<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<h3>THE SILVER FOX</h3>
<p>The log on which Sparrer was seated was near the edge of the swamp and
commanded a view of the small upper pond, while he himself was more or
less screened from observation from that direction by a fringe of young
birch and alders. He had sat there perhaps ten minutes, and was just
beginning to realize that he would have to move on in order to keep warm
when his eyes, idly scanning the farther shore, detected something
moving among the trees beyond the farther end of the little dam.</p>
<p>Instantly he was all attention, his eyes glued to the spot. He forgot
that he was beginning to feel chilled. A warm glow of excitement rushed
over him. There was an animal of some kind over there, but what he could
not tell at that distance. But one thing was certain, it was no rabbit,
for it was dark in color, and it was too big. He could catch but
tantalizing glimpses of it in the young growth along the edge of the
pond, and presently it disappeared altogether behind a tangle of fallen
brush. Unconsciously he held his breath as he waited for it to reappear.
Slowly the minutes slipped away. He began to think that his eyes must
have been playing him tricks. He was once more becoming conscious of the
cold and had almost decided to cross over and investigate the brush pile
into which he thought the animal had vanished when a black form leaped
lightly out on the farther end of the dam and paused with one fore foot
uplifted and head thrown up to test the wind.</p>
<p>Sparrer needed but one look at the great plume of a tail to know that it
was a fox, but such a fox as he had never dreamed existed. It was bigger
than any fox he had ever seen, the great size being apparent even at
that distance. And instead of the red coat of the foxes with which the
boy was familiar at the Bronx Zoo this fellow was robed in the blackness
of night, and this was intensified by contrast with the pure white of
his surroundings.</p>
<p>"It's him, de silver fox!" gasped Sparrer under his breath, and with the
realization that here before his very eyes was the king of the North
American fur bearers, whose skin was worth a fabulous sum, according to
what he had heard, he began to shake as with the ague. What if he could
get him? A cold sweat broke out at the mere thought. There on the dam
was what to him was nothing less than a fortune, and here was he shaking
like an aspen leaf in the wind. The distance was too great for a shot at
present, but perhaps the fox would come nearer, and then a true eye and
steady nerves for just a matter of a few seconds and the prize might be
his.</p>
<p>With a quick intake of breath he tried to get a grip on himself. He
thought of the battles he had fought with bullies older and bigger than
himself, and had won because he had kept his head in the heat of contest
and had coolly taken advantage of every opening. But that was different.
Then he was in action and it was easier to keep cool. Then, too, if he
missed one blow there was a chance for another. It was this sitting
still with the knowledge that there would be but one chance, and that
this must be taken at just the right moment or be lost forever that
upset him so. Then curiously enough the motto of the Boy Scouts flashed
into his head—"Be prepared." It was like a tonic to his shaking nerves.
Was not a Scout supposed to be prepared for all emergencies, and what
was this but a form of emergency?</p>
<p>He stopped shaking. He lifted his rifle ever so little and found that it
remained steady and motionless in his hands. "It ain't no fox. It's just
a rabbit and youse can't miss it," he whispered over and over to
himself, and experienced an odd sense of confidence. He was himself once
more, the Sparrer of the streets, able to take care of himself and keep
his head in any emergency; the Sparrer of the Blue Tortoise Patrol,
noting the number of the fleeing machine at the time of the accident.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the fox was leisurely crossing the dam, stopping now and then
to sniff at the snow or to test the wind. Fortunately what little there
was of the latter was blowing toward the hidden watcher, a fact which
Sparrer did not appreciate at the time. Had the wind been the other way
the fox would have caught the hated man smell and vanished like a
shadow. As it was his every move denoted complete lack of suspicion so
far as a fox ever does lack this characteristic trait.</p>
<p>Sparrer was at complete loss as to what he should do. The temptation to
crawl forward so as to get within easy range of the end of the dam was
almost irresistible, but he realized that the first move on his part
would be likely to attract the keen eyes of his quarry, and arouse his
suspicions. Had the fringe of brush through which he was watching been
leaved out it might have been possible to successfully make this move,
but as it was his dark body against the white background could hardly
fail of detection despite the screen of brush. He knew enough of animals
to know that so long as he was motionless he would appear to be no more
than a part of the log on which he sat, and wisely concluded to sit
tight and await developments.</p>
<p>If the fox continued clear across the dam there was one point at which
he would afford a clear shot through a little opening in the brush. It
would be at long range, but the 22 was high powered, and if he could
judge the distance aright and hold true there was a chance that he
might kill. So far as he could see this appeared to be his only chance,
and he prepared to take advantage of it. Inch by inch he wormed himself
around on the log so as to face this opening. Then estimating the
distance as best he could, a difficult matter across the snow, he set
his sights accordingly, cocked the rifle and held it in readiness. All
the time he kept whispering to himself, "Nothin' but a rabbit. Nothin'
to git excited about. Youse has got a dead cinch. Youse can't miss."
