun, come out of the crevice an' stopped on the shelf to take a
+look at the weather.
+
+"It struck me right off that he was on his way down to this pocket o'
+mine, which was maybe his favorite country residence. I didn't like
+one bit the idee o' his comin' an' findin' me there, when I'd never
+been invited. I felt right bad about it, you bet; and I'd have got
+away if I could. But not bein' able to, there was nothin' fer me to do
+but try an' make myself onpleasant. I grabbed up a handful o' dirt an'
+threw it at the rattler. It scattered all 'round him, of course, an'
+some of it hit him. Whereupon he coiled himself like a flash, with
+head an' tail both lifted, an' rattled indignantly. There was nothin'
+big enough to do him any damage with, an' I was mighty oneasy lest he
+might insist on comin' home to see who his impident caller was. But I
+kept on flingin' dirt as long as there was any handy, while he kept on
+rattlin', madder an' madder. Then I stopped, to think what I'd better
+do next. I was jest startin' to take off my boot, to hit him with as
+he come along the narrow ledge, when suddenly he uncoiled an' slipped
+back into the crevice.
+
+"Either it was very hot, or I'd been a bit more anxious than I'd
+realized, for I felt my forehead wet with sweat; I drew my sleeve
+across it, all the time keeping my eyes glued on the spot where the
+rattler'd disappeared. Jest then, seemed to me, I felt a breath on the
+back o' my neck. A kind o' cold chill crinkled down my backbone, an' I
+turned my face 'round sharp.
+
+"Will you believe it, boys? I was nigh jumpin' straight off that there
+ledge, right into the landscape an' eternity! There, starin' 'round
+the wall o' rock, not one inch more than a foot away from mine, was
+the face o' the bear.
+
+"Well, I was scared. There's no gittin' round that fact. There was
+something so onnatural about that big, wicked face hangin' there over
+that awful height, an' starin' so close into mine. I jest naturally
+scrooged away as fur as I could git, an' hung on tight to the rock
+so's not to go over. An' _then_ my face wasn't more'n two feet away,
+do the best I could; an' that was the time I found what it felt like
+to be right down scared. I believe if that face had come much closer,
+I'd have _bit_ at it, that minute, like a rat in a hole.
+
+"For maybe thirty seconds we jest stared. Then, I kind o' got a holt
+of myself, an' cursed myself good fer bein' such a fool; an' my blood
+got to runnin' agin. I fell to studyin' how the bear could have got
+there; an' pretty soon I reckoned it out as how there must be a big
+ledge runnin' down the cliff face, jest the other side o' the wall o'
+the pocket. An' I hugged myself to think I hadn't managed to climb
+'round on to that ledge jest before the bear arrived. I got this all
+figgered out, an' it took some time. But still that face, hangin' out
+there over the height, kept starin' at me; an' I never saw a wickeder
+look than it had on to it, steady an' unwinkin' as a nightmare. It is
+curious how long a beast _kin_ look at one without winkin'. At last,
+it got on to my nerves so I jest couldn't stand it; an' snatching a
+bunch of weeds (I'd already flung away all the loose dirt, flingin' it
+at the rattler), I whipped 'em across them devilish leetle eyes as
+hard as I could. It was a kind of a child's trick, or a woman's, but
+it worked all right, fer it made the eyes blink. That proved they were
+real eyes, an' I felt easier. After all, it _was_ only a bear; an' he
+couldn't git any closer than he was. But that was a mite too close,
+an' I wished he'd move. An' jest then, not to be gittin' _too_ easy in
+my mind, I remembered the rattler.
+
+"Another cold chill down my backbone! I looked 'round right smart. But
+the rattler wasn't anywhere in sight. That, however, put me in mind of
+what I'd been goin' to do to _him_. A boot wasn't much of a weapon
+agin a bear, but it was the only thing handy, so I reckoned I'd have
+to make it do. I yanked it off, took it by the toe, an' let that
+wicked face have the heel of it as hard as I could. I hadn't any room
+to swing, so I couldn't hit very hard. But a bear's nose is tender,
+on the tip; an' it was jest there, of course, I took care to land.
+There was a big snort, kind o' surprised like, an' the face
+disappeared.
+
+"I felt a sight better.
