THE OUTLAW DOGS
Not a little farm work still remained
to be done; our farm work, in fact, was
never done. For a fortnight after our return from
the camping trip, we were busy, ploughing stubble
ground, drawing off loose stones and building a piece
of “double wall” along the side of the
north field. There was also a field of winter
rye to be got in. The Old Squire was, moreover,
preparing to re-embark in the lumbering business at
certain lots of timber land which he owned up in the
“great woods.” Loggers would be hired
for this work, however, for Addison, Halstead and I
expected to attend the district school which was announced
to begin on the Monday after Thanksgiving.
It was mostly dull, hard work now,
all day long, and often we were obliged to husk corn,
or dry apples, during the evening. The only amusement
for a time was one or two husking parties, and an “apple
bee” at the Murches’.
On the morning of the 30th of October
we waked to find the ground white with snow; several
inches had fallen; but it went off, after a day or
two; the weather had grown quite cold, however.
Ice formed nearly every night. The cattle were
now at the barns, but the sheep were still running
about the pastures and fields. On the night of
the 5th of November the upper part of the lake froze
over, as well as the smaller ponds in the vicinity.
I found that the boys thereabouts knew how to skate,
and was not long in buying a pair of skates, myself.
I had much difficulty in learning to use them for
several days; at length, I caught the knack of it,
and felt well repaid for a good many hard falls, when
at last I could glide away and keep up with Halse,
Addison and Thomas Edwards, who skated well.
Even Theodora and Ellen could skate.
For a week that fall Lake Pennesseewassee
was grand skating ground. Parties of boys from
a distance came there every evening and built bonfires
on the shore to enliven the scene.
I think that it was the third day
before Thanksgiving that eight of us went to the lake,
at about four in the afternoon, to have an hour of
skating before dark. We found Alfred Batchelder
there in advance of us. As Alfred did not now
speak to our boys, he kept a little aloof from us.
Near the head of the lake is an island
and above it a bog. We had skated around the
head of the lake, and keeping to the east side of the
island, circled about it, and were coming down on
the west side along an arm, some two hundred yards
wide, where there was known to be deep water.
We thought the ice perfectly firm and safe there,
since that on the east side of the island, over which
we had just skated, had proved so. All of us
were at full racing speed, and Alfred was keeping six
or eight rods further out, but parallel with us.
Suddenly we heard a crash and saw Alfred go down.
The water gushed up around him.
There was no premonitory cracking
or yielding. The ice broke on the instant; and
so rapidly was he moving that a hole twelve or fifteen
feet long was torn by the sheer force with which he
went against it. As he fell through, he went
under once, but luckily came up in the hole he had
made, and got his hands and arms on the edges of the
ice, which, however, kept bending down and breaking
off. The breaking and his fall were so sudden
that he had not even time to cry out till he came up
and caught hold of the ice.
Instinctively we all sheered off toward
the west shore at first. Then came the impulse
to save him. A peeled hemlock log lay stranded
on the shore upon rocks, with about four feet of its
length frozen in the ice. I remember rushing
to this, to get it up and slide it out to him.
Finding I could not wrench it loose with my hands,
I kicked it with first one foot and then the other,
and broke both my skates; but the ice held it like
a vise. Then I started on my broken skates to
find a pole; two or three of the other boys were also
running for poles, shouting excitedly.
All the while Alfred was calling despairingly
to us; every time the ice broke, he would nearly disappear
under the water, which was deadly cold.
Addison who had first pulled off his
skates, then thought of green alder poles. Running
to the nearest clump, he bent down and hurriedly cut
off two, each as large as a pump-brake. Before
I was done kicking the peeled hemlock log, or Halse
was back from his pole hunt, Addison had shoved one
of the long alders out to Alf, who managed to clutch
hold of it.
Addison had hold of the butt end,
and Willis Murch, nearer the shore, had reached out
the top of the second alder to Addison. The ice
yielded somewhat and the water came up; but they all
held fast. By this time the rest of us had cut
more alders, one of which was thrust out to Willis;
and then by main strength we hauled Alfred out and
back where the ice was firmer.
