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The
Lord of the Air
THE
chill glitter of the northern summer sunrise was washing
down over the rounded top of old Sugar Loaf. The sombre
and solitary peak, bald save for a ragged veil of blueberry
and juniper scrub, seemed to topple over the deep enshadowed
valley at its foot. The valley was brimmed with crawling
vapours, and around its rim emerged spectrally the jagged
crests of the fir wood. On either side of the shrouded
valley, to east and west, stretched a chain of similar
basins, but more ample, and less deeply wrapped in mist.
From these, where the vapours had begun to lift, came
radiances of unruffled water.
Where the peak leaned to the valley,
the trunk of a giant pine jutted forth slantingly from
a roothold a little below the summit. Its top had long
ago been shattered by lightening and hurled away into
the depths; but from a point some ten or twelve feet below
the fracture, one gaunt limb [Page 55]
still waved green with persistent, indomitable life. This
bleached stub, thrust over the vast basin, hummed about
by the untrammelled winds, was the watch-tower of the
great bald eagle who ruled supreme over all the aerial
vicinage of the Squatooks.
When the earliest of the morning
light fell palely on the crest of Sugar Loaf, the great
eagle came to his watch-tower, leaving the nest on the
other side of the peak, where the two nestlings had begun
to stir hungrily at the first premonition of dawn. Launching
majestically from the edge of the nest, he had swooped
down into the cold shadow, then, rising into the light
by a splendid spiral, with muffled resonance of wing-stroke,
he had taken a survey of the empty, glimmering world.
It was still quite too dark for hunting, down there on
earth, hungry though the nestlings were. He soared, and
soared, till presently he saw his
wide-winged mate, too, leave the nest, and beat swiftly
off toward the Tuladi Lakes, her own special hunting-grounds.
Then he dropped quietly to his blanched pine-top on the
leaning side of the summit.
Erect and moveless he sat in the
growing light, his snowy, flat-crowned head thrust a little
forward, consciously lord of the air. His powerful beak,
long and scythe-edged, curved over sharply at the [Page
56] end in a rending hook. His eyes, clear, direct,
unacquainted with fear, had a certain hardness in their
vitreous brilliancy, perhaps by reason of the sharp contrast
between the bright gold iris and the unfathomable pupil,
and the straight line of the low overhanging brow gave
them a savage intensity of penetration. His neck and tail
were of the same snowy whiteness as his snake-like head,
while the rest of his body was a deep, shadowy brown,
close kin to black.
Suddenly, far, far down, winging
swiftly in a straight line through the topmost fold of
the mist drift, he saw a duck flying from one lake to
another. The errand of the duck was probably an unwonted
one, of some special urgency, or he would not have flown
so high and taken the straight route over the forest;
for at this season the duck of inland waters is apt to
fly low and follow the watercourse. However that may be,
he had forgotten the piercing eyes that kept watch from
the peak of old Sugar Loaf.
The eagle lifted and spread the
sombre amplitude of his wings, and glided from his perch
in a long curve, till he balanced above the unconscious
voyager. Then down went his head; his wings shut close,
his feathers hardened till he was like a wedge [Page
59] of steel, and down he shot with breathless,
appalling speed. But the duck was travelling fast, and
the great eagle saw that the mere speed of dropping like
a thunderbolt was insufficient for his purpose. Two or
three quick, short, fierce thrusts of his pinions, and
the speed of his descent was more than doubled. The duck
heard an awful hissing in the air above him. But before
he could swerve to look up he was struck, whirled away,
blotted out of life.
Carried downward with his quarry
by the rush of his descent, the eagle spread his pinions
and rose sharply just before he reached the nearest tree-tops.
High he mounted on still wings with that tremendous impulse.
Then, as the impulse failed, his wings began to flap strongly,
and he flew off with business-like directness toward the
eyrie on the other slope of Sugar Loaf. The head and legs
of the duck hung limply from the clutch of his talons.
The nest was a seemingly haphazard
collection of sticks, like a hay-cart load of rubbish,
deposited on a ledge of the mountainside. In reality,
every stick in the structure had been selected with care,
and so adeptly fitted that the nest stood unshaken beneath
the wildest storms that swept old Sugar Loaf. The ground
below the ledge was strewn with the faggots and branches
which the careful [Page 60] builders
had rejected. The nest had the appearance of being merely
laid upon the ledge, but in reality its foundations were
firmly locked into a ragged crevice which cleft the ledge
at that point.
