The smell of the burning rubbish heaps-the
penetrating November smell-spread up from
the clearings and filled the chilly, windless evening
air. It seemed a sort of expression of the cold
sky, those pale steel-gray and sea-green wastes, deepening
into sharp straight bands of orange and smoke colour
along the far horizon. It seemed equally an expression
of the harsh, darkening upland pastures, dotted with
ragged stumps and backed by ragged forests. It
was the distinctive autumn smell of the backwoods
settlements, that smell which, taken into the blood
in childhood, can never lose its potency of magic,
its power over the most secret springs of memory and
longing.
On the rude snake fence at the back
of the pasture sat a boy, with a roll of birch bark
in his hands. The bark was fashioned into the
shape of a fish-horn, and the boy handled it proudly.
He took deep breaths of the pungent-smelling air,
and felt an exciting thrill as he glanced over his
shoulder at the dark woods just behind him. It
was for the sake of this thrill, this delicious though
unfounded apprehension, that he had come here to the
very back of the pasture, in the twilight, after bringing
up the cows from the milking. The cows he couldn’t
see, for they were feeding in the lower pasture, just
under the rise of the hill. The lights beginning
to glimmer in the farmhouse were very far down in
the valley; and very far down were the little creeping
flames whence came that pungent smell pervading the
world; and the boy felt his spirit both expand and
tremble before the great spaces of the solitude.
It was for the purpose of practising
privately the call of the cow-moose that the boy had
betaken himself to the lonely back pasture. On
the previous evening an old hunter, just back from
a successful “calling” over on Nictau
Lake, had given the boy some lessons in this alluring
and suggestive department of woodcraft, and had made
his joy complete by the gift of the bark “moose-call”
itself, a battered old tube with many “kills”
to its credit. The boy, with his young voice
just roughening toward the bass of manhood, had proved
an apt pupil. And the hunter had not only told
him that practice would make him a first-class “caller,”
but had promised to take him hunting next season.
This promise had set the boy’s imagination aflame,
and all day he had been dreaming of tall moose-bulls,
wide-antlered, huge-belled, black of mane and shoulder.
Of course, when he went up to the
fence of the back pasture to practise his new accomplishment,
the boy had no idea of being heard by anything in
the shape of a bull-moose, still less of being able
to deceive that crafty animal. Had he imagined
the possibility of gaining any response to his call,
he would have come well-armed, and would have taken
up his post in the branches of some safe tree.
But it was getting near the end of the season, and
what was more to the purpose, there ran a tradition
in the settlement that the moose never came east of
Five Mile Creek, a water-course some four miles back
from the fence whereon the boy was sitting. Such
traditions, once established in a backwoods village,
acquire an authority quite superior to fact and proof
against much ocular refutation. The boy had an
unwavering faith that, however seductively he might
sound the call of the cow, never a moose bull would
hear him, because never a moose bull could be found
this side of Five Mile Creek. It was fascinating
to pretend,-but he had no will to evoke
any monstrous apparition from those dark woods behind
him, on which he found it so thrillingly hard to keep
his back turned.
After sitting silent and moveless
for a few minutes, listening to the vague, mysterious
stir of the solitude till his eyes grew wide as a
watching deer’s, the boy lifted his birchen tube
in both hands, stretched his neck, and gave forth
the harsh, half-bleating bellow, or bray, with which
the cow-moose signals for a mate. It was a good
imitation of what the old hunter had done, and the
boy was proud of it. In his exultation he repeated
it thrice. Then he stopped to listen,-pretending,
as boys will, that he expected an answer.
The silence following upon that sonorous
sound seemed startling in its depth; and the boy held
his breath lest he should mar it. Then came an
unexpected noise, at which the boy’s heart jumped
into his throat,-a sharp crashing and rattling
of branches, as if somebody was thrashing the underbrush
with sticks. It seemed to be some hundreds of
yards away, beyond the farthest fence of the pasture.
For a moment the boy wondered tremulously what it
could be. Then he thought he understood.
“Some fool steer’s got through the fence
and gone stumbling through the brush piles,”
he muttered to himself. The explanation had the
merit of explaining; and when the sound had ceased
the boy once more set the bark trumpet to his lips
and sounded its harsh appeal.
This time he called twice. As
he paused to draw breath, a little creepy feeling
on the skin of his cheeks and about the roots of his
hair made him turn his head and fix his eyes upon a
dense spruce thicket some twenty paces behind him.
Surely there was a movement among the young spruce
tops. Almost as smoothly as a mink slips from
a rock the boy slipt down from his too conspicuous
perch and crouched behind the fence. Peering
between the rails he saw a tall, dark shape, with
gigantic head, vast antlers, and portentous bulk of
shoulder, step noiselessly from the thicket and stand
motionless. With a heart that throbbed in mingled
exultation and terror, the boy realized that he had
called a bull-moose.
