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oks. We never shoot anything, except the chutes in Coney Island, and you can't call that cruelty to animals. And if I just went off and left him there, maybe he'd stagger around in the woods and claw at himself and tear himself all to pieces and get all bloody and just die. That wouldn't be much fun, would it? As soon as I wasn't scared any more I felt sorry for him-that's the honest truth. I saw how he was beaten and I felt sorry for him. I knew he was really stronger than I was, and that it wasn't a fair fight. I don't care what he intended to do, it wasn't a fair fight. Even if I had shot him he might have looked brave and noble, kind of. But with all that stuff on him and the dirt and grass sticking to his fur, I just sort of felt as if nobody has a right to make an animal look like that. So I took the rope and made a lasso knot in it and let myself down the trunk as far as I dared. I have to admit I was sort of scared, but you have to be decent when you win. You have to be, even if it's only a wild animal. I tried two or three times to get the noose over his head, but I couldn't, because he wasn't still enough. But after a couple of minutes I managed it and then I tied the other end of the rope to the tree. After that I climbed away out to the end of the lowest branch and it bent down with me and I dropped to the ground. First I thought I'd go over and touch him to see how he felt, but I just didn't dare to. I was scared of him even then. So I just started off along the path, going scout pace, and when I got a little way off so I _knew_ I was safe, I looked back and said, "You stay where you are and don't get excited, and I'll fix it for you." Because anyway, I hadn't done my good turn yet and it was pretty near dark. CHAPTER XI SEEING IS BELIEVING The fellows were just thinking about sending a couple of scouts to hunt for me when I went running pell-mell into camp, shouting that I had captured a leopard. "A what?" Westy asked. "A leopard," I shouted, "as sure as I stand here. Come and see for yourselves. He's tied by a rope; he's got fly paper all over him!" "How many sodas did you have?" Harry Donnelle asked me. I said, "That's all right, you just come and see." "It's a leopard; you can see it for yourself." Harry said, "Sit down, Kiddo, and--rest and have a cup of coffee. Guess you fell asleep by the wayside, hey? Tell us all about your dream. Here's a plate of beans. Did you see
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