Late one summer afternoon a hush lay
over the wilderness. The air was so still that
even the poplar leaves, which move at the slightest
breath, hung motionless. The swamp steamed in
the heat, and even in the more open forest the air
was sultry and oppressive. Birds and wild creatures
waited panting for the relief of darkness, seeming
to move more silently and furtively than usual.
The sun sank behind a bank of angry-looking clouds,
but even after dusk had shrouded the trails there was
only slight relief from the heat.
Ringtail climbed from the home tree
to which he had returned in the spring, and set out
for the swamp, eager for a meal of frogs and fish in
spite of the strange, oppressive feeling in the air.
About midnight, while he was still abroad, the storm
broke and swept over the wilderness, leaving its path
strewn with a tangled mass of brush and fallen trees.
Fortunate it was for Ringtail that he was not at home,
for the great beech crashed to the earth, where it
lay upon the forest floor, the entrance to the raccoon’s
house buried from sight. Thus Ringtail found
it when he returned from his fishing, having safely
weathered the storm under a ledge of rock.
His comfortable home was gone, but
Ringtail was not one to complain. The next night
found him abroad in search of a new dwelling, moving
being no trouble at all for him. In the course
of his wanderings he came to the rail fence which
protected the clearing of the Hermit. Standing
with his front feet on the lower rail, Ringtail surveyed
the house and the cleared ground flooded with moonlight.
A dark object at the top of a tall pole caught his
attention and he decided to investigate.
Ringtail was a skillful climber and
he soon stood on a stout platform at the top of the
pole. Before him was a rude, though inviting-looking
cabin of sticks; but, alas for poor Ringtail’s
hopes, the doorway was much too small for him to enter.
He poked in his inquisitive, pointed nose, thereby
causing a great commotion among the sparrows who had
made the place their home. Aroused by their noisy
chirping, the Hermit appeared in his doorway and in
the moonlight discovered the dark bulk before his
birdhouse.
Wondering what it could be, he approached
noiselessly and turned his flashlight upon the visitor.
The light revealed a pair of bright little eyes set
in a comical, black-masked face peering down at him
over the edge of the platform.
“Old Ringtail, as sure as I
am standing here, and by the looks of things, trying
his best to roost in my birdhouse!” The Hermit
chuckled as he looked up into the eyes of the animal,
who did not seem at all alarmed.
After the two had gazed sociably at
each other for a few moments the Hermit bade Ringtail
a cheery good-night and withdrew to his own cabin,
calling to Pal, who had been arousing the echoes with
his excited barking. The next morning Ringtail
had disappeared, but, deciding that the raccoon would
make a far more interesting neighbor than a colony
of noisy sparrows, the Hermit tore out the nests and
enlarged the doorway enough to permit the animal to
enter. Then he awaited developments, trusting
to the raccoon’s curiosity to bring him back.
He was not disappointed. The
following night Ringtail again visited the birdhouse.
To his joy he discovered that it could now be entered,
even though the doorway was a tight fit. The
sparrows, who, in spite of the destruction of their
nests, had returned to the cabin to roost, he evicted
without a qualm of conscience. The first streaks
of dawn found him curled up snugly, sound asleep in
his new home.
From that time on, the big raccoon
made himself very much at home about the clearing.
At night he investigated everything on the place and
nearly drove Pal to a frenzy until the dog’s
master gave him to understand that the raccoon was
to be one of the family. Pal was surprised and
disgusted, but from that time on he tried to ignore
his old enemy. This was not an easy matter.
Ringtail, who had grown extremely bold with the protection
accorded him, seemed to take delight in making Pal’s
life miserable. He would tag the dog around the
clearing until Pal, in desperation, would turn upon
him with a savage growl. Then his tormentor would
take to a tree, or his pole, or even the roof of the
cabin, there to wait until the dog’s anger had
cooled.
Ringtail had, also, another habit
which annoyed Pal greatly. In the shade just
outside the cabin door was the dog’s drinking-pan
which the Hermit always kept filled with fresh water
from the spring. This pan the raccoon always
used for washing his food. Poor Pal, coming up
hot and thirsty, was sure to find it full of leaves,
twigs and earth. He bore this affront for some
time but at last his patience was exhausted.
There-after he did his drinking at the spring, approaching
it always by a round-about way lest the raccoon discover
it and pollute its clear water. The Hermit watched
the two animals with amusement, but he did not interfere.
Gradually the feud was forgotten. Indeed, before
many weeks had passed, the two had become firm friends,
though Ringtail still delighted in teasing the dog.
In a surprisingly short space of time,
too, the raccoon came to trust the Hermit, even to
the point of entering the cabin and eating from his
hand. This friendliness, however, led to trouble,
as the man soon discovered. Ringtail’s
curiosity was never satisfied and the cabin furnished
a rich field for exploration. Shining objects
of all kinds seemed to hold a fascination for him.