+
+"Fer maybe five minutes nothin' else happened. I sat there figgerin'
+how I was goin' to git out o' that hole; an' my figgerin' wasn't
+anyways satisfactory. I knew the bear was a stayer, all right. There'd
+be no such a thing as tryin' to crawl 'round that shoulder o' rock
+till I was blame sure _he_ wasn't on t'other side; an' how I was goin'
+to find _that_ out was more than I could git at. There was no such a
+thing as climbin' _up_. There was no such a thing as climbin' _down_.
+An' as fer that leetle ledge an' crevice leadin' off to the
+right,--well, boys, when there's a rattler layin' low fer ye in a
+crevice, ye're goin' to keep clear o' that crevice. It wanted a good
+three hours of sundown, an' I knew my chaps wouldn't be missin' me
+before night. When I didn't turn up for dinner, of course they'd begin
+to suspicion somethin', because they knew I was takin' things rather
+easy an' not followin' up any long trails. It looked like I was there
+fer the night; an' I didn't like it, I tell you. There wasn't room to
+lay down, and if I fell asleep settin' up, like as not I'd roll off
+the ledge. There was nothing fer it but to set up a whoop an' a yell
+every once in a while, in hopes that one or other of the boys _might_
+be cruisin' 'round near enough to hear me. So I yelled some half a
+dozen times, stoppin' between each yell to listen. Gittin' no answer,
+at last I decided to save my throat a bit an try agin after a spell o'
+restin' an' worryin'. Jest then I turned my head; an' I forgot, right
+off, to worry about fallin' off the ledge. There, pokin' his ugly head
+out o' the crevice, was the rattler. I chucked a bunch o' weeds at
+him, an' he drew back in agin. But the thing that jarred me now was,
+how would I keep him off when it got too dark fer me to see him. He'd
+be slippin' home quiet like, thinkin' maybe I was gone, an' mad when
+he found I wasn't, fer, ye see, _he_ hadn't no means of knowin' that I
+couldn't go _up_ the rock jest as easy as I come down. I feared there
+was goin' to be trouble after dark. An' while I was figgerin' on that
+till the sweat come out on my forehead, I turned agin, an' there agin
+was the bear's face starin' round the rock not more'n a foot away.
+
+"You'll understand how my nerves was on the jumps, when I tell you,
+boys, that I was scared an' startled all over again, like the first
+time I'd seen it. With a yell, I fetched a swipe at it with my boot;
+but it was gone, like a shadow, before I hit it; an' the boot flew out
+o' my hand an' went over the cliff, an' me pretty nigh after it. I
+jest caught myself, an' hung on, kind o' shaky, fer a minute. Next
+thing, I heard a great scratchin' at the other side o' the rock, as if
+the brute was tryin' to git a better toehold an' work some new dodge
+on me. Then the face appeared agin, an' maybe, though perhaps that was
+jest my excited imagination, it was some two or three inches closer
+this time.
+
+"I lit out at it with my fist, not havin' my other boot handy. But
+Lord, a bear kin dodge the sharpest boxer. That face jest wasn't
+there, before I could hit it. Then, five seconds more, an' it was back
+agin starin' at me. I wouldn't give it the satisfaction o' tryin' to
+swipe it agin, so I jest kept still, pretendin' to ignore it; an' in a
+minute or two it disappeared. But then, a minute or two more an' it
+was back agin. An' so it went on, disappearin', comin' back, goin'
+away, comin' back, an' always jest when I _wasn't_ expectin' it, an'
+always sudden an' quick as a shadow, till _that_ kind o' got on to my
+nerves too, an' I wished he'd stay one way or t'other, so as I could
+know what I was up against. At last, settlin' down as small as I
+could, I made up my mind I jest wouldn't look that way at all, face or
+no face, but give all my attention to watchin' for the rattler, an'
+yellin' fer the boys. Judgin' by the sun,--which went mighty slow that
+day,--I kept that game up for an hour or more; an' then, as the
+rattler didn't come any more than the boys, I got tired of it, an'
+looked 'round for the bear's face. Well, that time it wasn't there.
+But in place of it was a big brown paw, reachin' round the edge of the
+rock all by itself, an' clawin' quietly within about a foot o' my ear.
+That was all the farthest it would reach, however, so I tried jest to
+keep my mind off it. In a minute or two it disappeared; an' then back
+come the face.