It is doubtful whether we should have
got him out of the lake but for this expedient; for
the water was so cold and the wind so bitterly sharp,
that he could not long have supported himself by those
bending ice edges. His teeth chattered noisily
when at length we hauled him ashore; Addison’s,
too! Both were wet through. We started and
ran as hard as we could towards home. Two of
us had to drag Alf at the start; but he ran better
after the first hundred yards; and we were all very
warm by the time we got him home.
It is often difficult to determine
why the ice on some portions of a pond should be thin
and treacherous, as in the above instance, while on
other portions it is quite safe. Indeed, there
is no way of determining except by cautious inspection.
I must do Alfred the justice to record
that he came around quite handsomely to thank Addison,
and then asked his pardon for the hard words that
he had used at Fair time.
The morning following is marked forever
in my memory by an unexpected trip up to the “great
woods” the result of certain disturbing
rumors which had been in circulation throughout the
autumn, but of which I have not previously spoken,
since they were confined mainly to a school district
two miles to the east of the Old Squire’s farm.
On that morning a party of not less
than thirty men and boys, with hounds, was made up
to go in pursuit of a pack of outlaw dogs which had
been killing sheep and calves in that town and vicinity.
As yet the flocks in our own neighborhood had not
been molested, but there was no saying how soon the
marauders might pay us a visit; and a public effort
had been inaugurated to hunt the pack down and destroy
it.
The history of these dog outlaws was
a singular one and parallels in canine life the famous
story of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.”
The fact that dogs do occasionally lead double lives one
that of a docile house-dog by day, and the other that
of a wild, dangerous beast by night is well
established. In this case a trusted dog had become
not only an outlaw himself, but drew others about
him and was the leader of a dangerous band.
A farmer named Frost, three miles
from us, began to lose sheep from a flock of seventy
which he owned and which were kept in a pasture that
included a high hill and sloped northward over rough,
bushy land to the great woods. It was not the
custom there to enclose the sheep in pens or shelters,
at night. They wandered at will in the pasture,
and were rarely visited oftener than once a week,
and that usually on Sunday morning. Then either
the farmer or one of his boys would go to the pasture
to give the sheep salt and count them. This was
the custom among the farmers in that locality, nearly
all of whom owned flocks sometimes as small as twenty,
but rarely larger than seventy-five, since sheep in
New England do not thrive when kept in large flocks.
Farmer Frost was not the only one
who had lost sheep at this time. Six other flocks
were invaded, but his loss occurred first. His
son Rufus, going to the pasture to salt and count
the sheep on a Sunday morning, found that two ewes
and a grown lamb were missing. Later in the day
the partially devoured remains of the sheep were found
in the pasture not far from a brook.
“Bear’s work,” the
farmer and his neighbors said, although an old hunter
who visited the spot pronounced against the theory.
But a bear had been seen recently in the vicinity;
and Monday morning the Frost boys loaded their guns
for a thorough hunt. Two traps were also set near
the carcasses, which were left as found, to lure the
destroyer back.
The destroyer did not return; the
traps remained as they were set; and the youthful
hunters were unsuccessful in rousing a bear in the
woods. But on the following Wednesday night a
farmer named Needham, living a mile and a half from
Frost, lost two sheep, the bodies of which were found
in his pasture, partly eaten.
It chanced that Farmer Needham, or
his son Emerson, owned a dog which was greatly prized.
They called him Bender. Bender was said to be
a half-breed, Newfoundland and mastiff, but had, I
think, a strain of more common blood in his ancestry,
for there was a tawny crescent mark beneath each of
his eyes. Bender was the pink of propriety and
a dog of unblemished reputation.
On this occasion Bender went with
the farmer and his boys to the sheep pasture, and
smelled the dead sheep with every appearance of surprise
and horror. The hair on his shoulders bristled
with indignation. He coursed around, seeking
for bear tracks, and ran barking about the pasture.
In short, he did everything that a properly grieved
dog should do under the circumstances, and so far
from touching or eating any of the torn mutton, he
plainly scorned such a thing.
The boys took Bender with them to
hunt bears, as their main reliance and ally, and Bender
hunted assiduously. Three or four other dogs,
belonging at farms in the vicinity, were also taken
on these hunts. One was a collie, another a mongrel
bulldog, and a third a large brindled dog of no known
pedigree. Still another half-bred St. Bernard
dog set off with the others, but on reaching the sheep
pasture, where they went first to get the trail and
make a start, this latter dog behaved oddly, left the
others and slunk away home.