As the eagle drew near with his
prey, he saw his mate winging heavily from the Tuladis,
a large fish hanging from her talons. They met at the
nest’s edge, and two heavy-bodied, soot-coloured,
half-fledge nestlings, with wings half spread in eagerness,
thrust up hungry, gaping beaks to greet them. The fish,
as being the choicer morsel, was first torn to fragments
and fed to these greedy beaks; and the duck followed in
a few moments, the young ones gulping their meal with
grotesque contortions and ecstatic liftings of their wings.
Being already much more than half the size of their parents,
and growing almost visibly, and expending vast vitality
in the production of their first feathers, their appetites
were prodigious. Not until these appetites seemed to be,
for the moment, stayed, and the eaglets sank back contentedly
upon the nest, did the old birds fly off to forage for
themselves, leaving a bloody garniture of bones and feathers
upon the threshold of their home.
The king — who, though smaller
than his mate, was her lord by virtue of superior initiative
and [Page 61] more assured, equable daring
— returned at once to his watch-tower on the lake
side of the summit. It had become his habit to initiate
every enterprise from that starting-point. Perching motionless
for a few minutes, he surveyed the whole wide landscape
of the Squatook Lakes, with the great waters of Lake Temiscouata
gleaming to the northwest, and the peak of Bald Mountain,
old Sugar Loaf’s rival, lifting a defiant front
from the shores of Nictau Lake, far to the south.
The last wisp of vapour had vanished,
drunk up by the rising sun, and the eagle’s eye
had clear command of every district of his realm. It was
upon the little lake far below him that his interest presently
centred itself. There, at no great height above the unruffled
waters, he saw a fish-hawk sailing, now tilted to one
side or the other on moveless wing, now flapping hurriedly
to another course, as if he were scrupulously quartering
the whole lake surface.
The king recognised with satisfaction
the diligence of this, the most serviceable, though most
unwilling, of his subjects. In leisurely fashion he swung
off from his perch, and presently was whirling in slow
spirals directly over the centre of the lake. Up, up he
mounted, till he was a mere [Page 62]
speck in the blue, and seemingly oblivious of all that
went on below; but, as he wheeled, there in his supreme
altitude, his grim white head was stretched ever earthward,
and his eyes lost no detail of the fish-hawk’s diligence.
All at once, the fish-hawk was
seen to poise on steady wing. Then his wings closed, and
he shot downward like a javelin. The still waters of the
lake were broken with a violent splash, and the fish-hawk’s
body for a moment almost disappeared. Then, with a struggle
and a heavy flapping of wings, the daring fisher arose,
grasping in his victorious claws a large “togue”
or gray lake trout. He rose till he was well above the
tree-tops of the near-by shore, and then headed for his
nest in the cedar swamp.
This was the moment for which
the eagle had been waiting, up in the blue. Again his
vast wings folded themselves. Again his plumage hardened
to a wedge of steel. Again he dropped like a plummet.
But this time he had no slaughterous intent. He was merely
descending out of the heavens to take tribute. Before
he reached the hurrying fish-hawk he swerved upward, steadied
himself, and flapped a menacing wing in the fish-hawk’s
face, heading it out again toward the centre of the lake.
[Page 63]
Frightened, angry, obstinate,
the big hawk clutched his prize the closer, and made futile
efforts to reach the tree-tops. But, fleet though he was,
he was no match for the fleetness of his master. The great
eagle was over him, under him, around him, all at once,
yet never striking him. The king was simply indicating,
quite unmistakably, his pleasure, which was that the fish
should be delivered up.
Suddenly, however, seeing that
the fish-hawk was obstinate, the eagle lost patience.
It was time, he concluded, to end the folly. He had no
wish to harm the fish-hawk, — a most useful creature,
and none too abundant for his kingly needs. In fact, he
was always careful not to exact too heavy a tribute from
the industrious fisherman, lest the latter should grow
discouraged and remove to freer waters. Of the spoils
of his fishing the big hawk was always allowed to keep
enough to satisfy the requirements of himself and his
nestlings. But it was necessary that there should be no
foolish misunderstanding on the subject.
The eagle swung away, wheeled
sharply with an ominous, harsh rustling of stiffened feathers,
and then came at the hawk with a yelp and a sudden tremendous
rush. His beak was half open. His [Page 64]
great talons were drawn forward and extended for a deadly
stroke. His wings darkened broadly over the fugitive.
