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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bears of Blue River, by Charles Major
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Bears of Blue River
-
-Author: Charles Major
-
-Release Date: June 15, 2017 [EBook #54915]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BEARS OF BLUE RIVER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Larry B. Harrison and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE BEARS OF BLUE RIVER
-
-
-[Illustration: The MM Co.]
-
-[Illustration: “Balser was more fortunate in his aim, and gave the bear
-a mortal wound.”]
-
-
-
-
- The
- Bears of Blue River
-
-
- BY
-
- CHARLES MAJOR
-
- AUTHOR OF “WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER,” ETC.
-
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY A. B. FROST AND OTHERS_
-
-
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- LONDON: MACMILLAN & CO., LTD.
-
- 1908
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1900, 1901,
- BY CURTIS PUBLISHING CO. BY JOHN WANAMAKER.
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1901,
- BY CHARLES MAJOR.
-
-
- First published elsewhere. Reprinted November, 1902;
- March, 1904; October, 1908.
- New edition September, 1906.
-
-
- Norwood Press
- J. S. Cushing & Co.—Berwick & Smith
- Norwood Mass. U.S.A.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- PAGE
-
- The Big Bear 3
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- How Balser got a Gun 31
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Lost in a Forest 53
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- The One-eared Bear 79
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- The Wolf Hunt 104
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Borrowed Fire 140
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- The Fire Bear 171
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- The Black Gully 190
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- On the Stroke of Nine 217
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- A Castle on Brandywine 238
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- “Balser was more fortunate in his aim, and gave the bear
- a mortal wound” _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
-
- Bass and sunfish and big-mouthed redeye 4
-
- “A wildcat almost as big as a cow” 14
-
- “Little Balser noticed fresh bear tracks, and his breath
- began to come quickly” 15
-
- “Fresh bear tracks” 17
-
- “Imagine ... his consternation when he saw upon the
- bank, quietly watching him, a huge black bear” 19
-
- “The bear had a peculiar, determined expression about
- him” 21
-
- “When the bear got within a few feet of Balser ... the
- boy grew desperate with fear, and struck at the beast
- with the only weapon he had—his string of fish” 25
-
- “The bear had caught the fish, and again had climbed
- upon the log” 29
-
- “He could hear the bear growling right at his heels, and
- it made him just fly” _facing_ 44
-
- “Tige was told to go into the cave” _facing_ 48
-
- “Each with a saucy little bear cub” _facing_ 52
-
- “Down came Tom and Jerry from the roof” _facing_ 60
-
- Tige and Prince swimming about the canoe _facing_ 74
-
- “’Lordy, Balser! It’s the one-eared bear’” _facing_ 88
-
- “’Let’s get out of here’” _facing_ 94
-
- “Balser rushed into the fight” _facing_ 102
-
- “Mischief! they never thought of anything else” 108
-
- “Balser turned in time to see a great, lank, gray wolf
- emerge from the water, carrying a gander by the neck” 109
-
- “Bang! went Balser’s gun, and the wolf ... paid for his
- feast with his life” 117
-
- “Caught them by the back of the neck” 123
-
- “The boys tied together the legs of the old wolves and
- swung them over the pole ... and started home leading
- the pups” 127
-
- “These hives were called ‘gums’” 135
-
- “The cubs went every way but the right way” _facing_ 146
-
- “The bear rose to climb after the boy” _facing_ 160
-
- “Liney thrust the burning torch into the bear’s face and
- held it there despite its rage and growls” _facing_ 168
-
- “’Help! help!’ came the cry” _facing_ 176
-
- “’Now, hold up the torch, Polly’” _facing_ 204
-
- “Polly continued slowly toward the bear” _facing_ 212
-
- “Imagine his consternation when he recognized the forms
- of Liney Fox and her brother Tom” 229
-
- “He fell a distance of ten or twelve feet, ... and lay
- half stunned” 233
-
- En route for the castle 244
-
- The castle on the Brandywine 252
-
- “Balser hesitated to fire, fearing that he might kill
- Tom or one of the dogs” 263
-
- “Espied a doe and a fawn, standing upon the opposite
- side of the creek” 273
-
-
-
-
- I.
-
- THE BIG BEAR.
-
-
-
-
- THE BEARS OF BLUE RIVER.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
- THE BIG BEAR.
-
-
-Away back in the “twenties,” when Indiana was a baby state, and great
-forests of tall trees and tangled underbrush darkened what are now her
-bright plains and sunny hills, there stood upon the east bank of Big
-Blue River, a mile or two north of the point where that stream crosses
-the Michigan road, a cozy log cabin of two rooms—one front and one back.
-
-The house faced the west, and stretching off toward the river for a
-distance equal to twice the width of an ordinary street, was a
-blue-grass lawn, upon which stood a dozen or more elm and sycamore
-trees, with a few honey-locusts scattered here and there. Immediately at
-the water’s edge was a steep slope of ten or twelve feet. Back of the
-house, mile upon mile, stretched the deep dark forest, inhabited by deer
-and bears, wolves and wildcats, squirrels and birds, without number.
-
-[Illustration: BASS AND SUNFISH AND THE BIG-MOUTHED REDEYE.]
-
-In the river the fish were so numerous that they seemed to entreat the
-boys to catch them, and to take them out of their crowded quarters.
-There were bass and black suckers, sunfish and catfish, to say nothing
-of the sweetest of all, the big-mouthed redeye.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-South of the house stood a log barn, with room in it for three horses
-and two cows; and enclosing this barn, together with a piece of ground,
-five or six acres in extent, was a palisade fence, eight or ten feet
-high, made by driving poles into the ground close together. In this
-enclosure the farmer kept his stock, consisting of a few sheep and
-cattle, and here also the chickens, geese, and ducks were driven at
-nightfall to save them from “varmints,” as all prowling animals were
-called by the settlers.
-
-The man who had built this log hut, and who lived in it and owned the
-adjoining land at the time of which I write, bore the name of Balser
-Brent. “Balser” is probably a corruption of Baltzer, but, however that
-may be, Balser was his name, and Balser was also the name of his boy,
-who was the hero of the bear stories which I am about to tell you.
-
-Mr. Brent and his young wife had moved to the Blue River settlement from
-North Carolina, when young Balser was a little boy five or six years of
-age. They had purchased the “eighty” upon which they lived, from the
-United States, at a sale of public land held in the town of Brookville
-on Whitewater, and had paid for it what was then considered a good round
-sum—one dollar per acre. They had received a deed for their “eighty”
-from no less a person than James Monroe, then President of the United
-States. This deed, which is called a patent, was written on sheepskin,
-signed by the President’s own hand, and is still preserved by the
-descendants of Mr. Brent as one of the title-deeds to the land it
-conveyed. The house, as I have told you, consisted of two large rooms,
-or buildings, separated by a passageway six or eight feet broad which
-was roofed over, but open at both ends—on the north and south. The back
-room was the kitchen, and the front room was parlour, bedroom, sitting
-room and library all in one.
-
-At the time when my story opens Little Balser, as he was called to
-distinguish him from his father, was thirteen or fourteen years of age,
-and was the happy possessor of a younger brother, Jim, aged nine, and a
-little sister one year old, of whom he was very proud indeed.
-
-On the south side of the front room was a large fireplace. The chimney
-was built of sticks, thickly covered with clay. The fireplace was almost
-as large as a small room in one of our cramped modern houses, and was
-broad and deep enough to take in backlogs which were so large and heavy
-that they could not be lifted, but were drawn in at the door and rolled
-over the floor to the fireplace.
-
-The prudent father usually kept two extra backlogs, one on each side of
-the fireplace, ready to be rolled in as the blaze died down; and on
-these logs the children would sit at night, with a rough slate made from
-a flat stone, and do their “ciphering,” as the study of arithmetic was
-then called. The fire usually furnished all the light they had, for
-candles and “dips,” being expensive luxuries, were used only when
-company was present.
-
-The fire, however, gave sufficient light, and its blaze upon a cold
-night extended half-way up the chimney, sending a ruddy, cozy glow to
-every nook and corner of the room.
-
-The back room was the storehouse and kitchen; and from the beams and
-along the walls hung rich hams and juicy side-meat, jerked venison,
-dried apples, onions, and other provisions for the winter. There was a
-glorious fireplace in this room also, and a crane upon which to hang
-pots and cooking utensils.
-
-The floor of the front room was made of logs split in halves with the
-flat, hewn side up; but the floor of the kitchen was of clay, packed
-hard and smooth.
-
-The settlers had no stoves, but did their cooking in round pots called
-Dutch ovens. They roasted their meats on a spit or steel bar like the
-ramrod of a gun. The spit was kept turning before the fire, presenting
-first one side of the meat and then the other, until it was thoroughly
-cooked. Turning the spit was the children’s work.
-
-South of the palisade enclosing the barn was the clearing—a tract of
-twenty or thirty acres of land, from which Mr. Brent had cut and burned
-the trees. On this clearing the stumps stood thick as the hair on an
-angry dog’s back; but the hard-working farmer ploughed between and
-around them, and each year raised upon the fertile soil enough wheat and
-corn to supply the wants of his family and his stock, and still had a
-little grain left to take to Brookville, sixty miles away, where he had
-bought his land, there to exchange for such necessities of life as could
-not be grown upon the farm or found in the forests.
-
-The daily food of the family all came from the farm, the forest, or the
-creek. Their sugar was obtained from the sap of the sugar-trees; their
-meat was supplied in the greatest abundance by a few hogs, and by the
-inexhaustible game of which the forests were full. In the woods were
-found deer just for the shooting; and squirrels, rabbits, wild turkeys,
-pheasants, and quails, so numerous that a few hours’ hunting would
-supply the table for days. The fish in the river, as I told you, fairly
-longed to be caught.
-
-One day Mrs. Brent took down the dinner horn and blew upon it two strong
-blasts. This was a signal that Little Balser, who was helping his father
-down in the clearing, should come to the house. Balser was glad enough
-to drop his hoe and to run home. When he reached the house his mother
-said:—
-
-“Balser, go up to the drift and catch a mess of fish for dinner. Your
-father is tired of deer meat three times a day, and I know he would like
-a nice dish of fried redeyes at noon.”
-
-“All right, mother,” said Balser. And he immediately took down his
-fishing-pole and line, and got the spade to dig bait. When he had
-collected a small gourdful of angleworms, his mother called to him:—
-
-“You had better take a gun. You may meet a bear; your father loaded the
-gun this morning, and you must be careful in handling it.”
-
-Balser took the gun, which was a heavy rifle considerably longer than
-himself, and started up the river toward the drift, about a quarter of a
-mile away.
-
-There had been rain during the night and the ground near the drift was
-soft.
-
-Here, Little Balser noticed fresh bear tracks, and his breath began to
-come quickly. You may be sure he peered closely into every dark thicket,
-and looked behind all the large trees and logs, and had his eyes wide
-open lest perchance “Mr. Bear” should step out and surprise him with an
-affectionate hug, and thereby put an end to Little Balser forever.
-
-So he walked on cautiously, and, if the truth must be told, somewhat
-tremblingly, until he reached the drift.
-
-Balser was but a little fellow, yet the stern necessities of a settler’s
-life had compelled his father to teach him the use of a gun; and
-although Balser had never killed a bear, he had shot several deer, and
-upon one occasion had killed a wildcat, “almost as big as a cow,” he
-said.
-
-I have no doubt the wildcat seemed “almost as big as a cow” to Balser
-when he killed it, for it must have frightened him greatly, as wildcats
-were sometimes dangerous animals for children to encounter. Although
-Balser had never met a bear face to face and alone, yet he felt, and
-many a time had said, that there wasn’t a bear in the world big enough
-to frighten him, if he but had his gun.
-
-[Illustration: “A WILDCAT ALMOST AS BIG AS A COW.”]
-
-He had often imagined and minutely detailed to his parents and little
-brother just what he would do if he should meet a bear. He would wait
-calmly and quietly until his bearship should come within a few yards of
-him, and then he would slowly lift his gun. Bang! and Mr. Bear would be
-dead with a bullet in his heart.
-
-[Illustration: “LITTLE BALSER NOTICED FRESH BEAR TRACKS, AND HIS BREATH
-BEGAN TO COME QUICKLY.”]
-
-[Illustration: “FRESH BEAR TRACKS.”]
-
-But when he saw the fresh bear tracks, and began to realize that he
-would probably have an opportunity to put his theories about bear
-killing into practice, he began to wonder if, after all, he would become
-frightened and miss his aim. Then he thought of how the bear, in that
-case, would be calm and deliberate, and would put _his_ theories into
-practice by walking very politely up to him, and making a very
-satisfactory dinner of a certain boy whom he could name. But as he
-walked on and no bear appeared, his courage grew stronger as the
-prospect of meeting the enemy grew less, and he again began saying to
-himself that no bear could frighten him, because he had his gun and he
-could and would kill it.
-
-So Balser reached the drift; and having looked carefully about him,
-leaned his gun against a tree, unwound his fishing-line from the pole,
-and walked out to the end of a log which extended into the river some
-twenty or thirty feet.
-
-Here he threw in his line, and soon was so busily engaged drawing out
-sun fish and redeyes, and now and then a bass, which was hungry enough
-to bite at a worm, that all thought of the bear went out of his mind.
-
-After he had caught enough fish for a sumptuous dinner he bethought him
-of going home, and as he turned toward the shore, imagine, if you can,
-his consternation when he saw upon the bank, quietly watching him, a
-huge black bear.
-
-If the wildcat had seemed as large as a cow to Balser, of what size do
-you suppose that bear appeared? A cow! An elephant, surely, was small
-compared with the huge black fellow standing upon the bank.
-
-[Illustration: “IMAGINE ... HIS CONSTERNATION WHEN HE SAW UPON THE BANK,
-QUIETLY WATCHING HIM, A HUGE BLACK BEAR.”]
-
-It is true Balser had never seen an elephant, but his father had, and so
-had his friend Tom Fox, who lived down the river; and they all agreed
-that an elephant was “purt nigh as big as all outdoors.”
-
-The bear had a peculiar, determined expression about him that seemed to
-say:—
-
-[Illustration: “THE BEAR HAD A PECULIAR, DETERMINED EXPRESSION ABOUT
-HIM.”]
-
-“That boy can’t get away; he’s out on the log where the water is deep,
-and if he jumps into the river I can easily jump in after him and catch
-him before he can swim a dozen strokes. He’ll _have_ to come off the log
-in a short time, and then I’ll proceed to devour him.”
-
-About the same train of thought had also been rapidly passing through
-Balser’s mind. His gun was on the bank where he had left it, and in
-order to reach it he would have to pass the bear. He dared not jump into
-the water, for any attempt to escape on his part would bring the bear
-upon him instantly. He was very much frightened, but, after all, was a
-cool-headed little fellow for his age; so he concluded that he would not
-press matters, as the bear did not seem inclined to do so, but so long
-as the bear remained watching him on the bank would stay upon the log
-where he was, and allow the enemy to eye him to his heart’s content.
-
-There they stood, the boy and the bear, each eying the other as though
-they were the best of friends, and would like to eat each other, which,
-in fact, was literally true.
-
-Time sped very slowly for one of them, you may be sure; and it seemed to
-Balser that he had been standing almost an age in the middle of Blue
-River on that wretched shaking log, when he heard his mother’s dinner
-horn, reminding him that it was time to go home.
-
-Balser quite agreed with his mother, and gladly would he have gone, I
-need not tell you; but there stood the bear, patient, determined, and
-fierce; and Little Balser soon was convinced in his own mind that his
-time had come to die.
-
-He hoped that when his father should go home to dinner and find him
-still absent, he would come up the river in search of him, and frighten
-away the bear. Hardly had this hope sprung up in his mind, when it
-seemed that the same thought had also occurred to the bear, for he began
-to move down toward the shore end of the log upon which Balser was
-standing.
-
-Slowly came the bear until he reached the end of the log, which for a
-moment he examined suspiciously, and then, to Balser’s great alarm,
-cautiously stepped out upon it and began to walk toward him.
-
-Balser thought of the folks at home, and, above all, of his baby sister;
-and when he felt that he should never see them again, and that they
-would in all probability never know of his fate, he began to grow
-heavy-hearted and was almost paralyzed with fear.
-
-On came the bear, putting one great paw in front of the other, and
-watching Balser intently with his little black eyes. His tongue hung
-out, and his great red mouth was open to its widest, showing the sharp,
-long, glittering teeth that would soon be feasting on a first-class boy
-dinner.
-
-When the bear got within a few feet of Balser—so close he could almost
-feel the animal’s hot breath as it slowly approached—the boy grew
-desperate with fear, and struck at the bear with the only weapon he
-had—his string of fish.
-
-Now, bears love fish and blackberries above all other food; so when
-Balser’s string of fish struck the bear in the mouth, he grabbed at
-them, and in doing so lost his foothold on the slippery log and fell
-into the water with a great splash and plunge.
-
-This was Balser’s chance for life, so he flung the fish to the bear, and
-ran for the bank with a speed worthy of the cause.
-
-[Illustration: “WHEN THE BEAR GOT WITHIN A FEW FEET OF BALSER ... THE
-BOY GREW DESPERATE WITH FEAR, AND STRUCK AT THE BEAST WITH THE ONLY
-WEAPON HE HAD—HIS STRING OF FISH.”]
-
-When he reached the bank his self-confidence returned, and he remembered
-all the things he had said he would do if he should meet a bear.
-
-The bear had caught the fish, and again had climbed upon the log, where
-he was deliberately devouring them.
-
-This was Little Balser’s chance for death—to the bear. Quickly snatching
-up the gun, he rested it in the fork of a small tree near by, took
-deliberate aim at the bear, which was not five yards away, and shot him
-through the heart. The bear dropped into the water dead, and floated
-down-stream a little way, where he lodged at a ripple a short distance
-below.
-
-Balser, after he had killed the bear, became more frightened than he had
-been at any time during the adventure, and ran home screaming. That
-afternoon his father went to the scene of battle and took the bear out
-of the water. It was very fat and large, and weighed, so Mr. Brent said,
-over six hundred pounds.
-
-Balser was firmly of the opinion that he himself was also very fat and
-large, and weighed at least as much as the bear. He was certainly
-entitled to feel “big”; for he had got himself out of an ugly scrape in
-a brave, manly, and cool-headed manner, and had achieved a victory of
-which a man might have been proud.
-
-The news of Balser’s adventure soon spread among the neighbours and he
-became quite a hero; for the bear he had killed was one of the largest
-that had ever been seen in that neighbourhood, and, besides the gallons
-of rich bear oil it yielded, there were three or four hundred pounds of
-bear meat; and no other food is more strengthening for winter diet.
-
-There was also the soft, furry skin, which Balser’s mother tanned, and
-with it made a coverlid for Balser’s bed, under which he and his little
-brother lay many a cold night, cozy and “snug as a bug in a rug.”
-
-[Illustration: “THE BEAR HAD CAUGHT THE FISH AND AGAIN HAD CLIMBED UPON
-THE LOG.”]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- HOW BALSER GOT A GUN.
-
-
-For many years after the killing of the big bear, as told in the
-preceding chapter, time was reckoned by Balser as beginning with that
-event. It was, if I may say it, his “Anno Domini.” In speaking of
-occurrences, events, and dates, he always fixed them in a general way by
-saying, “That happened before I killed the big bear;” or, “That took
-place after I killed the big bear.” The great immeasurable eternity of
-time was divided into two parts: that large unoccupied portion preceding
-the death of the big bear, and the part, full to overflowing with
-satisfaction and pride, after that momentous event.
-
-Balser’s adventure had raised him vastly in the estimation of his
-friends and neighbours, and, what was quite as good, had increased his
-respect for himself, and had given him confidence, which is one of the
-most valuable qualities for boy or man. Frequently when Balser met
-strangers, and the story of the big bear was told, they would pat the
-boy on the shoulder and call him a little man, and would sometimes ask
-him if he owned a gun. Much to Balser’s sorrow, he was compelled to
-admit that he did not. The questions as to whether or not he owned a gun
-had put into his mind the thought of how delightful life would be if he
-but possessed one; and his favourite visions by day and his sweetest
-dreams by night were all about a gun; one not so long nor so heavy as
-his father’s, but of the shorter, lighter pattern known as a smooth-bore
-carbine. He had heard his father speak of this gun, and of its
-effectiveness at short range; and although at long distances it was not
-so true of aim as his father’s gun, still he felt confident that, if he
-but possessed the coveted carbine he could, single-handed and alone,
-exterminate all the races of bears, wolves and wildcats that inhabited
-the forests round about, and “pestered” the farmers with their
-depredations.
-
-But how to get the gun! That was the question. Balser’s father had
-received a gun as a present from _his_ father when Balser Sr. had
-reached the advanced age of twenty-one, and it was considered a rich
-gift. The cost of a gun for Balser would equal half of the sum total
-that his father could make during an entire year; and, although Little
-Balser looked forward in fond expectation to the time when he should be
-twenty-one and should receive a gun from his father, yet he did not even
-hope that he would have one before then, however much he might dream
-about it. Dreams cost nothing, and guns were expensive; too expensive
-even to be hoped for. So Balser contented himself with inexpensive
-dreams, and was willing, though not content, to wait.
-
-But the unexpected usually happens, at an unexpected time, and in an
-unexpected manner.
-
-About the beginning of the summer after the killing of the big bear,
-when Balser’s father had “laid by” his corn, and the little patch of
-wheat had just begun to take on a golden brown as due notice that it was
-nearly ready to be harvested, there came a few days of idleness for the
-busy farmer. Upon one of those rare idle days Mr. Brent and Balser went
-down the river on a fishing and hunting expedition. There was but one
-gun in the family, therefore Balser could not hunt when his father was
-with him, so he took his fishing-rod, and did great execution among the
-finny tribe, while his father watched along the river for game, as it
-came down to drink.
-
-Upon the day mentioned Balser and his father had wandered down the river
-as far as the Michigan road, and Mr. Brent had left the boy near the
-road fishing, after telling him to go home in an hour or two, and that
-he, Mr. Brent, would go by another route and be home in time for supper.
-
-So Balser was left by himself, fishing at a deep hole perhaps a hundred
-yards north of the road. This was at a time when the river was in flood,
-and the ford where travellers usually crossed was too deep for passage.
-
-Balser had been fishing for an hour or more, and had concluded to go
-home, when he saw approaching along the road from the east a man and
-woman on horseback. They soon reached the ford and stopped, believing it
-to be impassable. They were mud-stained and travel-worn, and their
-horses, covered with froth, were panting as if they had been urged to
-their greatest speed. After a little time the gentleman saw Balser, and
-called to him. The boy immediately went to the travellers, and the
-gentleman said:—
-
-“My little man, can you tell me if it is safe to attempt the ford at
-this time?”
-
-“It will swim your horses,” answered Balser.
-
-“I knew it would,” said the lady, in evident distress. She was young and
-pretty, and seemed to be greatly fatigued and frightened. The gentleman
-was very attentive, and tried to soothe her, but in a moment or two she
-began to weep, and said:—
-
-“They will catch us, I know. They will catch us. They cannot be more
-than a mile behind us now, and we have no place to turn.”
-
-“Is some one trying to catch you?” asked Balser.
-
-The gentleman looked down at the little fellow for a moment, and was
-struck by his bright, manly air. The thought occurred to him that Balser
-might suspect them of being fugitives from justice, so he explained:—
-
-“Yes, my little fellow, a gentleman is trying to catch us. He is this
-lady’s father. He has with him a dozen men, and if they overtake us they
-will certainly kill me and take this lady home. Do you know of any place
-where we may hide?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” answered Balser, quickly; “help me on behind you, and I’ll
-take you to my father’s house. There’s no path up the river, and if they
-attempt to follow they’ll get lost in the woods.”
-
-Balser climbed on the horse behind the gentleman, and soon they plunged
-into the deep forest, and rode up the river toward Balser’s home. The
-boy knew the forest well, and in a short time the little party of three
-was standing at the hospitable cabin door. Matters were soon explained
-to Balser’s mother, and she, with true hospitality, welcomed the
-travellers to her home. During the conversation Balser learned that the
-gentleman and lady were running away that they might be married, and,
-hoping to finish a good job, the boy volunteered the advice that they
-should be married that same evening under his father’s roof. He also
-offered to go in quest of a preacher who made his home some two miles to
-the east.
-
-The advice and the offer of services were eagerly accepted, and the lady
-and gentleman were married that night, and remained a few days at the
-home of Mr. Brent until the river was low enough to cross.
-
-The strangers felt grateful to the boy who had given them such timely
-help, and asked him what they could do for him in return.
-
-Balser hesitated a moment, and said, “There’s only one thing I want very
-bad, but that would cost so much there’s no use to speak of it.”
-
-“What is it, Balser? Speak up, and if it is anything I can buy, you
-shall have it.”
-
-“A gun! A gun! A smooth-bore carbine. I’d rather have it than anything
-else in the world.”
-
-“You shall have it if there’s one to be bought in Indianapolis. We are
-going there, and will return within a week or ten days, and you shall
-have your carbine if I can find one.”
-
-Within two weeks after this conversation Balser was the happiest boy in
-Indiana, for he owned a carbine, ten pounds of fine powder, and lead
-enough to kill every living creature within a radius of five miles.
-
-Of course the carbine had to be tested at once. So the day after he
-received it Balser started out with his father on a hunting expedition,
-fully determined in his own mind to kill a bear twice as large as his
-first one. They took with them corn-bread and dried venison for dinner,
-and started east toward Conn’s Creek, where the houses of the settlers
-were thinly scattered and game plentiful.
-
-They had with them two faithful dogs, “Tige” and “Prince.” Balser
-considered these dogs the most intelligent animals that walked on four
-feet. They were deerhounds with a cross of bulldog, and were swift of
-foot and very strong.
-
-Our hunters had travelled perhaps three or four miles into the forest
-when they started a deer, in pursuit of which the dogs bounded off with
-their peculiar bark, and soon deer and dogs were lost to sight. Balser
-and his father listened carefully for the voices of the dogs, for should
-the deer turn at bay, the dogs, instead of the quick bark, to which they
-gave voice in the chase, would utter a long-drawn-out note—half howl,
-half yelp.
-
-The bay of the hounds had died away in the distance, and Balser and his
-father had heard nothing of them for two or three hours.