+
+"I didn't like it. I preferred the paw. But then, it kept the
+situation from gittin' monotonous.
+
+"I suppose it was about this time the bear remembered somethin' that
+wanted seein' to down the valley. The face disappeared once more, and
+this time it didn't come back. After I hadn't seen it fer a half-hour,
+I began to think maybe it had _really_ gone away; but I knew how foxy
+a bear could be, an' thought jest as like as not he was waitin',
+patient as a cat, on the other side o' the rock fer me to look round
+so's he could git a swipe at me that would jest wipe my face clean
+off. I didn't try to look round. But I kept yellin' every little
+while; an' all at once a voice answered right over my head. I tell you
+it sounded good, if _'twasn't_ much of a voice. It was Steevens, my
+packer, lookin' down at me.
+
+"'Hello, what in h---- are ye doin' down there, Job?' he demanded.
+
+"'Waiting fer you to git a rope an' hoist me up!' says I. 'But look
+out fer the bear!'
+
+"'Bear nothin'!' says he.
+
+"'Chuck an eye down the other side,' says I.
+
+"He disappeared, but came right back. 'Bear nothin',' says he agin,
+havin' no originality.
+
+"'Well, he _was_ there, 'an' he stayed all the afternoon,' says I.
+
+"'Reckon he must 'a' heard ye was an animal trainer, an' got skeered!'
+says Steevens. But I wasn't jokin' jest then.
+
+"'You cut fer camp, an' bring a rope, an' git me out o' this, _quick_,
+d'ye hear?' says I. 'There's a rattler lives here, an' he's comin'
+back presently, an' I don't want to meet him. Slide!'
+
+"Well, boys, that's all. That bear _wasn't_ jest what I'd wanted; but
+feelin' ugly about him, I decided to take him an' break him in. We
+trailed him, an' after a lot o' trouble we trapped him. He was a sight
+more trouble after we'd got him, I tell you. But afterwards, when I
+set myself to tryin' to train him, why, I might jest as well have
+tried to train an earthquake. Do you suppose that grizzly was goin' to
+be afraid o' _me?_ He'd seen me afraid o' _him_, all right. He'd seen
+it in my eyes! An' what's more, _I_ couldn't forgit it; but when I'd
+look at him I'd _feel_, every time, the nightmare o' that great wicked
+face hangin' there over the cliff, close to mine. So, he don't
+perform. What'll ye take, boys? It's hot milk, this time, fer mine."
+
+
+
+
+THE DUEL ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+
+
+THE DUEL ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+White and soft over the wide, sloping upland lay the snow, marked
+across with the zigzag gray lines of the fences, and spotted here and
+there with little clumps of woods or patches of bushy pasture. The sky
+above was white as the earth below, being mantled with snow-laden
+cloud not yet ready to spill its feathery burden on the world. One
+little farm-house, far down the valley, served but to emphasize the
+spacious emptiness of the silent winter landscape.
+
+Out from one of the snow-streaked thickets jumped a white rabbit, its
+long ears waving nervously, and paused for a second to look back with
+a frightened air. It had realized that some enemy was on its trail,
+but what that enemy was, it did not know. After this moment of
+perilous hesitation, it went leaping forward across the open, leaving
+a vivid track in the soft surface snow. The little animal's discreet
+alarm, however, was dangerously corrupted by its curiosity; and at the
+lower edge of the field, before going through a snake fence and
+entering another thicket, it stopped, stood up as erect as possible on
+its strong hind quarters, and again looked back. As it did so, the
+unknown enemy again revealed himself, just emerging, a slender and
+sinister black shape, from the upper thicket. A quiver of fear passed
+over the rabbit's nerves. Its curiosity all effaced, it went through
+the fence with an elongated leap and plunged into the bushes in a
+panic. Here it doubled upon itself twice in a short circle, trusting
+by this well-worn device to confuse the unswerving pursuer. Then,
+breaking out upon the lower side of the thicket, it resumed its
+headlong flight across the fields.