His sound, his shadow, — they were doom itself,
annihilation to the frightened hawk.
But that deadly stroke was not
delivered. The threat was enough. Shrinking aside with
a scream the fish-hawk opened his claws, and the trout
fell, a gleaming bar of silver in the morning light. On
the instant the eagle half closed his wings, tilted sideways,
and swooped. He did not drop, as he had descended upon
the voyaging duck, but with a peculiar shortened wing-stroke,
he flew straight downward for perhaps a hundred feet.
Then, with this tremendous impulse driving him, he shot
down like lightening, caught the fish some twenty feet
above the water, turned, and rose in a long, magnificent
slant, with the tribute borne in his talons. He sailed
away majestically to his watchtower on old Sugar Loaf,
to make his meal at leisure, while the ruffled hawk beat
away rapidly down the river to try his luck in the lower
lake.
Holding the fish firmly in the
clutch of one great
talon, the eagle tore it to pieces and swallowed it
with savage haste. Then he straightened himself, twisted
and stretched his neck once or twice, settled back into
erect and tranquil dignity, and swept [Page 67]
a kingly glance over all his domain, from the far head
of Big Squatook, to the alder-crowded outlet of Fourth
Lake. He saw unmoved the fish-hawk capture another prize,
and fly off with it in triumph to his hidden nest in the
swamp. He saw two more ducks winging their way from a
sheltered cove to a wide, green reed-bed at the head of
the thoroughfare. Being a right kingly monarch, he had
no desire to trouble them. Untainted by the lust of killing,
he killed only when the need was upon him.
Having preened himself with some
care, polished his great beak on the dry wood of the stub,
and stretched each wing, deliberately and slowly, the
one after the other, with crisp rustling noises, till
each strong-shanked plume tingled pleasantly in its socket
and fitted with the utmost nicety to its overlapping fellows,
he bethought him once more of the appetites of his nestlings.
There were no more industrious fish-hawks in sight. Neither
hare nor grouse was stirring in the brushy opens. No living
creatures visible save a pair of loons chasing each other
off the point of Sugar Loaf Island, and an Indian in his
canoe just paddling down to the outlet to spear suckers.
The eagle knew that the loons
were no concern [Page 68] of his. They
were never to be caught napping. They could dive quicker
than he could swoop and strike. The Indian also knew,
and from long experience has learned to regard him as
inoffensive. He had often watched, with feelings as near
akin to jealously as his arrogant heart could entertain,
the spearing of suckers and whitefish. And now the sight
determined him to go fishing on is own account. He remembered
a point of shoals on Big Squatook where large fish were
wont to lie basking in the sun, and where sick or disabled
fish were frequently washed ashore. Here he might gather
some spoil of the shallows, pending the time when he could
again take tribute of the fish-hawk. Once more he launched
himself from his watchtower under the peak of Sugar Loaf,
and sailed away over the serried green tops of the forest.
II.
Now
it chanced that the old Indian, who was the most cunning
trapper in all the wilderness of Northern New Brunswick,
though he seemed so intent upon his fishing, was in
reality watching the great eagle. He had anticipated,
and indeed prepared for the regal bird’s expedition
to those shoals of the Big Squatook; and now, as he
marked the direction [Page 69] of his
flight, he clucked grimly to himself with satisfaction,
and deftly landed a large sucker in that canoe.
That very morning, before the
first pallor of dawn had spread over Squatook, the Indian
had scattered some fish, trout and suckers, on the shore
adjoining the shoal water. The point he chose was where
a dense growth of huckleberry and withe-wood ran out
to within a few feet of the water’s edge, and
where the sand of the beach was dotted thickly with
tufts of grass. The fish, partly hidden among these
tufts of grass, were all distributed over a circular
area of a diameter not greater than six or seven feet;
and just at the centre of the baited circle the Indian
had placed a stone about a foot high, such as any reasonable
eagle would like to perch upon when making a hasty meal.
He was crafty with all the cunning of the woods, was
this old trapper, and he knew that a wise and experienced
bird like the king of Sugar Loaf was not to be snared
by any ordinary methods. But to snare him he was resolved,
though it should take him all the rest of the summer
to accomplish it; for a rich American, visiting Edmundston
on the Madawaska in the spring, had promised him fifty
dollars for a fine specimen of the great white headed
and white tailed [Page 70] eagle of
New Brunswick lakes, if delivered at Edmundston alive
and unhurt.