-
-The hunters had seen other deer as they walked along, but they had been
-unable to obtain a shot. Smaller game was plentiful, but Balser and his
-father did not care to frighten away large game by shooting at squirrels
-or birds. So they continued their walk until they reached the bank of
-Conn’s Creek, near the hour of noon; by that time Balser’s appetite was
-beginning to call loudly for dinner, and he could not resist the
-temptation to shoot a squirrel, which he saw upon a limb of a
-neighbouring tree. The squirrel fell to the ground and was soon skinned
-and cleaned. Balser then kindled a fire, and cutting several green
-twigs, sharpened the ends and fastened small pieces of the squirrel upon
-them. He next stuck the twigs in the ground so that they leaned toward
-the fire, with the meat hanging directly over the blaze. Soon the
-squirrel was roasted to a delicious brown, and then Balser served dinner
-to his father, who was sitting on a rock near by. The squirrel, the
-corn-bread, and the venison quickly disappeared, and Balser, if
-permitted to do so, would have found another squirrel and would have
-cooked it. Just as dinner was finished, there came from a long way
-up-stream the howling bark of Tige and Prince, telling, plainly as if
-they had spoken English, that the deer was at bay.
-
-Thereupon Balser quickly loaded his gun, and he and his father looked
-carefully to their primings. Then Mr. Brent directed Balser to climb
-down the cliff and move toward the dogs through the thicket in the
-bottom, while he went by another route, along the bluff. Should the
-hunters be separated, they were to meet at an agreed place in the
-forest. Balser climbed cautiously down the cliff and was soon deep in a
-dark thicket of tangled underbrush near the creek.
-
-Now and then the deep bay of the dogs reached his ears from the
-direction whence he had first heard it, and he walked as rapidly as the
-tangled briers and undergrowth would permit toward his faithful
-fellow-hunters.
-
-He was so intent on the game which he knew the dogs held at bay, that he
-did not look about him with his accustomed caution, and the result of
-his unwatchfulness was that he found himself within ten feet of two huge
-bears before he was at all aware of their presence. They were evidently
-male and female, and upon seeing him the great he-bear gave forth a
-growl that frightened Balser to the depths of his soul. Retreat seemed
-almost impossible; and should he fire at one of the bears, his gun would
-be empty and he would be at the mercy of the other. To attempt to outrun
-a bear, even on level ground, would be almost a hopeless undertaking;
-for the bear, though an awkward-looking creature, is capable of great
-speed when it comes to a foot-race. But there, where the tangled
-underbrush was so dense that even walking through it was a matter of
-great difficulty, running was out of the question, for the thicket which
-would greatly impede Balser would be but small hindrance to the bears.
-
-After Balser had killed the big bear at the drift, he felt that he never
-again would suffer from what hunters call “buck ager”; but when he found
-himself confronted by those black monsters, he began to tremble in every
-limb, and for the life of him could not at first lift his gun. The
-he-bear was the first to move. He raised himself on his haunches, and
-with a deep growl started for poor Balser. Balser should have shot the
-bear as he came toward him, but acting solely from an instinct of
-self-preservation he started to run. He made better headway than he had
-thought possible, and soon came to a small open space of ground where
-the undergrowth was not so thick, and where the bright light of the sun
-dispelled the darkness. The light restored Balser’s confidence, and the
-few moments of retreat gave him time to think and to pull himself
-together. So, turning quickly, he lifted his gun to his shoulder and
-fired at the bear, which was not two yards behind him. Unfortunately,
-his aim was unsteady, and his shot wounded the bear in the neck, but did
-not kill him.
-
-Balser saw the disastrous failure he had made, and felt that the bear
-would be much surer in his attack upon him than he had been in his
-attack upon the bear. The boy then threw away his gun, and again began a
-hasty retreat.
-
-He called for his father, and cried, “Tige! Prince! Tige! Tige!” not so
-much with a hope that either the dogs or his father would hear, but
-because he knew not what else to do. Balser ran as fast as he could,
-still the bear was at his heels, and the frightened boy expected every
-moment to feel a stroke from the brute’s huge rough paw. Soon it came,
-with a stunning force that threw Balser to the ground, upon his back.
-The bear was over him in an instant, and caught his left arm between his
-mighty jaws. It seemed then that the light of the world went out for a
-moment, and he remembered nothing but the huge, blood-red mouth of the
-bear, his hot breath almost burning his cheeks, and his deep, terrible
-growls nearly deafening his ears. Balser’s whole past life came up
-before him like a picture, and he remembered everything that had ever
-happened to him. He thought of how deeply his dear father and mother
-would grieve, and for the only time in his life regretted having
-received the carbine, for it was the gun, after all, that had got him
-into this trouble. All this happened in less time than it takes you to
-read ten lines of this page, but it seemed very, very long to Balser,
-lying there with the huge body of the bear over him.
-
-[Illustration: “He could hear the bear growling right at his heels, and
-it made him just fly.”]
-
-Suddenly a note of hope struck his ear—the sweetest sound he had ever
-heard. It was the yelp of dear old Tige, who had heard his call and had
-come to the rescue. If there is any creature on earth that a bear
-thoroughly hates, it is a dog. Tige wasted not a moment’s time, but was
-soon biting and pulling at the bear’s hind legs. The bear immediately
-turned upon the dog, and gave Balser an opportunity to rise. Of this
-opportunity he quickly took advantage, you may be sure. Soon Prince came
-up also, and in these two strong dogs the bear had foemen worthy of his
-steel.
-
-Balser’s great danger and narrow escape had quickened all his faculties,
-so he at once ran back to the place where he had dropped his gun, and
-although his left arm had been terribly bitten, he succeeded in loading,
-and soon came back to the help of the dogs, who had given him such
-timely assistance.
-
-The fight between the dogs and the bear was going on at a merry rate,
-when Balser returned to the scene of action. With Prince on one side and
-Tige on the other, both so strong and savage, and each quick and nimble
-as a cat, the bear had all he could do to defend himself, and
-continually turned first one way and then another in his effort to keep
-their fangs away from his legs or throat. This enabled Balser to
-approach within a short distance of the bear, which he cautiously did.
-Taking care not to wound either of his faithful friends, he was more
-fortunate in his aim than he had been the first time, and gave the bear
-a mortal wound.
-
-The wounded animal made a hasty retreat back into the thicket, followed
-closely by the dogs; but Balser had seen more than enough of bear
-society in the thicket, and prudently concluded not to follow. He then
-loaded his gun with a heavy charge of powder only, and fired it to
-attract his father’s attention. This he repeated several times, until at
-last he saw the welcome form of his father hurrying toward him from the
-bluff. When his father reached him and saw that he had been wounded, Mr.
-Brent was naturally greatly troubled; but Balser said: “I’ll tell you
-all about it soon. Let’s go in after the bears. Two of them are in the
-thicket up there next to the cliff, and the dogs have followed them. If
-Tige had not come up just in time, one of the bears would have killed
-me; but I think the shot I gave him must have killed him by this time.”
-
-So without another word, Balser having loaded his gun, they started into
-the dark thicket toward the cliff, in the direction whence came the
-voices of the dogs.
-
-They had not proceeded farther than a hundred yards when they found the
-bear which Balser had shot, lying dead in the path over which Balser had
-so recently made his desperate retreat. The dogs were farther in, toward
-the cliff, where the vines, trees, and brush grew so thick that it was
-almost dark.
-
-The two hunters, however, did not stop, but hurried on to the help of
-their dogs. Soon they saw through the gloom of the thicket the she-bear,
-and about her the dogs were prancing, barking, and snapping most
-furiously.
-
-Carefully Balser and his father took their position within a few yards
-of the bear, and Balser, upon a signal from his father, called off the
-dogs so that a shot might be made at the bear without danger of killing
-either Tige or Prince.
-
-[Illustration: “Tige was told to go into the cave.”]
-
-Soon the report of two guns echoed through the forest, almost at the
-same instant, and the great she-bear fell over on her side, quivered for
-a moment, and died. This last battle took place close by the stone
-cliff, which rose from the bottom-land to a height of fifty or sixty
-feet.
-
-Balser and his father soon worked their way through the underbrush to
-where the she-bear lay dead. After having examined the bear, Balser’s
-attention was attracted to a small opening in the cliff, evidently the
-mouth of a cave which had probably been the home of the bear family that
-he and his father had just exterminated. The she-bear had taken her
-stand at the door of her home, and in defending it had lost her life.
-Balser examined the opening in the cliff, and concluded to enter; but
-his father said:—
-
-“You don’t know what’s in there. Let’s first send in one of the dogs.”
-
-So Tige was called and told to go into the cave. Immediately after he
-had entered he gave forth a series of sharp yelps which told plainly
-enough that he had found something worth barking at. Then Balser called
-the dog out, and Mr. Brent collected pieces of dry wood, and made a fire
-in front of the cave, hoping to drive out any animal that might be on
-the inside.
-
-He more than suspected that he would find a pair of cubs.
-
-As the smoke brought nothing forth, he concluded to enter the cave
-himself and learn what was there.
-
-Dropping upon his knees, he began to crawl in at the narrow opening, and
-the boy and the two dogs followed closely. Mr. Brent had taken with him
-a lighted torch, and when he had gone but a short distance into the cave
-he saw in a remote corner a pair of gray-black, frowzy little cubs, as
-fat and round as a roll of butter. They were lying upon a soft bed of
-leaves and grass, which had been collected by their father and mother.
-
-Balser’s delight knew no bounds, for, next to his gun, what he wanted
-above all things was a bear cub, and here were two of them. Quickly he
-and his father each picked up a cub and made their way out of the cave.
-
-The cubs, not more than one-half larger than a cat, were round and very
-fat, and wore a coat of fur, soft and sleek as the finest silk. Young
-bears usually are gray until after they are a year old, but these were
-an exception to the rule, for they were almost black.
-
-Leaving the old bears dead upon the ground, Balser and his father
-hurried down to the creek, where Mr. Brent washed and dressed his son’s
-wounded arm. They then marked several trees upon the bank of the creek
-by breaking twigs, so that they might be able to find the bears when
-they returned that evening with the horses to take home the meat and
-skins.
-
-All this, which has taken so long to tell, occurred within the space of
-a few minutes; but the work while it lasted was hard and tiresome, and,
-although it was but a short time past noon, Balser and his father were
-only too glad to turn their faces homeward, each with a saucy little
-bear cub under his arm.
-
-“As we have killed their mother,” said Balser, referring to the cubs,
-“we must take care of her children and give them plenty of milk, and
-bring them up to be good, honest bears.”
-
-The evening of the same day Mr. Brent and a few of his neighbours
-brought home the bear meat and skins. Balser did not go with his father
-because his arm was too sore. He was, however, very proud of his wound,
-and thought that the glory of the day and the two bear cubs were
-purchased cheaply enough after all.
-
-[Illustration: “Each with a saucy little cub.”]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- LOST IN THE FOREST.
-
-
-Balser’s arm mended slowly, for it had been terribly bitten by the bear.
-The heavy sleeve of his buckskin jacket had saved him from a wound which
-might have crippled him for life; but the hurt was bad enough as it was,
-and Balser passed through many days and nights of pain before it was
-healed. He bore the suffering like a little man, however, and felt very
-“big” as he walked about with his arm in a buckskin sling.
-
-Balser was impatient that he could not hunt; but he spent his time more
-or less satisfactorily in cleaning and polishing his gun and playing
-with the bear cubs, which his little brother Jim had named “Tom” and
-“Jerry.” The cubs soon became wonderfully tame, and drank eagerly from a
-pan of milk. They were too small to know how to lap, so the boys put
-their hands in the pan and held up a finger, at which the cubs sucked
-lustily. It was very laughable to see the little round black fellows
-nosing in the milk for the finger. And sometimes they would bite, too,
-until the boys would snatch away their hands and soundly box the cubs on
-the ears. A large panful of milk would disappear before you could say
-“Christmas,” and the bears’ silky sides would stand out as big and round
-as a pippin. The boys were always playing pranks upon the cubs, and the
-cubs soon learned to retaliate. They would climb everywhere about the
-premises, up the trees, on the roofs of the barn and house, and over the
-fence. Their great delight was the milk-house and kitchen, where they
-had their noses into everything, and made life miserable for Mrs. Brent.
-She would run after them with her broomstick if they but showed their
-sharp little snouts in the doorway. Then off they would scamper, yelping
-as though they were nearly killed, and ponder upon new mischief. They
-made themselves perfectly at home, and would play with each other like a
-pair of frisky kittens, rolling over and over on the sod, pretending to
-fight, and whining and growling as if they were angry in real earnest.
-One day Balser and his little brother Jim were sitting on a log, which
-answered the purpose of a settee, under the eaves in front of the house.
-The boys were wondering what had become of Tom and Jerry, as they had
-not seen them for an hour or more, and their quietness looked
-suspicious.
-
-“I wonder if those cubs have run away,” said Balser.
-
-“No,” said Jim, “bet they won’t run away; they’ve got things too
-comfortable here to run away. Like as not they’re off some place
-plannin’ to get even with us because we ducked them in the water trough
-awhile ago. They looked awful sheepish when they got out, and as they
-went off together I jus’ thought to myself they were goin’ away to think
-up some trick on us.”
-
-Balser and Jim were each busily engaged eating the half of a blackberry
-pie. The eave of the house was not very high, perhaps seven or eight
-feet from the ground, and Balser and Jim were sitting under it, holding
-the baby and eating their pie.
-
-Hardly had Jim spoken when the boys heard a scraping sound from above,
-then a couple of sharp little yelps; and down came Tom and Jerry from
-the roof, striking the boys squarely on the head.
-
-To say that the boys were frightened does not half tell it. They did not
-know what had happened. They fell over, and the baby dropped to the
-ground with a cry that brought her mother to the scene of action in a
-moment. The blackberry pie had in some way managed to spread itself all
-over the baby’s face, and she was a very comical sight when her mother
-picked her up.
-
-The bears _had_ retaliated upon the boys sooner than even Jim had
-anticipated, and they all had a great laugh over it; the bears seeming
-to enjoy it more than anybody else. The boys were ready to admit that
-the joke was on them, so they took the cubs back to the milk-house, and
-gave them a pan of rich milk as a peace-offering.
-
-The scrapes these cubs got themselves and the boys into would fill a
-large volume; but I cannot tell you any more about them now, as I want
-to relate an adventure having no fun in it, which befell Balser and some
-of his friends soon after his arm was well.
-
-It was blackberry time, and several children had come to Balser’s home
-for the purpose of making a raid upon a large patch of wild blackberries
-that grew on the other side of the river, a half-hour’s walk from Mr.
-Brent’s cabin.
-
-Soon after daybreak one morning, the little party, consisting of Balser
-and Jim, Tom Fox and his sister Liney (which is “short” for
-Pau-_li_-ne), and three children from the family of Mr. Neigh, paddled
-across the river in a canoe which Balser and his father had made from a
-large gum log, and started westward for the blackberry patch.
-
-Tom and Jerry had noticed the preparations for the journey with
-considerable curiosity, and felt very much hurt that they were not to be
-taken along. But they were left behind, imprisoned in a pen which the
-boys had built for them, and their whines and howls of complaint at such
-base treatment could be heard until the children were well out of sight
-of the house.
-
-The party hurried along merrily, little thinking that their journey home
-would be one of sadness; and soon they were in the midst of the
-blackberries, picking as rapidly as possible, and filling their gourds
-with the delicious fruit.
-
-They worked hard all the morning, and the deerskin sacks which they had
-brought with them were nearly full.
-
-Toward noon the children became hungry, and without a dissenting voice
-agreed to eat dinner.
-
-They had taken with them for lunch a loaf of bread and a piece of cold
-venison, but Balser suggested that he should go into the woods and find
-a squirrel or two to help out their meal. In the meantime Tom Fox had
-started out upon a voyage of discovery, hoping that he, too, might
-contribute to the larder.
-
-In a few minutes Balser’s gun was heard at a distance, and then again
-and again, and soon he was back in camp with three fat squirrels.
-
-Almost immediately after him came Tom Fox carrying something in his
-coonskin cap.
-
-“What have you there, Limpy?” cried Liney.
-
-The children called Tom “Limpy” because he always had a sore toe or a
-stone bruise on his heel.
-
-“You’ll never guess,” answered Tom. All the children took a turn at
-guessing, and then gave it up.
-
-“Turkey eggs,” said Tom. “We’ll have eggs as well as squirrel for dinner
-to-day.”
-
-“How will you cook them?” asked one of the Neigh children.
-
-“I’ll show you,” answered Tom.
-
-So now they were guessing how Limpy would cook the eggs, but he would
-not tell them, and they had to give it up.
-
-The boys then lighted a fire from the flint-lock on the gun, and Balser,
-having dressed the squirrel, cut twigs as he had done when he and his
-father dined on Conn’s Creek, and soon pieces of tender squirrel were
-roasting near the flame, giving forth a most tempting odour.
-
-In the meantime Limpy had gone away, and none of the children knew where
-he was, or what he was doing.
-
-[Illustration: “Down came Tom and Jerry from the roof.”]
-
-Soon, however, he returned bearing a large flat rock eight or ten inches
-in diameter, and two or three inches thick. This rock he carefully
-washed and scrubbed in a spring, until it was perfectly clean. He then
-took coals from the fire which Balser had kindled, and soon had a great
-fire of his own, in the midst of which was the stone. After the blaze
-had died down, he made a bed of hot coals on which, by means of a couple
-of sticks, he placed the rock, and then dusted away the ashes.
-
-“Now do you know how I’m going to cook the eggs?” he asked.
-
-They, of course, all knew; and the girls greased the rock with the fat
-of the squirrel, broke the eggs, and allowed them to fall upon the hot
-stone, where they were soon thoroughly roasted, and the children had a
-delicious meal. After dinner they sat in the cool shade of the tree
-under which they dined, and told stories and asked riddles for an hour
-or two before they again began berry-picking. Then they worked until
-about six o’clock, and stopped to have another play before returning
-home.
-
-They played “Ring around a rosey,” “Squat where ye be,” “Wolf,” “Dirty
-dog,” and then wound up with the only never-grow-old, “Hide-and-seek.”
-
-The children hid behind logs and trees, and in dense clumps of bushes.
-The boys would often climb trees, when, if “caught,” the one who was
-“it” was sure to run “home” before the hider could slide half-way down
-his tree. Now and then a hollow tree was found, and that, of course, was
-the best hiding-place of all.
-
-Beautiful little Liney Fox found one hollow tree too many; and as long
-as they lived all the children of the party remembered it and the
-terrible events that followed her discovery. She was seeking a place to
-hide, and had hurried across a small open space to conceal herself
-behind a huge sycamore tree. When she reached the tree and went around
-it to hide upon the opposite side, she found it was hollow at the root.
-
-Balser was “it,” and with his eyes “hid” was counting one hundred as
-rapidly and loudly as he could. He had got to sixty, he afterward said,
-when a shriek reached his ears. This was when Liney found the hollow
-tree. Balser at once knew that it was Liney’s voice; for, although he
-was but a little fellow, he was quite old enough to have admired Liney’s
-exquisite beauty, and to have observed that she was as kind and gentle
-and good as she was pretty.
-
-So what wonder that Balser, whom she openly claimed as her best friend,
-should share not only in the general praise, but should have a boy’s
-admiration for her all his own?
-
-In persons accustomed to exercise the alertness which is necessary for a
-good hunter, the sense of locating the direction and position from which
-a sound proceeds becomes highly developed, and as Balser had been
-hunting almost ever since he was large enough to walk, he knew instantly
-where Liney was.
-
-He hurriedly pushed his way through the bushes, and in a moment reached
-the open space of ground, perhaps one hundred yards across, on the
-opposite side of which stood the tree that Liney had found. Some twenty
-or thirty yards beyond the tree stood Liney. She was so frightened that
-she could not move, and apparently had become powerless to scream.
-
-Balser hastened toward her at his utmost speed, and when he reached a
-point from which he could see the hollow side of the tree, imagine his
-horror and fright upon beholding an enormous bear emerging from the
-opening. The bear started slowly toward the girl, who seemed unable to
-move.
-
-“Run, Liney! run for your life!” screamed Balser, who fearlessly rushed
-toward the bear to attract its attention from the girl, and if possible
-to bring it in pursuit of himself.
-
-“I just felt,” said Balser afterward, “that I wanted to lie down and let
-the bear eat me at once if I could only keep it away from Liney. I
-shouted and threw clods and sticks at it, but on it went toward her. I
-reckon it thought she was the nicest and preferred her to me. It was
-right, too, for she was a heap the nicest, and I didn’t blame the bear
-for wanting her.
-
-“Again I shouted, ‘Run, Liney! run!’ My voice seemed to waken her, and
-she started to run as fast as she could go, with the bear after her, and
-I after the bear as fast as I could go. I was shouting and doing my best
-to make the bear run after me instead of Liney; but it kept right on
-after her, and she kept on running faster and faster into the dark
-woods. In a short time I caught up with the bear, and kicked it on the
-side as hard as I could kick. That made it mad, and it turned upon me
-with a furious growl, as much as to say that it would settle with me
-pretty quick and then get Liney. After I had kicked it I started to run
-toward my gun, which was over by the blackberry patch. For a while I
-could hear the bear growling and puffing right at my heels, and it made
-me just fly, you may be sure. I never ran so fast in all my life, for I
-knew that I could not hold out long against the bear, and that if I
-didn’t get my gun quick he would surely get me. I did not care as much
-as you might think, nor was I very badly frightened, for I was so glad I
-had saved Liney. But naturally I wanted to save myself too, if possible,
-so, as I have said, I ran as I never ran before—or since, for that
-matter.
-
-“Soon the growls of the bear began to grow indistinct, and presently
-they ceased and I thought I had left it behind. So I kept on running
-toward my gun, and never stopped to look back until I heard another
-scream from Liney. Then I looked behind me, and saw that the bear had
-turned and was again after her, although she was quite a distance ahead
-of it.
-
-“I thought at first that I should turn back and kick the bear again, and
-just lie down and let it eat me if nothing else would satisfy it; but I
-was so near my gun that I concluded to get it and then hurry back and
-shoot the bear instead of kicking it.
-
-“I heard Liney scream again and heard her call ‘B-a-l-s-e-r,’ and that
-made me run even faster than the bear had made me go. It was but a few
-seconds until I had my gun and had started back to help Liney.
-
-“Soon I was at the hollow sycamore, but the bushes into which Liney had
-run were so thick and dark that I could see neither her nor the bear. I
-quickly ran into the woods where I thought Liney had gone, and when I
-was a little way into the thicket I called to her, but she did not
-answer. I then went on, following the track of the bear as well as I
-could. Bears, you know, have long flat feet that do not sink into the
-ground and leave a distinct track like a deer’s foot does, so I soon
-lost the bear tracks and did not know which way to go.
-
-“I kept going, however, calling loudly for Liney every now and then, and
-soon I was so deep into the forest that it seemed almost night. I could
-not see far in any direction on account of the thick underbrush, and at
-a little distance objects appeared indistinct. On I went, knowing not
-where, calling ‘Liney! Liney!’ at nearly every step; but I heard no
-answer, and it seemed that I liked Liney Fox better than anybody in all
-the world, and would have given my life to save her.”
-
-After Balser had gone into the woods to help Liney the other children
-gathered in a frightened group about the tree under which they had eaten
-dinner. There they waited in the greatest anxiety and fear until the sun
-had almost sunk below the horizon, but Balser and Liney did not return.
-Shortly before dark the children started homeward, very heavy-hearted
-and sorrowful, you may be sure. When they reached the river they paddled
-across and told Mr. Brent that Balser and Liney were lost in the woods,
-and that when last seen a huge bear was in pursuit of Liney. Balser’s
-father lost not a moment, but ran to a hill near the house, upon the top
-of which stood a large stack of dry grass, leaves, and wood, placed
-there for the purpose of signalling the neighbours in case of distress.
-He at once put fire to the dry grass, and soon there was a blaze, the
-light from which could be seen for miles around.
-
-Mr. Brent immediately crossed the river, and leaving Tom Fox behind to
-guide the neighbours, walked rapidly in the direction of the place where
-Balser and Liney had last been seen. He took with him the dogs, and a
-number of torches which he intended to light from a tinder-box if he
-should need them.
-
-The neighbours soon hurried to the Brent home in response to the fire
-signal, and several of them started out to rescue the children, if
-possible. If help were to be given, it must be done at once. A night in
-the woods meant almost certain death to the boy and girl; for, besides
-bears and wolves, there had been for several weeks a strolling band of
-Indians in the neighbourhood.
-
-Although the Indians were not brave enough to attack a settlement, they
-would be only too ready to steal the children, did they but have the
-opportunity.
-
-These Indians slept all day in dark, secluded spots, and roamed about at
-night, visiting the houses of the settlers under cover of darkness, for
-the purpose of carrying off anything of value upon which they could lay
-their hands. Recently several houses had been burned, and some twenty
-miles up the river a woman had been found murdered near the bank. Two
-children were missing from another house, and a man while out hunting
-had been shot by an unseen enemy.
-
-These outrages were all justly attributed to the Indians; and if they
-should meet Balser and Liney in the lonely forest, Heaven itself only
-knew what might become of the children,—a bear would be a more merciful
-enemy.
-
-All night Mr. Brent and the neighbours searched the forest far and near.
-
-Afterward Balser told the story of that terrible night, and I will let
-him speak:—
-
-“I think it was after six o’clock when I went into the woods in pursuit
-of Liney and the bear. It was almost dark at that time in the forest,
-and a little later, when the sun had gone down and a fine drizzle of
-rain had begun to fall, the forest was so black that once I ran against
-a small tree because I did not see it.
-
-“I wandered about for what seemed a very long time, calling for Liney;
-then I grew hopeless and began to realize that I was lost. I could not
-tell from which direction I had come, nor where I was going. Everything
-looked alike all about me—a deep, black bank of nothing, and a nameless
-fear stole over me. I had my gun, but of what use was it, when I could
-not see my hand before me? Now and then I heard wolves howling, and it
-seemed that their voices came from every direction. Once a black shadow
-ran by me with a snarl and a snap, and I expected every moment to have
-the hungry pack upon me, and to be torn into pieces. What if they should
-attack Liney? The thought almost drove me wild.