+
+Meanwhile the enemy, a large mink, was following on the trail with the
+dogged persistence of a sleuth-hound. Sure of his methods, he did not
+pause to see what the quarry was doing, but kept his eyes and nose
+occupied with the fresh tracks. His speed was not less than that of
+the rabbit, and his endurance was vastly greater. Being very long in
+the body, and extremely short in the legs, he ran in a most peculiar
+fashion, arching his lithe back almost like a measuring-worm and
+straightening out like a steel spring suddenly released. These sinuous
+bounds were grotesque enough in appearance, but singularly effective.
+The trail they made, overlapping that of the rabbit, but quite
+distinct from it, varied according to the depth of the surface snow.
+Where the snow lay thin, just deep enough to receive an imprint, the
+mink's small feet left a series of delicate, innocent-looking marks,
+much less formidable in appearance than those of the pad-footed
+fugitive. But where the loose snow had gathered deeper the mink's long
+body and sinewy tail from time to time stamped themselves
+unmistakably.
+
+When the mink reached the second thicket, his keen and experienced
+craft penetrated at once the poor ruses of the fugitive. Cutting
+across the circlings of the trail, he picked it up again with
+implacable precision, making almost a straight line through the
+underbrush. When he emerged again into the open, the rabbit was in
+full view ahead.
+
+The next strip of woodland in the fugitive's path was narrow and
+dense. Below it, in a patch of hillocky pasture ground, sloping to a
+pond of steel-bright ice, a red fox was diligently hunting. He ran
+hither and thither, furtive, but seemingly erratic, poking his nose
+into half-covered moss-tufts and under the roots of dead stumps,
+looking for mice or shrews. He found a couple of the latter, but
+these were small satisfaction to his vigorous winter appetite.
+Presently he paused, lifted his narrow, cunning nose toward the woods,
+and appeared to ponder the advisability of going on a rabbit hunt. His
+fine, tawny, ample brush of a tail gently swept the light snow behind
+him as he stood undecided.
+
+All at once he crouched flat upon the snow, quivering with excitement,
+like a puppy about to jump at a wind-blown leaf. He had seen the
+rabbit emerging from the woods. Absolutely motionless he lay, so still
+that, in spite of his warm coloring, he might have been taken for a
+fragment of dead wood. And as he watched, tense with anticipation, he
+saw the rabbit run into a long, hollow log, which lay half-veiled in a
+cluster of dead weeds. Instantly he darted forward, ran at top speed,
+and crouched before the lower end of the log, where he knew the rabbit
+must come out.
+
+Within a dozen seconds the mink arrived, and followed the fugitive
+straight into his ineffectual retreat. Such narrow quarters were just
+what the mink loved. The next instant the rabbit shot forth--to be
+caught in mid-air by the waiting fox, and die before it had time to
+realize in what shape doom had come upon it.
+
+All unconscious that he was trespassing upon another's hunt, the fox,
+with a skilful jerk of his head, flung the limp and sprawling victim
+across his shoulder, holding it by one leg, and started away down the
+slope toward his lair on the other side of the pond.
+
+As the mink's long body darted out from the hollow log he stopped
+short, crouched flat upon the snow with twitching tail, and stared at
+the triumphant intruder with eyes that suddenly blazed red. The
+trespass was no less an insult than an injury; and many of the wild
+kindreds show themselves possessed of a nice sensitiveness on the
+point of their personal dignity. For an animal of the mink's size the
+fox was an overwhelmingly powerful antagonist, to be avoided with care
+under all ordinary circumstances. But to the disappointed hunter, his
+blood hot from the long, exciting chase, this present circumstance
+seemed by no means ordinary. Noiseless as a shadow, and swift and
+stealthy as a snake, he sped after the leisurely fox, and with one
+snap bit through the great tendon of his right hind leg, permanently
+laming him.
+
+As the pang went through him, and the maimed leg gave way beneath his
+weight, the fox dropped his burden and turned savagely upon his
+unexpected assailant. The mink, however, had sprung away, and lay
+crouched in readiness on the snow, eying his enemy malignantly. With a
+fierce snap of his long, punishing jaws the fox rushed upon him.
+But--the mink was not there. With a movement so quick as fairly to
+elude the sight, he was now crouching several yards away, watchful,
+vindictive, menacing. The fox made two more short rushes, in vain;
+then he, too, crouched, considering the situation, and glaring at his
+slender black antagonist. The mink's small eyes were lit with a
+smouldering, ruddy glow, sinister and implacable; while rage and pain
+had cast over the eyes of the fox a peculiar green opalescence.