One day when the Hermit missed his watch, and found
it eventually in the raccoon’s house, he decided
that it was time to put a curb upon that animal’s
explorations.
Ringtail developed another habit which
came to be very annoying to the Hermit. On warm
summer nights the man slept in a hammock swung between
two trees in front of his cabin. Ringtail, returning
from his nocturnal hunting, would run along the low
branch of one of these trees until he stood directly
above the sleeper. Then he would let go and fall
with a thud, sometimes into the springy hammock, but
more often upon the man.
Nothing that the Hermit could do would
break Ringtail of this playful habit. At length
he was compelled to move his hammock, swinging it
between a corner of the cabin and a small spruce having
no long, horizontal branches. Here for a time
he slept in peace, until Ringtail discovered that
he could take a few steps on the rope and so get into
the hammock, where he would sleep contentedly until
morning. At least this was better than having
the raccoon’s weight descend upon him without
warning, and the Hermit permitted him to remain.
Sometimes he even used Ringtail for a pillow, a liberty
which the animal never resented.
As has been mentioned, Ringtail was
extremely fond of bright objects. A bit of glass
or tin glittering in the light would draw him irresistibly.
And one night this attraction led him into serious
trouble. At dawn Ringtail was still absent, and
as the morning passed and he did not return, the Hermit
grew uneasy. Pal, too, seemed to miss his playmate.
He wandered aimlessly about and at last disappeared
into the forest.
Late in the afternoon Pal returned
and signified by his actions that his master was needed
in the forest. Remembering the plight in which
Dave Lansing had found himself, the Hermit carried
his axe with him into the wilderness. Pal ran
on ahead but his eager barking enabled his master to
follow. Coming to a mossy spot under a big pine,
he beheld a sight which moved him to pity.
Long before, a trap had been set under
the tree and forgotten. It was covered from sight
and badly rusted save for one spot, where a moonbeam
had made a dazzling point of light in the darkness.
Lured by its gleam Ringtail had stopped to investigate
and his foot had been caught fast in the trap.
For hours he had torn at the thing
which held him so tightly, until, bleeding and exhausted
and almost dead with thirst, he had crouched down
among the leaves in despair. Thus Pal had found
him and, unable to do anything for his playfellow,
had brought his master, confident that to him all
things were possible. When the Hermit came upon
them, Pal was licking the face of the big raccoon
who seemed much comforted by the dog’s presence.
The Hermit, with his axe, soon freed
Ringtail. As the latter limped painfully, he
carried him in his arms to the cabin, Pal frisking
joyfully about them. Ringtail had the best of
attention and in a few days was as lively as ever,
his spirits undampened by his harrowing experience.
He worried Pal continually, but the dog bore it all
with a look of mingled resignation and pleasure which
was comical to see.
About this time a new trick which
the big raccoon had developed became very annoying
to poor Pal. When presented by his master with
an unusually fine bone, the dog would sneak off back
of the cabin, look suspiciously around and then quickly
bury his prize, concealing all traces of its location.
Almost invariably, however, a pair of bright eyes
set in a masked face would be watching from some place
of concealment and the dog would no sooner turn his
back than the mischievous Ringtail would dig up the
treasure. Pal generally discovered him in time
to save the bone and the friendship appeared not to
suffer in the least.
Once Pal, in his turn, owed his life
to his friend. At dusk the two wandered together
into the borders of the wilderness. While Ringtail
was catching mice, Pal went on by himself. Early
that spring a lynx had taken up its abode in a rocky
cave not far from the Hermit’s clearing, and
several times had watched hungrily as Pal trotted through
the forest. Pal had always been accompanied by
the Hermit and, though the lynx could see no gun,
it was suspicious of mankind and dared not attack.
Now, however, it found the dog alone and unprotected.
Without a sound the beast crouched
and leaped. As it sprang, however, a sound deflected
its attention and the leap fell short, the long claws
raking cruelly across the dog’s unprotected back,
but causing no fatal injury. Pal uttered a howl
of terror and pain and, before the big cat could launch
itself again, a raging whirlwind of claws and teeth
descended upon its back.
Ringtail, at his hunting not far away,
had heard the agonized cry of his playmate and the
sound had filled him with rage. Now, perched upon
the back of the astonished lynx, he bit and tore,
holding his place in spite of the animal’s frantic
efforts to dislodge him. At length, cowed and
exhausted and with bleeding flanks, the lynx was glad
to escape to its den. From that time on it showed
no interest in either dog or raccoon.
Late summer came, with a full moon
flooding the world with its silvery radiance.
The nights were almost as bright as the days and seemed
to hold a witchery which ran like fire in the veins
of the forest folk. Ringtail slept in his log
house the greater part of the day but was seldom to
be found about the clearing at night. He was round,
full-fed, and jolly.