-
-“I do not know how long I had wandered through the forest, but it must
-have been eight or nine hours, when I came to the river. I went to the
-water’s edge and put my hand in the stream to learn which way the
-current ran, for I was so confused and so entirely lost that I did not
-know which direction was down-stream. I found that the water was running
-toward my right, and then I climbed back to the bank and stood in
-helpless confusion for a few minutes.
-
-“Nothing could be gained by standing there watching the water, like a
-fish-hawk, so I walked slowly down the river. I had been going
-down-stream for perhaps twenty minutes, when I saw a tall man come out
-of the woods, a few yards ahead of me, and walk rapidly toward the river
-bank. He carried something on his shoulder, as a man would carry a sack
-of wheat, and when he had reached the river bank, where there was more
-light, I could see from his dress that he was an Indian. I could not
-tell what it was he carried, but in a moment I thought of Liney and ran
-toward him. I reached the place where he had gone down the bank just in
-time to see him place his burden in a canoe. He himself was on the point
-of stepping in when I called to him to stop, and told him I would shoot
-him if he did not. My fright was gone in an instant, and I would not
-have feared all the lions, bears, and Indians that roamed the
-wilderness. I had but one thought—to save Liney, and something told me
-that she lay at the other end of the canoe.
-
-“The open space of the river made it light enough for me to see the
-Indian, and I was so close to him that even in the darkness I could not
-miss my aim. In place of answering my call, he glanced hurriedly at me,
-in surprise, and quickly lifted his gun to shoot me. But I was quicker
-than he, and I fired first. The Indian dropped his gun and plunged into
-the river. I did not know whether he had jumped or fallen in, but he
-immediately sank. I thought I saw his head a moment afterward above the
-surface of the water near the opposite bank, and I do not know to this
-day whether or not I killed him. At the time I did not care, for the one
-thing on my mind was to rescue Liney.
-
-“I did not take long to climb into the canoe, and sure enough there she
-was at the other end. I had not taken the precaution to tie the boat to
-the bank, and I was so overjoyed at finding Liney, and was so eager in
-my effort to lift her, and to learn if she were dead or alive, that I
-upset the unsteady thing. I thought we should both drown before we could
-get out, for Liney was as helpless as if she were dead, which I thought
-was really the case.
-
-“After a hard struggle I reached shallow water and carried Liney to the
-top of the bank. I laid her on the ground, and took away the piece of
-wood which the Indian had tied between her teeth to keep her from crying
-out. Then I rubbed her hands and face and rolled her over and over until
-she came to. After a while she raised her head and opened her eyes, and
-looked about her as if she were in a dream.
-
-[Illustration: Tige and Prince swimming about the Canoe.]
-
-‘Oh, Balser!’ she cried, and then fainted away again. I thought she was
-dead this time sure, and was in such agony that I could not even feel.
-Hardly knowing what I was doing, I picked her up to carry her home,
-dead—as I supposed. I had carried her for perhaps half an hour, when,
-becoming very tired, I stopped to rest. Then Liney wakened up again, and
-I put her down. But she could not stand, and, of course, could not walk.
-
-“She told me that after she had run into the woods away from the bear,
-she became frightened and was soon lost. She had wandered aimlessly
-about for a long time, how long she did not know, but it seemed ages.
-She had been so terrified by the wolves and by the darkness, that she
-was almost unconscious, and hardly knew what she was doing. She said
-that every now and then she had called my name, for she knew that I
-would try to follow her. Her calling for me had evidently attracted the
-Indian, whom she had met after she had been in the woods a very long
-time.
-
-“The Indian seized her, and placed the piece of wood between her teeth
-to keep her from screaming. He then threw her over his shoulder, and she
-remembered very little of what happened after that until she was
-awakened in the canoe by the flash and the report of my gun. She said
-that she knew at once I had come, and then she knew nothing more until
-she awakened on the bank. She did not know of the upsetting of the
-canoe, nor of my struggle in the water, but when I told her about it,
-she said:—
-
-“’Balser, you’ve saved my life three times in one night.’
-
-“Then I told her that I would carry her home. She did not want me to,
-though, and tried to walk, but could not; so I picked her up and started
-homeward.
-
-“Just then I happened to look toward the river and saw the Indian’s
-canoe floating down-stream, bottom upward. I saw at once that here was
-an opportunity for us to ride home, so I put Liney down, took off my wet
-jacket and moccasins, and swam out to the canoe. After I had drawn it to
-the bank and had turned out the water, I laid Liney at the bow, found a
-pole with which to guide the canoe, climbed in myself, and pushed off.
-We floated very slowly, but, slow as it was, it was a great deal better
-than having to walk.
-
-“It was just beginning to be daylight when I heard the barking of dogs.
-I would have known their voices among ten thousand, for they were as
-familiar to me as the voice of my mother. It was dear old Tige and
-Prince, and never in my life was any voice more welcome to my ears than
-that sweet sound. I whistled shrilly between my fingers, and soon the
-faithful animals came rushing out of the woods and plunged into the
-water, swimming about us as if they knew as well as a man could have
-known what they and their master had been looking for all night.”
-Balser’s father had followed closely upon the dogs, and within an hour
-the children were home amid the wildest rejoicing you ever heard.
-
-When Liney became stronger she told how she had seen the hollow in the
-sycamore tree, and had hurried toward it to hide; and how, just as she
-was about to enter the hollow tree, a huge bear raised upon its haunches
-and thrust its nose almost in her face. She said that the bear had
-followed her for a short distance, and then for some reason had given up
-the chase. Her recollection of everything that had happened was confused
-and indistinct, but one little fact she remembered with a clearness that
-was very curious: the bear, she said, had but one ear.
-
-When Balser heard this, he arose to his feet, and gave notice to all
-persons present that there would soon be a bear funeral, and that a
-one-eared bear would be at the head of the procession. He would have the
-other ear of that bear if he had to roam the forest until he was an old
-man to find it.
-
-How he got it, and how it got him, I will tell you in the next chapter.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- THE ONE-EARED BEAR.
-
-
-“You, Tom! You, Jerry! come here!” called Balser one morning, while he
-and Jim were sitting in the shade near the river in front of the house,
-overseeing the baby.
-
-“You, Tom! You, Jerry!” called Balser a second time with emphasis. The
-cubs, snoozing in the sun a couple of paces away, rolled lazily over two
-or three times in an effort to get upon their feet, and then trotted to
-their masters with a comical, waddling gait that always set the boys
-laughing,—it was such a swagger.
-
-When they had come, Balser said, “Stop right there!” and the cubs, being
-always tired, gladly enough sat upon their haunches, and blinked
-sleepily into Balser’s face, with a greedy expression upon their own, as
-if to say, “Well, where’s the milk?”
-
-“Milk, is it?” asked Balser. “You’re always hungry. You’re nothing but a
-pair of gluttons. Eat, eat, from morning until night. Well, this time
-you’ll get nothing. There’s no milk for you.”
-
-The cubs looked disgusted, so Jim said, and no doubt he was right, for
-Jim and the cubs were great friends and understood each other
-thoroughly.
-
-“Now, I’ve been a good father to you,” said Balser. “I’ve always given
-you as much milk as you could hold, without bursting, and have tried to
-bring you up to be good respectable bears, and to do my duty by you. I
-have whipped you whenever you needed it, although it often hurt me worse
-than it did you.”
-
-The bears grunted, as if to say: “But not in the same place.”
-
-“Now what I want,” continued Balser, regardless of the interruption,
-“is, that you tell me what you know, if anything, concerning a big
-one-eared bear that lives hereabouts. Have you ever heard of him?”
-
-Tom gave a grunt, and Jim, who had been studying bear language, said he
-meant “Yes.”
-
-Jerry then put his nose to Tom’s ear, and whined something in a low
-voice.
-
-“What does he say, Jim?” asked Balser.
-
-“He says for Tom not to tell you anything until you promise to give them
-milk,” answered Jim, seriously.
-
-“Jerry, you’re the greatest glutton alive, I do believe,” said Balser;
-“but if you’ll tell me anything worth knowing about the one-eared bear,
-I’ll give you the biggest pan of milk you ever saw.”
-
-Jerry in his glee took two or three fancy steps, awkwardly fell over
-himself a couple of times, got up, and grunted to Tom to go ahead. Jim
-was the interpreter, and Tom grunted and whined away, in a mighty effort
-to earn the milk.
-
-“The one-eared bear,” said he, “is my uncle. Used to hear dad and mother
-talk about him. Dad bit his ear off. That’s how he came to have only
-one. Dad and he fought about mother, and when dad bit uncle’s ear off
-mother went with dad and wouldn’t have anything to do with the other
-fellow. Couldn’t abide a one-eared husband, she said.”
-
-“That’s interesting,” answered Balser. “Where does he live?”
-
-Tom pointed his nose toward the northwest, and opened his mouth very
-wide.
-
-“Up that way in a cave,” interpreted Jim, pointing as the cub had
-indicated.
-
-“How far is it?” asked Balser.
-
-Jerry lay down and rolled over twice.
-
-“Two hours’ walk,” said Jim.
-
-“How shall I find the place?” asked Balser.
-
-Tom stood upon his hind legs, and scratched the bark of a tree with his
-fore paws as high as he could reach.
-
-“Of course,” said Balser, “by the bear scratches on the trees. I
-understand.”
-
-Jerry grunted “milk,” so Jim said, and the whole party, boys, bears, and
-baby, moved off to the milk-house, where the cubs had a great feast.
-
-After the milk had disappeared, Jerry grew talkative, and grunted away
-like the satisfied little pig that he was.
-
-Again Jim, with a serious face, acted as interpreter.
-
-“Mighty bad bear,” said Jerry. “Soured on the world since mother threw
-him over. Won’t have anything to do with anybody. He’s as big and strong
-as a horse, fierce as a lion, and meaner than an Injun. He’s bewitched,
-too, with an evil spirit, and nobody can ever kill him.”
-
-“That’s the name he has among white folks,” remarked Balser.
-
-“Better be careful when you hunt him, for he’s killed more men and boys
-than you have fingers and toes,” said Tom. Then the cubs, being full of
-milk and drowsy, stretched themselves out in the sun, and no amount of
-persuasion could induce them to utter another grunt.
-
-The bears had told the truth—that is, if they had told anything; for
-since it had been learned throughout the settlement that it was a
-one-eared bear which had pursued Liney, many stories had been told of
-hairbreadth escapes and thrilling adventures with that same fierce
-prowler of the woods.
-
-One hunter said that he had shot at him as many as twenty times, at
-short range, but for all he knew, had never even wounded him.
-
-The one-eared bear could not be caught by any means whatsoever. He had
-broken many traps, and had stolen bait so frequently from others, that
-he was considered altogether too knowing for a natural bear; and it was
-thought that he was inhabited by an evil spirit which gave him
-supernatural powers.
-
-He certainly was a very shrewd old fellow, and very strong and fierce;
-and even among those of the settlers who were not superstitious enough
-to believe that he was inhabited by an evil spirit, he was looked upon
-as a “rogue” bear; that is, a sullen, morose old fellow, who lived by
-himself, as old bachelors live. The bachelors, though, being men, should
-know better and act more wisely.
-
-Notwithstanding all these evil reports concerning the one-eared bear,
-Balser clung to his resolution to hunt the bear, to kill him if
-possible, and to give Liney the remaining ear as a keepsake.
-
-Balser’s father knew that it was a perilous undertaking, and tried to
-persuade the boy to hunt some less dangerous game; but he would not
-listen to any of the warnings, and day by day longed more ardently for
-the blood of the one-eared bear.
-
-So one morning shortly after the conversation with the cubs, Balser
-shouldered his gun and set out toward the northwest, accompanied by
-Limpy Fox and the dogs.
-
-In truth, the expedition had been delayed that Limpy’s sore _toe_ might
-_heal_. That was one of Liney’s jokes.
-
-Limpy had no gun, but he fairly bristled with knives and a hatchet,
-which for several days he had been grinding and whetting until they were
-almost as sharp as a razor.
-
-The boys roamed through the forest all day long, but found no trace of
-the one-eared bear, nor of any other, for that matter. So toward evening
-they turned their faces homeward, where they arrived soon after sunset,
-very tired and hungry.
-
-Liney had walked over to Balser’s house to learn the fate of the
-one-eared bear, and fully expected to hear that he had been slaughtered,
-for she looked upon Balser as a second Saint Hubert, who, as you know,
-is the patron saint of hunters.
-
-One failure, however, did not shake her faith in Balser, nor did it
-affect his resolution to kill the one-eared bear.
-
-Next day the boys again went hunting, and again failed to find the bear
-they sought. They then rested for a few days, and tried again, with
-still another failure.
-
-After several days of fruitless tramping through the forests, their
-friends began to laugh at them.
-
-“If he ever catches sight of Tom,” said Liney, “he’ll certainly die, for
-Tom’s knives and hatchet would frighten any bear to death.”
-
-Balser also made sport of Tom’s armament, but Tom, a little “miffed,”
-said:—
-
-“You needn’t be so smart; it hasn’t been long since you had nothing but
-a hatchet. You think because you’ve got a gun you’re very big and cute.
-I’ll bet the time will come when you’ll be glad enough that I have a
-hatchet.”
-
-Tom was a truer prophet than he thought, for the day soon came when the
-hatchet proved itself true steel.
-
-The boys had started out before sun-up one morning, and were deep into
-the forest when daylight was fairly abroad. Tige and Prince were with
-them, and were trotting lazily along at the boys’ heels, for the day was
-very warm, and there was no breeze in the forest. They had been walking
-for several hours, and had almost lost hope, when suddenly a deep growl
-seemed to come from the ground almost at their feet. The boys sprang
-back in a hurry, for right in their path stood an enormous bear, where a
-moment before there had been nothing.
-
-“Lordy! it’s the one-eared bear,” cried Tom, and the hairs on his head
-fairly stood on end.
-
-My! what a monster of fierceness the bear was. His head, throat, and
-paws, were covered with blood, evidently from some animal that he had
-been eating, and his great red mouth, sharp white teeth, and cropped ear
-gave him a most ferocious and terrifying appearance.
-
-Balser’s first impulse, now that he had found the long-sought one-eared
-bear, I am sorry to say, was to retreat. That was Tom’s first impulse
-also, and, notwithstanding his knives and hatchet, he acted upon it
-quicker than a circus clown can turn a somersault.
-
-Balser also started to run, but thought better of it, and turned to give
-battle to the bear, fully determined to act slowly and deliberately, and
-to make no mistake about his aim.
-
-[Illustration: “’Lordy, Balser! It’s the one-eared bear.’”]
-
-He knew that a false aim would end his own days, and would add one more
-victim to the already long list of the one-eared bear.
-
-The dogs barked furiously at the bear, and did not give Balser an
-opportunity to shoot. The bear and dogs were gradually moving farther
-away from Balser, and almost before he knew it the three had disappeared
-in the thicket. Balser was loath to follow until Tom should return, so
-he called in an undertone:—
-
-“Tom! Limpy!”
-
-Soon Tom cautiously came back, peering fearfully about him, hatchet in
-hand, ready to do great execution upon the bear—he afterward said.
-
-“You’re a pretty hunter, you are. You’d better go home and get an ax.
-The bear has got away just because I had to wait for you,” said Balser,
-only too glad to have some one to blame for the bear’s escape.
-
-The boys still heard the dogs barking, and hurried on after them as
-rapidly as the tangle of undergrowth would permit. Now and then they
-caught a glimpse of the bear, only to lose it again as he ran down a
-ravine or through a dense thicket. The dogs, however, kept in close
-pursuit, and loudly called to their master to notify him of their
-whereabouts.
-
-The boys and bears played at this exciting game of hide-and-seek for two
-or three hours, but Balser had no opportunity for a good shot, and Tom
-found no chance to use his deadly hatchet.
-
-When the bear showed a disposition to run away rather than to fight,
-Limpy grew brave, and talked himself into a high state of heroism.
-
-It was an hour past noon and the boys were laboriously climbing a steep
-ascent in pursuit of the bear and dogs, which they could distinctly see
-a few yards ahead of them, at the top of a hill. The underbrush had
-become thinner, although the shadow of the trees was deep and dark, and
-Balser thought that at last the bear was his. He repeated over and over
-to himself his father’s advice: “When you attack a bear, be slow and
-deliberate. Do nothing in a hurry. Don’t shoot until you’re sure of your
-aim.”
-
-He remembered vividly his hasty shot when he wounded the bear on Conn’s
-Creek, and his narrow escape from death at that time had so impressed
-upon him the soundness of his father’s advice, that he repeated it night
-and morning with his prayers.
-
-When he saw the bear at the top of the hill, so close to him, he raised
-his gun to his shoulder and held it there for a moment, awaiting a
-chance for a sure shot. But disappointment, instead of the bear, was
-his, for while he held his gun ready to fire, the bear suddenly
-disappeared, as if the earth had opened and swallowed him.
-
-It all happened so quickly that even the dogs looked astonished. Surely,
-this _was_ a demon bear.
-
-The boys hurried to the spot where they had last seen the animal, and,
-although they carefully searched for the mouth of a cave, or burrow,
-through which the bear might have escaped, they saw none, but found the
-earth everywhere solid and firm. They extended their search for a
-hundred feet or more about them, but still with the same result. They
-could find no hole or opening into which the bear could possibly have
-entered. His mysterious disappearance right before their eyes seemed
-terribly uncanny.
-
-There was certainly something wrong with the one-eared bear. He had
-sprung from the ground, just at their feet, where a moment before there
-had been nothing; and now he had as mysteriously disappeared into the
-solid earth, and had left no trace behind him.
-
-Balser and Tom stood for a moment in the greatest amazement, and all
-they had heard about the evil spirit which inhabited the one-eared bear
-quickly flashed through their minds.
-
-“We’d better let him go, Balser,” said Tom, “for we’ll never kill him,
-that’s sure. He’s been leading us a wild-goose chase all the morning
-only to get us up here to kill us. I never saw such an awful place for
-darkness. The bushes and trees don’t seem natural. They all have thorns
-and great knots on them, and their limbs and twigs look like huge bony
-arms and fingers reaching out after us. I tell you this ain’t a natural
-place, and that bear is an evil spirit, as sure as you live. Lordy!
-let’s get out of here, for I never was so scared in my life.”
-
-Balser was also afraid, but Tom’s words had made him wish to appear
-brave, and he said:—
-
-“Shucks! Limpy; I hope you ain’t afraid when you have your hatchet.”
-
-“For goodness’ sake, don’t joke in such a place as this, Balser,” said
-Tom, with chattering teeth. “I’m not afraid of any natural bear when I
-have my hatchet, but a bewitched bear is too much for me, and I’m not
-ashamed to own it.”
-
-“How do you know he’s bewitched?” asked Balser, trying to talk himself
-out of his own fears.
-
-“Bewitched? Didn’t he come right out of the ground just at our very
-feet, and didn’t he sink into the solid earth right here before our
-eyes? What more do you want, I’d like to know? Just you try to sink into
-the ground and see if you can. Nobody can, unless he’s bewitched.”
-
-Balser felt in his heart that Tom told the truth, and, as even the dogs
-seemed anxious to get away from the dark, mysterious place, they all
-descended the hill on the side opposite to that by which they had
-ascended. When they reached the bottom of the hill they unexpectedly
-found that they were at the river’s edge, and after taking a drink they
-turned their faces toward home. They thought of dinner, but their
-appetite had been frightened away by the mysterious disappearance of the
-bear, and they did not care to eat. So they fed the dogs and again
-started homeward down the river.
-
-After a few minutes’ walking they came to a bluff several hundred feet
-long, and perhaps fifty feet high, which at that time, the water being
-low, was separated from the river by a narrow strip of rocky, muddy
-ground.
-
-[Illustration: “’Let’s get out of here.’”]
-
-This strip of ground was overgrown with reeds and willows, and the bluff
-was covered with vines and bushes which clung in green masses to its
-steep sides and completely hid the rocks and earth. Tom was in front,
-Balser came next, and the dogs, dead tired, were trailing along some
-distance behind. Suddenly Tom threw up his hands and jumped frantically
-backward, exclaiming in terrified tones:—
-
-“Oh, Lord! the one-eared bear again.”
-
-When Tom jumped backward his foot caught in a vine, and he fell
-violently against Balser, throwing them both to the ground. In falling,
-Tom dropped his hatchet, which he had snatched from his belt, and Balser
-dropped his gun, the lock of which struck a stone and caused the charge
-to explode. Thus the boys were on their backs and weaponless, while the
-one-eared bear stood almost within arm’s length, growling in a voice
-like distant thunder, and looking so horrid and fierce that he seemed a
-very demon in a bear’s skin.
-
-Tom and Balser were so frightened that for a moment they could not move;
-but the deep growls which terrified them also brought the dogs, who came
-quickly to the rescue, barking furiously.
-
-The bear sprang upon the boys just as the dogs came up, and Balser
-received the full force of a great flat horny paw upon his back, and was
-almost stunned. The long sharp claws of the bear tore through the
-buckskin jacket as if it were paper, and cut deep gashes in Balser’s
-flesh. The pain seemed to revive him from the benumbing effect of the
-stroke, and when the bears attention was attracted by the dogs, Balser
-crawled out from beneath the monster and arose to his feet, wounded,
-bloody, and dizzy.
-
-Tom also felt the force of the bear’s great paw, and was lying a few
-feet from Balser, with his head in a tangle of vines and reeds.
-
-Balser, having escaped from under the bear, the brute turned upon Tom,
-who was lying prostrate in the bushes.
-
-The dogs were still vigorously fighting the bear, and every second or
-two a stroke from the powerful paw brought a sharp yelp of pain from
-either Tige or Prince, and left its mark in deep, red gashes upon their
-bodies. The pain, however, did not deter the faithful animals from their
-efforts to rescue the boys; and while the bear was making for Tom it was
-kept busy in defending itself from the dogs.
-
-In an instant the bear reached Tom, who would have been torn in pieces
-at once, had not Balser quickly unsheathed his long hunting knife and
-rushed into the fight. He sprang for the bear and landed on his back,
-clinging to him with one arm about his neck, while with the other he
-thrust his sharp hunting knife almost to the hilt into the brute’s side.
-
-This turned the attack from Tom, and brought it upon Balser, who soon
-had his hands full again.
-
-The bear rose upon his hind feet, and before Balser could take a step in
-retreat, caught him in his mighty arms for the purpose of hugging him to
-death, which is a bear’s favourite method of doing battle.
-
-The hunting knife was still sticking in the rough black side of the
-bear, where Balser had thrust it, and blood flowed from the wound in a
-great stream.
-
-The dogs were biting at the bear’s hind legs, but so intent was the
-infuriated monster upon killing Balser that he paid no attention to
-them, but permitted them to work their pleasure upon him, while he was
-having the satisfaction of squeezing the life out of the boy.
-
-In the meantime Tom recovered and rose to his feet. He at once realized
-that Balser would be a dead boy if something were not done immediately.
-Luckily, Tom saw his hatchet, lying a few feet away, and snatching it up
-he attacked the bear, chopping away at his great back as if it were a
-tree.
-
-At the third or fourth stroke from Tom’s hatchet, the bear loosened his
-grip upon Balser and fell in a great black heap to the ground, growling
-and clawing in all directions as if he were frantic with rage and pain.
-He bit at the rocks and bushes, gnashed his teeth, and dug into the
-ground with his claws.
-
-Balser, when released from the bear, fell in a half conscious condition,
-close to the river’s edge. Tom ran to him, and, hardly knowing what he
-did, dashed water in his face to remove the blood-stains and to wash the
-wounds. The water soon revived Balser, who rose to his feet; and, Tom
-helping his friend, the boys started to run, or rather to walk away as
-fast as their wounds and bruises would permit, while the dogs continued
-to bark and the bear to growl.
-
-As the boys were retreating, Tom, turned his head to see if the bear was
-following, but as it was still lying on the ground, growling and biting
-at the rocks and scratching the earth, he thought perhaps that the
-danger was over, and that the bear was so badly wounded that he could
-not rise, or he certainly would have been on his feet fighting Tige and
-Prince, who gave him not one moment’s peace. Balser and Tom paused for
-an instant, and were soon convinced that the bear was helpless.
-
-“I believe he can’t get up,” said Balser.
-
-“Of course he can’t,” answered Tom, pompously. “I cut his old backbone
-in two with my hatchet. When he was hugging you I chopped away at him
-hard enough to cut down a hickory sapling.”
-
-The boys limped back to the scene of conflict, and found that they were
-right. The bear could not rise to his feet, but lay in a huge struggling
-black heap on the ground.
-
-Balser then cautiously went over to where his gun lay, picked it up, and
-ran back to Tom. He tried to load the gun, but his arms were so bruised
-and torn that he could not; so he handed it to Tom, who loaded it with a
-large bullet and a heavy charge of powder.
-
-Balser then called off the dogs, and Tom, as proud as the President of
-the United States, held the gun within a yard of the bear’s head and
-pulled the trigger. The great brute rolled over on his side, his mighty
-limbs quivered, he uttered a last despairing growl which was piteous—for
-it was almost a groan—and his fierce, turbulent spirit fled forever.
-Balser then drew his hunting knife from the bear’s body, cut off the
-remaining ear, and put it in the pocket of his buckskin coat.
-
-The boys were sorely wounded, and Balser said that the bear had squeezed
-his “insides” out of place. This proved to be true to a certain extent,
-for when he got home it was found that two of his ribs were broken.
-
-The young hunters were only too glad to start homeward, for they had
-seen quite enough of the one-eared bear for one day.
-
-After walking in silence a short distance down the river, Balser said to
-Tom:—
-
-“I’ll never again say anything bad about your hatchet. It saved my life
-to-day, and was worth all the guns in the world in such a fight as we
-have just gone through.”
-
-Tom laughed, but was kind-hearted enough not to say, “I told you so.”
-
-You may imagine the fright the boys gave their parents when they arrived
-home wounded, limping, and blood-stained; but soon all was told, and
-Balser and Tom were the heroes of the settlement.
-
-They had killed the most dangerous animal that had ever lived on Blue
-River, and had conquered where old and experienced hunters had failed.
-
-The huge carcass of the bear was brought home that evening, and when the
-skin was removed, his backbone was found to have been cut almost through
-by Tom’s hatchet.
