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CHAPTER VIII.
The Old Log-Shanty. — Nobody at Home. — Rummaging for Supper. — The Hay Shake-Downs. — A Nocturnal Scare and Scrimmage. — A Wild-cat Hunt.
THIS was
good news
indeed. “I don’t believe there’s anybody there, though,” remarked Wash
to me as
we gathered up the trout into the buckets. “There’s no smoke, anyway;
looks all
silent and deserted like.” Wash ran
ahead with
the guns: the rest of us followed with the buckets, etc. A trudge of
fifteen
minutes brought us out into an opening a little back from the river, —
a stumpy
clearing of eight or ten acres. Seven or eight large conical hay-stacks
loomed
amidst the stubs and stumps; and on the side next the river, there was
a
fair-sized log and pole shanty. The whole establishment had a very
rough, rude
look, as all man’s first encroachments on Nature are apt to have. Huge
smutty
logs lay about, — the carcasses of the fallen forest monarchs. Twilight
was
deepening. We hurried on toward the shanty. As Wash had hinted, there
was no
smoke. The proprietor was evidently absent. The door — three planks
cleated
together — was closed, and fastened with a prodigious button, — a foot
long,
certainly. Wash knocked with the rifle-butt. There was no response: we
had not
expected any. Raed then turned the button; and, after a cautious
glance, we
walked in. The interior had a very smoky odor; and immediately quite a
scrabbling and scuffling began overhead, where a sort of chamber or
loft had
been made by laying loose rails across the log-beams. There was a
trap-door
hole up through this floor, where a ladder had probably been used in
the place
of stairs. “Nothing
but rats,”
said Raed. “There’s no body here.” A stone
fire-place
and chimney occupied one end of the shanty. Across the other there ex
tended a
table, or shelf, made of half a large basswood log split in the middle,
with
the split side up. A quantity of old knots and birch-bark lay on one
side. Wash
threw some of these into the fireplace, and, striking a match, soon had
the
hovel lighted. On the other side there were two barrels, one very damp
and
mouldy. This we found to be half full of brine, in which there were
floating
several pieces of meat, beef, Wash thought. The other was about a third
full of
“Indian meal.” On it there was set a box of salt. Several other boxes
were
ranged along the shelf, or table. A kettle, a spider, and a very
dissipated-looking
old coffee-pot, hung on pegs driven into crevices between the logs.
This latter
utensil set us to searching; and, hurrah! in one of the boxes we
unearthed
about a pint of coffee in the bean, and not yet roasted. On going
out to
pick up more wood for fire, Wade discovered, off a little to the left,
a small
patch of potatoes and turnips. He came racing in greatly elated. We all
went
out to investigate. There was, perhaps, a quarter of an acre of them.
The
turnips, at this season, were not much larger than one’s fist, and the
potatoes
about the size of English walnuts. The tops were very dark green and
rank. Wash
pulled up half a dozen hills. Raed brought out a bucket, and we dug out
enough
for a stew. “Guess we
can make
ourselves comfortable,” said Wade. “Wonder what the old chap who owns
this
ranch would say, though, if he could see us.” I
mentioned that it
was the custom all through the wild lands for every one to make himself
at
home, and take whatever he could find at any of the “clearings,”
whether the
owner was at home or not. Raed said he should think, that, considering
the
labor it took to bring supplies up here, whoever used them ought to pay
for
them at a fair price. “And I
move,” he
continued, “that we keep an account of what we use, and leave enough
money to
make the proprietor, whoever he is, whole.” This
seemed but
fair. We then
fell to
work to prepare supper. Our bill
of fare
that night consisted of fried trout, boiled potatoes, turnips,
corn-cake, and
coffee. For the coffee we had neither cream nor sugar: had to take it
raw, or,
as Wash expressed it, bald-headed.
It was nearly nine o’clock before supper was ready, and it must have been ten by the time it was over. “Now the
question
is,” said Raed after we had cast out the fragments of the feast, “where
does
this man bunk? where’s his sleeping apparatus?” There were
a few
wisps of hay on the side where the wood was. “Possibly
he lay on
a shake-down of hay,” said I. “Well, if he can, we can!” exclaimed Wash. “But let’s have a good soft one. There’s hay enough in the stacks.” All four
of us
sallied out; and, making for the nearest stack, each pulled out what he
could lug, and went
back to the shanty. It made
a prodigious heap, come to get it inside; and was soft as a
feather-bed.
