Loading...
Village Squire, 1975-11, Page 17"Well, we'll see, have to get a permit to keep them you know." Jimmy brought bread and milk but the pups wouldn't eat. Everything was so strange here, the sights, the sounds, the smells, a new world. The; saw the kennel entrance and retired hastily from view. "Never mind J im, they'll eat tomorrow, leave them be, they're pretty upset." When night came both foxes visited the Parsons farm. It took no great amount of sleuthing to discover the pups. The frantic scent of their fear was wafted half a mile on the evening breeze. There was a brief conference partly grunts and moans but mostly mental telepathy. "Get that fool hound out of here and I'll see what I can do." Reynard flashed across the door of Bozo's kennel and both departed...Bozo splitting the night air with his bellows. In the moonlight Rowena made a swift survey of the pen. The pups overjoyed, wagged tails and crawled on bellies. The mother tore at the wire, it was still strong. She tried the door, it was secure, she dug frantically but the ground was hard. A door opened and Grandpa appeared on the porch. There was something in his hand that looked like a gun. The mother slipped away, a small almost imperceptible shadow in a world of shadows. She slid behind a clump of thistles and waited. The old man knelt behind a watering trough and rested the gun across it. He was out of sight there or thought he was. The tox was not fooled, she could not see him but the scent pointed out Grandpa to her almost like a beam of light. The pups whimpered and cried, wriggling along the pen wall and standing on their hind legs. One crawled up the wire as far as the overhang then fell heavily. The moon went behind a cloud and came out again. Bozo gave tongue from far away and a breeze brought chill air from a swamp. Grandpa shifted uneasily, his knees were sore and the breeze lifted his shirt tail. Grandpa slept in his shirt only. This would be bad for rheumatism. He went back to the house. Rowena slipped back to the pen; a quick circuit confirmed the former inspection. Some thing more was needed. She went up the pen wall to the roof; here she found the weak spot. To save money Grandpa had roofed the centre of the pen with chicken wire. Long ago it had seen its best days. Rowena went through it easily. The pups squalled with excitement. Here was a problem now, there was no going back through the roof; there was an overhang of tough wire. At any moment now that old man would be out again with his gun. Round and round the pen went the mother in a frenzy. She dug, she tore at the wire, she hurled herself against it. Suddenly a gap appeared in the wire of the pen wall. Some staples had pulled out of rotting wood. The four were out in a flash moving as one. Grandpa appeared in his shirt tail. He fired a futile shot gun blast, a gesture only. The four fugitives sped through the night. They reached the den and the pups wanted to stop. Rowena nudged them on squealing and protesting. A mile away they found another den. Here they stayed, and the pups were exhausted. Reynard had led Bozo far away. He circled and cut a figure eight. He ran up a small creek. He reached a pasture farm and rushed into the centre of a sleeping herd of cattle. He pranced and leaped about in their sleeping wondering midst. It was a kind of hypnotism. Just as the cattle finally full awake rose to consider this phenomenon he shot out to one side. Bozo entered the aroused circle moments later. He was met by lowered horns and bellows of rage. He preceded a speedy young heifer with a sharp pair of horns, by only a few feet to the nearest fence. He returned home disgusted; one got into the oddest predicaments chasing foxes. When Reynard found the family he looked for some praise. There was none. "What took you so long, you could have helped with the children? I had an awful time to get them this far." J immy had slept through all the disturbance. In the morning he was shocked to find the pups gone and all his plans upset. "Whatever happened Grandpop? I thought I heard a gun shot. Did you hit any of them?" "Never touched them Jim, the old one got them away clean heinirich's gifts and gourmet foods Canadian and imported cheese "Exclusive" gift selections .*-4enta._ CHINA and GIFTS ROYAL COPENHAGEN 'Specialty Gift Food Packages WE GIFT WRAP iI9Ontario St., Stratford. Ont. CRISTAL. LI PARIS (S19)27I-7740 VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER 1975, 15