When the eagle came to the point
of shoals he noticed a slight change. That big stone
was something new, and therefore to be suspected. He
flew over it without stopping, and alighted on the top
of a dead birch-tree near by. A piercing scrutiny convinced
him that the presence of the stone at a point where
he was accustomed to hop awkwardly on the level sand,
was in no way portentous, but rather a provision of
destiny for his convenience. He sailed down and alighted
upon the stone.
When he saw a dead sucker lying
under a grass tuft he considered again. Had the fish
lain at the water’s edge he would have understood;
but up among the grasses, that was a singular situation
for a dead fish to get itself into. He now peered suspiciously
into the neighbouring bushes, scanned every tuft of
grass, and cast a sweeping survey up and down the shores.
Everything was as it should be. He hopped down, captured
the fish, and was about to fly away with it to his nestlings,
when he caught sight of another, and yet another. Further
search revealed two more. Plainly the wilderness, in
one of those caprices which even his old wisdom had
not yet learned to comprehend, was [Page 71]
caring very lavishly for the king. He hastily tore and
swallowed two of the fish, and then flew away with the
biggest of the lot to the nest behind the top of old
Sugar Loaf. That same day he came twice again to the
point of shoals, till there was not another fish left
among the grass tufts. But on the following day, when
he came again, with hope rather than expectation in
his heart, he found that the supply had been miraculously
renewed. His labours thus were greatly lightened. He
had more time to sit upon his wind-swept watch-tower
under the peak, viewing widely his domain, and leaving
the diligent fish-hawks to toil in peace. He fell at
once into the custom of perching on the stone at every
visit, and then devouring at least one fish before carrying
a meal to the nest. His surprise and curiosity as to
the source of the supply had died out on the second
day. The wild creatures quickly learned to accept a
simple obvious good, however extraordinary, as one of
those beneficences which the unseen powers bestow without
explanation.
By the time the eagle had come
to this frame of mind, the old Indian was ready for
the next move in his crafty game. He made a strong hoop
of plaited withe-wood, about seven feet in diameter.
[Page 72] To this he fastened an ample
bag of strong salmon-netting, which he had brought with
him from Edmunston for this purpose. To the hoop he
fixed securely a stiff birch sapling for a handle, so
that the affair when completed was a monster scoop-net,
stout and durable in every part. On a moonlight night
when he knew that the eagle was safely out of sight,
on his eyrie around at the back of Sugar Loaf, the Indian
stuck this gigantic scoop into the bow of his canoe,
and paddled over to the point of shoals. He had never
heard of any one trying to catch an eagle in a net;
but, on the other hand, he had never heard of any one
wanting an eagle alive, and being willing to emphasize
his wants with fifty dollars. The case was plainly one
that called for new ideas, and the Indian, who had freed
himself from the conservatism of his race, was keenly
interested in the plan which he had devised.
The handle of the great scoop-net
was about eight feet in length. Its butt the trapper
drove slantingly into the sand where the water was an
inch or two deep, bracing it securely with stones. He
fixed it at an angle so acute that the rim of the net
lay almost flat at a height of about four feet above
the stone whereon the eagle was wont to perch. Under
the uppermost edge of the hoop the trapper fixed [Page
73] a firm prop, making the structure steady
and secure. The drooping slack of the net he then caught
up and held lightly in place on three or four willow
twigs, so that it all lay flat within the rim. This
accomplished to his satisfaction, he scattered fish
upon the ground as usual, most of them close about the
stone and within the area overshadowed by the net, but
two or three well outside. Then he paddled noiselessly
away across the moon-silvered mirror of the lake, and
disappeared into the blackness about the outlet.
On the following morning, the
king sat upon his watch-tower while the first gilded
the leaning summit of Sugar Loaf. His gaze swept the
vast and shadowy basin of the landscape with its pointed
tree-tops dimly emerging above the vapour-drift, and
its blank, pallid spaces whereunder the lakes lay veiled
in a dream. His golden eye flamed fiercely under the
straight and fierce white brow; nevertheless, when he
saw, far down, two ducks winging their way across the
lake, now for a second visible, now vanishing in the
mist, he suffered them to go unstricken. The clear light
gilded the white feathers of his head and tail, but
sank and was absorbed in the cloudly gloom of his wings.