Several times during the evening we had heard the rats up in the loft. As often
as they would scramble,
Ding-bat would look up and growl. Once they even made the dirt and dust
fall
down into our eyes. It seemed odd, too, that rats should exist so far
from
civilization; but we did not give the matter much thought. Wade put
on a few
knots to keep the fire alive. Raed pushed the door into place, and
fastened it
with a piece of board set slant-wise. There were no windows to close;
nothing
in the shape of windows, save a hole about a foot square on one side,
up five
or six feet from the ground. As soon as the door was shut, Ding-bat
began to
whine to get out: he didn’t seem to like inside. Wade got up and let
him out,
to lodge outside the door. We then lay down in the hay, and, tired as
we had
become, were soon asleep. Along in the night (pretty late, for the fire
had
gone out), something waked me, — something moving in the hay at my
feet. I felt
a pulling, as of nails hooking into my stocking. (I had taken off my
boots.)
Still half asleep, I had a vague idea that it was the dog. The rustling
continued. Presently I was aware of a sharp prick through my trousers.
That
roused me disagreeably; and, still thinking it was Ding-bat, I gave a
sleepy
kick that hit something. Instantly there was a spit and a snarl.
Jumping up on
my elbow, I saw two pale bright spots, that glowed like match-streaks
in the
darkness. Horrors! how such a thing will startle a fellow! I knew it
was some
sort of a cat, and thought it was just on the point of jumping at me.
The
moment that popped into my head, I leaped to get away; and making a
sort of
tumble and roll over Wash and Wade, who were in the middle, came down
wallop on
Raed, who lay on the farther side. Up jumped Raed with an ejaculation.
Wash and
Wade began to scramble too. “Whist-s-s-sh!”
I
whispered. “Hold on!” “What is
it?”
exclaimed Raed. “What’s
up?” from
Wash. “What’s
the
matter?” from Wade. “Hold on!
keep
quiet!” I kept saying. “There’s some sort of a creature — some kind of
a cat —
in here, — in the shanty here.” “Where’s
the guns?”
demanded Raed. “I set ‘em
both
right up here by our heads,” muttered Wash, fumbling. “Here’s one of
them.
Where’bouts is he?” “On the
side next
to the table-shelf,” said I; “under it, I guess. There! don’t you hear
him?” as
a slight rustling came to our ears. “There! don’t you see his eyes
shine?” “I’ll fix
him!”
muttered Wash. We heard
the lock
click as he cocked the gun. Then came a deafening explosion, with a
great flash
of light that lit up the shanty, showing an animal rather larger than
Ding-bat,
with its back drawn up and head askew under the table. A sharp snarl
followed
the report. We jumped to our feet. I heard the creature go scratching
over the
barrels, knocking off the salt-box. Then it seemed to jump up toward
the
trap-door hole in the loft floor; at least, we heard the rails rattle
up there:
but it fell back into the hay at our feet. We all kicked frantically.
Wash
struck with the gun. Raed, having got hold of the other gun, cocked it,
and,
hearing a scrabbling over the boxes on the table-shelf, fired slam-bang. We caught another
glimpse of
the beast trying to run up the side of the shanty, and the next moment
heard
its claws scratch as it jumped and went through the hole into the loft.
“Strike a
match!”
cried Wash. “Light a roll of that bark!” Wade had
the
matches, and, after some scraping, got one to burn, and with it
lighted a coil
of bark. The shanty was full of powder-smoke: we could scarcely see
across it.
Ding-bat was barking like mad outside, trying to get in. Raed let him
in, and
pushed the door to again. “I don’t
think the
creature will come down of his own accord,” said he, keeping a wary eye
to the
trap-door hole. “Where’s the powder and shot and the cartridges? — Get
out, you
noisy cur!” (to Ding-bat.) — “Load quick, now! We’ll pop him through
the
cracks!” The kettle
with the
ammunition was found, and the guns were hastily recharged. “How the
brute got
in here is more than I can cipher,” said Wash, capping the rifle. “He
couldn’t
possibly have got in through that little hole,” — pointing to the
window
aperture. “Of course
not,”
said Raed. “He was up in the loft; been up there all night.” “That’s
what we
took for rats, then,” said Wash. “I expect
so,”
replied Raed with a queer look. “When we got all quiet and asleep, he
came down
to see if we were fit for eating.” “It looks
so.” “The
dickens!”
exclaimed Wash. “Wouldn’t have caught me going to sleep if I had
mistrusted
what was up there, you bet! Been glaring down at us ever since we came;
all the
time we were getting supper — and eating it. Wonder he hadn’t dropped
on to
some of us!” “Looks as
if he
didn’t care to attack us,” said Raed; “but we will attack him now with
a vengeance.
