登陆注册
18373800000011

第11章 KEEONEKH THE FISHERMAN(3)

I must confess here that, besides the boy's wonder in watching the wild things, another interest brought me to the river bank and kept me studying Keeonekh's ways. Father Otter was a big fellow,--enormous he seemed to me, thinking of my mink skins,--and occasionally, when his rich coat glinted in the sunshine, I was thinking what a famous cap it would make for the winter woods, or for coasting on moonshiny nights. More often I was thinking what famous things a boy could buy for the fourteen dollars, at least, which his pelt would bring in the open market.

The first Saturday after I saw him I prepared a board, ten times bigger than a mink-stretcher, and tapered one end to a round point, and split it, and made a wedge, and smoothed it all down, and hid it away--to stretch the big otter's skin upon when I should catch him.

When November came, and fur was prime, I carried down a half- bushel basket of heads and stuff from the fish market, and piled them up temptingly on the bank, above a little water path, in a lonely spot by the river. At the lower end of the path, where it came out of the water, I set a trap, my biggest one, with a famous grip for skunks and woodchucks. But the fish rotted away, as did also another basketful in another place. Whatever was eaten went to the crows and mink. Keeonekh disdained it.

Then I set the trap in some water (to kill the smell of it) on a game path among some swamp alders, at a bend of the river where nobody ever came and where I had found Keeonekh's tracks. The next night be walked into it. But the trap that was sure grip for woodchucks was a plaything for Keeonekh's strength. He wrenched his foot out of it, leaving me only a few glistening hairs--which was all I ever caught of him.

Years afterward, when I found old Noel's trap on Keeonekh's portage, Iasked Simmo why no bait had been used.

"No good use-um bait," he said, "Keeonekh like-um fresh fish, an' catch-um self all he want." And that is true. Except in starvation times, when even the pools are frozen, or the fish die from one of their mysterious epidemics, Keeonekh turns up his nose at any bait. If a bit of castor is put in a split stick, he will turn aside, like all the fur-bearers, to see what this strange smell is. But if you would toll him with a bait, you must fasten a fish in the water in such a way that it seems alive as the current wiggles it, else Keeonekh will never think it worthy of his catching.

The den in the river bank was never disturbed, and the following year another litter was raised there. With characteristic cunning--a cunning which grows keener and keener in the neighborhood of civilization--the mother-otter filled up the land entrance among the roots with earth and driftweed, using only the doorway under water until it was time for the cubs to come out into the world again.

Of all the creatures of the wilderness Keeonekh is the most richly gifted, and his ways, could we but search them out, would furnish a most interesting chapter. Every journey he takes, whether by land or water, is full of unknown traits and tricks; but unfortunately no one ever sees him doing things, and most of his ways are yet to be found out. You see a head holding swiftly across a wilderness lake, or coming to meet your canoe on the streams; then, as you follow eagerly, a swirl and he is gone. When he comes up again he will watch you so much more keenly than you can possibly watch him that you learn little about him, except how shy he is. Even the trappers who make a business of catching him, and with whom I have often talked, know almost nothing of Keeonekh, except where to set their traps for him living and how to care for his skin when he is dead. Once I saw him fishing in a curious way. It was winter, on a wilderness stream flowing into the Dugarvon. There had been a fall of dry snow that still lay deep and powdery over all the woods, too light to settle or crust. At every step one had to lift a shovelful of the stuff on the point of his snowshoe; and I was tired out, following some caribou that wandered like plover in the rain.

Just below me was a deep open pool surrounded by double fringes of ice. Early in the winter, while the stream was higher, the white ice had formed thickly on the river wherever the current was not too swift for freezing. Then the stream fell, and a shelf of new black ice formed at the water's level, eighteen inches or more below the first ice, some of which still clung to the banks, reaching out in places two or three feet and forming dark caverns with the ice below. Both shelves dipped towards the water, forming a gentle incline all about the edges of the open places.

A string of silver bubbles shooting across the black pool at my feet roused me out of a drowsy weariness. There it was again, a rippling wave across the pool, which rose to the surface a moment later in a hundred bubbles, tinkling like tiny bells as they broke in the keen air. Two or three times I saw it with growing wonder. Then something stirred under the shelf of ice across the pool. An otter slid into the water; the rippling wave shot across again; the bubbles broke at the surface; and I knew that he was sitting under the white ice below me, not twenty feet away.