-
-When they cut the bear open somebody said he had two galls, and that
-fact, it was claimed, accounted for his fierceness.
-
-Where the bear had sprung from when the boys first saw him in the
-forest, or how he had managed to disappear into the ground at the top of
-the hill was never satisfactorily explained. Some settlers insisted that
-he had not been inhabited by an evil spirit, else the boys could not
-have killed him, but others clung to the belief with even greater faith
-and persistency.
-
-[Illustration: “Balser rushed into the fight.”]
-
-Liney went every day to see Balser, who was confined to his bed for a
-fortnight.
-
-One day, while she was sitting by him, and no one else was in the room,
-he asked her to hand him his buckskin jacket; the one he had worn on the
-day of the bear fight. The jacket was almost in shreds from the
-frightful claws of the bear, and tears came to the girl’s eyes as she
-placed it on the bed.
-
-Balser put his hand into one of the deep pockets, and, drawing out the
-bear’s ear, handed it to Liney, saying:—
-
-“I cut this off for you because I like you.”
-
-The girl took the bear’s ear, blushed a deep red, thanked him, and
-murmured:—
-
-“And I will keep it, ugly as it is, because I—because—I—like you.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- THE WOLF HUNT.
-
-
-It was a bright day in August. The whispering rustle of the leaves as
-they turned their white sides to the soft breath of the southwest wind,
-the buzzing of the ostentatiously busy bees, the lapping of the river as
-it gurgled happily along on its everlasting travels, the half-drowsy
-note of a thrush, and the peevish cry of a catbird seemed only to
-accentuate the Sabbath hush that was upon all nature.
-
-The day was very warm, but the deep shade of the elms in front of the
-cabin afforded a delightful retreat, almost as cool as a cellar.
-
-Tom and Liney Fox had walked over to visit Balser and Jim; and Sukey
-Yates, with her two brothers, had dropped in to stay a moment or two,
-but finding such good company, had remained for the day.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The children were seated at the top of the slope that descended to the
-river, and the weather being too warm to play any game more vigorous
-than “thumbs up,” they were occupying the time with drowsy yawns and
-still more drowsy conversation, the burden of which was borne by Tom.
-
-Balser often said that he didn’t mind “talking parties,” if he could
-only keep Tom Fox from telling the story of the time when he went to
-Cincinnati with his father and saw a live elephant. But that could never
-be done; and Tom had told it twice upon the afternoon in question, and
-there is no knowing how often he would have inflicted it upon his small
-audience, had it not been for an interruption which effectually disposed
-of “Cincinnati” and the live elephant for that day.
-
-A bustling old hen with her brood of downy chicks was peevishly clucking
-about, now and then lazily scratching the earth, and calling up her
-ever-hungry family whenever she was lucky enough to find a delicious
-worm or racy bug.
-
-[Illustration: “MISCHIEF! THEY NEVER THOUGHT OF ANYTHING ELSE.”]
-
-The cubs were stretched at full length in the bright blaze of the sun,
-snoring away like a pair of grampuses, their black silky sides rising
-and falling with every breath. They looked so pretty and so innocent
-that you would have supposed a thought of mischief could never have
-entered their heads. (Mischief! They never thought of anything else.
-From morning until night, and from night until morning, they studied,
-planned, and executed deeds of mischief that would have done credit to
-the most freckle-faced boy in the settlement. Will you tell me why it is
-that the boy most plentifully supplied with freckles and warts is the
-most fruitful in schemes of mischief?) A flock of gray geese and snowy
-ganders were floating on the placid surface of the river, opposite the
-children, where a projection of the bank had caused the water to back,
-making a little pool of listless eddies.
-
-[Illustration: “BALSER TURNED IN TIME TO SEE A GREAT, LANK, GRAY WOLF
-EMERGE FROM THE WATER, CARRYING A GANDER BY THE NECK.”]
-
-Suddenly from among the noiseless flock of geese came a mighty squawking
-and a sound of flapping wings, and the flock, half flying, half
-swimming, came struggling at their utmost speed toward home.
-
-“Look, Balser! Look!” said Liney in a whisper. “A wolf!”
-
-Balser turned in time to see a great, lank, gray wolf emerge from the
-water, carrying a gander by the neck.
-
-The bird could not squawk, but he flapped his wings violently, thereby
-retarding somewhat the speed of Mr. Wolf.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Balser hurried to the house for his gun, and with Tom Fox quickly
-paddled across the river in pursuit of the wolf. The boys entered the
-forest at the place the wolf had chosen. White feathers from the gander
-furnished a distinct spoor, and Balser had no difficulty in keeping on
-the wolf’s track. The boys had been walking rapidly for thirty or forty
-minutes, when they found that the tracks left by the wolf and the
-scattered feathers of the gander led toward a thick clump of pawpaw
-bushes and vines, which grew at the foot of a small rocky hill. Into
-this thicket the boys cautiously worked their way, and, after careful
-examination, they found, ingeniously concealed by dense foliage, a small
-hole or cleft in the rocks at the base of the hill, and they at once
-knew that the wolf had gone to earth, and that this was his den.
-
-Foxes make for themselves and their families the snuggest, most
-ingenious home in the ground you can possibly imagine. They seek a place
-at the base of a hill or bluff, and dig what we would call in our houses
-a narrow hallway, straight into the hill. They loosen the dirt with
-their front feet, and throw it back of them; then with their hind feet
-they keep pushing it farther toward the opening of the hole, until they
-have cast it all out. When they have removed the loose dirt, they at
-once scatter it over the ground and carefully cover it with leaves and
-vines, to avoid attracting unwelcome visitors to their home.
-
-When the hallway is finished, the fox digs upward into the hill, and
-there he makes his real home. His reason for doing this is to prevent
-water from flowing through his hall into his living apartment. The
-latter is often quite a cave in the earth, and furnishes as roomy and
-cozy a home for Mr. and Mrs. Fox and their children as you could find in
-the world. It is cool in summer and warm in winter. It is softly
-carpeted with leaves, grass, and feathers, and the foxes lie there
-snugly enough when the winter comes on, with its freezing and snowing
-and blowing.
-
-When the fox gets hungry he slips out of his cozy home, and briskly
-trots to some well-known chicken roost; or perhaps he finds a covey of
-quails huddled under a bunch of straw. In either case he carries home
-with him a dainty dinner, and after he has feasted, he cares not how the
-wind blows, nor how the river freezes, nor how the snow falls, for he is
-housed like a king, and is as warm and comfortable and happy as if he
-owned the earth and lived in a palace.
-
-Wolves also make their dens in the earth, but they usually hunt for a
-place where the hallway, at least, is already made for them. They seek a
-hill with a rocky base, and find a cave partially made, the entrance to
-which is a small opening between the rocks. With this for a
-commencement, they dig out the interior and make their home, somewhat
-upon the plan of the fox.
-
-The old wolf which Balser and Tom had chased to earth had found a fine
-dinner for his youngsters, and while the boys were watching the hole, no
-doubt the wolf family was having a glorious feast upon the gander.
-
-The boys, of course, were at their rope’s end. The dogs were not with
-them, and, even had they been, they were too large to enter the hole
-leading to the wolf’s den. So the boys seated themselves upon a rock a
-short distance from the opening, and after a little time adopted the
-following plan of action.
-
-Balser was to lie upon his breast on the hillside, a few yards above the
-opening of the wolf den, while Tom was to conceal himself in the dense
-foliage, close to the mouth of the cave, and they took their positions
-accordingly. Both were entirely hidden by vines and bushes, and remained
-silent as the tomb. They had agreed that they should lie entirely
-motionless until the shadow of a certain tree should fall across Tom’s
-face, which they thought would occur within an hour. Then Tom, who could
-mimic the calls and cries of many birds and beasts, was to squawk like a
-goose, and tempt the wolf from his den so that Balser could shoot him.
-
-It was a harder task than you may imagine to lie on the ground amid the
-bushes and leaves; for it seemed, at least so Tom said, that all the
-ants and bugs and worms in the woods had met at that particular place,
-and at that exact time, for the sole purpose of “drilling” up and down,
-and over and around, his body, and to bite him at every step. He dared
-not move to frighten away the torments, nor to scratch. He could not
-even grumble, which to Tom was the sorest trial of all.
-
-[Illustration: “BANG! WENT BALSER’S GUN, AND THE WOLF ... PAID FOR HIS
-FEAST WITH HIS LIFE.”]
-
-The moment the shadow of the tree fell upon his face Tom squawked like a
-goose, so naturally, that Balser could hardly believe it was Tom, and
-not a real goose. Soon he uttered another squawk, and almost at the same
-instant Mr. Wolf came out of his hall door, doubtless thinking to
-himself that that was his lucky day, for he would have two ganders, one
-for dinner and one for supper, and plenty of cold goose for breakfast
-and dinner the next day. But he was mistaken, for it was the unluckiest
-day of the poor wolf’s life. Bang! went Balser’s gun, and the wolf, who
-had simply done his duty as a father, by providing a dinner for his
-family, paid for his feast with his life.
-
-“We’ll drag the body a short distance away from the den,” said Balser,
-“and you lie down again, and this time whine like a wolf. Then the old
-she-wolf will come out and we’ll get her too.”
-
-Tom objected.
-
-“I wouldn’t lie there another hour and let them ants and bugs chaw over
-me as they did, for all the wolves in the state.”
-
-“But just think, Tom,” answered Balser, “when the wagons go to
-Brookville this fall we can get a shilling apiece for the wolfskins!
-Think of it! A shilling! One for you and one for me. I’ll furnish the
-powder and shot if you’ll squawk and whine. Squawks and whines don’t
-cost anything, but powder and lead does. Now that’s a good fellow, just
-lie down and whine a little. She’ll come out pretty quick.”
-
-Tom still refused, and Balser still insisted. Soon Balser grew angry and
-called Tom a fool, Tom answered in kind, and in a moment the boys
-clinched for a fight. They scuffled and fought awhile, and soon stumbled
-over the dead wolf and fell to the ground. Balser was lucky enough to
-fall on top, and proceeded to pound Tom at a great rate.
-
-“Now will you whine?” demanded Balser.
-
-“No,” answered Tom.
-
-“Then take that, and that, and that. Now will you whine?”
-
-“No,” cried Tom, determined not to yield.
-
-So Balser went at it again, but there was no give up to stubborn Tom,
-even if he was on the under side.
-
-At last Balser wiped the perspiration from his face, and, sitting
-astride of his stubborn foe, said:—
-
-“Tom, if you’ll whine I’ll lend you my gun for a whole day.”
-
-“And powder and bullets?” asked Tom.
-
-“Well, I guess not,” answered Balser. “I’ll lick you twenty times
-first.”
-
-“If you’ll lend me your gun and give me ten full loads, I’ll whine till
-I fetch every wolf in the woods, if the bugs do eat me up.”
-
-“That’s a go,” said Balser, glad enough to compromise with a boy who
-didn’t know when he was whipped.
-
-Then they got up, and were as good friends as if no trouble had occurred
-between them.
-
-Balser at once lay down upon the hillside above the wolf den, and Tom
-took his place to whine.
-
-The boys understood their job thoroughly, and Tom’s whines soon brought
-out the old she-wolf. She looked cautiously about her for a moment,
-stole softly over to her dead mate, and dropped by his side with a
-bullet through her heart.
-
-Tom was about to rise, but Balser said:—
-
-“Whine again; whine again, and the young ones will come out.”
-
-Tom whined, and sure enough, out came two scrawny, long-legged wolf
-whelps.
-
-The boys rushed upon them, and caught them by the back of the neck, to
-avoid being bitten, for the little teeth of the pups were as sharp as
-needles and could inflict an ugly wound. Balser handed the whelp he had
-caught to Tom, and proceeded to cut two forked sticks from a tough bush,
-which the children called “Indian arrow.” These forked branches the boys
-tied about the necks of the pups, with which to lead them home.
-
-[Illustration: “CAUGHT THEM BY THE BACK OF THE NECK.”]
-
-Tom then cut a strong limb from a tree with his pocket-knife. This was
-quite an undertaking, but in time he cut it through, and trimmed off the
-smaller branches. The boys tied together the legs of the old wolves and
-swung them over the pole, which they took upon their shoulders, and
-started home leading the pups. They arrived home an hour or two before
-sunset, and found that Liney and Sukey had arranged supper under the
-elms.
-
-The boys scoured their faces and hands with soft soap, for that was the
-only soap they had, and sat down to supper with cheeks shining, and hair
-pasted to their heads slick and tight.
-
-“When a fellow gets washed up this way, and has his hair combed so
-slick, it makes him feel like it was Sunday,” said Tom, who was uneasily
-clean.
-
-“Tom, I wouldn’t let people know how seldom I washed my face if I were
-you,” said Liney, with a slight blush. “They’ll think you clean up only
-on Sunday.”
-
-Tom, however, did not allow Liney’s remarks to interrupt his supper, but
-continued to make sad havoc among the good things on the log.
-
-There was white bread made from wheat flour, so snowy and light that it
-beat cake “all holler!” the boys “allowed.” Wheat bread was a luxury to
-the settler folks in those days, for the mill nearest to the Blue River
-settlement was over on Whitewater, at Brookville, fifty miles away.
-Wheat and the skins of wild animals were the only products that the
-farmers could easily turn into cash, so the small crops were too
-precious to be used daily, and wheat flour bread was used only for
-special occasions, such as Christmas, or New Year’s, or company dinner.
-
-Usually three or four of the farmers joined in a little caravan, and
-went in their wagons to Brookville twice a year. They would go in the
-spring with the hides of animals killed during the winter, that being
-the hunting season, and the hides then taken being of superior quality
-to those taken at any other time.
-
-[Illustration: “THE BOYS TIED TOGETHER THE LEGS OF THE OLD WOLVES AND
-SWUNG THEM OVER THE POLE ... AND STARTED HOME LEADING THE PUPS.”]
-
-Early in the fall they would go again to Brookville, to market their
-summer crop of wheat.
-
-Mr. Fox and a few neighbours had returned from an early trip to market
-only a day or two before the children’s party at Balser’s home, and had
-brought with them a few packages of a fine new drink called coffee. That
-is, it was new to the Western settler, at the time of which I write,
-milk sweetened with “tree sugar” being the usual table drink.
-
-Liney had brought over a small gourdful of coffee as a present to Mrs.
-Brent, and a pot of the brown beverage had been prepared for the supper
-under the elms.
-
-The Yates children and Tom were frank enough to admit that the coffee
-was bitter, and not fit to drink; but Liney had made it, and Balser
-drank it, declaring it was very good indeed. Liney knew he told a story,
-but she thanked him for it, nevertheless, and said that the Yates
-children and Tom were so thoroughly “country” and green that she
-couldn’t expect them to like a civilized drink.
-
-This would have made trouble with Tom, but Balser, who saw it coming,
-said:—
-
-“Now you shut up, Tom Fox.” And Balser had so recently whipped Tom that
-his word bore the weight of authority.
-
-Besides the coffee and the white bread there was a great gourd full of
-milk with the cream mixed in, just from the springhouse, delicious and
-cold. There was a cold loin of venison, which had been spitted and
-roasted over a bed of hot coals in the kitchen fireplace that morning.
-There was a gourd full of quail eggs, which had been boiled hard and
-then cooled in the springhouse. There were heaping plates of fried
-chicken, and rolls of glorious yellow butter just from the churn, rich
-with the genuine butter taste, that makes one long to eat it by the
-spoonful; then there was a delicious apple pie, sweet and crusty,
-floating in cream almost as thick as molasses in winter.
-
-They were backwoods, homely children; but the supper to which they sat
-down under the elms was fit for a king, and the appetite with which they
-ate it was too good for any king.
-
-During the supper the bear cubs had been nosing about the log table,
-begging each one by turns for a bite to eat. They were so troublesome
-that Jim got a long stick, and whenever they came within reach he gave
-them a sharp rap upon the head, and soon they waddled away in a pet of
-indignant disgust.
-
-For quite a while after Jim had driven them off there had been a season
-of suspicious quietude on the part of the cubs.
-
-Suddenly a chorus of yelps, howls, growls, and whines came from the
-direction of the wolf pups. The attention of all at the table was, of
-course, at once attracted by the noise, and those who looked beheld
-probably the most comical battle ever fought. Tom and Jerry, with their
-everlasting desire to have their noses into everything that did not
-concern them, had gone to investigate the wolf pups, and in the course
-of the investigation a fight ensued, whereby the wolves were liberated.
-The cubs were the stronger, but the wolves were more active, thus the
-battle was quite even. The bears, being awkward, of course, were in each
-other’s way most of the time, and would fall over themselves and roll
-upon the ground for a second or two, before they could again get upon
-their clumsy feet. The consequence was that the wolves soon had the best
-of the fight, and, being once free from the cubs, scampered off to the
-woods and were never seen again.
-
-When the wolves had gone the cubs turned round and round, looking for
-their late antagonists; but, failing to find them, sat down upon their
-haunches, grinned at each other in a very silly manner, and then began
-to growl and grumble in the worst bear language any one had ever heard.
-
-Balser scolded the cubs roundly, and told them he had taught them better
-than to swear, even in bear talk. He then switched them for having
-liberated the wolves, and went back to supper.
-
-The switching quieted the bears for a short time, but soon their spirit
-of mischief again asserted itself.
-
-After another period of suspicious silence on the part of the cubs, Jim
-put a general inquiry to the company:—
-
-“What do you s’pose they’re up to this time?”
-
-“Goodness only knows,” responded Balser. “But if I hear another grunt
-out of them, I’ll take a stick to them that’ll hurt, and off they’ll go
-to their pen for the night.”
-
-The settlers frequently caught swarms of bees in the woods, and Balser’s
-father had several hives near the house. These hives were called “gums,”
-because they were made from sections of a hollow gum tree, that being
-the best wood for the home of the bees. These hollow gums were placed on
-end upon small slanting platforms, and were covered with clapboards,
-which were held tightly in their places by heavy stones. There was a
-small hole, perhaps as large as the end of your finger, cut in the wood
-at the base, through which the bees entered, and upon the inside of the
-hive they constructed their comb and stored their honey.
-
-I told you once before how bears delight to eat fish and blackberries.
-They are also very fond of honey. In fact, bears seem to have a general
-appetite and enjoy everything, from boys to blackberries.
-
-Hardly had Balser spoken his threat when another duet of howls and yelps
-reached his ears.
-
-“Now what on earth is it?” he asked, and immediately started around the
-house in the direction whence the howls had come.
-
-“Geminy! I believe they’ve upset the bee-gum,” said Jim.
-
-“Don’t you know they have?” asked Balser. By that time the boys were in
-sight of the bears.
-
-[Illustration: “THESE HIVES WERE CALLED ‘GUMS.’”]
-
-“Well, I know now they have, if that suits you any better. Golly! Look
-at them paw and scratch, and rub their eyes when the bees sting. Good
-enough for you. Give it to ‘em, bees!” And Jim threw back his head and
-almost split his sides with laughter.
-
-Sure enough, the bears had got to nosing about the bee-gums, and in
-their ever hungry greediness had upset one. This, of course, made the
-bees very angry, and they attacked the cubs in a buzzing, stinging swarm
-that set them yelping, growling, and snapping, in a most desperate and
-comical manner. All their snapping and growling, however, did no good,
-for the bees continued to buzz and sting without any indication of being
-merciful. A little of this sort of thing went a long way with the black
-mischief-makers, and they soon ran to Balser and Jim for help. The bees,
-of course, followed, and when the boys and girls saw the bees coming
-toward them they broke helter-skelter in all directions, and ran as fast
-as they could go. The bears then ran to the river, and plunged in to
-escape their tormentors.
-
-When the gum had been placed in position again and the bees had become
-quiet, the cubs, thinking the field clear, came out of the water
-dripping wet. Then they waddled up close to the girls, and out of pure
-mischief shook themselves and sprinkled the dainty clean frocks with a
-shower from their frowzy hides.
-
-That sealed the fate of the cubs for the day, and when Balser marched
-them off to their pen they looked so meek and innocent that one would
-have thought that they had been attending bear Sunday-school all their
-lives, and were entirely lacking in all unwarrantable and facetious
-instincts.
-
-They went to bed supperless that evening, but had their revenge, for
-their yelps and whines kept the whole family awake most of the night.
-
-By the time the bears had been put to bed, darkness was near at hand, so
-the supper dishes and gourds were washed and carried to the kitchen.
-Then the visitors said good night and left for home.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- BORROWED FIRE.
-
-
-One day Tom Fox was told by his mother to kindle the fire, which had
-been allowed to grow so dim that only a smouldering bed of embers was
-left upon the hearth. Hanging from the crane was a large kettle, almost
-full of water. Now, in addition to his reputation for freckles, Tom was
-also believed to be the awkwardest boy in the Blue River settlement.
-Upon the day above referred to, he did all in his power to live up to
-his reputation, by upsetting the kettle of water upon the fire, thereby
-extinguishing the last spark of that necessary element in the Fox
-household.
-
-Of course there was not a lucifer match on all Blue River, from its
-source to its mouth; and as Mr. Fox had taken the tinder-box with him on
-a hunting expedition, and would not return till night, Limpy received a
-sound thrashing, and was sent to the house loft, there to ponder for the
-rest of the day over his misdeeds.
-
-Mrs. Fox then sent Liney over to Mrs. Brent’s to borrow fire. Limpy
-would have been glad to go, had his mother seen fit to send him, but the
-task would have been a reward rather than a punishment. Liney was
-delighted to have an opportunity to visit the Brent cabin, so away she
-went, very willingly indeed. Before the day was finished she was doubly
-glad she had gone, and the help she was able to give to a friend in need
-made her devoutly thankful to the kind fate which, operating through
-Mrs. Fox, had sent her on her errand. The terrible adventure, which
-befell her, and the frightful—but I am telling my story before I come to
-it.
-
-When Balser was a boy, each season brought its separate work and
-recreation on the farm, as it does now. But especially was this true in
-the time of the early settlers.
-
-The winter was the hunting season. The occupation of hunting, which was
-looked upon as sport and recreation combined, was also a business with
-the men who cleared the land and felled the forests of Indiana; for a
-wagon-load of good pelts, taken during the winter season when the fur is
-at its best, was no inconsiderable matter, and brought at market more
-money than the same wagon filled with wheat would have been worth. So
-the settler of Balser’s time worked quite as hard in the winter with his
-rifle, as he did with his hoe and plough in the fields during the months
-of summer.
-
-Spring, of course, was the time for breaking up and ploughing. Summer
-was the wheat harvest. Then, also, the various kinds of wild berries
-were gathered, and dried or preserved. In the summer casks of rich
-blackberry wine were made, to warm the cold hunter upon his return from
-the chase during the cold days to come, or to regale company upon long
-winter evenings before the blazing fire. Blackberries could be had by
-the bushel for the mere gathering, and the wine could be made so cheaply
-that almost every house was well stocked with the delicious beverage.
-
-Then came the corn gathering, and bringing in the fodder. The latter was
-brought in by wagon-loads, and was stacked against the sides of the barn
-and of the cow shed. It answered a double purpose: it made the barn and
-sheds warm and cozy homes for the stock during the cold bleak winter,
-and furnished food for the cattle and the horses, so that by spring they
-had eaten part of their houses. The wheat straw was stacked in the
-barnyard; and into this the sheep and calves burrowed little caves,
-wherein they would lie so snug and warm that it made no difference to
-them how much the wind blew, or the snow and rain fell, or how hard it
-froze outside; for the bad weather made their cozy shelter seem all the
-more comfortable by contrast.
-
-The fall also had its duties, part task, and part play. The woods
-abounded in hickory nuts, walnuts, and hazelnuts, and a supply of all
-these had to be gathered, for they furnished no small part of the winter
-food. Preparation was always made for this work by the boys of Mr.
-Brent’s family long before a hickory nut had thought of falling. Shortly
-after the wolf hunt which I described to you in the last chapter, Balser
-and Jim began to make ready for the nut campaign. Their first task was
-to build a small wagon, for the purpose of carrying home the nuts. They
-found a tree twelve or fourteen inches in diameter, which they felled.
-They then sawed off four round sections of the tree, each about one inch
-thick, to serve as wheels. From the outer edge of these wheels they
-removed the bark, and bound them with tires made from the iron hoops of
-a barrel. They then cut round holes in the centre in which to insert the
-axles of the wagon. With their hatchets they split clapboards, which
-they made smooth, and of the clapboards they made the bottom, sides, and
-ends. The boys worked pretty hard for ten or twelve days, and completed
-as perfect a two-horse wagon, in miniature, as any one ever beheld.
-There were the tongue, the axletree, the sideboard, the headboard, and
-the tail-gate and floor, all fitted so tightly together that you would
-have declared a wagon maker had made them. The wheels, bound with
-barrel-hoop tires, were marvels of their kind. The wagon bed would hold
-as much as could be contained in two large flour sacks, and when filled
-with nuts would prove quite a load to draw, consequently the boys must
-have a team of some sort. The team which they eventually rigged up was
-probably the most absurd and curious combination that ever drew a load.
-
-The boys selected strong pieces of deer-hide, and made four sets of
-harness. For what purpose, do you suppose? You never could guess. Two
-for the dogs, Tige and Prince, and two for the bear cubs, Tom and Jerry,
-who they proposed should do something to earn their bread and milk, for
-they were growing to be great awkward, big-footed, long-legged fellows,
-and were very strong.
-
-So the four sets of harness were finished, and one day the odd team was
-hitched up for trial. The little wagon was loaded with rocks, and the
-boys tried to start the team. The dogs seemed willing enough to obey,
-but the cubs, which were hitched in front, went every way but the right
-one, and showed a disposition to rebel against the indignity of work.
-
-The bears were then taken from the lead, the dogs were put in their
-places, and the bears were put next to the wagon. The team was started
-again, but the cubs lay down flat upon the ground and refused to move.
-After trying in vain to induce the cubs to do their duty, Balser spoke
-to Jim, who was standing at the dogs’ heads, and Jim started forward,
-leading the dogs, and Jim and the dogs dragged after them the cubs and
-the wagon. At almost every step the heavily loaded wagon would roll upon
-the hind feet of the cubs, and Balser threw thorns upon the ground,
-which pricked the bears as they were dragged along, until the black
-sluggards came to the conclusion that it was easier to work than to be
-dragged over thorns; so they arose to their feet, and followed the dogs,
-without, however, drawing an ounce of the load.
