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aucers with interrogation, he turned appealingly to his uncle and said nothing. "That was the little one--one of the two little ones," said Uncle Andy obligingly. "But what?--why?--" "You see," went on Uncle Andy, hastening to explain before he could be overwhelmed, "your poor little friend was a mother bat, and she was carrying her two young ones with her, clinging to her neck with their wings, while she was busy hunting gnats and moths and protecting your nose from mosquitoes. When the owl swooped on her, and so nearly caught her, she dodged so violently that one of the little ones was jerked from its hold. Being too young to fly, it could do nothing but flutter to the ground and squat there, beating its wings till the mother came to look for it. How she managed to pick it up again so neatly, I can't say. But you saw for yourself how neat it was, eh?" The Child nodded his head vigorously and smacked his lips in agreement. "But why does she carry them around with her that way?" he inquired. "It seems to me awfully dangerous. I don't think _I'd_ like it." He pictured to himself his own substantial mamma swooping erratically through the air, with skirts flying out behind and himself clinging precariously to her neck. And at the thought he felt a sinking sensation at the pit of his stomach. "Well, you know, you're not a bat," said Uncle Andy sententiously. "If you were you'd probably think it much pleasanter, and far _less_ dangerous, than being left at home alone while your mother was out swooping 'round after moths and June bugs.'" "Why?" demanded the Child promptly. "Well, you just listen a bit," answered Uncle Andy in his exasperating way. He hated to answer any of the Child's most innocent questions directly if he could get at them in a roundabout way. "Once upon a time"--("Ugh!" thought the Child to himself, "_this_ is going to be a fairy story!" But it wasn't). "Once upon a time," went on Uncle Andy slowly, "there was a young bat--a baby bat so small you might have put him into your mother's thimble. He lived high up in the peak of the roof of an old barn down in the meadows beside the golden, rushing waters of the Nashwaak stream, not more than five or six miles from Fredericton. We'll call him Little Silk Wing." "_I_'ve been to Fredericton!" interjected the Child with an important air. "Really!" said Uncle Andy. "Well, Little Silk Wing hadn't. And now, who's going to tell t
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