Somehow this trying to think of the fox as a rabbit helped wonderfully.
Anybody could hit a rabbit.</p>
<p>The fox was trotting now with his nose to the snow. Sparrer was
conscious of a hope so great that it was almost a prayer that the animal
would stop when he reached the critical spot. It would be a hard enough
shot at a motionless mark, but to hit a mark moving as swiftly as the
fox was now going was more than he dared even dream of doing. The trot
broke into a lope. Sparrer raised the rifle and sighted through the
opening. It seemed to him that that swiftly moving form crossed the
opening in one leap, a blur of black across his sights. Slowly he
lowered his rifle. His chance was gone.</p>
<p>In the reaction that followed he realized how high his hopes had been.
It seemed as if Fortune had but played with him, had put the prize
almost within his grasp and then as he reached for it had snatched it
away to tease and mock him. He could have cried with vexation and
disappointment had he been of the weeping kind. As it was he swallowed a
lump in his throat and leaned forward to peer through the brush for one
last glimpse of the royal animal.</p>
<p>At the end of the dam the fox stopped. Sparrer could just make him out
through the tangled screen of brush. For a moment he stood motionless.
It seemed to the boy like adding insult to injury. Then with a long
graceful leap he landed on the snow of the swamp. A sudden hope caused
Sparrer to instinctively tighten his grip on the rifle and catch his
breath. Perhaps the fox would come his way! If he should, well, he would
at least find a true Scout—he would be prepared.</p>
<p>But the fox did not turn in his direction. Instead he kept straight on
into the swamp as if he intended to cross it to the high land which made
up to the hills beyond. Sparrer caught occasional glimpses of him
through the trees. He crossed the trail by which Sparrer had come in,
sniffed at it, looked up in Sparrer's direction suspiciously, it seemed
to him, sniffed again and then trotted on as if the matter were of no
present interest. The dry snow had not held the scent sufficiently to
cause alarm.</p>
<p>Instead of continuing in a direct course for the hills the fox now began
to quarter the ground very much as a bird dog does in quest of quail. In
short runs from side to side he advanced deeper into the swamp,
investigating every bush and clump of trees in his course, pausing now
and then with head raised and ears cocked forward to listen, then
running on again. Gradually it dawned on Sparrer that Reynard had
crossed the dam with a definite purpose. He had come over to the swamp
with the same object in view that had brought Sparrer there—to hunt
rabbits.</p>
<p>The sharp contrast between the snow and the black coat of the fox made
it possible for Sparrer to follow the animal's movements at a distance
which under ordinary conditions would have been impossible. He had
turned and was working up wind, continually stopping to carefully test
the light air in the hope of scenting a hare. His course was now
directly away from Sparrer toward the lower end of the swamp. The boy
could get only an occasional glimpse of him and presently lost him
altogether. Once more bitter disappointment rankled in his heart. What
should he do now? Should he remain where he was, or should he move on?