For fully half and hour he sat in regal [Page
74] immobility. But when at last the waters
of Big Squatook were revealed, stripped and gleaming,
he dropped from his perch in a tremendous, leisurely
curve, and flew over to the point of shoals.
As he drew near, he was puzzled
and annoyed to see the queer structure that had been
erected during the night above his rock. It was inexplicable.
He at once checked his flight and began whirling in
great circles, higher and higher, over the spot, trying
in vain to make out what it was. He could see that the
dead fish were there as usual. And at length he satisfied
himself that no hidden peril lurked in the near-by huckleberry
thicket. Then he descended to the nearest tree-top and
spent a good half-hour in moveless watching of the net.
He little guessed that a dusky figure, equally moveless
and far more patient, was watching him in turn from
a thicket across the lake.
At the end of this long scrutiny,
the eagle decided that a closer investigation was desirable.
He flew down and alighted on the level sand well away
from the net. There he found a fish which he devoured.
Then he found another; and this he carried away to the
eyrie. He had not solved the mystery of the strange
structure overhanging the rock, but he had proved that
it was not actively inimical. It had [Page 75]
not interfered with his morning meal, or attempted to
hinder him from carrying off his customary spoils. When
he returned an hour later to the point of shoals the
net looked less strange to him. He even perched on the
sloping handle, balancing himself with outspread wings
till the swaying ceased. The thing was manifestly harmless.
He hopped down, looked with keen interested eyes at
the fish beside the rock, hopped in and clutched one
out with beak and claw, hopped back again in a great
hurry, and flew away with the prize to his watchtower
on Sugar Loaf. This caution he repeated at every visit
throughout that day. But when he came again on the morrow,
he had grown once more utterly confident. He went under
the net without haste or apprehension, and perched unconcernedly
on the stone in the midst of his banquet. And the stony
face of the old Indian, in his thicket across the lake,
flashed for one instant with a furtive grin. He grunted,
melted back into the woods, and slipped away to resume
his fishing at the outlet.
The next morning, about an hour
before dawn, a ghostly birch canoe slipped up to the
point of shoals, and came to land about a hundred yards
from the net. The Indian stepped out, lifted it from
the water, and hid it in the bushes. Then he [Page
76] proceeded to make some important changes
in the arrangement of the net.
To the topmost rim of the hoop
he tied a strong cord, brought the free end to the ground,
led it under a willow root, and carried it some ten
paces back into the thicket. Next he removed the supporting
prop. Going back into the thicket, he pulled the cord.
It ran freely under the willow root, and the net swayed
down till it covered the rock, to rebound to its former
position the moment he released the cord. Then he restored
the prop to its place; but this time, instead of planting
its butt firmly into the sand, he balanced it on a small
flat stone, so that the least pull would instantaneously
dislodge it. To the base of the prop he fixed another
cord; and this also he ran under the willow root and
carried back into the thicket. To the free end of this
second cord he tied a scrap of red flannel, that there
might be no mistake at a critical moment. The butt of
the handle he loosened, so that if the prop were removed
the net would almost fall of its own weight; and on
the upper side of the butt, to give steadiness and speed
of action, he leaned two heavy stones. Finally, he baited
his trap with the usual dead fish, bunching them now
under the centre of the net. Then, satisfying himself
that all was in [Page 77] working order,
he wormed his way into the heart of the thicket. A few
leafy branches, cunningly disposed around and above
his hiding-place, made his concealment perfect, while
his keen black beads of eyes commanded a clear view
of the stone beneath the net. The ends of the two cords
were between his lean fingers. No waiting fox or hiding
grouse could have lain more immovable, could have held
his muscles in more patient perfect stillness, than
did the wary old trapper through the chill hour of growing
dawn.
At last there came a sound that
thrilled even such stoic nerves as his. Mighty wings
hissed in the air above his head. The next moment he
saw the eagle alight upon the level sand beside the
net. This time there was no hesitation. The great bird,
for all his wisdom, had been lured into accepting the
structure as a part of the established order of things.
He hopped with undignified alacrity right under the
net, clutched a large whitefish, and perched himself
on the stone to enjoy his meal.
At that instant he felt, rather
than saw, the shadow of a movement in the thicket. Or
rather, perhaps, some inward, unaccredited guardian
signalled to him of danger. His muscles gathered themselves
for that instantaneous spring wherewith [Page
78] he was wont to hurl himself into the air.