Let’s go to work right, though. Wade. you get another roll 6f that bark
ready
to light. Now hold up the torch, so we can see what we’re about. Kit,
you take
that old fish-pole over the shelf, and poke up through the rails with
it: make
him stir, so we can tell where he is. Wash and I will stand ready to
shoot.” I began
prodding up
through the cracks, first in one corner, then in another. Presently
there was a
sudden ha-pih, a leap,
and a
rattle, as the creature went to the other side; and, on running the
pole up
near where he seemed to have stopped, it was snapped at, and nearly
wrenched
out of my hands. Raed instantly pushed the muzzle of the rifle up
through the
rails, and fired. The beast yawled, and went skurrying round the loft,
making a
tremendous racket, and growling all the while. “Confound
it!”
muttered Raed. “Never touched him! That’s the third shot too!” “Stick the
torch on
the end of the fish-pole,” cried Wash, “and run it up through the
trap-door
hole, so we can see into the loft!” Wade
fastened the
closely-curling bark to the pole, and I thrust it up through the
aperture. The
instant the torch rose through the hole, the creature spit, and began
to yawl
afresh. I then commenced to wave it; when, with a perfect string of
spits, the
cat jumped (to get down past it, I think), hit against the pole,
knocking off
the torch, and down came torch and cat together into the hay! Wash had
held the
gun ready, and fired the instant the creature leaped. Tell you, reader,
there
was a scrambling then! We all paid on with what we had, — guns and
pole,
whackety-whack. “Hit him!”
“Knock
him!” “Squelch
him!” “Take him,
Ding-bat!” Fairly
frantic, the
creature whirled, and jumped blindly at Raed, who poked it headlong wth
the
point of the rifle. We all struck again; but the agile brute was up in
a
second, and went like a dart at Wade, who had the hatchet. He gave a
desperate
lick; but what with the hay tangled round his feet, and the beast
striking
plump against his stomach, over he went, rolling and kicking. Raed
jumped to
the rescue, and, grabbing the cat by the hind-legs, slat him off. Ding-bat sprang
upon him. They clinched. We
heard claws rip. The
Chinaman
burst out ti-yi-ing piteously.
Wade, who had regained his legs, pulled the dog away by the tail; and
the rest
of us aimed our best strokes at the varmint. But another little
circumstance
had forced itself upon our attention. The torch had fallen into the
hay, which
caught like tinder. The whole floor was blazing. Fierce gusts of hot
air and
smoke flew in our faces. “Out of
this!” yelled
Wash. “Open the door, Kit! We shall smother!” I tore
open the
door. We all dived out into the fresh air; Ding-bat ahead, howling like
a wolf.
The cat made a plunge to get out with us; but Raed slammed the door too
quick. “Look out for the window-hole!” he shouted. “Don’t let him crawl out!” We ran
round, and
saw the creature’s head and paws in the hole. He was trying to wriggle
out
through it. Such a screech as the brute gave when we rushed up to
strike him!
Wash got a fair clip at him with the shot-gun; Wade threw the hatchet
tomahawk-fashion; and I gave a sweeping cut with the pole. But,
despite these
draw backs, the beast wriggled through, and, giving a long leap and a scoot, got past us. “After
him, take
him, Ding-bat!” shouted Wade. “No use!”
exclaimed
Raed. “Let him rip! We must put out the fire.” Pushing
open the
door, a stifling gush of smoke flew out. The blaze had mostly subsided.
As soon
as the shanty had cleared somewhat, we entered it. The buckets and
blankets had
got another scorching; and, worse still, a spark had got down on to the
mosquito-net, folded up in the bottom of one of the buckets, and burned
through
half a dozen thicknesses of it. It took Raed all the next evening to
mend it.
The powder was in the same bucket. In the hurry of loading, Wash had
left the
flask unstopped. It is a wonder it had not blown up. Very lucky, we
thought. Low in the
east, a
pale, dim belt had begun to show. “Daybreak,”
said
Raed. It was
half-past
three. The shanty was rather too smoky and smutty to go to bed in
again. “Let’s
build a fire
and have some coffee,” proposed Wash. “I’m dry. These cat-scrapes will
knock
the bottom clean out of my nervous system yet. Some of that bald-headed
coffee,
I say, strong as lye.” “Yes; and
some of
that beef boiled, with potatoes and turnips,” said Raed; “in short, a
‘boiled
dish.’” “And some fried trout,” added Wade. We got our
coffee
ready in half an hour; but it was not till long after sunrise that the
beef and
vegetables were done enough to eat. On the
whole, we
were not much the worse for our tussle. Wade had a small rent in the
front of
his coat, supposed to have been made by the creature’s claws when he
was upset
in the hay. Ding-bat was the only one that had suffered flesh- wounds.