How he wished that he knew more about hunting and the ways of animals,
black foxes in particular. What would Pat do were he in his place? Would
he give up? Somehow he couldn't picture Pat as giving up without further
effort to capture so great a prize.</p>
<p>"He'd do somethin', but what?" Sparrer scowled in labored thought. The
fox was somewhere between him and the cabin. Should he turn back on the
chance that he would jump the animal somewhere on the way and get a
running shot? "No chance," he decided, remembering the clack of his
shoes in walking. "He'd hear me a mile." He slipped his shoes off and
rose to his feet. The crust bore him, for he was a light weight. Then he
took a comprehensive survey of his surroundings. There was one other
chance. The fox might return. He would soon reach the lower edge of the
swamp and failing to make a kill might decide to try his luck down wind
in the main body of the swamp.</p>
<p>The more Sparrer thought of this the more likely it seemed. Perhaps
unconsciously he was allowing hope to father the idea. Anyway it raised
his spirits wonderfully. In such an event he must be ready. Once more he
looked the ground over carefully. His present position was on the outer
edge of the swamp. He quickly appreciated that if he were farther in his
chances would be doubled in case the fox returned. If he remained where
he was the fox might pass so far toward the other side that he would not
even see him, to say nothing of getting a shot, whereas if he could find
a place farther in which would command a fairly open view in all
directions the chances of the animal passing unseen would be greatly
reduced. Slightly back of his present position and a good rifle shot in
to the swamp he noted a small mound crowned by a clump of young birches.
He decided to take his stand there and await developments. Silently but
vigorously he swung his arms to restore circulation, then picking up his
rifle and shoes he made his way quickly toward the new stand, taking the
utmost care not to snap a twig or make the least noise.</p>
<p>As he entered the clump of birches a white form leaped out from the
lower side, ran ten or twelve yards and sat up, looking back with eyes
in which fear and curiosity were strangely blended. It was a hare, or
so-called snow-shoe rabbit, and a big one. Slowly and carefully Sparrer
put down his shoes and then straightened up and raised his rifle.
Silently he brought the sights to bear on the motionless white form. His
finger was already on the trigger when he remembered the fox. A shot now
would effectually put an end to any possibility of getting the prince of
fur bearers that day, and what was a rabbit compared with the latter?</p>
<p>Oddly enough the old adage "A bird in the hand is worth two in the
bush" popped into his head, but this time the one in the bush was of so
much greater value that he promptly decided to let the one in hand go.
At that distance he couldn't miss, for he had readjusted the sights and
he had but to press the trigger to put an end to bunny. A little sigh
escaped him as he lowered the rifle. The lowering of that rifle was the
hardest thing he had done for a long time. It required considerable
power of self-restraint. The fox might not come back, and if he did
might not offer a shot, or he might miss him. Then the chances were that
he would have to return to the cabin empty handed.</p>
<p>With the lowering of the rifle the rabbit dropped to a crouch, thumped
the snow smartly, and then slowly hopped away to a point twenty yards
distant in the direction in which the fox had gone, and there crouched
under a bush, an inconspicuous lump of white. Sparrer noted with
satisfaction that she was still within good range, and made up his mind
that if there were no signs of the fox within fifteen or twenty minutes
and the rabbit still remained where she was he would shoot.</p>
<p>Now be it known that the thump of a rabbit can be heard a long distance.
