Near the southern border of the wilderness
the aisles of lofty spruce give place to second-growth
birch, maple and ash, and these in turn to wild meadows
and stump lots. The country is rugged, broken
here and there by upthrusts of gray rock. Protruding
ledges shelter dark caves, and protect their moss-carpeted
entrances from sun and wind. Dense thickets of
pawpaw, hazel and wild cherry offer coverts for the
shy and furtive kindred of the forest: goggle-eyed
rabbits, restless as wind-blown leaves; mice, with
their intricate system of runways among the grass
roots; slow-moving porcupines, prickly as huge sandburs;
and occasionally a stately buck or savage-eyed Canada
lynx.
In such a country, in a cleverly concealed
den about a mile from the Hermit’s cabin, Silver
Spot was born. A projecting ledge, crowned with
hazel brush, concealed the mouth of the den which looked
out upon a small mossy clearing, sloping warmly toward
the rising sun. It was an ideal location, for,
though it lay so near the outposts of civilization,
no human foot had ever trodden the spot until the Hermit
discovered it quite by accident one day while harvesting
a store of golden seal, a root of great value in the
drug market.
Drawn by the peace and seclusion of
this shadowy, green world, he laid aside his mattock
and wandered to the edge of the hazel thicket.
Thinking the spot a likely one for a fox den, he parted
the bushes and, as noiselessly as one of the forest
creatures, crept forward until he could look into
the mossy clearing under the ledge. He had been
there but a moment when out into the sunshine rolled
a furry ball which, upon dissolving, proved to be
three sturdy fox cubs. For a moment they sat on
their tails, blinking in the sunlight; then, as if
at a signal, they rose upon their haunches and began
a good-natured rough and tumble, biting and clawing
as they rolled over and over on the moss.
All were appealing, as are young animals
at play the world over, but to one the Hermit’s
eyes turned in admiration again and again. He
was larger than the others, with a snowy white spot
on breast and tail. His movements were quick
and sure and, though he still possessed some of the
awkwardness of the kitten, he showed every indication
of making a splendid animal when grown.
In his study of the wild creatures
of the forest the Hermit had learned a valuable art,
that of keeping still. Assuming a comfortable
position with his back against a tree, he let himself
blend into his background of green and brown until
even the keen eyes of the forest people were deceived.
A chickadee regarded him inquisitively from a branch
over his head, talking softly to itself the while;
a rabbit, hopping by on some apparently urgent business,
came upon the motionless figure, stopped suddenly
and then, as the Hermit did not move, went on indifferently.
It was a busy and interesting world, but the attention
of the man was upon the fox cubs.
Suddenly the play came to a halt as
all eyes turned toward the thicket on the opposite
side of the little clearing. Following their gaze,
the man saw a full grown fox standing motionless in
the sunlight, a rabbit hanging limply from her jaws.
Now a singular thing happened. The cubs, who
had made a wild dash toward the mother, stopped abruptly,
stood an instant, and then, silent as little shadows,
vanished into the dark cave. So far as the Hermit
could observe, the mother fox had made no sound, yet
some communication had passed from her to the cubs
and they had instantly and unquestioningly obeyed.
The mother stood a moment longer, alert but unmoving;
then, instead of entering the den, she slipped away.
The Hermit caught a glimpse of her circling the thicket
suspiciously, so, not wishing to alarm her unnecessarily,
he stole quietly away, leaving her free to return
to the cubs.
Almost daily he paid a visit to the
den, keeping well out of sight but becoming more and
more interested in the big cub that he had named Silver
Spot. Often, as he waited, the mother fox would
return with food, and before many days she appeared
to become accustomed to the motionless figure among
the hazel bushes, for she no longer sent the cubs to
the den with her silent warning.
The meal finished, she would lie down
in the warm sunshine and let the cubs play rough and
tumble games about her, such as those of puppies or
kittens. Worrying her plumy tail and tobogganing
from her back seemed to be favorite pastimes with
two of the cubs. Silver Spot had a mind of his
own and would sometimes wander alone to the edge of
the clearing, his attitude expressing intense interest
in the world beyond. He never went farther, however,
for his mother, apparently engrossed in the play of
the others, would suddenly raise her head and look
intently at the big cub, who would at once return
to the family circle. The Hermit could but wonder
at the perfect understanding which needed no sound
audible to human ears.
The cubs grew fast, but Silver Spot
outstripped the others. His fur grew long and
thick and glossy, his brush magnificent. His trim,
pointed ears allowed nothing to escape his active
brain. The family, when grown, soon separated,
but Silver Spot, much to the satisfaction of the Hermit,
remained near the home den. Occasionally Pal,
in his private explorations into the edge of the forest,
would take up the trail of the fox. At such a
time it would have been difficult to decide which animal
more enjoyed the chase, the dog or the big fox.
