"Struck!" shouted Vosh as the doe gave a great spring; but she dashed right onward, followed by the dogs.
"Now, boys, you run while I load."
Port and Corry hardly needed orders; and the main wonder was, that they did not break their necks in the desperate burst they made after that wounded deer. Even Jack could not do his best running over that icy crust, except when travelling in a straight line. He could not turn quickly without slipping; and the doe must have known it, to judge by the manner in which she dodged among the trees.
"Here she comes, right past us!"
Bang! went one barrel of Vosh Stebbins"s gun.
"Missed, I declare! Must be I"ve got the buck-ague."
Bang! from Corry, and he seemed to have done no better; but just then the deer broke through at the foot of a hemlock, and Porter Hudson had what was almost as sure as a "sitting shot."
He made the best of it by letting drive with right and left. It was a long range, and the shot scattered, of course; but they afterwards found the marks of nine of them in the skin of that doe.
In twenty seconds Jack had her by the throat; and Ponto tried to imitate him, but concluded that he had better lie down and pant a little.
Vosh was on hand now, to take off Jack, and to finish the work with his long, sharp hunting-knife. He knew exactly what to do; and, when Deacon Farnham came up, they hung their game to the lower limb of a tree.
"No wolves around," said Vosh; "but it"ll be safe from any kind of varmint."
"What does he mean, Corry?"
"Why, the wolves are pretty well killed off; but there are wildcats, and some other things, I hardly know what. All the bears are treed. We"ll stop for our game on our way home."
They were now barely two miles from the farmhouse, and they went fully another before they saw any more game. Off, then, went the dogs; and the boys were taken a little by surprise when the deacon said,--
"Vosh, you and the boys sit right down here.--No, Corry, you and Port walk off to the right there, about thirty or forty rods. I"ll strike to the left as far as the edge of the big ravine. If they"ve really started a deer, he may come along there."
Away he went, and away went the boys. Porter Hudson had hardly been able to speak ever since he fired at the doe. It was true that his uncle had hit it first; but then, he had killed it, and he was thinking what a thing that would be to tell his city friends after he should get home.
He did not know a boy among them who had ever fired a gun at a deer. Now he himself was to be that very boy, and it was almost too much. He was beginning to half dream about it, when he heard the warning cry of Jack, coming nearer and nearer, ahead of him.
Almost at the same moment he heard the crack of his uncle"s rifle. He saw Corry spring to his feet, and stand still, while Vosh Stebbins darted away to the left, as if he thought he might be needed there.
"What can it be? I don"t see a single thing. No--yes--there he goes, straight for Corry! Why doesn"t Vosh stop?"
The deer in sight was a fine buck, with antlers which afterward proved him to be three years old; and it was easier for Corry to hit him "on the run" than to hit a white rabbit. He fired both barrels too, and he shouted to Port; but there was no more glory for the city boy this time.
Corry had aimed too well, and the buck had been too near; and it was hardly necessary for the dogs to pull down their game.
"Corry, hear that? It"s Vosh"s gun. What"s the matter?"
"There goes his second barrel. Run: your gun"s loaded."
It was all in a minute; and Port darted away with a strong impression that something strange had happened.
Corry must have thought so too, for he loaded his gun like lightning.
Something strange had indeed happened.
Deacon Farnham had walked on rapidly towards the deep ravine, after leaving the boys. He had known that forest ever since he was a boy, and had killed more than one deer in that vicinity. He did not go any great distance, keeping his eyes sharply about him, when he suddenly stopped short, and raised his rifle.
It looked as if he were aiming at a clump of sumach-bushes; and Port, or even Corry, would probably have said they saw nothing there. Vosh, perhaps, or any hunter of more experience, would have said,--
"See his antlers, just above the thick bush? See "em move? He"s gazing now. He"ll be off in a jiffy."
If left alone, but not so fast after the deacon had fired; for, after he had seen those antlers, he could guess pretty well at the body below them. He could not correctly guess its exact position, however; and so, instead of hitting the deer in the chest or side, the bullet grazed his shoulder, and struck his right hip. There was no more "run" after that in that magnificent buck, but there was plenty of fight. There was danger, too, in his sharp and branching horns, as Deacon Farnham discovered when he so rashly plunged in among those bushes.
Danger from a deer!
Exactly. Danger of being gored by those natural weapons of his.
Instead of being able to use his hunting-knife, the deacon found himself dodging actively behind trees, and fending off with his empty rifle the furious charges of his desperate a.s.sailant, until Vosh came to his a.s.sistance.
It was a very good thing that Vosh came when he did, and that his gun was loaded. Two charges of buckshot were fired at very short range; and the deacon was safe, but he was pretty nearly out of breath.
"You were just in time, Vosh."
"Glad I was. Isn"t he a whopper? Sile Hathaway was right. The deer haven"t run as well, down this way, since I remember."
Port came running up just then; and he was all eyes and ears, although his help was not needed.
"He"s a grand one! We"ve got another."
"Have you?" panted his uncle. "Vosh, you go and "tend to it. I"ll "tend to this one soon as I get my breath. Guess we"ve got all the game we want for one day."
"Why, uncle, it isn"t much after noon: we might kill some more."
"Well, we might, but it"ll be late enough when we get home. We"ve work before us, Port. Time we had some lunch, anyway."
They were all ready enough for that; but the boys began to discover soon afterwards that deer-hunting was not all play. It was easy enough to cut down branches of trees, and lay them on the sled, and fasten them together. Then it was not a terrible lift for all four of them to raise a dead deer, and lay him on the branches.
The tug of war came afterwards, as they hauled that sled homeward over the crust. Several times it broke through; and then there was no end of floundering in the snow, and tugging and lifting, before they again got it a-going. Then once it got away from them, and slid away down a deep, steep hollow, landing its cargo all in a heap at the bottom. There was no use for the snow-shoes, but they had to be fished for in the snow when the sled broke through.
It was a long pull, but they all worked at it until at last they hauled the sled out into the half-made road to Mink Lake. After that, they got on better; but they were a weary lot of hunters when they reached the farmhouse, and the day was about gone.
There were eager faces at the windows, that of Mrs. Stebbins among them.
There were shrill shouts from Pen on the front stoop. Then there was an excited little gathering at the kitchen-door, when the sled was drawn in front of it, and the deacon exclaimed,--
"There! Look at "em!"
"Three of "em!" exclaimed aunt Judith. "All real good ones, too. Now, when I was a girl, I"ve known the men folks go out and bring in six of a morning, and they didn"t have to go more"n a mile from the house."
Mrs. Farnham was equally well satisfied, and Pen clapped her little hands in a gale of excitement.
"Poor things!" said Susie.
She could hardly help feeling a little sorry for those three beautiful creatures on the sled; but Mrs. Stebbins curtly remarked,--
"Nonsense, my dear: they was made to be killed and eaten.--Deacon, did you and the boys kill any on "em?"