+
+For perhaps half a minute the two lay motionless, though quivering
+with the intensity of restraint and expectation. Then, with lightning
+suddenness, the fox repeated his dangerous rush. But again the mink
+was not there. As composed as if he had never moved a hair, he was
+lying about three yards to one side, glaring with that same immutable
+hate.
+
+At this the fox seemed to realize that it was no use trying to catch
+so elusive a foe. The realization came to him slowly--and slowly,
+sullenly, he arose and turned away, ignoring the prize which he could
+not carry off. With an awkward limp, he started across the ice,
+seeming to scorn his small but troublesome antagonist.
+
+Having thus recovered the spoils, and succeeded in scoring his point
+over so mighty an adversary, the mink might have been expected to let
+the matter rest and quietly reap the profit of his triumph. But all
+the vindictiveness of his ferocious and implacable tribe was now
+aroused. Vengeance, not victory, was his craving. When the fox had
+gone about a dozen feet, all at once the place where the mink had been
+crouching was empty. Almost in the same instant, as it seemed, the fox
+was again, and mercilessly, bitten through the leg.
+
+This time, although the fox had seemed to be ignoring the foe, he
+turned like a flash to meet the assault. Again, however, he was just
+too late. His mad rush, the snapping of his long jaws, availed him
+nothing. The mink crouched, eying him, ever just beyond his reach. A
+gleam of something very close to fear came into his furious eyes as he
+turned again to continue his reluctant retreat.
+
+Again, and again, and yet again, the mink repeated his elusive attack,
+each time inflicting a deep and disastrous wound, and each time
+successfully escaping the counter-assault. The trail of the fox was
+now streaked and flecked with scarlet, and both his hind legs dragged
+heavily. He reached the edge of the smooth ice and turned at bay. The
+mink drew back, cautious for all his hate. Then the fox started across
+the steel-gray glair, picking his steps that he might have a firm
+foothold.
+
+A few seconds later the mink once more delivered his thrust. Feinting
+towards the enemy's right, he swerved with that snake-like celerity of
+his, and bit deep into the tender upper edge of the fox's thigh, where
+it plays over the groin.
+
+It was a cunning and deadly stroke. But in recovering from it, to dart
+away again to safe distance, his feet slipped, ever so little, on the
+shining surface of the ice. The delay was only for the minutest
+fraction of a second. But in that minutest fraction lay the fox's
+opportunity. His wheel and spring were this time not too late. His
+jaws closed about the mink's slim backbone and crunched it to
+fragments. The lean, black shape straightened out with a sharp
+convulsion and lay still on the ice.
+
+Though fully aware of the efficacy and finality of that bite, the fox
+set his teeth, again and again, with curious deliberation of movement,
+into the limp and unresisting form. Then, with his tongue hanging a
+little from his bloody jaws, he lifted his head and stared, with a
+curious, wavering, anxiously doubtful look, over the white familiar
+fields. The world, somehow, looked strange and blurry to him. He
+turned, leaving the dead mink on the ice, and painfully retraced his
+deeply crimsoned trail. Just ahead was the opening in the log, the way
+to that privacy which he desperately craved. The code of all the
+aristocrats of the wild kindred, subtly binding even in that supreme
+hour, forbade that he should consent to yield himself to death in the
+garish publicity of the open. With the last of his strength he crawled
+into the log, till just the bushy tip of his tail protruded to betray
+him. There he lay down with one paw over his nose, and sank into the
+long sleep. For an hour the frost bit hard upon the fields, stiffening
+to stone the bodies but now so hot with eager life. Then the snow came
+thick and silent, filling the emptiness with a moving blur, and buried
+away all witness of the fight.