Silver Spot possessed an abundant
share of that alertness and sagacity necessary to
a fox or any other animal in the wilderness. He
did not fear the dog, but seemed to enjoy making the
trail as complicated as possible, while Pal, nose
to the ground, would patiently follow its intricacies.
Solemnly the fox would trot around in a large circle,
then, leaping as far to one side as possible, would
saunter off with an amusing air of indifference, pausing
to listen for mice or rabbits. Later, round and
round in the circle would go the dog until, becoming
aware of the deceit practised upon him, he would range
the neighborhood until he struck the scent. Often
the fox doubled on his trail. From a ridge some
distance away he would sit down and watch his puzzled
pursuer, who was always “it” in this game
of tag.
One day, from a slight elevation,
the Hermit followed the course of such a race as well
as was possible in the heavy forest. Pal had profited
by his experience and was, the Hermit concluded, giving
Silver Spot a stiff run. As the man stood leaning
comfortably against a tree, though he had caught no
glimpse of the fox, he could hear the dog coming rapidly
nearer. Then suddenly Silver Spot, with the lightness
of a wind-blown leaf, drifted into view a few paces
away among the trees. He paused at sight of the
man. As the beast stood, alert and graceful, one
paw daintily lifted, with no sign of fear in the eyes
which questioned the motionless figure, he made a
picture which the Hermit carried in his mind for many
a day.
From his brief survey the fox evidently
decided that the intruder was quite harmless and consequently
uninteresting. Though the dog was hot on his
trail, Silver Spot paused a moment longer to give an
unhurried look about him. A little to one side
lay a tree which, in falling, had lodged among the
branches of its neighbor. At a point where it
was raised about four feet from the ground Silver
Spot leaped upon it and thence into the middle of
a little forest stream beneath. In another moment
he had disappeared, keeping to the water which he well
knew would leave no tell-tale scent.
He was scarcely out of sight when
the dog appeared, passing his master as unheedingly
as if the latter had been a part of the tree against
which he leaned. At the foot of the inclined trunk
Pal stopped, plainly puzzled. No trace of the
alluring scent could he catch, though he eagerly nosed
all about the tree and even partly up the trunk.
Not having the agility of the woodland creature, however,
he could not proceed far enough to recapture the scent.
So he was obliged to content himself with ranging
the neighborhood in the hope of picking up the trail,
a fruitless search from which he was at length recalled
by the whistle of his master. And though the
trail invariably ended in some such manner, Pal never
seemed to weary of the chase.
As a rule a fox frequents a somewhat
restricted territory in which, if he is strong enough,
he rules supreme, driving away all trespassers.
Silver Spot, however, was an unusual fox in many ways
and often demonstrated his individuality by wandering
far afield.
Late one afternoon, while ranging
the woods several miles to the east of the home den,
he paused beside a clear forest stream to drink.
As he raised his head from the refreshing water, his
alert ears caught a faint stir. Soundless as
a shadow he melted into the bushes at his back just
as a queer procession came into view. At the head,
advancing with an air of slow dignity, walked a shining
black animal with two broad white stripes down her
back and fur so long that it rippled silkily in the
breeze; behind, in a row, came five little ones, exact
counterparts of their mother. Upon a flat stone
at the edge of the stream they all crouched for a
drink. Silver Spot did not offer to molest them,
but watched curiously as, their thirst quenched, they
again took up their slow march. He even followed
at a discreet distance, watching the youngster who
brought up the rear and who often had to be hustled
back into the line from which his curiosity had led
him.
Night found Silver Spot in an upland
pasture at the edge of the forest, a place of black
stumps and thickets of juniper and wild berries, silvered
over with the radiance of the full moon. He drifted
lightly across the pasture, alert for any adventure
which the night might present, and brought up beside
a rude building from which came an enticing odour.
Silver Spot had not tasted chicken since, as a cub,
he had rushed to meet his mother returning from a
foraging expedition, but the recollection of the delicacy
was still strong with him. He worked industriously,
and before long dug out an entrance under the building.
Then, before the plump hen which he had selected could
wake and cry out, Silver Spot had killed her and was
out and away. He traveled swiftly and, safe in
his own den, enjoyed the feast.
Having acquired a taste for plump
chicken, Silver Spot decided to revisit the henhouse
the following evening. This time, however, his
intentions were thwarted in a way which almost put
an end to his career. Eyes other than those of
the Hermit had been watching the growth of Silver
Spot, eyes burning with greed when they looked upon
his handsome coat. Fur such as this sold for
much money in the city and the desire for money left
no room for pity or admiration for the animal in the
mind of the half-breed, Sam. He had bided his
time, but now, though it was not the best time for
furs, he dared wait no longer. Very soon he was
to guide a party of hunters and fishermen far into
the north, and he must take the fox now or never.