It was so unexpected and so loud that it fairly startled Sparrer, who
was wholly unfamiliar with this method of rabbit signaling. The ground
is an excellent transmitter of sound and the heavy snow crust was hardly
less effective. Other ears than Sparrer's heard, and for them that
signal was pregnant with meaning and possibilities. Not two minutes
later Sparrer caught sight of a black spot moving swiftly in his
direction. It was the fox.</p>
<p>As he drew nearer he moved more slowly and with characteristic cunning
and caution. Every few steps he paused to listen and to look sharply
under every tree and bush. He no longer tested the air as when Sparrer
had last seen him, for now he was working down wind and must trust to
eyes and ears rather than to his nose. But he was no less thorough in
the way in which he covered the ground. Back and forth across Sparrer's
field of vision he wove, investigating every likely hiding-place,
approaching each with infinite care, tense, alert, the picture of
eagerness, prepared to spring at the first move of his quarry.</p>
<p>As he approached Sparrer could read in every move and attitude of the
black hunter expectancy and confidence. That he knew to a reasonable
certainty the approximate location from which that signal thump had
sounded was clearly evident. That he also knew that the rabbit might
have, and very likely had, moved since thumping was also clear and he
was taking no chance of over-running his game. If he kept on as he was
coming he would be within shooting distance within a few minutes. Inch
by inch Sparrer raised the rifle and then, hardly daring to breathe,
tense, as motionless as the trees among which he stood, he waited.</p>
<p>The fox was now within thirty yards, and still coming. It was plain that
he was unsuspicious of danger and intent wholly on the hunt. At this
point he turned obliquely to the left to investigate an old log. Sparrer
was tempted to shoot, but a clump of alders was in the way and he well
knew that even a small twig would be almost sure to deflect the bullet.
He would wait. Finding nothing at the log the fox turned and quartered
to the right, which brought him into the open between the rabbit and
the hunter and but a few yards from the former. The angle at which he
was approaching was such as to offer the smallest mark possible and make
the shot uncertain for such a novice as Sparrer. By a great effort the
latter overcame the almost overwhelming temptation to shoot and waited,
hoping that the animal would turn broadside.</p>
<p>Suddenly he whirled like a flash. The boy's first thought was that he
had been discovered, but the next move of the fox explained his action.
Crouching so that he appeared to move on his belly he began to creep
toward the rabbit, which still sat motionless. The fox had caught the
scent of the latter at the instant he turned and he had but to follow
his nose straight to his victim. Meanwhile he presented no better mark
than before, as he was now moving straight away, and Sparrer held his
fire. By this time he was so interested in the tragedy that was being
enacted before him that he almost forgot his own immediate purpose.</p>
<p>Inch by inch the black hunter crept forward, hugging the snow. Then
Sparrer saw him gather his muscular hindlegs under him. There was a
swift leap and at the same instant the rabbit left her form in a long
jump. Before she could make another the fox was upon her. There was a
shrill scream, a crunching of teeth and it was over. For an instant the
fox stood with one foot on the still white form, a black statue of
triumph. Then he picked the rabbit up by the middle and the limp form
hung transversely in his jaws, the long legs hanging on one side and the
drooping head with ridiculously long ears on the other. It was clear
that Reynard did not intend to enjoy his feast on the spot.</p>
<p>In executing this last move he had turned broadside. It was now or never
for Sparrer. With infinite care he lined his sights just back of the
shoulder and pulled the trigger. Simultaneously with the sharp crack of
the rifle the fox made a convulsive spring and then crumpled in a black
heap on the snow. Shaking so that he could hardly manipulate the lever
Sparrer ejected the empty shell and threw another cartridge into place.
Then with the rifle at his shoulder, covering the pathetic black heap as
best he could, he slowly advanced. Somewhere he had read or heard that
it was an old fox trick to simulate death, and he was taking no chances.</p>
<p>But his precautions were needless. The bullet had severed the spinal
column. The silver fox of Smugglers' Hollow had stalked his last rabbit
and made his last kill. In the revulsion of feeling from the reaction
following the long nervous strain Sparrer hardly knew whether to laugh
or cry. As he stretched the black form out on the snow and ran his hands
through the wonderful soft black fur and admired the great tail with its
tip of snowy white he had for the moment almost a feeling of regret that
he had been the means of destroying so beautiful a creature. Then the
true significance of his achievement, luck he called it, swept over him
and his eyes shone as he pictured his reception at the cabin.</p>
<p>In the midst of his triumphant thoughts a guttural voice broke in:
"White boy heap good shot."</p>
<p>Sparrer whirled to find himself staring into a dark coppery countenance
with beady eyes, low brow and high cheek bones. It was an Indian.</p>
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