laugh on us when we get home!"
said he.
CHAPTER VII
THE SNOWHOUSE BABY
There had been a film of glass-clear ice that morning all round the
shores of Silverwater. It had melted as the sun climbed high into the
bland October blue; but in the air remained, even at midday, a crispness,
a tang, which set the Child's blood tingling. He drew the spicy breath
of the spruce forests as deep as possible into his little lungs, and
outraged the solemn silences with shouts and squeals of sheer ecstasy,
which Uncle Andy had not the heart to suppress. Then, all at once, he
remembered what the thrilling air, the gold and scarlet of the trees, the
fairy ice films, the whirr of the partridge wings, and the sharp cries of
the bluejays all meant. It meant that soon Uncle Andy would take him
back to town, the cabin under the hemlock would be boarded up. Bill the
Guide would go off to the lumber camps beyond the Ottanoonsis, and
Silverwater would be left to the snow and the solitude of winter. His
heart tightened with homesickness. Yet, after all, he reflected, during
the months of cold his beloved Silverwater would be none too friendly a
place, especially to such of the little furred and feathered folk as were
bold enough to linger about its shores. He shivered as he thought of the
difference winter must make to all the children of the wild.
"Why so solemn all of a sudden?" asked Uncle Andy, eyeing him
suspiciously. "I thought a minute ago you'd take the whole roof off the
forest an' scare the old bull moose across the lake into shedding his new
antlers."
"I was just thinking," answered the Child.
"And does it hurt?" inquired Uncle Andy politely.
But, young as he was, the Child had learned to ignore sarcasm--especially
Uncle Andy's, which he seldom understood.
"I was just wondering," he replied, shaking his head thoughtfully, "what
the young ones of all the wild creatures would do in the winter to keep
warm. Bill says they all go to sleep. But I don't see how _that_ keeps
them warm, Uncle Andy."
"Oh, _Bill_!" remarked Uncle Andy, in a tone which stripped all Bill's
statements of the last shreds of authority. "But, as a matter of fact,
there _aren't_ many youngsters around in the woods in winter--not enough
for you to be looking so solemn about. They're mostly born early enough
in spring and summer to be pretty well grown up by the time winter comes
on them."
"Gee!" murmured the Child enviously. "I w
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