But even that electric speed of his was too slow for
this demand. Ere he could spring, the great net came
down about him with a vicious swish; and in a moment
beating wings, tearing back, and clutching talons were
helplessy intertangled
in the meshes. Before he could rip himself free, a blanket
was thrown over him. He was ignominiously rolled into
a bundle, picked up, and carried off under the old Indian’s
arm.
III.
When
the king was gone, it seemed as if a hush had fallen
over the country of the Squatooks. When the old pine
beneath the toppling peak of Sugar Loaf had stood vacant
all the long golden hours of the morning, two crows
flew up from the fir-woods to investigate. They hopped
up and down on the sacred seat, cawing impertinently
and excitedly. Then in a sudden flurry of apprehension
they darted away. News of the great eagle’s mysterious
absence spread quickly among the woodfolk, — not
by direct communication, indeed, except in the case
of the crows, but subtly and silently, as if by some
telepathic code intelligible alike to mind and woodmouse,
kingfisher and lucifee. [Page 81]
When the noon had gone
by, and the shadow of Sugar Loaf began to creep over
the edge of the nest, the old mother eagle grew uneasy
at the prolonged absence of her mate. Never before since
the nestlings broke the shell had he been so long away.
Never before had she been compelled to realise how insatiable
were the appetites of her young. She flew around to
the pine-tree on the other side of the peak, —
and finding it vacant, something told her it had been
long unoccupied. Then she flew hither and thither over
all the lakes, a fierce loneliness growing in her heart.
From the long grasses around the mouth of the thoroughfare
between third and fourth lakes a heron arose, flapping
wide bluish wings, and she dropped upon it savagely.
However her wild heart ached, the nestlings must be
fed. With the long limp neck and slender legs of the
heron trailing from her talons, she flew away to the
eyrie; and she came no more to the Squatooks.
The knowledge of all
the woodfolk around the lake had been flashed in upon
her, and she knew some mysterious doom had fallen upon
her mate. Thereafter, though the country of the Squatooks
was closer at hand and equally well stocked with game,
and though the responsibilities of her hunting had been
doubled, she kept strictly to her old [Page
82] hunting ground of the Tuladis. Everything
on the north side of old Sugar Loaf had grown hateful
to her; and unmolested within half a mile of the eyrie,
the diligent fish-hawks plied their craft, screaming
triumphantly over every capture. The male, indeed, growing
audacious after the king had been a whole week absent,
presumed so far as to adopt the old pine-tree under
the peak for his perch, to the loud and disconcerting
derision of the crows. They
flocked blackly about with vituperative malice,
driving him to forsake his seat of usurpation and soar
indignantly to heights where they could not follow.
But at last the game palled upon their whimsical fancies,
and they left him in peace to his aping of the king.
Meanwhile, in the village
of Edmundston, in the yard of a house that stood ever
enfolded in the sleepless roar of the Falls of Madawaska,
the king was eating out his sorrowful and tameless heart.
Around one steely-scaled leg, just above the spread
of the mighty claws, he wore the ragged ignominy of
a bandage of soiled red flannel. This was to prevent
the chafing of the clumsy and rusty dog-chain which
secured him to his perch in an open shed that looked
out upon the river. Across the river, across the cultivated
valley with its roofs, and farther [Page 85]
across the forest hills than any human eye could see,
his eye could see a dim summit, as it were a faint blue
cloud on the horizon, his own lost realm of Sugar Loaf.
Hour after hour he would sit upon his rude perch, unstirring,
unwinking, and gaze upon this faint blue cloud of his
desire.
From his jailers he
accepted scornfully his daily rations of fish, ignoring
the food while any one was by, but tearing it and gorging
it savagely when left alone. As week after week dragged
on, his hatred of his captors gathered force, but he
showed no sign. Fear he was hardly conscious of; or,
at least, he had never felt that panic fear which unnerves
even kings, except during the one appalling moment when
he felt the falling net encumber his wings, and the
trapper’s smothering blanket shut out the sun
from his eyes. Now, when any one of his jailers approached
and sought to win his confidence, he would shrink within
himself and harden his feathers with wild inward aversion,
but his eye of piercing gold would neither dim nor waver,
and a clear perception of the limits of his chain would
prevent any futile and ignoble struggle to escape. Had
he shown more fear, more wildness, his jailers would
have more hope of subduing him in some measure; but
as it was, being back country [Page 86]
men with some knowledge of the wilderness folk, they
presently gave him up as tameless and left off troubling
him with their attentions. They took good care of him,
however, for they were to be well paid for their trouble
when the rich American came for his prize.