Most cunningly he had baited and concealed
his trap, which had been purged by fire of all human
touch. Then he had scented the ground all about
with the carcass of a freshly killed chicken.
Thus Silver Spot, the memory of his feast still upon
him, caught the alluring scent. Swerving from
his path, he was suddenly caught in the steel jaws
which closed with an ugly click. The big fox
was a prisoner, the victim of a trapper’s greed.
He tore savagely at the thing which
held him, straining every effort to gain his freedom,
but without avail. The trap seemed only to close
more tightly, cutting through fur and sinew, staining
the ground red. At length, exhausted, he sank
down in the leaves only to rise again and again to
renew the struggle.
The hours dragged on. He was
hungry and unbearably thirsty, with water only a few
yards out of reach. His brave heart almost failed
him, but as the darkness began to pale and the wilderness
to waken, desperation gave him fresh courage.
He set his sharp teeth upon the imprisoned foot and
at last was free once more, two toes missing.
He took a long drink from the stream before limping
off to his den where morning found him licking his
wound, thus cleansing it of all impurities and assuring
a swift recovery.
A few hours later the half-breed visited
his trap where his keen eyes read correctly the evidences
of the night’s struggle. Sorely disappointed,
he returned to his cabin, save for the trap as empty-handed
as he had left it.
For a time the big fox was lame, but
nature soon healed the wound and he was able once
more to roam the forest as free as the air itself.
He had learned a lesson, however, and no trap could
be so cleverly placed as to lead him into its cruel
jaws. He paid no more visits to the farm in the
clearing, but kept almost entirely to his own domain.
Late in the summer came a wet period
when for days dark clouds hung over the wilderness
and the rain fell steadily. When the sun did appear,
scattering the clouds, the woods were soaked and dripping,
and showers still fell from the heavy branches.
It was on such a day that a hunter
with a pack of trained fox hounds entered the forest
a mile to the west of Silver Spot’s den.
It was not long before the dogs had found the trail
of the big fox and the chase was on, a chase destined
to try the cunning and strength of the hunted to the
breaking point.
At first the fox felt no anxiety.
He thoroughly enjoyed mystifying a pursuer. Ordinarily
in a straight-away run he could outdistance the fleetest
foxhound. Now, however, even Nature seemed to
conspire against him. He was soon drenched with
spray. The water clung to his long fur, and his
brush, usually carried blithely aloft, drooped heavily.
In spite of all his tricks, circling and doubling,
leaping from fallen trees and taking to the water,
the hounds clung to his trail like bees to honey.
Their deep baying sent the chill of fear to the staunch
heart of Silver Spot. Realizing that here was
no play such as he had indulged in with Pal, the Hermit’s
dog, he bent all his energies toward outstripping his
pursuers.
For a time he kept well ahead of the
dogs, but at length, as his old wound made itself
felt, the pace began to tell upon him. His tail
drooped lower until it all but swept the ground, while
with it the courage of the fox seemed to fail.
His breathing became labored. His foot-pads were
cut by thorns and sharp sticks, leaving now and then
a trace of blood upon the moss. He thought with
longing of the home den which he was widely circling,
but to which he dared not turn. With the pack
in full cry, the hunted beast broke from cover at the
edge of the wilderness where stood the cabin of the
Hermit.
At once Silver Spot realized his mistake.
Here in the open there was no means of avoiding the
dogs, nor could he return to the woods. Even as
he paused in despair, the leader of the pack burst
into view, eyes gleaming savagely and cruel teeth
bared. There was but one alternative and the
fox took it.
Across the clearing the door of the
log cabin stood open. For some time the Hermit
had been following the course of the chase from his
bench outside the door, his first feeling of exultation
at the cunning and fleetness of his pet gradually
giving place to uneasiness and then to genuine alarm
for his safety. As Silver Spot came into view
so closely pressed, the Hermit sprang to his feet,
but the fox heeded him not. With a last effort
he leaped the fence, sped across the clearing and through
the door which the man closed in the very teeth of
the foremost hound. The wild creature whom he
had come to love had turned to him for sanctuary,
and not in vain.
The hunt was over and, while the big
fox crouched in the corner regaining his breath, the
dogs raved unavailingly without. The hunter soon
arrived upon the scene and coaxed and threatened, but
the Hermit was firm. He told of his interest
in the fox since the time he had found him, a furry
cub, playing before the home den, and of how again
and again he had watched him outwit his own dog.
The hunter was at length won over and departed with
his hounds, even going so far as to promise to hunt
outside of Silver Spot’s domain in the future.
The Hermit waited until man and dogs
had vanished from sight; then he opened the door of
the cabin and stood aside. There was a flash of
reddish fur as Silver Spot bounded forth and away to
the forest, his splendid brush once more aloft and
new courage in his heart.