-
-[Illustration: The cubs went every way but the right way.]
-
-The boys kept patiently at this sort of training for three weeks; and at
-the end of that time, between bribes in the way of milk and honey, and
-beatings with a thick stick, the cubs little by little submitted to
-their task, and eventually proved to be real little oxen at drawing a
-load. The dogs, of course, had been broken in easily.
-
-By the time the cubs were ready for work, the hickory nuts, walnuts, and
-hazelnuts were ready to be gathered; and the boys only waited for a
-heavy black frost to loosen the nuts from their shells, and a strong
-wind to shake them from the branches.
-
-During the summer of which I told you in the preceding chapters, Mr.
-Brent had raised the roof of his house, so as to make a room in the loft
-for the boys. This room was floored with rough boards, between which
-large cracks were left, so that heat from the room below might arise and
-warm the boys’ room. The upper room was reached by the most primitive of
-stairways. It was nothing more than a small log, or thick pole, with
-notches cut on each side for footholds, or steps. In going up this
-stairway the boys climbed hand over hand, and foot over foot, as a bear
-climbs a tree; and to come down without falling was a task of no small
-proportions to one inexperienced in the art.
-
-One morning Jim awakened, and looked out from under the warm bearskin
-which served for a blanket, comforter, and sheet. He listened for a
-moment to the wind, which was blowing a gale, and then awakened Balser.
-
-“Balser! Balser!” said Jim. “Wake up! There’s frost enough to freeze a
-brass monkey, and the wind is blowing hard enough to blow down the
-trees, to say nothing of the nuts. Let’s get up and have an early
-start.” Balser was willing, and soon the boys had climbed out from under
-the warm bearskin, and were downstairs preparing to kindle the fires.
-
-The fire-kindling was no hard task; for the backlog which had been put
-in the fireplace the evening before was a great roll of red coals, and
-all that the boys had to do to kindle the fire was to “poke” the
-backlog, and it fell in chunks of half-charred, burning hickory, that
-hissed and popped and flamed, and made the room warm before you could
-say “Jack Robinson.” Then the boys threw on a large armful of cut wood,
-and soon the blaze was crackling cozily, and the kettle singing merrily
-on the flames.
-
-The morning was cold, and the boys sat upon the great hearth, with their
-palms to the fire, getting “good and warm for the day,” while the gray,
-frosty dawn was slowly frightening the shadows of night away from the
-forest, to which they seemed to cling.
-
-Then came the mother, who made the breakfast of sweet fried venison,
-buckwheat-cakes floating in maple syrup and butter, hoe-cake, and eggs.
-Instead of coffee they drank warm milk, sweetened with maple sugar, and
-I can tell you it was a breakfast to wax fat on.
-
-The sun was hardly above the horizon, when breakfast was finished, and
-the dogs and cubs were fed. Then they were harnessed to the wagon, and
-boys, bears, dogs, and wagon, all started on their way to the woods.
-Hickory trees did not grow plentifully in the bottom-lands, so the boys
-made for the hills, perhaps a mile away.
-
-Shortly after they had reached the hills, Jim cried out:—
-
-“Oh, here’s a great big shellbark! I’ll bet the ground’s covered with
-nuts.”
-
-Sure enough, the ground was covered with them, and the boys filled their
-wagon in a very short time. Then they started home. The trip home was
-marred by an upset, owing to the perversity of the cubs; but the boys
-righted the wagon, loaded it with nuts again, and after considerable
-trouble deposited them safely at home, and went back for another load.
-
-The dog-bear team worked admirably, barring a general tendency to run
-over logs and stones, and two great loads of hickory nuts were safely
-brought to the house before dinner.
-
-After the boys, bears, and dogs had eaten a hurried meal, they again
-went forth in quest of nuts; but they took a different course this time,
-toward the south—that is, in the direction of the house of Mr. Fox—for
-the purpose of visiting a hazel thicket, which was a mile from home.
-Soon the hazel patch was reached, and about five o’clock the wagon was
-full of beautiful, brown little nuts, than which there is none sweeter.
-
-When the wagon was loaded the boys hitched up the team, much to the
-delight of the latter, for by that time the dogs and cubs had come to
-think it great sport, and the caravan moved homeward.
-
-Soon after leaving the hazel patch, the boys entered a dark strip of
-woods and undergrowth, through which it was very hard work to draw the
-wagon. So they attached a long piece of tanned deerskin to the tongue of
-the wagon, and gave the team a helping hand.
-
-There was but one path through this dark strip of forest over which the
-wagon could be drawn, and it led through a low piece of ground that was
-wet and marshy. Upon the soft earth of the path Balser soon noticed the
-long, broad tracks of a bear, and the dogs at once began to bark and
-plunge in their harness. The tracks appeared to Balser to be an hour
-old, so he quieted the dogs, but did not release them from the wagon as
-he should have done. The boys went forward, regardless of the warning
-bear tracks, and the dogs and bears, drawing the wagon, followed closely
-at their heels. As they proceeded the bear tracks became fresher, and
-Balser began to grow somewhat fearful. Jim had become frightened, and
-had taken a position at the rear of the wagon to give a helping hand by
-pushing at the load. He said he could push better than he could pull
-anyway.
-
-After the little party had got well into the darkest part of the forest,
-the dogs began to show such evident signs of uneasiness that Balser
-grasped his gun, and held it in readiness, prepared for a fight, should
-one become necessary.
-
-The ground had been frozen earlier in the day, but it had thawed, and
-the path was slippery. Balser, who was walking a short distance ahead of
-the train, as a sort of advance guard, suddenly stopped and held up his
-hand warningly to Jim; for right ahead of him in the path stood a huge
-bear, with its head turned backward, looking inquiringly in the
-direction of the boys, Jim at once stopped the team. The dogs, of
-course, were dancing with impatience to be released from the harness,
-and even the dull-witted bears seemed to realize that something was
-wrong.
-
-“It’s running away,” said Balser. “It’s not safe to shoot at it from
-behind. I might wound it, and then we should be the ones to run. What
-shall we do?”
-
-“Let it run,” answered Jim, quickly. “I don’t like to run with a bear
-after me, anyway. If you’re going to shoot, I’ll run now so as to get a
-good start.”
-
-“No, you don’t! You stand right where you are, and take care of the
-team. If you move a foot, I’ll lick you,” answered Balser, as he moved
-cautiously ahead in the direction of the retreating bear.
-
-Jim was frozen by fear to the spot upon which he stood, as Balser walked
-out of sight. In a moment he again heard Balser speak, and then he heard
-a loud, deep growl.
-
-The dogs barked and plunged; the cubs whined and gave forth savage
-little baby-bear growls, half whines, for they were only learning to
-growl. Jim began to weep and to scream. Balser, who had disappeared from
-sight around a curve in the path, cried out:—
-
-“Let the dogs loose, for goodness’ sake, Jim! It’s after me.”
-
-The dogs seemed to understand Balser’s cry better than Jim did; for they
-barked and plunged more violently than ever in their harness. Jim seemed
-dazed, and could not, or at least did not, unharness the dogs. Then it
-was that the good dog sense of old Prince showed itself. Instead of
-waiting for help from Jim, who he saw had lost his wits, the good dog
-began to gnaw at the leather harness which held him and Tige to the
-wagon, and in a short time the dogs were freed from the wagon, though
-still tied to each other.
-
-Tige caught inspiration from Prince, and the dogs backed away from each
-other and pulled with all their strength, until the harness slipped over
-the head of Prince and left the dogs free. Then Prince plunged rapidly
-into the thicket to the rescue of his master, followed closely by Tige,
-dragging the broken harness.
-
-“Help! help!” cried Balser. “Why don’t you send the dogs?” And his voice
-seemed to be going farther and farther away.
-
-“Where are you?” cried Jim, in despair. His terror was so strong upon
-him that he could not move, and could not have helped Balser, had he
-been able to go to him. Jim was a little fellow, you must remember.
-
-“Help! help!” cried Balser again, his voice sounding from a still
-greater distance. “I’ve wounded it, and it’s about to kill me. Help!
-help!” but the cries came fainter and fainter.
-
-Jim stood his ground and screamed manfully. Soon after Balser had left
-Jim and the wagon, the bear turned toward its pursuer and presented to
-Balser its broadside. This gave the boy a good chance for a shot. For
-the moment, Balser forgot his father’s admonition to be deliberate and
-to act slowly, and his forgetfulness almost cost him his life. Balser
-shot, and wounded the bear in the neck, but did not kill it. Then it
-turned, and Balser, fearing to run back upon the path lest he should
-bring the bear upon Jim, started into the thicket, toward the river,
-with the bear in hot pursuit. Balser gained rapidly upon the bear at
-first, but he knew that his advantage could not last, for the bear was
-sure to catch him soon. What should he do? He hastily went over in his
-mind the possibilities in the case, and soon determined to put forth his
-utmost speed to gain as much upon the bear as possible, and then to
-climb the first tree, of the proper size, to which he should come. With
-this intent he flung his carbine over his back, by a strap attached to
-the gun for that purpose, and ran for dear life.
-
-Soon the boy reached a small beech tree, the branches of which were ten
-or twelve feet from the ground. Up this tree he climbed with the agility
-of a squirrel. He afterward said:—
-
-“I was so badly scared that it seemed as if my hands and feet had claws
-like a wildcat.”
-
-The bear had followed so closely upon his track, that, just as the boy
-was about to draw himself up among the branches of the tree, the bear
-rose upon its hind legs and caught the boy’s toes between his teeth.
-Balser screamed with pain, and tried to draw his foot away; but the
-harder he pulled the harder pulled the bear, and the pain was so great
-that he thought he could not stand it. While he clung to the limb with
-one hand, he reached toward the bear with the other, and caught it by
-the nose. He twisted the bear’s nose until the brute let loose of his
-foot. Then he quickly drew himself into the tree, and seated himself
-none too soon astride of a limb.
-
-[Illustration: “The bear rose to climb after the boy.”]
-
-When Balser had fixed himself firmly on the limb he proceeded at once to
-load his gun. This was no slight matter under the circumstances; for,
-aside from the fact that his position in the tree was an uneasy one, the
-branches were in his way when he began to use his ramrod. Balser had
-hardly poured the powder into his gun, when the bear again rose on its
-hind legs, and put its front paws upon the body of the tree, with
-evident intent to climb after the boy who had wounded it and had so
-insultingly twisted its nose. Bears like to scratch the bark of trees,
-and seem to take the same pride in placing their marks high upon the
-tree-trunks that a young man does in making a long jump or a good shot.
-Vanity, in this case, proved to be the bear’s undoing, as it has often
-been with men and boys. When it was reaching upward to make a high
-scratch, that it thought would be the envy of every bear that would see
-it, it should have been climbing; for while it was scratching Balser was
-loading. Not hurriedly, as he had shot, but slowly and deliberately,
-counting one, two, three with every movement; for when he had shot so
-hurriedly a few minutes before and had only wounded the bear, he had
-again learned the great lesson to make haste slowly. The lesson was to
-be impressed upon Balser’s mind more firmly than ever before he was
-through with the wounded bear; for to the day of his death he never
-forgot the events which befell him after he came down from the tree.
-Although Balser was deliberate, he had no time to waste, for soon the
-bear began climbing the tree, aided by a few small branches upon the
-lower part of the trunk, which had given help to Balser. Up the bear
-went, slowly and surely. Its great red tongue hung out at one side of
-its mouth, and its black, woolly coat was red and gory with blood from
-the wound that Balser had inflicted upon its huge neck. Its sharp little
-eyes were fixed upon Balser, and seemed to blaze with fury and rage, and
-its long bright teeth gleamed as its lips were drawn back in anger when
-it growled. Still the bear climbed, and still Balser was loading his
-gun. Would he have it loaded before the bear reached him? Now the powder
-was all in—a double charge. Now the first patch was in, and Balser was
-trying to ram it home. The branches of the trees were in his way, and
-the ramrod would not go into the gun. Inanimate things are often
-stubborn just when docility is most needed. Ah! At last the ramrod is
-in, and the first patch goes home, hard and fast upon the powder. On
-comes the bear, paw over paw, foot over foot, taking its time with
-painful deliberation, and, bearlike, carefully choosing its way; for it
-thinks full sure the boy cannot escape. Hurriedly Balser reaches into
-his pouch for a bullet. He finds one and puts it to the muzzle of his
-gun. Ah! worse luck! The bullet will not go in. It is too large. Balser
-feels with his finger a little ridge extending around the bullet, left
-there because he had not held the bullet moulds tightly together when he
-had cast the bullet. The boy impatiently throws the worthless bullet at
-the bear and puts his hand into the pouch for another. This time the
-bullet goes in, and the ramrod drives it home. Still there is the last
-patch to drive down,—the one which holds the bullet,—and still the bear
-climbs toward its intended victim. Its growls seem to shake the tree and
-its eyes look like burning embers. The patches and the bullets Balser
-kept in the same pouch, so, when the bullet has been driven home, the
-boy’s hand again goes into the pouch for the last patch. He can find
-nothing but bullets. Down goes his hand to each corner of the pouch in
-search of a patch; but alas! the patch, like a false friend, is wanting
-when most needed. On comes the bear. Not a moment is to be lost. A patch
-must be found; so the boy snatches off his cap of squirrel skin, and
-with his teeth bites out a piece of the skin which will answer his
-purpose. Then he dashes the mutilated cap in the bear’s face, only a
-foot or two below him. Quickly is the squirrel-skin patch driven home,
-but none too quickly, for the bear is at Balser’s feet, reaching for him
-with his great, rough, horny paw, as a cat reaches for a mouse. Balser
-quickly lifts himself to the limb above him, and hurriedly turning the
-muzzle of his gun right into the great red mouth, pulls the trigger.
-Bang! And the bear falls to the ground, where it lies apparently dead.
-It was only apparently dead, though, as you will presently see. Balser
-breathed a sigh of relief as the bear fell backward, for he was sure
-that he had killed it. No bear, thought he, could survive a bullet
-driven by the heavy charge of powder behind the one which had sped so
-truly into the bear’s mouth. Again Balser failed to make haste slowly.
-He should have remained in his secure position until he was sure that
-the bear was really dead; for a badly wounded bear, although at the
-point of death, is more dangerous than one without a scar. Without
-looking at the bear Balser called Jim to come to him, and began climbing
-down the tree, with his carbine slung over his shoulder, and his back to
-the bear. All this happened in a very short space of time. In fact, the
-time during which Balser was loading his gun, and while the bear was
-climbing the tree, was the same time in which the dogs were freeing
-themselves from the wagon; and Balser’s second shot was heard by Jim
-just as the dogs went bounding off to Balser’s relief. When the boy
-jumped to the ground, lo! the bear was alive again, and was on its feet,
-more ferocious than ever, and more eager for fight. Like our American
-soldiers, the bear did not know when it was whipped.
-
-At the time the dogs bounded away from Jim, there came down the path
-toward him a young girl. Who do you think it was? Liney Fox. She was
-carrying in her hand a lighted torch, and was swinging it gently from
-side to side that she might keep it ablaze. This was the fire which
-Liney had been sent to borrow. She had heard Balser’s cry and had heard
-both the shots that Balser had fired. She ran quickly to Jim, and with
-some difficulty drew from him an explanation of the situation. Then, as
-the dogs bounded away, she followed them, feeling sure that their
-instinct would lead them to Balser. The girl’s strength seemed to be
-increased a thousand fold, and she ran after the dogs in the hope that
-she might help the boy who had saved her life upon the night when she
-was lost in the forest. How could she help him? She did not know; but
-she would at least go to him and do her best.
-
-Just as Balser reached the ground, the bear raised itself upon its hind
-feet and struck at the boy, but missed him. Then Balser ran to the side
-of the tree opposite the bear, and bear and boy for a few moments played
-at a desperate game of hide-and-seek around the tree. It seemed a very
-long time to Balser. He soon learned that the bear could easily beat him
-at the game, and in desperation he started to run toward the river,
-perhaps two hundred yards away. He cried for help as he ran, and at that
-moment the dogs came up, and Liney followed in frantic, eager haste
-after them. Balser had thrown away his gun, and was leading the bear in
-the race perhaps six or eight feet. Close upon the heels of the bear
-were the dogs, and closer than you would think upon the heels of the
-dogs came Liney. Her bonnet had fallen back and her hair was flying
-behind her, and the torch was all ablaze by reason of its rapid movement
-through the air.
-
-At the point upon the river’s bank toward which Balser ran was a little
-stone cliff, almost perpendicular, the top of which was eight or ten
-feet from the water. Balser had made up his mind that if he could reach
-this cliff he would jump into the river, and perhaps save himself in
-that manner. Just as the boy reached the edge of the cliff Liney
-unfortunately called out “Balser!”
-
-Her voice stopped him for a moment, and he looked back toward her. In
-that moment the bear overtook him and felled him to the ground with a
-stroke of its paw. Balser felt benumbed and was almost senseless.
-Instantly the bear was standing over him, and the boy was blinded by the
-stream of blood which flowed into his eyes and over his face from the
-wound in the bear’s great mouth. He felt the bear shake him, as a cat
-shakes a mouse, and then for a moment the sun seemed to go out, and all
-was dark. He could see nothing. He heard the dogs bark, as they clung to
-the bear’s ears and neck close to his face, and he heard Liney scream;
-but it all seemed like a far-away dream. Then he felt something burn his
-face, and sparks and hot ashes fell upon his skin and blistered him. He
-could not see what was happening, but the pain of the burns seemed to
-revive him, and he was conscious that he was relieved from the terrible
-weight of the bear upon his breast. This is what happened: after Balser
-had fallen, the dogs had held the bear’s attention for a brief moment or
-two, and had given Liney time to reach the scene of conflict. The bear
-had caught Balser’s leather coat between its jaws, and was shaking him
-just as Liney came up. It is said that the shake which a cat gives a
-mouse produces unconsciousness; and so it is true that the shake which
-the larger animals give to their prey before killing it has a benumbing
-effect, such as Balser felt. When Liney reached Balser and the bear, she
-had no weapon but her torch, but with true feminine intuition she did,
-without stopping to think, the only thing she could do, and for that
-matter the best thing that any one could have done. She thrust the
-burning torch into the bear’s face and held it there, despite its rage
-and growls. Then it was that Balser felt the heat and sparks, and then
-it was that the bear, blinded by the fire, left Balser. The bear was
-frantic with pain, and began to rub its eyes and face with its paws,
-just as a man would do under the same circumstances. It staggered about
-in rage and blindness, making the forest echo with its frightful growls,
-until it was upon the edge of the little precipice of which I have
-spoken. Then Liney struck it again with her burning torch, and gave it a
-push, which, although her strength was slight, sent the bear rolling
-over the cliff into the river. After that she ran back to Balser, who
-was still lying upon the ground, covered with blood. She thought he was
-terribly wounded, so she tore off her muslin petticoat, and wiped the
-blood from Balser’s face and hands. Her joy was great when she learned
-that it was the bear’s blood and not Balser’s that she saw. The boy soon
-rose to his feet, dazed and half blinded.
-
-[Illustration: “Liney thrust the burning torch into the bear’s face and
-held it there despite its rage and growls.”]
-
-“Where’s the bear?” he asked.
-
-“We pushed him into the river,” said Jim, who had come in at the last
-moment.
-
-“Yes, ‘we pushed him in,’” said Balser, in derision. “Liney, did you—”
-
-“Yes,” answered Liney. “I don’t know how I did it; but after I had put
-my torch in the bear’s face, when he was over you, I—I pushed him into
-the river.” And she cast down her sweet, modest eyes, as if ashamed of
-what she had done.
-
-“Liney, Liney—” began Balser; but his voice was choked by a great lump
-of sobs in his throat. “Liney, Liney—” he began again; but his gratitude
-was so great he could not speak. He tried again, and the tears came in a
-flood.
-
-“Cry-baby!” said Jim.
-
-“Jim, you’re a little fool,” said Liney, turning upon the youngster with
-a blaze of anger in her eyes.
-
-“Jim’s right,” sobbed Balser. “I—I am a c-c-cry-baby.”
-
-“No, no! Balser,” said Liney, soothingly, as she took his hand. “I know.
-I understand without you telling me.”
-
-“Yes,” sobbed Balser, “I—I—c-c-cry—because—I—thank you so much.”
-
-“Don’t say that, Balser,” answered Liney. “Think of the night in the
-forest, and think of what you did for me.”
-
-“Oh! But I’m a boy.”
-
-Balser was badly bruised, but was not wounded, except in the foot where
-the bear had caught him as he climbed the tree. That wound, however, was
-slight, and would heal quickly. The cubs had broken away from the loaded
-wagon, and Jim, Liney, Balser, dogs, and cubs all marched back to Mr.
-Brent’s in a slow and silent procession, leaving the load of nuts upon
-the path, and the bear dead upon a ripple in the river.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- THE FIRE BEAR.
-
-
-One evening in December, a few weeks after Liney had saved Balser’s life
-by means of the borrowed fire, Balser’s father and mother and Mr. and
-Mrs. Fox, went to Marion, a town of two houses and a church, three miles
-away, to attend “Protracted Meeting.” Liney and Tom and the Fox baby
-remained with Balser and Jim and the Brent baby, at the Brent cabin.
-
-When the children were alone Liney proceeded to put the babies to sleep,
-and when those small heads of their respective households were dead to
-the world in slumber, rocked to that happy condition in a cradle made
-from the half of a round, smooth log, hollowed out with an adze, the
-other children huddled together in the fireplace to talk and to play
-games. Chief among the games was that never failing source of delight,
-“Simon says thumbs up.”
-
-Outside the house the wind, blowing through the trees of the forest,
-rose and sank in piteous wails and moans, by turns, and the snow fell in
-angry, fitful blasts, and whirled and turned, eddied and drifted, as if
-it were a thing of life. The weather was bitter cold; but the fire on
-the great hearth in front of the children seemed to feel that while the
-grown folks were away it was its duty to be careful of the children, and
-to be gentle, tender, and comforting to them; so it spluttered, popped,
-and cracked like the sociable, amiable, and tender-hearted fire that it
-was. It invited the children to go near it and to take its warmth, and
-told, as plainly as a fire could,—and a fire can talk, not English
-perhaps, but a very understandable language of its own,—that it would
-not burn them for worlds. So, as I said, the children sat inside the
-huge fireplace, and cared little whether or not the cold north wind
-blew.
-
-After “Simon” had grown tiresome, Liney told riddles, all of which Tom,
-who had heard them before, spoiled by giving the answer before the
-others had a chance to guess. Then Limpy propounded a few riddles, but
-Liney, who had often heard them, would not disappoint her brother by
-telling the answers. Balser noticed this, and said, “Limpy, you ought to
-take a few lessons in good manners from your sister.”
-
-“Why ought I?” asked Tom, somewhat indignantly.
-
-“Because she doesn’t tell your riddles as you told hers,” answered
-Balser.
-
-“He wants to show off,” said Jim.
-
-“No, he doesn’t,” said Liney. But she cast a grateful glance at Balser,
-which said, “Thank you” as plainly as if she had spoken the words. Tom
-hung his head, and said he didn’t like riddles anyway.
-
-“Let’s crack some nuts,” proposed Jim, who was always hungry.
-
-This proposition seemed agreeable to all, so Balser brought in a large
-gourd filled with nuts, and soon they were all busy cracking and
-picking.
-
-Then Liney told stories from “The Pilgrim’s Progress” and the Bible. She
-was at the most thrilling part of the story of Daniel in the lions’ den,
-and her listeners were eager, nervous, and somewhat fearful, when the
-faint cry of “Help!” seemed to come right down through the mouth of the
-chimney.
-
-“Listen!” whispered Balser, holding up his hands for silence. In a
-moment came again the cry, “Help!” The second cry was still faint, but
-louder than the first; and the children sprang together with a common
-impulse, and clung to Balser in unspoken fear.
-
-“Help! help!” came the cry, still nearer and louder.
-
-“Some one wants help,” whispered Balser. “I—must—go—to—him.” The latter
-clause was spoken rather hesitatingly.
-
-“No, no!” cried Liney. “You must not go. It may be Indians trying to get
-you out there to kill you, or it may be a ghost. You’ll surely be killed
-if you go.”
-
-Liney’s remark somewhat frightened Balser, and completely frightened the
-other children; but it made Balser feel all the more that he must not be
-a coward before her. However much he feared to go in response to the cry
-for help, he must not let Liney see that he was afraid. Besides, the boy
-knew that it was his duty to go; and although with Balser the sense of
-duty moved more slowly than the sense of fear, yet it moved more surely.
-So he quickly grasped his gun, and carefully examined the load and
-priming. Then he took a torch, lighted it at the fire, and out he rushed
-into the blinding, freezing storm.
-
-“Who’s there?” cried Balser, holding his torch on high.
-
-“Help! help!” came the cry from a short distance down the river,
-evidently in the forest back of the barn. Balser hurried in the
-direction whence the cry had come, and when he had proceeded one hundred
-yards or so, he met a man running toward him, almost out of breath from
-fright and exhaustion. Balser’s torch had been extinguished by the wind,
-snow, and sleet, and he could not see the man’s face.
-
-“Who are you, and what’s the matter with you?” asked brave little
-Balser, meanwhile keeping his gun ready to shoot, if need be.
-
-“Don’t you know me, Balser?” gasped the other.
-
-“Is it you, Polly?” asked Balser. “What on earth’s the matter?”
-
-“The Fire Bear! The Fire Bear!” cried Poll. “He’s been chasin’ me fur
-Lord knows how long. There he goes! There! Don’t you see him? He’s
-movin’ down to the river. He’s crossin’ the river on the ice now. There!
-There!” And he pointed in the direction he wished Balser to look. Sure
-enough, crossing on the ice below the barn, was the sharply defined form
-of a large bear, glowing in the darkness of the night as if it were on
-fire. This was more than even Balser’s courage could withstand; so he
-started for the house as fast as his legs could carry him, and Polly
-came panting and screaming at his heels.
-
-[Illustration: “’Help! help!’ came the cry.”]
-
-Polly’s name, I may say, was Samuel Parrott. He was a harmless, simple
-fellow, a sort of hanger-on of the settlement, and his surname, which
-few persons remembered, had suggested the nickname of Poll, or Polly, by
-which he was known far and wide.
