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stick between his teeth. "Come on--let me in," he urged. "I know how to play!" He tossed the stick in the air as if to prove what he was saying, and gave a little yap. Umisk and his brothers were like dummies. And then, of a sudden, someone saw Baree. It was a big beaver swimming down the pond with a sapling timber for the new dam that was under way. Instantly he loosed his hold and faced the shore. And then, like the report of a rifle, there came the crack of his big flat tail on the water--the beaver's signal of danger that on a quiet night can be heard half a mile away. "DANGER," it warned. "DANGER--DANGER--DANGER!" Scarcely had the signal gone forth when tails were cracking in all directions--in the pond, in the hidden canals, in the thick willows and alders. To Umisk and his companions they said: "RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!" Baree stood rigid and motionless now. In amazement he watched the four little beavers plunge into the pond and disappear. He heard the sounds of other and heavier bodies striking the water. And then there followed a strange and disquieting silence. Softly Baree whined, and his whine was almost a sobbing cry. Why had Umisk and his little mates run away from him? What had he done that they didn't want to make friends with him? A great loneliness swept over him--a loneliness greater even than that of his first night away from his mother. The last of the sun faded out of the sky as he stood there. Darker shadows crept over the pond. He looked into the forest, where night was gathering--and with another whining cry he slunk back into it. He had not found friendship. He had not found comradeship. And his heart was very sad. CHAPTER 7 For two or three days Baree's excursions after food took him farther and farther away from the pond. But each afternoon he returned to it--until the third day, when he discovered a new creek, and Wakayoo. The creek was fully two miles back in the forest. This was a different sort of stream. It sang merrily over a gravelly bed and between chasm walls of split rock. It formed deep pools and foaming eddies, and where Baree first struck it, the air trembled with the distant thunder of a waterfall. It was much pleasanter than the dark and silent beaver stream. It seemed possessed of life, and the rush and tumult of it--the song and thunder of the water--gave to Baree entirely new sensations. He made his way along it slowly and cautiously, and it was because
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