Lightfoot the Deer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 87 pages of information about Lightfoot the Deer.

Lightfoot the Deer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 87 pages of information about Lightfoot the Deer.

Lightfoot bounded away with such leaps as only Lightfoot can make.  In a little while the voices of the hounds grew fainter.  Lightfoot stopped to get his breath and stood trembling as he listened.  The baying of the hounds again grew louder and louder.  Those wonderful noses of theirs were following his trail without the least difficulty.  In a panic of fear, Lightfoot bounded away again.  As he crossed an old road, the Green Forest rang with the roar of a terrible gun.  Something tore a strip of bark from the trunk of a tree just above Lightfoot’s back.  It was a bullet and it had just missed Lightfoot.  It added to his terror and this in turn added to his speed.

So Lightfoot ran and ran, and behind him the voices of the hounds continued to ring through the Green Forest.

CHAPTER XXI:  How Lightfoot Got Rid Of The Hounds

Poor Lightfoot!  It seemed to him that there were no such things as justice and fair play.  Had it been just one hunter at a time against whom he had to match his wits it would not have been so bad.  But there were many hunters with terrible guns looking for him, and in dodging one he was likely at any time to meet another.  This in itself seemed terribly unfair and unjust.  But now, added to this was the greater unfairness of being trailed by hounds.

Do you wonder that Lightfoot thought of men as utterly heartless?  You see, he could not know that those hounds had not been put on his trail, but had left home to hunt for their own pleasure.  He could not know that it was against the law to hunt him with dogs.  But though none of those hunters looking for him were guilty of having put the hounds on his trail, each one of them was willing and eager to take advantage of the fact that the hounds were on his trail.  Already he had been shot at once and he knew that he would be shot at again if he should be driven where a hunter was hidden.

The ground was damp and scent always lies best on damp ground.  This made it easy for the hounds to follow him with their wonderful noses.  Lightfoot tried every trick he could think of to make those hounds lose the scent.

“If only I could make them lose it long enough for me to get a little rest, it would help,” panted Lightfoot, as he paused for just an instant to listen to the baying of the hounds.

But he couldn’t.  They allowed him no rest.  He was becoming very, very tired.  He could no longer bound lightly over fallen logs or brush, as he had done at first.  His lungs ached as he panted for breath.  He realized that even though he should escape the hunters he would meet an even more terrible death unless he could get rid of those hounds.  There would come a time when he would have to stop.  Then those hounds would catch up with him and tear him to pieces.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Lightfoot the Deer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.