+
+
+ * * * * * *
+
+
+Charles G. D. Roberts'
+
+ THE BACKWOODSMEN
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 12mo $1.50_
+
+ "'The Backwoodsmen' shows that the writer knows the backwoods as
+ the sailor knows the sea. Indeed, his various studies of wild life
+ in general, whether cast in the world of short sketch or story or
+ full-length narrative, have always secured an interested
+ public.... Mr. Roberts possesses a keen artistic sense which is
+ especially marked when he is rounding some story to its end. There
+ is never a word too much, and he invariably stops when the stop
+ should be made.... Few writers exhibit such entire sympathy with
+ the nature of beasts and birds as he."--_Boston Herald._
+
+ "When placed by the side of the popular novel, the strength of
+ these stories causes them to stand out like a huge primitive giant
+ by the side of a simpering society miss, and while the grace and
+ beauty of the girl may please the eye for a moment, it is to the
+ rugged strength of the primitive man your eyes will turn to glory
+ in his power and simplicity. In simple, forceful style Mr. Roberts
+ takes the reader with him out into the cold, dark woods, through
+ blizzards, stalking game, encountering all the dangers of the
+ backwoodsmen's life, and enjoying the close contact with Nature in
+ all her moods. His descriptions are so vivid that you can almost
+ feel the tang of the frosty air, the biting sting of the snowy
+ sleet beating on your face, you can hear the crunch of the snow
+ beneath your feet, and when, after heartlessly exposing you to the
+ elements, he lets you wander into camp with the characters of the
+ story, you stretch out and bask in the warmth and cheer of the
+ fire."--_Western Review._
+
+L. W. Brownell's
+
+ PHOTOGRAPHY FOR THE SPORTSMAN NATURALIST
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "It often occurs that he who finds delight in woodcraft finds also
+ a pleasure in preserving by photography what he finds to interest
+ him in his wanderings in the open. To such this book appeals with
+ a peculiar force, for the author is evidently at once familiar
+ with wood and field life and an adept with the camera."--_Boston
+ Transcript._
+
+Photography for the Sportsman Naturalist is in
+
+ THE AMERICAN SPORTSMAN LIBRARY SERIES
+
+The other volumes in the series are _The American Thoroughbred_,
+_American Yachting_, _Bass, Pike, Perch, and other Fish_, _Big Game
+Fishes of the United States_, _The Deer Family_, _Guns, Ammunition,
+and Tackle_, _Lawn Tennis and Lacrosse_, _Musk-Ox, Bison, Sheep, and
+Goat_, _Riding and Driving_, _Rowing and Track Athletics_, _Salmon and
+Trout_, _The Sporting Dog_, _The Trotting and the Pacing Horse_,
+_Upland Game Birds_, _and The Water Fowl Family_.
+
+The price of each volume is $2.00 net.
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+
+Ernest Ingersoll's
+
+ LIFE OF ANIMALS: THE MAMMALS
+
+ _Colored Plates and Photographic Illustrations_
+
+ _Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "Bountifully illustrated with new colored plates drawn and painted
+ by the author's daughter, and with more than a hundred
+ photographs, many of them taken by the author himself, the text of
+ the volume gives a succinct and lucid account of the life of the
+ mammals,... their ancestry, their place in nature, their means of
+ livelihood, and their general characteristics."--_New York
+ Herald._
+
+ "An exceedingly entertaining and informing book containing the
+ latest information concerning the whole group of mammals, that
+ branch of animal creation most interesting to man because he is
+ one himself. There are numberless works on this topic or related
+ ones, but we know of none that is so comprehensive as this in
+ a single volume.... There is an amazing amount of information
+ written simply but with authority. Every man, woman, and child
+ who takes up this book will hate to put it down for a
+ moment."--_Philadelphia Inquirer._
+
+ "There are pictures and anecdotes for the little ones of the
+ family, adventures and curious habits to attract the eager minds
+ of older lads, guiding information and suggestion for the student,
+ and the whole is treated in the light of the latest facts. Many
+ novelties, apart from the simple, homely, almost humorous method
+ of handling a truly scientific subject, characterize the volume.