-
-By the time Balser had reached the house he was ashamed of his
-precipitate retreat, and proposed that he and Polly should go out and
-further investigate the Fire Bear.
-
-This proposition met with such a decided negative from Polly, and such a
-vehement chorus of protests from Liney and the other children, that
-Balser, with reluctance in his manner, but gladness in his heart,
-consented to remain indoors, and to let the Fire Bear take his way
-unmolested.
-
-“When did you first see him?” asked Balser of Polly Parrot.
-
-“’Bout a mile down the river, by Fox’s Bluff,” responded Polly. “I’ve
-been runnin’ every step of the way, jist as hard as I could run, and
-that there Fire Bear not more’n ten feet behind me, growlin’ like
-thunder, and blazin’ and smokin’ away like a bonfire.”
-
-“Nonsense,” said Balser. “He wasn’t blazing when I saw him.”
-
-“Of course he wasn’t,” responded Poll. “He’d about burned out. D’ye
-think a bear could blaze away forever like a volcano?” Poll’s logical
-statement seemed to be convincing to the children.
-
-“And he blazed up, did he?” asked Liney, her bright eyes large with
-wonder and fear.
-
-“Blazed up!” ejaculated Polly. “Bless your soul, Liney, don’t you see
-how hot I am? Would a man be sweatin’ like I am on such a night as this,
-unless he’s been powerful nigh to a mighty hot fire?”
-
-Poll’s corroborative evidence was too strong for doubt to contend
-against, and a depressing conviction fell upon the entire company,
-including Balser, that it was really the Fire Bear which Polly and
-Balser had seen. Although Balser, in common with most of the settlers,
-had laughed at the stories of the Fire Bear which had been told in the
-settlement, yet now he was convinced, because he had seen it with his
-own eyes. It was true that the bear was not ablaze when he saw him, but
-certainly he looked like a great glowing ember, and, with Polly’s
-testimony, Balser was ready to believe all he had heard concerning this
-most frightful spectre of Blue River, the Fire Bear.
-
-One of the stories concerning the Fire Bear was to the effect that when
-he was angry he blazed forth into a great flame, and that when he was
-not angry he was simply aglow. At times, when the forests were burned,
-or when barns or straw-stacks were destroyed by fire, many persons,
-especially of the ignorant class, attributed the incendiarism to the
-Fire Bear. Others, who pretended to more wisdom, charged the Indians
-with the crimes. Of the latter class had been Balser. But to see is to
-believe.
-
-Another superstition about the Fire Bear was, that any person who should
-be so unfortunate as to behold him would die within three months after
-seeing him, unless perchance he could kill the Fire Bear,—a task which
-would necessitate the use of a potent charm, for the Fire Bear bore a
-charmed life. The Fire Bear had been seen, within the memory of the
-oldest inhabitant, by eight or ten persons, always after night. Each one
-who had seen the bear had died within the three months following. He had
-been stalked by many hunters, and although several opportunities to kill
-him had occurred, yet no one had accomplished that much-desired event.
-
-You may be sure there were no more games, riddles, or nut-cracking that
-evening in the Brent cabin. The children stood for a few moments in a
-frightened group, and then took their old places on the logs inside the
-fireplace. Polly, who was stupid with fright, stood for a short time
-silently facing the fire, and then said mournfully: “Balser, you and me
-had better jine the church. We’re goners inside the next three
-months,—goners, just as sure as my name’s Polly.” Then meditatively, “A
-durned sight surer than that; for my name ain’t Polly at all; but
-Samuel, or Thomas, or Bill, or something like that, I furgit which; but
-we’re goners, Balser, and we might as well git ready. No livin’ bein’
-ever seed that bear and was alive three months afterwards.”
-
-Then Liney, who was sitting next to Balser, touched his arm gently, and
-said:—
-
-“I saw him too. I followed you a short way when you went out, and I saw
-something bright crossing the river on the ice just below the barn. Was
-that the bear?”
-
-“Yes, yes,” cried Balser. “For goodness’ sake, Liney, why didn’t you
-stay in the house?”
-
-“You bet I stayed in,” said Jim.
-
-“And so did I,” said Tom.
-
-No one paid any attention to what Jim and Limpy said, and in a moment
-Liney was weeping gently with her face in her hands.
-
-Jim and Limpy then began to cry, and soon Polly was boohooing as if he
-were already at the point of death. It required all of Balser’s courage
-and strength to keep back the tears, but in a moment he rose to his feet
-and said: “Stop your crying, everybody. I’ll kill that bear before the
-three months is half gone; yes, before a month has passed. If Liney saw
-him, the bear dies; that settles it.”
-
-Liney looked up to Balser gratefully, and then, turning to Polly, said:—
-
-“He’ll save us, Polly; he killed the one-eared bear, and it was enough
-sight worse to fight than the Fire Bear. The one-eared bear was a—was a
-devil.”
-
-Polly did not share Liney’s confidence; so he sat down upon the hearth,
-and gazed sadly at the fire awhile. Then, taking his elbow for his
-pillow, he lay upon the floor and moaned himself to sleep.
-
-The children sat in silence for a short time; and Jim lay down beside
-Polly, and closed his eyes in slumber. Then Limpy’s head began to nod,
-and soon Limpy was in the land of dreams. Balser and Liney sat upon the
-spare backlog for perhaps half an hour, without speaking.
-
-The deep bed of live coals cast a rosy glow upon their faces, and the
-shadows back in the room grew darker, as the flame of the neglected fire
-died out. Now and then a fitful blaze would start from a broken ember,
-and the shadows danced for a moment over the floor and ceiling like
-sombre spectres, but Balser and Liney saw them not.
-
-Despite their disbelief in the existence of the Fire Bear, the
-overwhelming evidence of the last two hours had brought to them a
-frightful conviction of the truth of all they had heard about the
-uncanny, fatal monster. Three short months of life was all that was left
-to them. Such had been the fate of all who had beheld the Fire Bear.
-Such certainly would be their fate unless Balser could kill him—an event
-upon which Liney built much greater hope than did Balser.
-
-After a long time Balser spoke, in a low tone, that he might not disturb
-the others:—
-
-“Liney, if I only had a charm, I might kill the Fire Bear; but a gun by
-itself can do nothing against a monster that bears a charmed life. We
-must have a charm. You’ve read so many books and you know so much; can’t
-you think of a charm that would help me?”
-
-“No, no, Balser,” sighed Liney, “you know more than I, a thousand
-times.”
-
-“Nonsense, Liney. Didn’t you spell down everybody—even the grown
-folks—over at Caster’s bee?”
-
-“Yes, I know I did; but spelling isn’t everything, Balser. It’s mighty
-little, and don’t teach us anything about charms. You might know how to
-spell every word in a big book, and still know nothing about charms.”
-
-“I guess you’re right,” responded Balser, dolefully. “I wonder how we
-can learn to make a charm.”
-
-“Maybe the Bible would teach us,” said Liney. “They say it teaches us
-nearly everything.”
-
-“I expect it would,” responded Balser. “Suppose you try it.”
-
-“I will,” answered Liney. Silence ensued once more, broken only by the
-moaning wind and the occasional popping of the backlog.
-
-After a few minutes Liney said in a whisper:—
-
-“Balser, I’ve been thinking, and I’m going to tell you about something I
-have. It’s a great secret. No one knows of it but mother and father and
-I. I believe it’s the very thing we want for a charm. It looks like it,
-and it has strange words engraved upon it.”
-
-Balser was alive with interest.
-
-“Do you promise never to tell any one about it?” asked Liney.
-
-“Yes, yes, indeed. Cross my heart, ’pon honour, hope to die.”
-
-Balser’s plain, unadorned promise was enough to bind him to secrecy
-under ordinary circumstances, for he was a truthful boy; but when his
-lips were sealed by such oaths as “Cross my heart,” and “Hope to die,”
-death had no terrors which would have forced him to divulge.
-
-“What is it? Quick, quick, Liney!”
-
-“You’ll never tell?”
-
-“No, cross my—”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you. I’ve a thing at home that’s almost like a cross,
-only the pieces cross each other in the middle and are broad at each
-end. It’s a little larger than a big button. It’s gold on the back and
-has a lot of pieces of glass, each the size of a small pea, on the front
-side. Only I don’t believe they’re glass at all. They are too bright for
-glass. You can see them in the dark, where there’s no light at all. They
-shine and glitter and sparkle, so that it almost makes you blink your
-eyes. Now you never saw glass like that, did you?”
-
-“No,” answered Balser, positively.
-
-Liney continued; “That’s what makes me think it’s a charm; for you
-couldn’t see it in the dark unless it was a charm, could you, Balser?”
-
-“I should think not.”
-
-“There’s a great big piece of glass, or whatever it is, in the centre of
-it—as big as a large pea, and around this big piece are four words in
-some strange language that nobody can make out,—at least, mother says
-that nobody in this country can make them out. Mother told me that the
-charm was given to her for me by a gypsy man, when I was a baby. Mother
-says there’s something more to tell me about it when I become a woman.
-Maybe that’s the charm of it; I’m sure it is.” And she looked up to
-Balser with her soft, bright eyes full of inquiry and hope.
-
-“I do believe that thing is a charm,” said Balser. Then meditatively: “I
-know it’s a charm. Don’t tell me, Liney, that you don’t know a lot of
-things.”
-
-Liney’s sad face wore a dim smile of satisfaction at Balser’s
-compliments, and again they both became silent. Balser remained in a
-brown study for a few moments, and then asked:—
-
-“Where does your mother keep the—the charm?”
-
-“She keeps it in a box under my bed.”
-
-“Good! good!” responded Balser. “Now I’ll tell you what to do to make it
-a sure enough charm.”
-
-“Yes, yes,” eagerly interrupted Liney.
-
-“You take the charm and hold it on your lips while you pray seven times
-that I may kill the bear. Do that seven times for seven nights, and on
-the last night I’ll get the charm, and Polly, Limpey, and I will go out
-and kill the bear, just as sure as you’re alive.”
-
-The plan brought comfort to the boy and girl.
-
-Soon Liney’s eyes became heavy, and she fell asleep; and as Balser
-looked upon her innocent beauty, he felt in his heart that if seven
-times seven prayers from Liney’s lips could not make a charm which would
-give him strength from on high to kill the bear, there was no strength
-sufficient for that task to be had any place.
-
-Late in the night—nine o’clock—the parents of the children came home.
-The sleepers were aroused, and all of them tried to tell the story of
-the Fire Bear at one and the same time.
-
-“Tell me about it, Balser,” said Mr. Fox, seriously; for he, too, was
-beginning to believe in the story of the Fire Bear. Then Balser told the
-story, assisted by Polly, and the strange event was discussed until late
-into the night, without, however, the slightest reference to the charm
-by either Balser or Liney. That was to remain their secret.
-
-Mr. and Mrs. Fox remained with the Brents all night, and before they
-left next morning, Liney whispered to Balser:—
-
-“I’ll begin to-night, as you told me to do, with the charm. Seven nights
-from this the charm will be ready—if I can make it.”
-
-“And so will I be ready,” answered Balser, and both felt that the fate
-of the Fire Bear was sealed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- THE BLACK GULLY.
-
- NOTE.—The author, fearing that the account of fire springing from
- the earth, given in the following story, may be considered by the
- reader too improbable for any book but one of Arabian fables,
- wishes to say that the fire and the explosion occurred in the
- place and manner described.
-
-
-The Fire Bear had never before been seen in the Blue River
-neighbourhood. His former appearances had been at or near the mouth of
-Conn’s Creek, where that stream flows into Flatrock, five or six miles
-southeast of Balser’s home.
-
-Flatrock River takes its name from the fact that it flows over layers of
-broad flat rocks. The soil in its vicinity is underlaid at a depth of a
-few feet by a formation of stratified limestone, which crops out on the
-hillsides and precipices, and in many places forms deep, cañon-like
-crevasses, through which the river flows. In these cliffs and miniature
-cañons are many caves, and branching off from the river’s course are
-many small side-cañons, or gullies, which at night are black and
-repellent, and in many instances are quite difficult to explore.
-
-One of these side-cañons was so dark and forbidding that it was called
-by the settlers “The Black Gully.” The conformation of the rocks
-composing its precipitous sides was grotesque in the extreme; and the
-overhanging trees, thickly covered with vines, cast so deep a shadow
-upon the ravine that even at midday its dark recesses bore a cast of
-gloom like that of night untimely fallen. How Balser happened to visit
-the Black Gully, and the circumstances under which he saw
-it—sufficiently terrible and awe-inspiring to cause the bravest man to
-tremble—I shall soon tell you.
-
-The country in the vicinity of Flatrock was full of hiding-places, and
-that was supposed to be the home of the Fire Bear.
-
-The morning after Polly and Balser had seen the Fire Bear, they went
-forth bright and early to follow the tracks of their fiery enemy, and if
-possible to learn where he had gone after his unwelcome visit.
-
-They took up the spoor at the point where the bear had crossed the river
-the night before, and easily followed his path three or four miles down
-the stream. There they found the place where he had crossed the river to
-the east bank. The tracks, which were plainly visible in the new-fallen
-snow, there turned southeast toward his reputed home among the caves and
-gullies of Flatrock and Conn’s Creek.
-
-The trackers hurried forward so eagerly in their pursuit that they felt
-no fatigue. They found several deer, and at one time they saw at a great
-distance a bear; but they did not pursue either, for their minds were
-too full of the hope that they might discover the haunts of the monster
-upon whose death depended, as they believed, their lives and that of
-Liney Fox. When Balser and Polly reached the stony ground of Flatrock
-the bear tracks began to grow indistinct, and soon they were lost
-entirely among the smooth rocks from which the snow had been blown away.
-The boys had, however, accomplished their purpose, for they were
-convinced that they had discovered the haunts of the bear. They
-carefully noticed the surrounding country, and spoke to each other of
-the peculiar cliffs and trees in the neighbourhood, so that they might
-remember the place when they should return. Then they found a dry little
-cave wherein they kindled a fire and roasted a piece of venison which
-they had taken with them. When their roast was cooked, they ate their
-dinner of cold hoe-cake and venison, and then sat by the fire for an
-hour to warm and rest before beginning their long, hard journey home
-through the snow. Polly smoked his after-dinner pipe,—the pipe was a
-hollow corn-cob with the tip of a buck’s horn for a stem,—and the two
-bear hunters talked over the events of the day and discussed the coming
-campaign against the Fire Bear.
-
-“I s’pose we’ll have to hunt him by night,” said Polly. “He’s never seen
-at any other time, they say.”
-
-“Yes, we’ll have to hunt him by night,” said Balser; “but darkness will
-help us in the hunt, for we can see him better at night than at any
-other time, and he can’t see us as well as he could in daylight.”
-
-“Balser, you surprise me,” answered Polly. “Have you hunted bears all
-this time and don’t know that a bear can see as well after night as in
-the daytime—better, maybe?”
-
-“Maybe that’s so,” responded Balser. “I know that cats and owls can see
-better by night, but I didn’t know about bears. How do you know it’s
-true?”
-
-“How do I know? Why, didn’t that there bear make a bee-line for this
-place last night, and wasn’t last night as dark as the inside of a
-whale, and don’t they go about at night more than in the daytime? Tell
-me that. When do they steal sheep and shoats? In daytime? Tell me that.
-Ain’t it always at night? Did you ever hear of a bear stealing a shoat
-in the daytime? No, sirree; but they can see the littlest shoat that
-ever grunted, on the darkest night,—see him and snatch him out of the
-pen and get away with him quicker than you or I could, a durned sight.”
-
-“I never tried; did you, Polly?” asked Balser.
-
-Polly wasn’t above suspicion among those who knew him, and Balser’s
-question slightly disconcerted him.
-
-“Well, I—I—durned if that ain’t the worst fool question I ever heerd a
-boy ask,” answered Polly. Then, somewhat anxious to change the
-conversation, he continued:—
-
-“What night do you propose to come down here? To-morrow night?”
-
-“No, not for a week. Not till seven nights after to-night,” answered
-Balser, mindful of the charm which he hoped Liney’s prayers would make
-for him.
-
-“Seven nights? Geminy! I’m afraid I’ll get scared of this place by that
-time. I’ll bet this is an awful place at night; nothing but great chunks
-of blackness in these here gullies, so thick you could cut it with a
-knife. I’m not afraid now because I’m desperate. I’m so afraid of dyin’
-because I saw the Fire Bear that I don’t seem to be afraid of nothin’
-else.”
-
-Polly was right. There is nothing like a counter-fear to keep a coward’s
-courage up.
-
-After they were warm and had rested, Balser and Polly went out of the
-cave and took another survey of the surrounding country from the top of
-the hill. They started homeward, and reached the cozy cabin on Blue
-River soon after sunset, tired, hungry, and cold. A good warm supper
-soon revived them, and as it had been agreed that Polly should remain at
-Mr. Brent’s until after the Fire Bear hunt, they went to bed in the loft
-and slept soundly till morning.
-
-After Balser announced his determination to hunt the Fire Bear, many
-persons asked him when he intended to undertake the perilous task, but
-the invariable answer he gave was, that he would begin after the seventh
-night from the one upon which the Fire Bear had visited Blue River. “Why
-after the seventh night?” was frequently asked; but the boy would give
-no other answer.
-
-Balser had invited Tom Fox to go with him; and Tom, in addition to his
-redoubtable hatchet, intended to carry his father’s gun. Polly would
-take Mr. Brent’s rifle, and of course Balser would carry the greatest of
-all armaments, his smooth-bore carbine. Great were the preparations made
-in selecting bullets and in drying powder. Knives and hatchets were
-sharpened until they were almost as keen as a razor. Many of the men and
-boys of the neighbourhood volunteered to accompany Balser, but he would
-take with him no one but Tom and Polly.
-
-“Too many hunters spoil the chase,” said Balser, borrowing his thought
-from the cooks and the broth maxim.
-
-Upon the morning of the eighth day Balser went over to see Liney, and to
-receive from her the precious charm redolent with forty-nine prayers
-from her pure heart. When she gave it to him he said:—
-
-“It’s a charm; I know it is.” And he held it in his hand and looked at
-it affectionately. “It looks like a charm, and it feels like a charm.
-Liney, I seem to feel your prayers upon it.”
-
-“Ah! Balser, don’t say that. It sounds almost wicked. It has seemed
-wicked all the time for me to try to make a charm.”
-
-“Don’t feel that way, Liney. You didn’t try to make it. You only prayed
-to God to make it, and God is good and loves to hear you pray. If He
-don’t love to hear you pray, Liney, He don’t love to hear any one.”
-
-“No, no, Balser, I’m so wicked. The night we saw the Fire Bear father
-read in the Bible where it says, ‘The prayers of the wicked availeth
-not.’ Oh, Balser, do you think it’s wicked to try to make a charm—that
-is, to pray to God to make one?”
-
-“No, indeed, Liney, God makes them of His own accord. He made you.” But
-Liney only half understood.
-
-The charm worked at least one spell. It made the boy braver and gave him
-self-confidence.
-
-Balser, Tom, and Polly had determined to ride down to Flatrock on
-horseback, and for that purpose one of Mr. Fox’s horses and two of Mr.
-Brent’s were brought into service. At three o’clock upon the famous
-eighth day the three hunters started for Flatrock, and spent the night
-in the vicinity of the mouth of Conn’s Creek; but they did not see the
-Fire Bear. Four other expeditions were made, for Balser had no notion of
-giving up the hunt, and each expedition was a failure. But the
-fifth—well, I will tell you about it.
-
-Upon the fifth expedition the boys reached Flatrock River just after
-sunset. A cold drizzling rain had begun to fall, and as it fell it froze
-upon the surface of the rocks. The wind blew and moaned through the
-tree-tops, and the darkness was so dense it seemed heavy. The boys had
-tied their horses in a cave, which they had used for the same purpose
-upon former visits, and were discussing the advisability of giving up
-the hunt for that night and returning home. Tom had suggested that the
-rain might extinguish the Fire Bear’s fire so he could not be seen. The
-theory seemed plausible. Polly thought that a bear with any sense at all
-would remain at home in his cave upon such a night as that, and all
-these arguments, together with the slippery condition of the earth,
-which made walking among the rocks and cliffs very dangerous, induced
-Balser to conclude that it was best to return to Blue River without
-pursuing the hunt that night. He announced his decision, and had given
-up all hope of seeing the Fire Bear upon that expedition. But they were
-not to be disappointed after all, for, just as the boys were untying
-their horses to return home, a terrific growl greeted their ears,
-coming, it seemed, right from the mouth of the cave in which they stood.
-
-“That’s him,” cried Polly. “I know his voice. I heerd it for one mortal
-hour that night when he was a chasin’ me, and I’ll never furgit it. I’d
-know it among a thousand bears. It’s him. Oh, Balser, let’s go home! For
-the Lord’s sake, Balser, let’s go home! I’d rather die three months from
-now than now. Three months is a long time to live, after all.”
-
-“Polly, what on earth are you talking about? Are you crazy? Tie up your
-horse at once,” said Balser. “If the bear gets away from us this time,
-we’ll never have another chance at him. Quick! Quick!”
-
-Polly’s courage was soon restored, and the horses were quickly tied
-again.
-
-Upon entering the cave a torch had been lighted, and by the light of the
-torch, which Polly held, the primings of the guns were examined, knives
-and hatchets were made ready for immediate use, and out the hunters
-sallied in pursuit of the Fire Bear.
-
-On account of the ice upon the rocks it was determined that Polly should
-carry the torch with him. Aside from the dangers of the slippery path,
-there was another reason for carrying the torch. Fire attracts the
-attention of wild animals, and often prevents them from running away
-from the hunter. This is especially true of deer. So Polly carried the
-torch, and a fatal burden it proved to be for him. After the hunters had
-emerged from the cave, they at once started toward the river, and upon
-passing a little spur of the hill they beheld at a distance of two or
-three hundred yards the Fire Bear, glowing like a fiery heap against the
-black bank of night. He was running rapidly up the stream toward Black
-Gully, which came down to the river’s edge between high cliffs. This was
-the place I described to you a few pages back. Balser and Polly had seen
-Black Gully before, and had noticed how dark, deep, and forbidding it
-was. It had seemed to them to be a fitting place for the revels of
-witches, demons, snakes, and monsters of all sorts, and they thought
-surely it was haunted, if any place ever was. They feared the spot even
-in the daytime.
-
-Polly, who was ingenious with a pocket-knife, had carved out three
-whistles, and in the bowl of each was a pea. These whistles produced a
-shrill noise when blown upon, which could be heard at a great distance,
-and each hunter carried one fastened to a string about his neck. In case
-the boys should be separated, one long whistle was to be sounded for the
-purpose of bringing them together; three whistles should mean that the
-bear had been seen, and one short one was to be the cry for help. When
-Balser saw the bear he blew a shrill blast upon his whistle to attract
-the brute’s attention. The ruse produced the desired effect, for the
-bear stopped. His curiosity evidently was aroused by the noise and by
-the sight of the fire, and he remained standing for a moment or two
-while the boys ran forward as rapidly as the slippery rocks would
-permit. Soon they were within a hundred yards of the bear; then fifty,
-forty, thirty, twenty. Still the Fire Bear did not move. His glowing
-form stood before them like a pillar of fire, the only object that could
-be seen in the darkness that surrounded him. He seemed to be the
-incarnation of all that was brave and demoniac. When within twenty yards
-of the bear Balser said hurriedly to his companions:—
-
-“Halt! I’ll shoot first, and you fellows hold your fire and shoot one at
-a time, after me. Don’t shoot till I tell you, and take good aim. Polly,
-I’ll hold your torch when I want you to shoot.” Polly held the torch in
-one hand and his gun in the other, and fear was working great havoc with
-his usefulness. Balser continued: “It’s so dark we can’t see the sights
-of our guns, and if we’re not careful we may all miss the bear, or still
-worse, we may only wound him. Hold up the torch, Polly, so I can see the
-sights of my gun.”
-
-[Illustration: “’Now, hold up the torch, Polly.’”]
-
-Balser’s voice seemed to attract the bear’s attention more even than did
-the torch, and he pricked up his short fiery ears as if to ask, “What
-are you talking about?” When Balser spoke next it was with a tongue of
-fire, and the words came from his gun. The bear seemed to understand the
-gun’s language better than that of Balser, for he gave forth in answer a
-terrific growl of rage, and bit savagely at the wound which Balser had
-inflicted. Alas! It was only a wound; for Balser’s bullet, instead of
-piercing the bear’s heart, had hit him upon the hind quarters.
-
-“I’ve only wounded him,” cried Balser, and the note of terror in his
-voice seemed to create a panic in the breasts of Tom and Polly, who at
-once raised their guns and fired. Of course they both missed the bear,
-and before they could lower their guns the monster was upon them.