A whole family of otters, three or four of them, were fishing there at my feet in utter unconsciousness. The discovery took my breath away. Every little while the bubbles would shoot across from my side, and watching sharply I would see Keeonekh slide out upon the lower shelf of ice on the other side and crouch there in the gloom, with back humped against the ice above him, eating his catch. The fish they caught were all small evidently, for after a few minutes he would throw himself flat on the ice, slide down the incline into the water, making no splash or disturbance as he entered, and the string of bubbles would shoot across to my side again.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 赌博系统

    赌博系统

    当封拥拥有了“赌博系统”后,封拥必须拥有自己的势力……
  • 妈咪的总裁前夫

    妈咪的总裁前夫

    昨夜她失恋去酒吧喝酒,她酒后乱性乱拉了一个男人去开房,那晚之后,他要她当他三个月的免费情人,呜呜,她怎么那么倒霉……
  • 捍卫那三天的爱情

    捍卫那三天的爱情

    那一年的夏天是毕业的季节,就在大学生活的最后三天,我们走在了一起,然而就是3天之后,她就要远赴伦敦留学,相对于当时沉浸在幸福喜悦中的我来说,现在我清楚的意识到,一场虐心局才在那时才刚刚上演...
  • 史上第一牛人

    史上第一牛人

    自从那天不小心踩到了一堆狗屎,牛仁便走了狗屎运,牛仁变牛人,牛逼大发了!当然,能力越大责任也就越大,身为史上第一学院的主任,为了增强学院的师资力量,牛仁不得已穿越到历史上的各个朝代,将各个领域的史上第一人忽悠过来当老师,这其中就包括史上第一刺客的荆轲,史上第一诗人的李白,史上第一才子唐伯虎………尼玛,竟然还有史上第一贪官的和珅和史上第一傲拽的吕布……等等,这位有点面瘫的御姐竟然就是史上第一女皇帝武则天;还有那策马奔腾的绝世美人,她叫王昭君………这是一本能让你笑喷的小说,真的!不信?真的不信?……那何不点进去试试呢!!
  • 双面猎犬

    双面猎犬

    《双面猎犬》里面讲了猎犬洛嘎和母豺达维娅共同患难后结成一家,朝夕相处。可洛嘎忘恩负义,被达维娅推进怒江而死。达维娅回到豺群,生下白眉儿便死去。白眉儿被-迫做了苦豺,地位低下,可他坚持不懈地努力活了下去,后来成为村长阿蛮星优秀的猎犬。
  • 女王万岁万岁万万岁

    女王万岁万岁万万岁

    她穿越成了女王?不过这个女王好像有点悲催,自己信任的人随时想着如何谋害她,好友想着如何将她从那高位上拉下来,自己心爱的人爱的还不是自己?天啊,这都是什么世界?这还当什么狗屁的女王啊?女仆还差不多,让她回去行不行啊!
  • 青龙神器

    青龙神器

    当时空混乱时,七种武器降临人间当他们结合在一起,产生了逆天的能量,用这个来对付青龙会,他们能有几成胜算七种武器,本就是为了覆灭青龙会而生的只是,身为身不由己的江湖儿女,他们怎能没有感情的港湾,婷说过:如果必须选择死亡,我更愿意死的人是我,就当是满足了我小小的自私。
  • 征服从1910开始

    征服从1910开始

    穿越到了1910年,清室还没有退位,孙大炮还没开始满地图的开炮,袁世凯还没当大总统,蒋光头士官学校刚毕业,分配的岗位并不是委员长,而是日本陆军第十三师团第十九联队的士官候补生,身在满目疮痍的祖国,面对着饥寒交迫的国民,杨哲大声喊道:“我有能力,我应该帮助更多的人!”
  • 怒唐

    怒唐

    天佑大唐?我要逆天!圣光之下,荣耀重生!【感谢起点论坛封面组提供封面】【本书讨论群:六一六二三八六】
  • 独尊昆仑

    独尊昆仑

    一个人揣着金手指去了仙侠的世界,一切重头开始。