+ Nowhere else is so intelligently traced the relation between the
+ past (fossil history) and the present of the families in this most
+ important of all animal tribes; nowhere else will be found
+ explained many curious customs, such as the origin of the habit of
+ storing winter food, how the opossum came to 'play 'possum,' and
+ why beavers dam up streams. The book is written from the American
+ point of view, yet the whole world is covered and the newest
+ material has been utilized. It would be difficult to find a book
+ on natural history which could make a stronger appeal to the
+ reader, old or young, who is interested in natural history than
+ this volume by Ernest Ingersoll."--_Brooklyn Daily Eagle._
+
+ "There is not a page of the whole volume but is full of interest,
+ and the many splendid photographs of the existing and prehistoric
+ mammals add greatly to the value of the book. One lays it down
+ with reluctance and with the feeling that the author has added
+ largely to the sum of human knowledge."--_Toronto Globe._
+
+ "A large and admirable book.... Interesting as fiction,
+ scientifically exact, simply expressed, this well-prepared volume
+ will almost literally repeople the earth for many readers. Those
+ who already love natural history will rejoice in its fascinating
+ richness of information, while it would be difficult to imagine a
+ more readable and comprehensive introduction to the numerous big
+ and little brethren of the woods and fields."--_Chicago
+ Record-Herald._
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+
+Lieut.-Col. J. H. Patterson's
+
+ IN THE GRIP OF THE NYIKA
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "Nyika merely means wilderness, and its grip is conveyed very
+ forcefully to the pages of Colonel Patterson's book, which holds
+ the reader as closely as the Nyika holds those who venture into
+ it.... Colonel Patterson has a particularly interesting way of
+ describing things he sees.... The whole volume is filled with
+ exciting incidents and many illustrations from photographs of odd
+ animals and queer people."--_Boston Transcript._
+
+ THE MAN-EATERS OF TSAVO AND OTHER EAST AFRICAN ADVENTURES
+
+ With Foreword by Mr. Frederick C. Selous
+
+ _Illustrated Cloth 8vo $2.00 net_
+
+ "The account of how Colonel Patterson overcame the many
+ difficulties that confronted him in building his bridge across the
+ Tsavo River makes excellent reading, while the courage he
+ displayed in attacking, single-handed, lions, as well as
+ rhinoceroses and other animal foes, was surpassed by his pluck,
+ tact, and determination in quelling a formidable mutiny which once
+ broke out among his native workers."--_New York Herald._
+
+Theodore S. Van Dyke's
+
+ THE STILL HUNTER
+
+ _Illustrated, Cloth 8vo $1.75 net_
+
+ "A vivid account of the most exciting sport in the world.... The
+ record of years of experience.... It is crammed full of valuable
+ advice for the deer hunter, and has the advantage of having been
+ written before hunting became more of a pastime than a serious
+ business, requiring untiring energy, great patience, cool nerves,
+ and perfect sight."--_Chicago Tribune._
+
+Edwyn Sandys'
+
+ SPORTING SKETCHES
+
+ _Cloth 12mo $1.75 net_
+
+ "Mr. Sandys is a real sportsman with a wide experience, and he
+ writes agreeably and without effort to make his work unusual or
+ picturesque. It is just the sort of description you would expect
+ from a man who had really done the things narrated.... He
+ describes in such manner that even one who has never held gun or
+ rod cannot but partake of something of the writer's
+ enthusiasm."--_Chicago Tribune._
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+
+OUTDOOR STORIES FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
+
+ By J. W. Fortescue
+ THE STORY OF A RED DEER
+ Cloth, 16mo, $.80; Leather, $1.25
+
+ By Jack London
+ TALES OF THE FISH PATROL
+ Illustrated by G. Varian, Cloth, 12mo, $1.50
+
+ By Charles Major
+ THE BEARS OF BLUE RIVER
+ Illustrated by A. B. Frost, Cloth, 12mo, $1.50
+
+ UNCLE TOM ANDY BILL
+ Illustrated. Cloth, 12mo, $1.50
+
+ By Edwyn Sandys
+ SPORTSMAN JOE
+ Illustrated. 12mo, $1.50
+
+ TRAPPER JIM
+ Illustrated. 12mo, $1.50
+
+ By Ernest Ingersoll
+ AN ISLAND IN THE AIR
+ Illustrated by William McCullough, Cloth, 12mo $1.50
+
+ By Stewart Edward White
+ THE MAGIC FOREST
+ Colored Illustrations by Joseph Gleeson, Cloth, 12mo, $1.20 net
+
+ By Mabel Osgood Wright
+ DOGTOWN
+ Illustrated with Photographs, Cloth, 12mo, $1.50 net
+
+ GRAY LADY AND THE BIRDS
+ Colored Illustrations, Cloth, 12mo, $1.75 net
+
+PUBLISHED BY
+
+THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+
+64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KINGS IN EXILE***
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #28530 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/28530)