-
-Balser was in front, and received the full force of the brute’s
-ferocious charge. The boy went down under the bear’s mighty rush, and
-before he had time to draw his knife, or to disengage his hatchet from
-his belt, the infuriated animal was standing over him. As Balser fell
-his hand caught a rough piece of soft wood which was lying upon the
-ground, and with this he tried to beat the bear upon the head. The bear,
-of course, hardly felt the blows which Balser dealt with the piece of
-wood, and it seemed that another terrible proof was about to be given of
-the fatal consequences of looking upon the Fire Bear. Tom and Polly had
-both run when the bear charged, but Tom quickly came to Balser’s relief,
-while Polly remained at a safe distance. The bear was reaching for
-Balser’s throat, but by some fortunate chance he caught between his jaws
-the piece of wood with which Balser had been vainly striking him; and
-doubtless thinking that the wood was a part of Balser, the bear bit it
-and shook it ferociously. When Tom came up to the scene of conflict he
-struck the bear upon the head with the sharp edge of his hatchet, and
-chopped out one of his eyes. The pain of the wound seemed to double the
-bear’s fury, and he sprang over Balser’s prostrate form toward Tom. The
-bear rose upon his haunches and faced Tom, who manfully struck at him
-with his hatchet, and never thought of running. Ah! Tom was a brave one
-when the necessity for bravery arose. But Tom’s courage was better than
-his judgment, for in a moment he was felled to the ground by a stroke
-from the bear’s paw, and the bear was standing over him, growling and
-bleeding terribly. Polly had come nearer and his torch threw a ghastly
-glamour over the terrible scene. As in the fight with Balser, the bear
-tried to catch Tom’s throat between his jaws; but here the soft piece of
-wood which Balser had grasped when he fell proved a friend indeed, for
-the bear had bitten it so savagely that his teeth had been embedded in
-its soft fibre, and it acted as a gag in his mouth. He could neither
-open nor close his jaws. After a few frantic efforts to bite Tom, the
-bear seemed to discover where the trouble was, and tried to push the
-wood out of his mouth with his paws. This gave Tom a longed-for
-opportunity, of which he was not slow to take advantage, and he quickly
-drew himself from under the bear, rose to his feet, and ran away. In the
-meantime Balser rose from the ground and reached the bear just as Tom
-started to run. Balser knew by that time that he had no chance of
-success in a hand-to-hand conflict with the brute. So he struck the bear
-a blow upon the head with his hatchet as he passed, and followed Tom at
-a very rapid speed. Balser at once determined that he and Tom and Polly
-should reach a place of safety, quickly load their guns, and return to
-the attack. In a moment he looked back, and saw the bear still
-struggling to free his mouth from the piece of wood which had saved two
-lives that night. As the bear was not pursuing them, Balser concluded to
-halt; and he and Tom loaded their guns, while Polly held the torch on
-high to furnish light. Polly’s feeble wits had almost fled, and he
-seemed unconscious of what was going on about him. He did mechanically
-whatever Balser told him to do, but his eyes had a far-away look, and it
-was evident that the events of the night had paralyzed his poor, weak
-brain. When the guns were loaded Balser and Tom hurried forward toward
-the bear, and poor Polly followed, bearing his torch. Bang! went
-Balser’s gun, and the bear rose upon his hind feet, making the cliffs
-and ravines echo with his terrible growls.
-
-“Take good aim, Tom; hold up the torch, Polly,” said Balser. “Fire!” and
-the bear fell over on his back and seemed to be dead. Polly and Tom
-started toward the bear, but Balser cried out: “Stop! He may not be dead
-yet. We’ll give him another volley. We’ve got him now, sure, if we’re
-careful.” Tom and Polly stopped, and it was fortunate for them that they
-did so; for in an instant the bear was on his feet, apparently none the
-worse for the ill-usage the boys had given him. The Fire Bear stood for
-a little time undetermined whether to attack the boys again or to run.
-After halting for a moment between two opinions, he concluded to
-retreat, and with the piece of wood still in his mouth, he started at a
-rapid gait toward Black Gully, a hundred yards away.
-
-“Load, Tom; load quick. Hold the torch, Polly,” cried Balser. And again
-the guns were loaded, while poor demented Polly held the torch.
-
-The bear moved away rapidly, and in a moment the boys were following him
-with loaded guns. When the brute reached the mouth of Black Gully he
-entered it. Evidently his home was in that uncanny place.
-
-“Quick, quick, Polly!” cried Balser; and within a moment after the bear
-had entered Black Gully his pursuers were at the mouth of the ravine,
-making ready for another attack, Balser gave a shrill blast upon his
-whistle, and the bear turned for a moment, and deliberately sat down
-upon his haunches not fifty yards away. The place looked so black and
-dismal that the boys at first feared to enter, but soon their courage
-came to their rescue, and they marched in, with Polly in the lead. The
-bear moved farther up the gully toward an overhanging cliff, whose dark,
-rugged outlines were faintly illumined by the light of Polly’s torch.
-The jutting rocks seemed like monster faces, and the bare roots of the
-trees were like the horny fingers and the bony arms of fiends. The boys
-followed the bear, and when he came to a halt near the cliff and again
-sat upon his haunches, it was evident that the Fire Bear’s end was near
-at hand. How frightful it all appeared! There sat the Fire Bear, like a
-burning demon, sullen and motionless, giving forth, every few seconds,
-deep guttural growls that reverberated through the dark cavernous place.
-Not a star was seen, nor a gleam of light did the overcast sky afford.
-There stood poor, piteous Polly, all his senses fled and gone,
-unconsciously holding his torch above his head. The light of the torch
-seemed to give life to the shadows of the place, and a sense of fear
-stole over Balser that he could not resist.
-
-“Let’s shoot him again, and get out of this awful place,” said Balser.
-
-“You bet I’m willing to get out,” said Tom, his teeth chattering,
-notwithstanding his wonted courage.
-
-“Hold the torch, Polly,” cried Balser, and Polly raised the torch. The
-boys were within fifteen yards of the bear, and each took deliberate aim
-and fired. The bear moaned and fell forward. Then Balser and Tom started
-rapidly toward the mouth of the gully. When they had almost reached the
-opening they looked back for Polly, who they thought was following them,
-but there he stood where they had left him, a hundred yards behind them.
-
-Balser called, “Polly! Polly!” but Polly did not move. Then Tom blew his
-whistle, and Polly started, not toward them, alas! but toward the bear.
-
-“Don’t go to him, Polly,” cried Balser. “He may not be dead. We’ve had
-enough of him to-night, for goodness’ sake! We’ll come back to-morrow
-and find him dead.” But Polly continued walking slowly toward the bear.
-
-[Illustration: “Polly continued slowly toward the bear.”]
-
-“Polly! Polly! Come back!” cried both the boys. But Polly by that time
-was within ten feet of the bear, holding his torch and moving with the
-step of one unconscious of what he was doing. A few steps more and Polly
-was by the side of the terrible Fire Bear. The bear revived for a
-moment, and seemed conscious that an enemy was near him. With a last
-mighty effort he rose to his feet and struck Polly a blow with his paw
-which felled him to the ground. When Polly fell, the Fire Bear fell upon
-him, and Balser and Tom started to rescue their unfortunate friend. Then
-it was that a terrible thing happened. When Polly’s torch dropped from
-his hand a blue flame three or four feet in height sprang from the
-ground just beyond the bear. The fire ran upon the ground for a short
-distance like a serpent of flame, and shot like a flash of chain
-lightning half-way up the side of the cliff. The dark, jutting
-rocks—huge demon faces covered with ice—glistened in the light of the
-blaze, and the place seemed to have been transformed into a veritable
-genii’s cavern. The flames sank away for a moment with a low, moaning
-sound, and then came up again the colour of roses and of blood. A great
-rumbling noise was heard coming from the bowels of the earth, and a
-tongue of fire shot twenty feet into the air. This was more than flesh
-and blood could endure, and Balser and Tom ran for their lives, leaving
-their poor, demented friend behind them to perish. Out the boys went
-through the mouth of the gully, and across the river they sped upon the
-ice. They felt the earth tremble beneath their feet, and they heard the
-frightful rumbling again; then a loud explosion, like the boom of a
-hundred cannons, and the country for miles around was lighted as if by
-the midday sun. Then they looked back and beheld a sight which no man
-could forget to the day of his death. They saw a bright red flame a
-hundred yards in diameter and two hundred feet high leap from the Black
-Gully above the top of the cliffs. After a moment great rocks, and
-pieces of earth half as large as a house, began to fall upon every side
-of them, as if a mighty volcano had burst forth; and the boys clung to
-each other in fear and trembling, and felt sure that judgment day had
-come.
-
-After the rocks had ceased to fall, the boys, almost dead with fright,
-walked a short distance down the river and crossed upon the ice. The
-fire was still burning in the Black Gully, and there was no need of
-Polly’s torch to help them see the slippery path among the rocks.
-
-The boys soon found the cave in which the horses were stabled. They lost
-no time in mounting, and quickly started home, leading between them the
-horse which had been ridden by Polly. Poor Polly was never seen again.
-Even after the fire in the Black Gully had receded into the bowels of
-the earth whence it had come, nothing was found of his body nor that of
-the Fire Bear. They had each been burned to cinder.
-
-Many of the Blue River people did not believe that the Fire Bear derived
-its fiery appearance from supernatural causes. They suggested that the
-bear probably had made its bed of decayed wood containing foxfire, and
-that its fur was covered with phosphorus which glowed like the light of
-the firefly after night. The explosion was caused by a “pocket” of
-natural gas which became ignited when Polly’s torch fell to the ground
-by the side of the Fire Bear.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- ON THE STROKE OF NINE.
-
-
-Late one afternoon—it was the day before Christmas—Balser and Jim were
-seated upon the extra backlog in the fireplace, ciphering. Mrs. Brent
-was sitting in front of the fire in a rude home-made rocking-chair,
-busily knitting, while she rocked the baby’s cradle with her foot and
-softly sang the refrain of “Annie Laurie” for a lullaby. Snow had begun
-to fall at noon, and as the sun sank westward the north wind came in
-fitful gusts at first, and then in stronger blasts, till near the hour
-of four, when Boreas burst forth in the biting breath of the storm. How
-he howled and screamed down the chimney at his enemy, the fire! And how
-the fire crackled and spluttered and laughed in the face of his wrath,
-and burned all the brighter because of his raging! Don’t tell me that a
-fire can’t talk! A fire upon a happy hearth is the sweetest
-conversationalist on earth, and Boreas might blow his lungs out ere he
-could stop the words of cheer and health and love and happiness which
-the fire spoke to Jim and Balser and their mother in the gloaming of
-that cold and stormy day.
-
-“Put on more wood,” said the mother, in a whisper, wishing not to awaken
-the baby. “Your father will soon be home from Brookville, and we must
-make the house good and warm for him. I hope he will come early. It
-would be dreadful for him to be caught far away from home in such a
-storm as we shall have to-night.”
-
-Mr. Brent had gone to Brookville several days before with wheat and
-pelts for market, and was expected home that evening. Balser had wanted
-to go with his father, but the manly little fellow had given up his wish
-and had remained at home that he might take care of his mother, Jim, and
-the baby.
-
-Balser quietly placed a few large hickory sticks upon the fire, and then
-whispered to Jim:—
-
-“Let’s go out and feed the stock and fix them for the night.”
-
-So the boys went to the barnyard and fed the horses and cows, and drove
-the sheep into the shed, and carried fodder from the huge stack and
-placed it against the north sides of the barn and shed to keep the wind
-from blowing through the cracks and to exclude the snow. When the stock
-was comfortable, cozy, and warm, the boys milked the cows, and brought
-to the house four bucketfuls of steaming milk, which they strained and
-left in the kitchen, rather than in the milk-house, that it might not
-freeze over night.
-
-Darkness came on rapidly, and Mrs. Brent grew more and more anxious for
-her husband’s return. Fearing that he might be late, she postponed
-supper until Jim’s ever ready appetite began to cry aloud for
-satisfaction, and Balser intimated that he, too, might be induced to
-eat. So their mother leisurely went to work to get supper, while the
-baby was left sleeping before the cheery, talkative fire in the front
-room.
-
-A fat wild turkey roasted to a delicious brown upon the spit, eggs fried
-in the sweetest of lard, milk warm from the cows, corn-cakes floating in
-maple syrup and yellow butter, sweet potatoes roasted in hot ashes, and
-a great slice of mince pie furnished a supper that makes one hungry but
-to think about it. The boys, however, were hungry without thinking, and
-it would have done your heart good to see that supper disappear.
-
-As they sat at supper they would pause in their eating and listen
-attentively to every noise made by the creaking of the trees or the
-falling of a broken twig, hoping that it was the step of the father. But
-the supper was finished all too soon, and the storm continued to
-increase in its fury; the snow fell thicker and the cold grew fiercer,
-still Mr. Brent did not come.
-
-Mrs. Brent said nothing, but as the hours flew by her anxious heart
-imparted its trouble to Balser, and he began to fear for his father’s
-safety. The little clock upon the rude shelf above the fireplace
-hoarsely and slowly drawled out the hour of seven, then eight, and then
-nine. That was very late for the Brent family to be out of bed, and
-nothing short of the anxiety they felt could have kept them awake. Jim,
-of course, had long since fallen asleep, and he lay upon a soft bearskin
-in front of the fire, wholly unconscious of storms or troubles of any
-sort. Mrs. Brent sat watching and waiting while Jim and the baby slept,
-and to her anxious heart it seemed that the seconds lengthened into
-minutes, and the minutes into hours, by reason of her loneliness. While
-she rocked beside the baby’s cradle, Balser was sitting in his favourite
-place upon the backlog next to the fire. He had been reading, or trying
-to read, “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” but visions of his father and of the
-team lost in the trackless forest, facing death by freezing, to say
-nothing of wolves that prowled the woods in packs of hundreds upon such
-a night as that, continually came between his eyes and the page, and
-blurred the words until they held no meaning. Gradually drowsiness stole
-over him, too, and just as the slow-going clock began deliberately to
-strike the hour of nine his head fell back into a little corner made by
-projecting logs in the wall of the fireplace, and, like Jim, he forgot
-his troubles as he slept.
-
-Balser did not know how long he had been sleeping when the neighing of a
-horse was heard. Mrs. Brent hastened to the door, but when she opened
-it, instead of her husband she found one of the horses, an intelligent,
-raw-boned animal named Buck, standing near the house. Balser had heard
-her call, and he quickly ran out of doors and went to the horse. The
-harness was broken, and dragging upon the ground behind the horse were
-small portions of the wreck of the wagon. Poor Buck’s flank was red with
-blood, and his legs showed all too plainly the marks of deadly conflict
-with a savage, hungry foe. The wreck of the wagon, the broken harness,
-and the wounds upon the horse told eloquently, as if spoken in words,
-the story of the night. Wolves had attacked Balser’s father, and Buck
-had come home to give the alarm.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Balser ran quickly to the fire pile upon the hill and kindled it for the
-purpose of calling help from the neighbours. Then he went back to the
-house and took down his gun. He tied a bundle of torches over his
-shoulder, lighted one, and started out in the blinding, freezing storm
-to help his father, if possible.
-
-He followed the tracks of the horse, which with the aid of his torch
-were easily discernible in the deep snow, and soon he was far into the
-forest, intent upon his mission of rescue.
-
-After the boy had travelled for an hour he heard the howling of wolves,
-and hastened in the direction whence the sound came, feeling in his
-heart that he would find his father surrounded by a ferocious pack. He
-hurried forward as rapidly as he could run, and his worst fears were
-realized.
-
-Soon he reached the top of a hill overlooking a narrow ravine which lay
-to the eastward. The moon had risen and the snow had ceased to fall. The
-wind was blowing a fiercer gale than ever, and had broken rifts in the
-black bank of snow-cloud, so that gleams of the moon now and then
-enabled Balser’s vision to penetrate the darkness. Upon looking down
-into the ravine he beheld his father standing in the wagon, holding in
-his hand a singletree which he used as a weapon of defence. The wolves
-jumped upon the wagon in twos and threes, and when beaten off by Mr.
-Brent would crowd around the wheels and howl to get their courage up,
-and renew the attack.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Mr. Brent saw the boy starting down the hill toward the wagon and
-motioned to him to go back. Balser quickly perceived that it would be
-worse than madness to go to his father. The wolves would at once turn
-their attack upon him, and his father would be compelled to abandon his
-advantageous position in the wagon and go to his relief, in which case
-both father and son would be lost. Should Balser fire into the pack of
-wolves from where he stood, he would bring upon himself and his father
-the same disaster. He felt his helplessness grievously, but his quick
-wit came to his assistance. He looked about him for a tree which he
-could climb, and soon found one. At first he hesitated to make use of
-the tree, for it was dead and apparently rotten; but there was none
-other at hand, so he hastily climbed up and seated himself firmly upon a
-limb which seemed strong enough to sustain his weight.
-
-Balser was now safe from the wolves, and at a distance of not more than
-twenty yards from his father. There he waited until the clouds for a
-moment permitted the full light of the moon to rest upon the scene, and
-then he took deliberate aim and fired into the pack of howling wolves. A
-sharp yelp answered his shot, and then a black, seething mass of
-growling, fighting, snapping beasts fell upon the carcass of the wolf
-that Balser’s shot had killed, and almost instantly they devoured their
-unfortunate companion.
-
-Balser felt that if he could kill enough wolves to satisfy the hunger of
-the living ones they would abandon their attack upon his father, for
-wolves, like cowardly men, are brave only in desperation. They will
-attack neither man nor animal except when driven to do so by hunger.
-
-After Balser had killed the wolf, clouds obscured the moon before he
-could make another shot. He feared to fire in the dark lest he might
-kill his father, so he waited impatiently for the light which did not
-come.
-
-Meanwhile, the dead wolf having been devoured, the pack again turned
-upon Mr. Brent, and Balser could hear his father’s voice and the
-clanking of the iron upon the singletree as he struck at the wolves to
-ward them off.
-
-It seemed to Balser that the moon had gone under the clouds never to
-appear again. Mr. Brent continually called loudly to the wolves, for the
-human voice is an awesome sound even to the fiercest animals. To Balser
-the tone of his father’s voice, mingled with the howling of wolves, was
-a note of desperation that almost drove him frantic. The wind increased
-in fury every moment, and Balser felt the cold piercing to the marrow of
-his bones. He had waited it seemed to him hours for the light of the
-moon again to shine, but the clouds appeared to grow deeper and the
-darkness more dense.
-
-While Balser was vainly endeavouring to watch the conflict at the wagon,
-he heard a noise at the root of the tree in which he had taken refuge,
-and, looking down, he discovered a black monster standing quietly
-beneath him. It was a bear that had been attracted to the scene of
-battle by the noise. Balser at once thought, “Could I kill this huge
-bear, his great carcass certainly would satisfy the hunger of the wolves
-that surround my father.” Accordingly he lowered the point of his gun,
-and, taking as good aim as the darkness would permit, he fired upon the
-bear. The bear gave forth a frightful growl of rage and pain, and as it
-did so its companion, a beast of enormous size, came running up,
-apparently for the purpose of rendering assistance.
-
-[Illustration: “... IMAGINE HIS CONSTERNATION WHEN HE RECOGNIZED THE
-FORMS OF LINEY FOX AND HER BROTHER TOM.”]
-
-Balser hastily reloaded his gun and prepared to shoot the other bear.
-This he soon did, and while the wolves howled about his father the two
-wounded bears at the foot of the tree made night hideous with their
-ravings.
-
-Such a frightful bedlam of noises had never before been heard.
-
-Balser was again loading his gun, hoping to finish the bears, when he
-saw two lighted torches approaching along the path over which he had
-just come, and as they came into view imagine his consternation when he
-recognized the forms of Liney Fox and her brother Tom. Tom carried his
-father’s gun, for Mr. Fox had gone to Brookville, and Liney, in addition
-to her torch, carried Tom’s hatchet. Liney and Tom were approaching
-rapidly, and Balser called out to them to stop. They did not hear him,
-or did not heed him, but continued to go forward to their death. The
-bears at the foot of the tree were wounded, and would be more dangerous
-than even the pack of wolves howling at the wagon.
-
-“Go back! Go back!” cried Balser desperately, “or you’ll be killed. Two
-wounded bears are at the root of the tree I’m in, and a hundred wolves
-are howling in the hollow just below me. Run for your lives! Run! You’ll
-be torn in pieces if you come here.”
-
-The boy and girl did not stop, but continued to walk rapidly toward the
-spot from which they had heard Balser call. The clouds had drifted away
-from the moon, and now that the light was of little use to Balser—for he
-was intent upon saving Liney and Tom—there was plenty of it.
-
-[Illustration: “... HE FELL A DISTANCE OF TEN OR TWELVE FEET, ... AND
-LAY HALF STUNNED.”]
-
-The sound of his voice and the growling of the bears had attracted the
-attention of the wolves. They were wavering in their attack upon Mr.
-Brent, and evidently had half a notion to fall upon the bears that
-Balser had wounded. Meantime Liney and Tom continued to approach, and
-their torches, which under ordinary circumstances would have frightened
-the animals away, attracted the attention of the bears and the wolves,
-and drew the beasts upon them. They were now within a few yards of
-certain death, and again Balser in agony cried out: “Go back, Liney! Go
-back! Run for your lives!” In his eagerness he rose to his feet, and
-took a step or two out upon the rotten limb on which he had been seated.
-As he called to Liney and Tom, and motioned to them frantically to go
-back, the limb upon which he was standing broke, and he fell a distance
-of ten or twelve feet to the ground, and lay half stunned between the
-two wounded bears. Just as Balser fell, Liney and Tom came up to the
-rotten tree, and at the same time the pack of wolves abandoned their
-attack upon Mr. Brent and rushed like a herd of howling demons upon the
-three helpless children.
-
-One of the bears immediately seized Balser, and the other one struck
-Liney to the ground. By the light of the torches Mr. Brent saw all that
-had happened, and when the wolves abandoned their attack upon him he
-hurried forward to rescue Balser, Liney, and Tom, although in so doing
-he was going to meet his death. In a few seconds Mr. Brent was in the
-midst of the terrible fight, and a dozen wolves sprang upon him. Tom’s
-gun was useless, so he snatched the hatchet from Liney, who was lying
-prostrate under one of the bears, and tried to rescue her from its jaws.
-Had he done so, however, it would have been only to save her for the
-wolves. But his attempt to rescue Liney was quickly brought to an end.
-The wolves sprang upon Tom, and soon he, too, was upon the ground. The
-resinous torches which had fallen from the hands of Tom and Liney
-continued to burn, and cast a lurid light upon the terrible scene.
-
-Consciousness soon returned to Balser, and he saw with horror the fate
-that was in store for his father, his friends, and himself. Despair took
-possession of his soul, and he knew that the lamp of life would soon be
-black in all of them forever. While his father and Tom lay upon the
-ground at the mercy of the wolves, and while Liney was lying within
-arm’s reach of him in the jaws of the wounded bear, and he utterly
-helpless to save the girl of whom he was so fond, Balser’s mother shook
-him by the shoulder and said, “Balser, your father is coming.” Balser
-sprang to his feet, looked dazed for a moment, and then ran, half
-weeping, half laughing, into his father’s arms ... just as the sleepy
-little clock had finished striking nine.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- A CASTLE ON THE BRANDYWINE.
-
-
-Christmas morning the boys awakened early and crept from beneath their
-warm bearskins in eager anticipation of gifts from Santa Claus. Of
-course they had long before learned who Santa Claus was, but they loved
-the story, and in the wisdom of their innocence clung to an illusion
-which brought them happiness.
-
-The sun had risen upon a scene such as winter only can produce. Surely
-Aladdin had come to Blue River upon the wings of the Christmas storm,
-had rubbed his lamp, and lo! the humble cabin was in the heart of a
-fairyland such as was never conceived by the mind of a genie. Snow lay
-upon the ground like a soft carpet of white velvet ten inches thick. The
-boughs of the trees were festooned with a foliage that spring cannot
-rival. Even the locust trees, which in their pride of blossom cry out in
-June time for our admiration, seemed to say, “See what we can do in
-winter;” and the sycamore and beech drooped their branches, as if to
-call attention to their winter flowers given by that rarest of artists,
-Jack Frost.
-
-The boys quickly donned their heavy buckskin clothing and moccasins, and
-climbed down the pole to the room where their father and mother were
-sleeping. Jim awakened his parents with a cry of “Christmas Gift,” but
-Balser’s attention was attracted to a barrel standing by the fireplace,
-which his father had brought from Brookville, and into which the boys
-had not been permitted to look the night before. Balser had a shrewd
-suspicion of what the barrel contained, and his delight knew no bounds
-when he found, as he had hoped, that it was filled with steel traps of
-the size used to catch beavers, coons, and foxes.
-
-Since he had owned a gun, Balser’s great desire had been to possess a
-number of traps. As I have already told you, the pelts of animals taken
-in winter are of great value, and our little hero longed to begin life
-on his own account as a hunter and trapper.
-
-I might tell you of the joyous Christmas morning in the humble cabin
-when the gifts which Mr. Brent had brought from Brookville were
-distributed. I might tell you of the new gown for mother, of the bright,
-red mufflers, of the shoes for Sunday wear and the “store” caps for the
-boys, to be used upon holiday occasions. I might tell you of the candies
-and nuts, and of the rarest of all the gifts, an orange for each member
-of the family, for that fruit had never before been seen upon Blue
-River. But I must take you to the castle on Brandywine.
-
-You may wonder how there came to be a castle in the wilderness on
-Brandywine, but I am sure, when you learn about it, you will declare
-that it was fairer than any castle ever built of mortar and stone, and
-that the adventures which befell our little heroes were as glorious as
-ever fell to the lot of spurred and belted knight.
-
-Immediately after breakfast, when the chores had all been finished,
-Balser and Jim started down the river to visit Liney and Tom. Balser
-carried with him two Christmas presents for his friends—a steel trap for
-Tom, and the orange which his father had brought him from Brookville for
-Liney.
-
-I might also tell you of Tom’s delight when he received the trap, and of
-Liney’s smile of pleasure, worth all the oranges in the world, when she
-received her present; and I might fell you how she divided the orange
-into pieces, and gave one to each of the family; and how, after it had
-all been eaten, tears came to her bright eyes when she learned that
-Balser had not tasted the fruit. I might tell you much more that would
-be interesting, and show you how good and true and gentle were these
-honest, simple folk, but I must drop it all and begin my story.
-
-Balser told Tom about the traps, and a trapping expedition was quickly
-agreed upon between the boys.
-
-The next day Tom went to visit Balser, and for three or four days the
-boys were busily engaged in making two sleds upon which to carry
-provisions for their campaign. The sleds when finished were each about
-two feet broad and six feet long. They were made of elm, and were very
-strong, and were so light that when loaded the boys could easily draw
-them over the snow. By the time the sleds were finished the snow was
-hard, and everything was ready for the moving of the expedition.
-
-First, the traps were packed. Then provisions, consisting of sweet
-potatoes, a great lump of maple sugar, a dozen loaves of white bread,
-two or three gourds full of butter, a side of bacon, a bag of meal, a
-large piece of bear meat for the dogs, and a number of other articles
-and simple utensils such as the boys would need in cooking, were loaded
-upon the sleds. They took with them no meat other than bacon and the
-bear meat for the dogs, for they knew they could make traps from the
-boughs of trees in which they could catch quail and pheasants, and were
-sure to be able, in an hour’s hunting, to provide enough venison to
-supply their wants for a much longer time than they would remain in
-camp. There were also wild turkeys to be killed, and fish to be caught
-through openings which the boys would make in the ice of the creek.
