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See! here's the mark of an empty bag on the snow. If you discover anything new, come to the big dead Cottonwood--the one that was struck by storm-fire--at Two Rapids, and give the Boundary Call. I don't want you making a trail up to our new house for Francois to follow."
THE OTTER SLIDE
For the next few days Francois was busy completing his Marten Road, quite unconscious of the undoing that followed him. Fifteen miles out he constructed a small rest-house that would do for a night's camping; thus he could go the round of his Traps nicely in two days. The People of the Boundaries watched him, and where they found a Trap, sprang it and stole the Bait. He fixed up the chimney that had suffered from Carcajou's diabolical curiosity. Winter had properly set in; streams were frozen up, the ground covered with snow, and the days were of scarce more length than a long drawn out forenoon. Affairs were in this state when one morning the Red Widow heard Beaver's plaintive whistle from the Cottonwood.
"Son," she cried to Black Fox, "Umisk calls; something has gone wrong in the Forest." The King turned over, stretched his sinewy legs, and yawned; the sharp-pointed, blood-red tongue curled against the roof of his mouth, and the strong teeth gleamed white against the background of his lacquer coat. It was a full-drawn, lazy protest against being roused from slumber, for a brace of Pin-tail Grouse lying in the corner of his cave gave evidence of much energy during the previous night.
"Bother this being King!" he yapped crabbedly. "To take care of one's own relatives is trouble enough. By the Howl of a Hungry Wolf! I saved Stripes from a Trap yesterday--just in the nick of time to keep him from grabbing the Bait. Now Trowel Tail is after me. This place was bad enough when there were only Animals here--I mean Animals of our own knowing, Mother; now that this other kind of Animal, Man, has come, it's simply awful. They must be a bad lot, these Men. We fear Wolf when he is hungry, and Muskwa when there are no Berries, but Man is always crying, 'E-go, Kil-l--Kil-l!'"
Again Umisk's shrill little treble cut the keen frosty air. "Hurry, Lad!" cried the Widow; "likely his family is in trouble."
Black Fox stuck his head cautiously from the entrance to their Burrow, and peered through the ma.s.sive drapery of Birch-tree roots which completely veiled that part of the cut-bank. "Mother," he said, "make the Boys use the log-path when they're coming home, or Francois will hole us up one of these fine days."
"I have told them, Son; your two Brothers were cross-hatching the trail all yesterday afternoon. There are three blind holes within five miles up the stream, and to each one they have made a nice little false trail to amuse this Stealer of Skins."
"That's all right, Mother; we can't be too careful."
He stretched each hind-leg far out, throwing his head high to loosen the neck-muscles and expand his chest, shook the folds of his heavy, black cloak and yawned again. Then stooping low in the cave-mouth, with a powerful spring he alighted upon a log which crossed from one cut-bank to another of the stream. Umisk was whistling a quarter of a mile away down the left bank, but Black Fox started off up the right. As he trotted along he sang:--
"The trail that leads from nowhere to nowhere, Is the track of the King of the Tribe of Beware."
Suddenly he stopped, crept under a big log, and then emerged, tail first, backing up cautiously and putting his feet down carefully in the tracks he had made. "They'll find me asleep in there," he chuckled; and hummed, softly:--
"Under the log the King is asleep; Creep gently, Brother, creep; Under the log is the old Fox nest; Creep, Brother--mind his rest."
Suddenly jumping sideways over a great Spruce lying p.r.o.ne on the ground, he started off again, singing merrily:--
"The track that breaks Is a new track made; For eyes are sharp Where the nose is dead."
Down the stream, below where Umisk was waiting, Black King crossed, saying to himself: "Now, Francois, when I go home the trail will be complete, with no little break at my front door--dear Francois, sweet Francois."
With Umisk was Carcajou waiting for the King.
"What's up?" asked Black Fox.
"The Man has found us out," squeaked Umisk, despairingly.
"Too bad, too bad!" cried the King, with deep sympathy in his voice.
"Anything happened--any one caught?"
"Nothing serious at present. One of the Babes lost a toe--mighty close shave."
"How did the Breed work it? The old game of breaking in your house--the Burglar?"
"No; that's too stupid for Francois. Muskegs! but he is clever. The thing must have been done last night. He cut a hole in the ice of my pond near the dam, then shoved a nice, beautiful piece of Poplar, with a steel Trap attached, down into the water--one end in the mud, you know, and the other up in the ice. Of course it froze solid there. First-Kit, that's my eldest Son, saw it in the morning, and, thinking one of our bread-sticks had got away, went down to bring it back. Mind you, I didn't know anything about this; he is an ambitious little Chap and wanted to do it all himself. Of course the Poplar was fast--he couldn't budge it; so climbed up to cut it off at the ice, with the result that he sprang the Trap and incidentally lost a toe."
"It's great schooling for the Children, though, isn't it?" remarked Black King, trying to put a good face on affairs.
"It's mighty hard on their toes," whined Beaver. "Hope it wasn't his nippers--forgot to look into that."
"Nothing like bringing them up to take care of themselves," declared Carcajou. "All the same, my Wood-chopper Friend, you just cut off that stick and float it, with the Trap, to one of your air-holes; I'll cache it for Francois."
"I was thinking of keeping it," added Umisk, "to teach the Youngsters what a Trap is like."
"Well, just as you wish; only I'll go and make a little trail from the spot off into the woods, so our busy Friend will think I've taken it.
h.e.l.lo, Nekik!" he continued, as Otter came sliding through the snow on his belly; "has Francois been visiting you too?"
"I don't know; there is something the matter with my Slide. It isn't as I left it yesterday."
"Birds of a Feather! Birds of a Feather!" screamed Whisky-Jack, fluttering to a limb over their heads. "What's the caucus about this morning--discussing chances of a breakfast this year of starvation and scarcity of Wapoos? Mild Winter! but I had a big feed. The Boy no more knows the value of food than he knows the depravity of Carcajou's mind."
"Great hand for throwing away hot pork, isn't he, Jack?" asked Wolverine, innocently.
The Jay blinked his round bead-eyes, snapped his beak, and retorted: "They put in their evenings laughing over the roasting you got when you dropped into the fire."
"Where's Francois, Babbler?" asked the King.
"Gone out to bring in Deer Meat."
"Did he make a Kill?"
"U-h-huh! my crop is full."
"You horrid Beast!" cried Carcajou, disgustedly. "Where is it cached?"
"Not Mooswa?" broke in Black King, with a frightened voice.
"No--Caribou. Such a big shovel to his horn too--must have been of the Knowledge Age. Ugh! should have known better than to let a Man get near him. Of course Francois stuck the head on a tree to make peace with Manitou, and I'm fixed for a month."
"Cannibal!" again exclaimed Carcajou. "Where did you say your friend, Murderer, had cached the quarters?"
"'Cannibal,' eh? Go and find out, Glutton. Be careful, though--I saw some one handling the White Medicine last night."
"The White Medicine!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Black Fox, turning with dismay to the speaker.
"Uh, huh! but I never steal the Bait, like Carcajou, so I don't care. I eat what the Men eat."
"What they leave, you mean, Scavenger--what they throw to the Dogs!"
retorted the Lieutenant.
"You'll get enough of Dogs, First-Cousin-to-Ground Hog--Francois says he is going to have a train of them. They will squeeze your fat back if you come prowling about the Shack to steal food."