At last he came; and
when he saw the king he was glad. Trophies he had at
home in abundance, — the skins of lions which
he had shot on the Zambesi, of tigers from Himalayan
foot-hills, of grizzlies from Alaskan cañons,
and noble heads of moose and caribou from these very
highlands of Squatook, whereon the king had been wont
to look from his dizzy gyres of flight above old Sugar
Loaf. But the great white-headed eagle, who year after
year had baffled his woodcraft and eluded his rifle,
he had come to love so that he coveted him alive. Now,
having been apprised of the capture of so fine and well-known
a bird as the king of old Sugar Loaf, he had brought
with him an anklet of thick, soft leather for the illustrious
captive’s leg, and a chain of wrought steel links,
slender, delicate, and strong. On the morning after
his arrival the new chain was to be fitted.
The great eagle was
sitting erect upon his perch, gazing at the faint blue
cloud which he alone could [Page 87]
see, when two men came to the shed beside the river.
One he knew. It was his chief jailer, the man who usually
brought him fish. The other was a stranger, who carried
in his hand a long, glittering thing that jangled and
stirred a vague apprehension in his heart. The jailer
approached, and with a quick movement wrapped him in
a coat, till beak and wings and talons alike were helpless.
There was one instinctive, convulsive spasm within the
wrapping, and the bundle was still, the great bird being
too proud as well as too wise to waste force in a vain
struggle.
“Seems pretty
tame already,” remarked the stranger, in a tone
of satisfaction.
“Tame!”
exclaimed the countryman. “Them’s the kind
as don’t tame. I’ve give up trying to tame
him. Ef you keep him, an’ feed him, an’
coax him for ten year, he’ll be as wild as the
day Gabe snared him up on Big Squatook.”
“We’ll
see,” said the stranger, who had confidence in
his knowledge of the wild folk.
Seating himself on
a broken-backed chair just outside the shadow of the
shed, where the light was good, the countryman held
the motionless bundle firmly across his knees, and proceeded
cautiously to free the fettered leg. He held it in an
[Page 88] inflexible grip, respecting
those knife-edged claws. Having removed the rusty dog-chain
and the ignominious red flannel bandage, he fitted dexterously
the soft leather anklet, with its three tiny silver
buckles, and its daintily engraved plate, bearing the
king’s name with the place and date of his capture.
Then he reached out his hand for the new steel chain.
The eagle, meanwhile,
had been slowly and imperceptibly working his head free;
and now, behind the countryman’s arm, he looked
out from the imprisoning folds of the coat. Fierce,
wild, but unaffrighted, his eye caught the glitter of
the chain as the stranger held it out. That glitter
moved him strangely. On a sudden impulse he opened his
mighty beak, and tore savagely at the countryman’s
leg.
With a yell of pain and surprise
the man attempted to jump away from this assault. But
as the assailant was on his lap this was obviously impossible.
The muscles of his leg stiffened out instinctively,
— and the broken-backed chair gave way under the
strain. Arms and legs flew wildly in the air as he sprawled
backward, — and the coat fell apart, — and
the eagle found himself free. The stranger sprang forward
to clutch his treasured [Page 89] captive,
but received a blinding buffet from the great wings
undestined to captivity. The next moment the king bounded
upward. The air whistled under his tremendous wing-strokes.
Up, up he mounted, leaving the men to gape after him,
flushed and foolish. Then he headed his flight for that
faint blue cloud beyond the hills.
That afternoon there was a difference
in the country of the Squatooks. The nestlings in the
eyrie — bigger and blacker and more clamorous
they were now than when he went away — found more
abundant satisfaction to their growing appetites. Their
wide-winged mother, hunting away on Tuladi, hunted with
more joyous heart. The fish-hawks on the Squatook waters
came no more near the blasted pine; but they fished
more diligently and their hearts were big with indignation
over the spoils which they had been forced to deliver
up.
The crows far down in the fir-tops
were garrulous about the king’s return, and the
news spread swiftly among the mallards, the muskrats,
the hares, and the careful beavers. And the solitude
about the toppling peak of old Sugar Loaf seemed to
resume some lost sublimity, as the king resumed his
throne among the winds. [Page 90]
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