The poor
Chinaman had a long rake across one side of his corpus, looking as if made by
all four of the animal’s nails
at one dig. There had
swollen up
ridges as big as one’s little finger where each claw had torn through
his bare hide. By way
of consoling him, we
gave him all the boiled beef (a part of which turned out to be pork)
and potato
he could eat. After that he was as good as new, and presently ran
sniffing off
on the trail of the cat. “Yes, hunt
him
out!” cried Wade. “Find him, and pin him!” The dog
ran off,
and we began to get out our fish-hooks and lines to go to the river for
more
trout. By and by we heard the Chinaman barking out in the woods, —
barking as
if fixed at one spot. All at once, he broke out into a ti-yi. Then the barking was
resumed. “Got
something
treed or holed, I guess,” said Wash. “Maybe the
big
cat,” remarked Wade. “That’s
so,” said
Raed. “Who knows but we may get him yet.” The guns
were
charged in considerable haste, and we hurried out toward the barking.
Hearing
us coming, Ding-bat ran back to meet us, greatly excited. He had a
bleeding
scratch on his nose, and looked as if he had been weeping. Following
the dog,
we came to a large fallen maple, the but-end of which showed a black
hollow
running up toward the top. Into this the dog dived, so that his tail
only was
in sight, and began barking again. “Inside
the log,”
said Wash. Wade
seized hold of
the dog’s tail, and pulled him out. Wash then looked cautiously in. “Pretty
dark up in
there,” he remarked. “But seems to me I can see eyes. Kit, you go knock on the
outside of the log with the
hatchet-back, about a dozen feet from the end here. Raed and I will
stand ready
to shoot if he starts. Wade can keep Ding-bat off.” I pounded
on the
trunk; but the creature would not budge. “Hack
through the
outside,” suggested Wade, who stood holding the Chinaman by the nape of
the
neck. “Hack a hole. He will get
when he sees the blade of the hatchet coming through.” “Yes, cut
in right
over where he seems to be,” said Raed. The log was a mere old shell. After a few minutes hacking, the hatchet went through. There was a sudden scratch. “He’s
going out!”
shouted Wade. The next
instant
the beast emerged in a cloud of dirt and dust. Crack! Bang went
both
guns! The creature uttered a wild yawl,
— a series of them, — and flew round and round in a most wonderful
manner: now
bounding three or four feet from the ground; now whirling and rolling
over and
over, tearing up the dry leaves; then, tumbling between a stone and an
old
stump, it lay convulsed and throbbing. “Do put
the brute
out of its agony!” exclaimed Wash. “Kit, give him a coup de grace; do!” A smart
blow from
the hatchet-head, and our nocturnal disturber was at rest. Ding-bat
rushed up,
but merely sniffed; then went back a step, barked once, and gave a look
at our
faces, as much as to say, “His job’s done. No occasion for my
services.” “It would
be
interesting to know just what a dog’s ideas of death are as expressed
in that
wistful look and bark,” said Raed thoughtfully, patting the Chinaman. “I suspect
they are
rather indistinct,” laughed Wade. “I’m not sure he doesn’t know as much about it as I do,” replied Raed, still patting the dog’s head. “Better drop a subject you know so little about, then,” said Wash, “and come back to the subject before us,” — pointing to the carcass of the cat. “Can any of you tell what sort of a beast that is? It is not a Canada lynx, you see; no tassels on its ears; fur not so good; mottled differently: nor is it so large as the one we killed last week, nor yet so heavy (raising the body by one leg) by a dozen pounds certain. What do you call it, Kit? I’m a little stuck on it.” I thought
it was a
common wild-cat. “Wild-cat?”
said
Wash. “That’s the Bay lynx. Well, I guess you’re right” (taking out his
memoranda-book).
“Felis rufous, — color
reddish-gray; irregularly marked; under surface of body
yellowish-white; chin
and throat dull white; from point of nose to roots of tail thirty-two
inches;
length of tail six inches, weight about twenty- three pounds.” “Yes: that tallies with this.” Taking up the dead Felis rufous, we went back to the shanty, where we hung up the carcass on a wooden hook just outside the door. Then, after a “swig” of cold coffee, we went off to the river to fish for dinner. |