Wilderness Ways eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 128 pages of information about Wilderness Ways.

Wilderness Ways eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 128 pages of information about Wilderness Ways.

Presently one of the lucivees came out, yawned, stretched, raised himself against a root.  In the morning stillness I could hear the cut and rip of his claws on the wood.  We call the action sharpening the claws; but it is only the occasional exercise of the fine flexor muscles that a cat uses so seldom, yet must use powerfully when the time comes.  The second lucivee came out of the shadow a moment later and leaped upon the fallen tree where he could better watch the hillside below.  For half an hour or more, while I waited expectantly, both animals moved restlessly about the den, or climbed over the roots and trunk of the fallen tree.  They were plainly cross; they made no attempt at play, but kept well away from each other with a wholesome respect for teeth and claws and temper.  Breakfast hour was long past, evidently, and they were hungry.

Suddenly one, who was at that moment watching from the tree trunk, leaped down; the second joined him, and both paced back and forth excitedly.  They had heard the sounds of a coming that were too fine for my ears.  A stir in the underbrush, and Mother Lynx, a great savage creature, stalked out proudly.  She carried a dead hare gripped across the middle of the back.  The long ears on one side, the long legs on the other, hung limply, showing a fresh kill.  She walked to the doorway of her den, crossed it back and forth two or three times, still carrying the hare as if the lust of blood were raging within her and she could not drop her prey even to her own little ones, which followed her hungrily, one on either side.  Once, as she turned toward me, one of the kittens seized a leg of the hare and jerked it savagely.  The mother whirled on him, growling deep down in her throat; the youngster backed away, scared but snarling.  At last she flung the game down.  The kittens fell upon it like furies, growling at each other, as I had seen the stranger lynxes growling once before over the caribou.  In a moment they had torn the carcass apart and were crouched, each one over his piece, gnarling like a cat over a rat, and stuffing themselves greedily in utter forgetfulness of the mother lynx, which lay under a bush some distance away and watched them.

In a half hour the savage meal was over.  The little ones sat up, licked their chops, and began to tongue their broad paws.  The mother had been blinking sleepily; now she rose and came to her young.  A change had come over the family.  The kittens ran to meet the dam as if they had not seen her before, rubbing softly against her legs, or sitting up to rub their whiskers against hers—­a tardy thanks for the breakfast she had provided.  The fierce old mother too seemed altogether different.  She arched her back against the roots, purring loudly, while the little ones arched and purred against her sides.  Then she bent her savage head and licked them fondly with her tongue, while they rubbed as close to her as they could get, passing between her legs as under a bridge, and trying to lick her face in return; till all their tongues were going at once and the family lay down together.

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Wilderness Ways from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.