-
-Over the loaded sleds they spread woolly bearskins to be used for beds
-and covering during the cold nights, and they also took with them a
-number of tanned deerskins, with which to carpet the floor of their
-castle and to close its doors and windows. Tom took with him his
-wonderful hatchet, an axe, and his father’s rifle. Axe, hatchets, and
-knives had been sharpened, and bullets had been moulded in such vast
-numbers that one would have thought the boys were going to war. Powder
-horns were filled, and a can of that precious article was placed
-carefully upon each of the sleds.
-
-Bright and early one morning Balser, Tom, and Jim, and last, but by no
-means least, Tige and Prince, crossed Blue River, and started in a
-northwestern direction toward a point on Brandywine where a number of
-beaver dams were known to exist, ten miles distant from the Brent cabin.
-
-[Illustration: EN ROUTE FOR THE CASTLE.]
-
-Tom and Tige drew one of the sleds, and Balser and Prince drew the
-other. During the first part of the trip, Jim would now and then lend a
-helping hand, but toward the latter end of the journey he said he
-thought it would be better for him to ride upon one of the sleds to keep
-the load from falling off. Balser and Tom, however, did not agree with
-him, nor did the dogs; so Jim walked behind and grumbled, and had his
-grumbling for his pains, as usually is the case with grumblers.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Two or three hours before sunset the boys reached Brandywine, a babbling
-little creek in springtime, winding its crooked rippling way through
-overhanging boughs of water elm, sycamore, and willows, but, at the time
-of our heroes’ expedition, frozen over with the mail of winter. It is in
-small creeks, such as Brandywine, that beavers love to make their dams.
-
-Our little caravan, upon reaching Brandywine, at once took to the ice
-and started up-stream along its winding course.
-
-Jim had grown tired. “I don’t believe you fellows know where you’re
-going,” said he. “I don’t see any place to camp.”
-
-“You’ll see it pretty quickly,” said Balser; and when they turned a bend
-in the creek they beheld a huge sycamore springing from a little valley
-that led down to the water’s edge.
-
-“There’s our home,” said Balser.
-
-The sycamore was hollow, and at its roots was an opening for a doorway.
-
-Upon beholding the tree Jim gave a cry of delight, and was for entering
-their new home at once, but Balser held him back and sent in the dogs as
-an exploring advance guard. Soon the dogs came out and informed the boys
-that everything within the tree was all right, and Balser and Tom and
-Jim stooped low and entered upon the possession of their castle on
-Brandywine.
-
-The first task was to sweep out the dust and dry leaves. This the boys
-did with bundles of twigs rudely fashioned into brooms. The dry leaves
-and small tufts of black hair gave evidence all too strongly that the
-castle which the boys had captured was the home of some baron bear who
-had incautiously left his stronghold unguarded. Jim spoke of this fact
-with unpleasant emphasis, and was ready to “bet” that the bear would
-come back when they were all asleep, and would take possession of his
-castle and devour the intruders.
-
-“_What_ will you bet?” said Tom.
-
-“I didn’t say I would bet anything. I just said I’d bet, and you’ll see
-I’m right,” returned Jim.
-
-Balser and Tom well knew that Jim’s prophecy might easily come true, but
-they had faith in the watchfulness of their sentinels, Tige and Prince,
-and the moon being at its full, they hoped rather than feared that his
-bearship might return, and were confident that, in case he did, his
-danger would be greater than theirs.
-
-After the castle floor had been carefully swept, the boys carried in the
-deerskins and spread them on the ground for a carpet. The bearskins were
-then taken in, and the beds were made; traps, guns, and provisions were
-stored away, and the sleds were drawn around to one side of the door,
-and placed leaning against the tree.
-
-The boys were hungry, and Jim insisted that supper should be prepared at
-once; but Tom, having made several trips around the tree, remarked
-mysteriously that he had a plan of his own. He said there was a great
-deal of work to be done before sundown, and that supper could be eaten
-after dark when they could not work. Tom was right, for the night gave
-promise of bitter cold.
-
-Limpy did not tell his plans at once, but soon they were developed.
-
-The hollow in the tree in which the boys had made their home was almost
-circular in form. It was at least ten or eleven feet in diameter, and
-extended up into the tree twenty or thirty feet. Springing from the same
-root, and a part of the parent tree, grew two large sprouts or branches,
-which at a little distance looked like separate trees. They were,
-however, each connected with the larger tree, and the three formed one.
-
-“What on earth are you pounding at that tree for?” asked Jim, while Tom
-was striking one of the smaller trees with the butt end of the hatchet,
-and listening intently as if he expected to hear a response.
-
-Tom did not reply to Jim, but in a moment entered the main tree with axe
-in hand, and soon Balser and Jim heard him chopping.
-
-The two boys at once followed Tom, to learn what their eccentric
-companion was doing. Tom did not respond to their questions, but after
-he had chopped vigorously for a few minutes the result of his work gave
-them an answer, for he soon cut an opening into the smaller tree, which
-was also hollow. Tom had discovered the hollow by striking the tree with
-his hatchet. In fact, Tom was a genius after his own peculiar pattern.
-
-The newly discovered hollow proved to be three or four feet in diameter,
-and, like that in the larger tree, extended to a considerable height.
-After Tom had made the opening between the trees, he sat upon the
-ground, and with his hatchet hewed it to an oval shape, two feet high
-and two feet broad.
-
-Jim could not imagine why Tom had taken so much trouble to add another
-room to their house, which was already large enough. But when Tom,
-having finished the opening upon the inside, went out and began to climb
-the smaller tree with the help of a few low-growing branches, the
-youngest member of the expedition became fully convinced in his own mind
-that the second in command was out of his head entirely. When Tom,
-having climbed to a height of twelve or fifteen feet, began to chop with
-his hatchet, Jim remarked, in most emphatic language, that he thought “a
-fellow who would chop at a sycamore tree just for the sake of making
-chips, when he might be eating his supper, was too big a fool to live.”
-
-Tom did not respond to Jim’s sarcasm, but persevered in his chopping
-until he had made an opening at the point to which he had climbed.
-Balser had quickly guessed the object of Tom’s mighty labors, but he did
-not enlighten Jim. He had gone to other work, and by the time Tom had
-made the opening from the outside of the smaller tree, had collected a
-pile of firewood, and had carried several loads of it into the castle.
-Then Tom came down, and Jim quickly followed him into the large tree,
-for by that time his mysterious movements were full of interest to the
-little fellow.
-
-Now what do you suppose was Tom’s object in wasting so much time and
-energy with his axe and hatchet?
-
-A fireplace.
-
-You will at once understand that the opening which Tom had cut in the
-tree at the height of twelve or fifteen feet was for the purpose of
-making a chimney through which the smoke might escape.
-
-The boys kindled a fire, and in a few minutes there was a cheery blaze
-in their fireplace that lighted up the room and made “everything look
-just like home,” Jim said.
-
-Then Jim went outside and gave a great hurrah of delight when he saw the
-smoke issuing from the chimney that ingenious Tom had made with his
-hatchet.
-
-[Illustration: THE CASTLE ON THE BRANDYWINE.]
-
-Jim watched the smoke for a few moments, and then walked around the tree
-to survey the premises. The result of his survey was the discovery of a
-hollow in the third tree of their castle, and when he informed Balser
-and Tom of the important fact, it was agreed that the room which Jim had
-found should be prepared for Tige and Prince. The dogs were not
-fastidious, and a sleeping-place was soon made for them entirely to
-their satisfaction.
-
-Meantime the fire was blazing and crackling in the fireplace, and the
-boys began to prepare supper. They had not had time to kill game, so
-they fried a few pieces of bacon and a dozen eggs, of which they had
-brought a good supply, and roasted a few sweet potatoes in the ashes.
-Then they made an opening in the ice, from which they drew a bucketful
-of sparkling ice water, and when all was ready they sat down to supper,
-served with the rarest of all dressings, appetite sauce, and at least
-one of the party, Jim, was happy as a boy could be.
-
-The dogs then received their supper of bear meat.
-
-The members of the expedition, from the commanding officer Balser to the
-high privates Tige and Prince, were very tired after their hard day’s
-work, and when Tom and Balser showed the dogs their sleeping-place, they
-curled up close to each other and soon were in the land of dog dreams.
-
-By the time supper was finished night had fallen, and while Tom and
-Balser were engaged in stretching a deerskin across the door to exclude
-the cold air, Jim crept between the bearskins and soon was sound asleep,
-dreaming no doubt of suppers and dinners and breakfasts, and scolding in
-his dreams like the veritable little grumbler that he was. A great bed
-of embers had accumulated in the fireplace, and upon them Balser placed
-a hickory knot for the purpose of retaining fire till morning, and then
-he covered the fire with ashes.
-
-After all was ready Balser and Tom crept in between the bearskins, and
-lying spoon-fashion, one on each side of Jim, lost no time in making a
-rapid, happy journey to the land of Nod.
-
-Tom slept next to the wall, next to Tom lay Jim, and next to Jim was
-Balser. The boys were lying with their feet to the fire, and upon the
-opposite side of the room was the doorway closed by the deerskin, of
-which I have already told you.
-
-Of course they went to bed “all standing,” as sailors say when they lie
-down to sleep with their clothing on, for the weather was cold, and the
-buckskin clothing and moccasins were soft and pleasant to sleep in, and
-would materially assist the bearskins in keeping the boys warm.
-
-It must have been a pretty sight in the last flickering light of the
-smouldering fire to see the three boys huddled closely together, covered
-by the bearskins. I have no doubt had you seen them upon that night they
-would have appeared to you like a sleeping bear. In fact, before the
-night was over they did appear to—but I must not go ahead of my story.
-
-The swift-winged hours of darkness sped like moments to the sleeping
-boys. The smouldering coals in the fireplace were black and lustreless.
-The night wind softly moaned through the branches of the sycamore, and
-sighed as it swept the bare limbs of the willows and the rustling tops
-of the underbrush. Jack Frost was silently at work, and the cold, clear
-air seemed to glitter in the moonlight. It was an hour past midnight.
-Had the boys been awake and listening, or had Tige and Prince been
-attending to their duties as sentinels, they would have heard a crisp
-noise of footsteps, as the icy surface of the snow cracked, and as dead
-twigs broke beneath a heavy weight. Ah, could the boys but awaken! Could
-the dogs be aroused but for one instant from their deep lethargy of
-slumber!
-
-Balser! Tom! Jim! Tige! Prince! Awaken! Awaken!
-
-On comes the heavy footfall, cautiously. As it approaches the castle a
-few hurried steps are taken, and the black, awkward form lifts his head
-and sniffs the air for signs of danger.
-
-The baron has returned to claim his own, and Jim’s prophecy, at least in
-part, has come true. The tracks upon the snow left by the boys and dogs,
-and the sleds leaning against the tree, excite the bear’s suspicion, and
-he stands like a statue for five minutes, trying to make up his mind
-whether or not he shall enter his old domain. The memory of his cozy
-home tempts him, and he cautiously walks to the doorway of his house.
-The deerskin stretched across the opening surprises him, and he
-carefully examines it with the aid of his chief counsellor, his nose.
-Then he thrusts it aside with his head and enters.
-
-He sees the boys on the opposite side of the tree, and doubtless fancies
-that his mate has gotten home before him, so he complacently lies down
-beside the bearskins, and soon, he, too, is in the land of bear dreams.
-
-When a bear sleeps he snores, and the first loud snort from the baron’s
-nostrils aroused Balser. At first Balser’s mind was in confusion, and he
-thought that he was at home. In a moment, however, he remembered where
-he was, and waited in the darkness for a repetition of the sound that
-had awakened him. Soon it came again, and Balser in his drowsiness
-fancied that Tom had changed his place and was lying beside him, though
-never in all his life had he heard such sounds proceed from Limpy’s
-nose. So he reached out his hand, and at once was undeceived, for he
-touched the bear, and at last Balser was awake. The boy’s hair seemed to
-stand erect upon his head, and his blood grew cold in his veins, as he
-realized the terrible situation. All was darkness. The guns, hatchets,
-and knives were upon the opposite side of the tree, and to reach them or
-to reach the doorway Balser would have to climb over the bear. Cold as
-the night was, perspiration sprang from every pore of his skin, and
-terror took possession of him such as he had never before known. It
-seemed a long time that he lay there, but it could not have been more
-than a few seconds until the bear gave forth another snort, and Tom
-raised up from his side of the bed, and said: “Balser, for goodness’
-sake stop snoring. The noise you make would bring a dead man to life.”
-
-Tom’s voice aroused the bear, and it immediately rose upon its haunches
-with a deep growl that seemed to shake the tree. Then Jim awakened and
-began to scream. At the same instant Tige and Prince entered the tree,
-and a fight at once ensued between the bear and dogs. The bear was as
-badly frightened as the boys, and when it and the dogs ran about the
-room the boys were thrown to the ground and trampled upon.
-
-The beast, in his desperate effort to escape, ran into the fireplace and
-scattered the coals and ashes. As he could not escape through the
-fireplace, he backed into the room, and again made the rounds of the
-tree with the dogs at his heels. Again the boys were knocked about as if
-they were ninepins. They made an effort to reach the door, but all I
-have told you about took place so quickly, and the darkness was so
-intense, that they failed to escape. Meantime the fight between the dogs
-and the bear went on furiously, and the barking, yelping, growling, and
-snarling made a noise that was deafening. Balser lifted Jim to his arms
-and tried to save him from injury, but his efforts were of small avail,
-for with each plunge of the bear the boys were thrown to the ground or
-dashed against the tree, until it seemed that there was not a spot upon
-their bodies that was not bruised and scratched. At last, after a minute
-or two of awful struggle and turmoil—a minute or two that seemed hours
-to the boys—the bear made his exit through the door followed closely by
-Tige and Prince, who clung to him with a persistency not to be shaken
-off.
-
-You may be sure that the boys lost no time in making their exit also.
-Their first thoughts, of course, were of each other, and when Balser
-learned that Jim and Tom had received no serious injury, he quickly
-turned his head in the direction whence the bear and dogs had gone, and
-saw them at a point in the bend of the creek not fifty yards away. The
-bear had come to bay, and the dogs were in front of him, at a safe
-distance, barking furiously. Then Balser’s courage returned, and he
-hastily went into the tree, brought out his carbine, and hurried toward
-the scene of conflict. The moon was at its full, and the snow upon the
-trees and upon the ground helped to make the night almost as light as
-day. The bear was sitting erect upon his haunches, hurling defiant
-growls at the dogs, and when Balser approached him, the brute presented
-his breast as a fair mark. Tom also fetched his gun and followed closely
-at Balser’s heels. The attention of the bear was so occupied with the
-dogs that he gave no heed to the boys, and they easily approached him to
-within a distance of five or six yards. Tom and Balser stood for a
-moment or two with their guns ready to fire, and Balser said: “Tom, you
-shoot first. I’ll watch carefully, and hold my fire until the bear makes
-a rush, should you fail to kill him.”
-
-Much to Balser’s surprise, Tom quickly and fearlessly took three or four
-steps toward the bear, and when he lifted his father’s long gun to fire,
-the end of it was within three yards of the bear’s breast.
-
-[Illustration: “BALSER HESITATED TO FIRE, FEARING THAT HE MIGHT KILL TOM
-OR ONE OF THE DOGS.”]
-
-Balser held his ground, much frightened at Tom’s reckless bravery, but
-did not dare to speak. When Tom fired, the bear gave forth a fearful
-growl, and sprang like a wildcat right upon the boy. Tom fell to the
-ground upon his back, and the bear stood over him. The dogs quickly made
-an attack, and Balser hesitated to fire, fearing that he might kill Tom
-or one of the dogs. Then came Jim, who rushed past Balser toward Tom and
-the bear, and if Jim’s courage had ever before been doubted, all such
-doubts were upon that night removed forever. The little fellow carried
-in his hand Tom’s hatchet, and without fear or hesitancy he ran to the
-bear and began to strike him with all his little might. Meantime poor,
-prostrate Tom was crying piteously for help, and, now that Jim was added
-to the group, it seemed impossible for Balser to fire at the bear. But
-no time was to be lost. If Balser did not shoot, Tom certainly would be
-killed in less than ten seconds. So, without stopping to take thought,
-and upon the impulse of one of those rare intuitions under the influence
-of which persons move so accurately, Balser lifted his gun to his
-shoulder. He could see the bear’s head plainly as it swayed from side to
-side, just over Tom’s throat, and it seemed that he could not miss his
-aim. Almost without looking, he pulled the trigger. He felt the rebound
-of the gun and heard the report breaking the heavy silence of the night.
-Then he dropped the gun upon the snow and covered his face with his
-hands, fearing to see the result of his shot. He stood for a moment
-trembling. The dogs had stopped barking; the bear had stopped growling;
-Jim had ceased to cry out; Tom had ceased his call for help, and the
-deep silence rested upon Balser’s heart like a load of lead. He could
-not take his hands from his face. After a moment he felt Jim’s little
-hand upon his arm, and Tom said, as he drew himself from beneath the
-bear, “Balser, there’s no man or boy living but you that could have made
-that shot in the moonlight.”
-
-Then Balser knew that he had killed the bear, and he sank upon the snow
-and wept as if his heart would break.
-
-Notwithstanding the intense cold, the excitement of battle had made the
-boys unconscious of it, and Tom and Jim stood by Balser’s side as he sat
-upon the snow, and they did not feel the sting of the night.
-
-Poor little Jim, who was so given to grumbling, much to the surprise of
-his companions fell upon his knees, and said, “Don’t cry, Balser, don’t
-cry,” although the tears were falling over the little fellow’s own
-cheeks. “Don’t cry any more, Balser, the bear is dead all over. I heard
-the bullet whiz past my ears, and I heard it strike the bear’s head just
-as plain as you can hear that owl hoot; and then I knew that you had
-saved Tom and me, because nobody can shoot as well as you can.”
-
-The little fellow’s tenderness and his pride in Balser seemed all the
-sweeter, because it sprang from his childish gruffness.
-
-Tom and Jim helped Balser to his feet, and they went over to the spot
-where the bear was lying stone dead with Balser’s bullet in his brain.
-The dogs were sniffing at the dead bear, and the monster brute lay upon
-the snow in the moonlight, and looked like a huge incarnate fiend.
-
-After examining him for a moment the boys slowly walked back to the
-tree. When they had entered they raked the coals together, put on an
-armful of wood, called in the dogs to share their comfort, hung up the
-deerskin at the door, drew the bearskins in front of the fire, and sat
-down to talk and think, since there was no sleep left in their eyes for
-the rest of that night.
-
-After a long silence Jim said, “I told you he’d come back.”
-
-“But he didn’t eat us,” replied Tom, determined that Jim should not be
-right in everything.
-
-“He’d have eaten you, Limpy Fox, if Balser hadn’t been the best shot in
-the world.”
-
-“That’s what he would,” answered Tom, half inclined to cry.
-
-“Nonsense,” said Balser, “anybody could have done it.”
-
-“Well, I reckon not” said Jim. “Me and Tom and the dogs and the bear was
-as thick as six in a bed; and honest, Balser, I think you had to shoot
-around a curve to miss us all but the bear.”
-
-After a few minutes Jim said: “Golly! wasn’t that an awful fight we had
-in here before the bear got out?”
-
-“Yes, it was,” returned Balser, seriously.
-
-“Well, I rather think it was,” continued Jim. “Honestly, fellows, I ran
-around this here room so fast for a while, that—that I could see my own
-back most of the time.”
-
-Balser and Tom laughed, and Tom said: “Jim, if you keep on improving,
-you’ll be a bigger liar than that fellow in the Bible before you’re half
-his age.”
-
-Then the boys lapsed into silence, and the dogs lay stretched before the
-fire till the welcome sun began to climb the hill of the sky and spread
-his blessed tints of gray and blue and pink and red, followed by the
-glorious flood of day.
-
-After breakfast the boys skinned the bear and cut his carcass into small
-pieces—that is, such portions of it as they cared to keep. They hung the
-bearskin and meat upon the branches of their castle beyond the reach of
-wolves and foxes, and they gave to Tige and Prince each a piece of meat
-that made their sides stand out with fulness.
-
-The saving of the bear meat and skin consumed most of the morning, and
-at noon the boys took a loin steak from the bear and broiled it upon the
-coals for dinner. After dinner they began the real work of the
-expedition by preparing to set the traps.
-
-When all was ready they started up the creek, each boy carrying a load
-of traps over his shoulder. At a distance of a little more than half a
-mile from the castle they found a beaver dam stretching across the
-creek, and at the water’s edge near each end of the dam they saw
-numberless tracks made by the little animals whose precious pelts they
-were so anxious to obtain.
-
-I should like to tell you of the marvellous home of that wonderful
-little animal the beaver, and of his curious habits and instincts; how
-he chops wood and digs into the ground and plasters his home, under the
-water, with mud, using his tail for shovel and trowel. But all that you
-may learn from any book on natural history, and I assure you it will be
-found interesting reading.
-
-The boys placed five or six traps upon the beaver paths on each side of
-the creek, and then continued their journey up stream until they found a
-little opening in the ice down to which, from the bank above, ran a
-well-beaten path, telling plainly of the many kinds of animals that had
-been going there to drink. There they set a few traps and baited them
-with small pieces of bear meat, and then they returned home, intending
-to visit the traps next morning at an early hour, and hoping to reap a
-rich harvest of pelts.
-
-When the boys reached home it lacked little more than an hour of sunset,
-but the young fellows had recovered from the excitement of the night
-before, which had somewhat destroyed their appetites for breakfast and
-dinner, and by the time they had returned from setting their traps those
-same appetites were asserting themselves with a vigour that showed
-plainly enough a fixed determination to make up for lost time.
-
-“How would a wild turkey or a venison steak taste for supper?” asked
-Balser.
-
-Jim simply looked up at him with a greedy, hungry expression, and
-exclaimed the one word—“Taste?”
-
-“Well, I’ll go down the creek a little way and see what I can find. You
-fellows stay here and build a fire, so that we can have a fine bed of
-coals when I return.”
-
-Balser shouldered his gun and went down the creek to find his supper. He
-did not take the dogs, for he hoped to kill a wild turkey, and dogs are
-apt to bark in the pursuit of squirrels and rabbits, thereby frightening
-the turkey, which is a shy and wary bird.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-When the boy had travelled quite a long distance down stream, he began
-to fear that, after all, he should be compelled to content himself with
-a rabbit or two for supper. So he turned homeward and scanned the woods
-carefully for the humble game, that he might not go home entirely
-empty-handed.
-
-Upon his journey down the creek rabbits had sprung up on every side of
-him, but now that he wanted a pair for supper they all had mysteriously
-disappeared, and he feared that he and the boys and the dogs would be
-compelled to content themselves with bear meat.
-
-[Illustration: “ESPIED A DOE AND A FAWN, STANDING UPON THE OPPOSITE SIDE
-OF THE CREEK.”]
-
-When the boy was within a few hundred yards of home, and had almost
-despaired of obtaining even a rabbit, he espied a doe and a fawn,
-standing upon the opposite side of the creek at a distance of sixty or
-seventy yards, watching him intently with their great brown eyes, so
-full of fatal curiosity. Balser imitated the cry of the fawn, and held
-the attention of the doe until he was enabled to lessen the distance by
-fifteen or twenty yards. Then he shot the fawn, knowing that if he did
-so, its mother, the doe, would run for a short distance and would return
-to the fawn. In the meantime Balser would load his gun and would kill
-the doe when she returned. And so it happened that the doe and the fawn
-each fell a victim to our hunter’s skill. Balser threw the fawn over his
-shoulder and carried it to the castle; then the boys took one of the
-sleds and fetched home the doe.
-
-They hung the doe high upon the branches of the sycamore, and cut the
-fawn into small pieces, which they put upon the ice of the creek and
-covered with snow, that the meat might quickly cool. The bed of coals
-was ready, and the boys were ready too, you may be sure.
-
-Soon the fawn meat cooled, and soon each boy was devouring a savoury
-piece that had been broiled upon the coals.
-
-After supper the boys again built a fine fire, and sat before it talking
-of the events of the day, and wondering how many beavers, foxes, coons,
-and muskrats they would find in their traps next morning.
-
-As the fire died down drowsiness stole over our trappers, who were in
-the habit of going to bed soon after sunset, and they again crept in
-between the bearskins with Jim in the middle. They, however, took the
-precaution to keep Tige and Prince in the same room with them, and the
-boys slept that night without fear of an intrusion such as had disturbed
-them the night before.
-
-Next morning, bright and early, the boys hurried up the creek to examine
-their traps, and greatly to their joy found five beavers and several
-minks, coons, and muskrats safely captured. Near one of the traps was
-the foot of a fox, which its possessor had bitten off in the night when
-he learned that he could not free it from the cruel steel.
-
-The boys killed the animals they had caught by striking them on the head
-with a heavy club, which method of inflicting death did not damage the
-pelts as a sharp instrument or bullet would have done. After resetting
-the traps, our hunters placed the game upon the sled and hurried home to
-their castle, where the pelts were carefully removed, stretched upon
-forked sticks, and hung up to dry.
-
-Our heroes remained in camp for ten or twelve days, and each morning
-brought them a fine supply of fur. They met with no other adventure
-worthy to be related, and one day was like another. They awakened each
-morning with the sun, and ate their breakfast of broiled venison, fish,
-or quail, with now and then a rabbit. Upon one occasion they had the
-breast of a wild turkey. They sought the traps, took the game, prepared
-the pelts, ate their dinners and suppers of broiled meats and baked
-sweet potatoes, and slumbered cozily beneath their warm bearskins till
-morning.
-
-One day Balser noticed that the snow was melting and was falling from
-the trees. He and his companions had taken enough pelts to make a heavy
-load upon each of the sleds. They feared that the weather might suddenly
-grow warm and that the snow might disappear. So they leisurely packed
-the pelts and their belongings, and next morning started for home on
-Blue River, the richest, happiest boys in the settlement.
-
-They were glad to go home, but it was with a touch of sadness, when they
-passed around the bend in the creek, that they said “Good-by” to their
-“Castle on Brandywine.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-
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- Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall
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-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Changed “CHAPTER IX. A CASTLE ON THE BRANDYWINE” to “CHAPTER X. A
- CASTLE ON THE BRANDYWINE” on p. 238.
- 2. Silently corrected typographical errors.
- 3. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Bears of Blue River, by Charles Major
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