One night the Hermit fell asleep thinking
of Ringtail. As he slept, he dreamed of walking
in the forest and of hearing the distant barking of
dogs. Louder and louder grew the sound until suddenly
he awoke to find that it had not all been a dream.
So close at hand as to startle him, he heard a wild
clamor in which he could distinguish Pal’s excited
voice. Leaping from his hammock he quickly rounded
the corner of the cabin and beheld a weird sight.
A torch borne in the hand of a tall man cast a flickering
light over a melee of dogs, leaping and barking about
the foot of the pole which held Ringtail’s snug
home. Another but smaller figure stood near,
pointing to the spot where, upon the platform before
the birdhouse, two shining eyes looked down at the
group. Pal was here, there and everywhere, loudly
voicing his opinion of the intruders.
The Hermit strode up to the group.
“What does this mean?” he asked in a stern
voice, of the man who held the torch.
Instead of replying to his question,
the man asked, “Is that your coon?”
“No, it isn’t my coon,
but it is kind enough to be boarding with me at present,”
the Hermit replied.
“Well, you’ll have to
kill him. My name is Graham. I live a mile
up the river and this coon has just about ruined my
cornfield,” was the truculent answer.
“How do you know it is this
one?” the Hermit asked. “There are
other raccoons in the woods.”
“How do we know?” The
man was growing angry at the delay. “Didn’t
we just track him here? After he had ruined a
choice patch last night, I made up my mind to get
him. Sure enough, he came to-night and the dogs
brought us here.”
The Hermit’s face grew grave
and he raised troubled eyes to those of his old friend
twinkling down at him. “If this is true,”
he said slowly, “of course something will have
to be done. I only ask you to make sure first.
Will you do what I propose?”
He talked earnestly for a few moments
while the farmer listened in silence. Then Mr.
Graham said, still unconvinced, “Well, we will
try it, but if we find that it is your coon, he will
have to be killed.”
The Hermit nodded and, calling their
dogs, the strangers departed without their game.
The Hermit returned to his hammock and silence once
more settled over the clearing. It was long, however,
before the man slept. Ringtail, with his mischievous
ways and funny masked face, had become a favorite
member of his little household. And now disgrace
and death were probably to be his portion. With
a sinking of the heart the Hermit remembered Ringtail’s
long absences in the moonlight and his full-fed, happy
appearance upon his return.
The following morning, in accordance
with his promise to the farmer, the Hermit lured Ringtail
to the cabin by means of a cooky. Snapping a chain
about his neck he tethered him securely to a young
pine before the door. Ringtail ate the cooky,
nosed the Hermit’s hand for more and then started
for home. The chain, however, brought him up with
a jerk and he turned such a bewildered look upon the
man that the latter’s heart almost failed him.
“I’m sorry, old chap,
but I promised,” he said. “If you
would take just a little corn it would not matter,
but I have seen a field ruined by your tribe and I
know it cannot be permitted.”
Ringtail tried in every way to gain
his freedom but the chain was strong. Pal, too,
seemed much bewildered at the sudden curtailing of
his playmate’s liberty. He stood at attention,
looking from the Hermit to his old chum and back again.
“It’s no use, Pal.
I promised to keep him chained to-night. Then
if Mr. Graham’s field suffers again, he will
know that it was not Ringtail who visited it.”
The Hermit patted the dog’s head and turned back
to the cabin. When he came out some time later,
he found Pal and the raccoon asleep side by side.
So Ringtail became a prisoner of war,
though, it must be confessed, a very pampered one.
During the day he seemed quite contented with his
lot, playing with the shining links of his chain or
sleeping with his tail over his eyes. But when
night came and the moon again flooded the wilderness
with its radiance, the raccoon strained at his leash
and whimpered like a child, so that the Hermit was
forced to harden his heart anew. Meanwhile, he
hoped against hope that the jury would not find his
pet guilty.
Both the man and the animal spent
a restless night. The Hermit rose early and was
just preparing his breakfast when he heard a commotion
in the clearing. Looking out, he beheld Farmer
Graham and his son, guns over their shoulders and
two weary dogs at their heels.
“Well, I guess you can keep
your coon,” the farmer chuckled, as the Hermit
stepped out to greet him. “The thief came
again last night and we treed him much nearer home
than this.” He patted a bulky bag at his
back. “The trails of the two must have crossed
the other time. Anyway, we’ll give your
Ringtail the benefit of the doubt. Sorry to have
troubled you.”
“That’s all right and
I will confess that I am glad Ringtail has not been
found guilty. I am just getting breakfast.
Come right in and help eat it, won’t you?”
the Hermit invited, heartily.
The farmer declined, on the plea that
breakfast would be waiting at home, and the men parted
friends. Ringtail was then released from bondage
and given a good breakfast, after which he climbed
to his home in the birdhouse and fell asleep, unconscious
of his narrow escape from death.