Huge as seemed its stature to the
boy’s excited vision, the moose was in reality
a young and rather small bull, who had been forced
by stronger rivals to go unmated. Driven by his
restless desire, he had wandered beyond his wonted
range. Now he stood like a statue, head uplifted,
peering on every side to catch sight of the mate whose
voice had so resistlessly summoned him. Only
his wide ears moved, waving inquisitively. His
nostrils, ordinarily his chief source of information,
were dulled almost to obtuseness by that subtly acrid
perfume of the smoke.
The boy in his fence corner, with
a gray stump beside him, shrank within himself and
stared through half-closed eyes, trembling lest the
mighty stranger should detect him. He had a very
reasonable notion that the mighty stranger might object
to the deception which had been practised upon his
eager emotions, and might not find the old rail fence
much barrier to his righteous wrath. For all his
elation, the boy began to wish that he had not been
in such haste to learn moose-calling. “Don’t
call till you’ve some idea who’ll answer!”
was a rule which he deduced from that night’s
experience.
It is possible that the bull, during
those few minutes while he stood waiting and watching,
saw the dim figure of the boy behind the fence.
If so, the figure had no concern for him. He caught
nothing of the dreaded man-smell; and he had no reason
to associate that small, harmless creature with the
mate to whose calling he had sped so eagerly.
But there was no doubt that the calling had come from
this very place. Was it possible that the cow,
more coquettish than her kind are apt to be, had hidden
herself to provoke him? He came closer to the
fence, and uttered a soft grumble in his throat, a
sound both caressing and appealing. “My!
how disappointed he’ll be!” thought the
boy, and devoutly wished himself safe at home.
At this trying moment came relief
from an unexpected quarter. That distant threshing
of the bushes which the boy had heard after his first
calling had not been a stray steer. Not by any
means. It was the response of another young wandering
moose bull, beating on the underbrush with his ill-developed,
but to himself quite wonderful, antlers. He,
too, was seeking a mate in a region far remote from
that where ruled the tyrannous elder bulls. Silently
and swiftly, assured by the second summons, he had
hurried to the tryst; and now, to his ungovernable
rage, what he saw awaiting him in the dusk was no mate
at all, but a rival. Pausing not to consider
the odds, he burst from the covert and rushed furiously
to the attack.
The first bull, though somewhat the
larger of the two, and by far the better antlered,
was taken at a disadvantage. Before he could whirl
and present his formidable front to the charge, the
newcomer caught him on the flank, knocked him clear
off his feet, and sent him crashing into the fence.
The fence went down like stubble; and the boy, his
eyes starting with astonished terror, scurried like
a rabbit for the nearest tree. Climbing into
the branches with an agility which surprised even
himself, he promptly recovered from his panic and
turned to watch the fight.
The first bull, saved from serious
injury by the defects of his adversary’s antlers,
picked himself up from the wreckage of the fence,
and, grunting with anger, plunged back to meet his
assailant. The latter, somewhat puzzled by the
fence and its zig-zag twistings, had drawn a little
to one side, and so it happened that when the first
bull rushed at him, the angle of a fence corner intervened.
When the opposing antlers came together, they met
harmlessly between the heavy rails, and got tangled
in a way that seemed to daunt their owners’
rage. In the pushing and struggling the top rail
was thrown off and fell smartly across the newcomer’s
neck. At the same time one of the stakes flew
up and caught the first bull fairly on the sensitive
muzzle. Sneezing violently, he jumped back; and
the two stood eyeing each other with fierce suspicion
over the top of the fence.
The boy was trembling with excitement
there in his tree, eager for the fight to go on and
eager to see which would win. But in this he was
doomed to disappointment. The end came in a most
unlooked-for fashion. It chanced that the boy’s
“calling” had deceived others besides the
two young bulls. The old hunter, in his cabin
under the hill, had heard it. He had snatched
his rifle from behind the door, and stolen swiftly
up to the back pasture.
From a clump of hemlock not fifty
yards away came a red flash and a sharp report.
The bull on the near side of the fence sprang into
the air with a gasping cough, and fell. The smaller
bull, who knew what guns meant, simply vanished.
It was as if the dusk had blotted him out, so noiselessly
and instantaneously did he sink back into the thickets;
and a moment later he was heard crashing away through
the underbrush in mad flight. As the hunter stepped
up to examine his prize, the boy dropped from the
tree, grabbed his birch-bark tube, and came forward
proudly.
“There wasn’t any cow
at all,-’cept me!” he proclaimed,
his voice ringing with triumph.