Some of the boys attributed this to
cowardice, and he was hooted; others suspected Roke,
for that was his name, of having killed the sheep.
Suspicion against him so increased that his master
kept him chained at home.
No bears were tracked to their dens,
and none were caught in the traps, which were also
set in the Needham pasture; but less than a week later
another farmer, this time the owner of the mongrel
bulldog, lost three sheep in one night. As previously,
the sheep were found dead and partly eaten.
If Roke’s alibi had not
had a tangible chain at one end of it that night,
his character would have been as good as lost; for
his refusal to hunt with the other dogs and the manner
in which he behaved while near the dead sheep, had
rendered him a public “suspect.” When
near the carcasses he had growled morosely, and shown
his teeth. When barked at by the other dogs,
he had taken himself off.
A few nights afterward Farmer Frost
lost two more sheep from his flock in the pasture,
and the following night Rufus watched in the pasture
with a loaded gun, quite without results.
About that time two or three others
watched in their pastures. Some shut up their
sheep. But the losses continued to occur.
Within a radius of three or four miles as many as
twenty-four sheep were killed in the course of three
weeks.
None of the watchers by night or the
hunters by day had, as yet, obtained so much as a
trace or a clue to the animal which had done the killing.
They came to think that it was quite useless to watch
by night; the marauding creature, whether bear, wild-cat,
or dog, was apparently too wily, or too keen-scented,
to enter a pasture and approach a flock where a man
was concealed.
Rufus Frost, who had watched repeatedly,
then hit on a stratagem. First he cut off about
a foot from the barrel of a shotgun, to shorten it,
and then made a kind of bag, or sack, by sewing two
sheep-pelts together. Thus equipped, he repaired
to the pasture after dark, and joined himself to the
flock, not as a watcher, but as a sheep.
That is to say, he crept into the sheepskin bag, which
was also capacious enough to contain the short gun,
and lay down on the outskirts of the flock, a little
aloof.
The sheep were lying in a group, ruminating,
as is their habit, by night. Rufus drew a tangle
of wool over his head, and otherwise contrived to
pose as a sheep lying down. He assumed that when
thus bagged up in fresh sheepskin, the odor of a sheep
would be diffused, and the appearance of one so well
counterfeited as to deceive even a bear. His
gun he had charged heavily with buckshot; and altogether
the ruse was ingenious, if nothing more.
Nothing disturbed the flock on the
first night that he spent in the pasture, nor on the
second; but he resolved to persevere. It was no
very bad way to pass an autumn night; the weather
was pleasant and warm, and there was a bright moon
nearing its full.
He had kept awake during the first
night, listening and watching for the most of the
time; but he caught naps the second, and on the third
was sleeping comfortably at about two in the morning,
when he was suddenly set upon, tooth and nail, by
what he believed, on first waking, to be a whole family
of bears. One had him by the leg, through the
bag, shaking him. Another was dragging at the
back of the bag, while the teeth of a third were snapping
at his face. Still other teeth were chewing upon
his arm, and the growling was something frightful!
This was an alarming manner in which
to be wakened from a sound nap, and it is little wonder
that Rufus, although a plucky youngster, rolled over
and over and yelled with the full power of his lungs.
His shouts produced an effect.
First one and then another of his assailants let go
and drew back; and getting the wool out of his eyes,
Rufus saw that the creatures were not bears, but four
astonished dogs, standing a few feet away, regarding
him with doubt and disgust.
To all appearance he had been a sheep,
lying a little apart from the others, and they had
fallen upon him as one; but his shouts led them to
think that he was not mutton, after all, and they did
not know what to make of it!
Rufus, almost equally astonished,
now lay quite still, staring at them. The dogs
looked at each other, licked the wool from their mouths,
and sat down to contemplate him further.
Rufus, on his part, waxed even more
amazed as he looked, for by the bright moonlight he
at once identified the four dogs. They were, alas!
the highly respectable, exemplary old Bender, the collie,
Tige, the brindle, and the mongrel bulldog all
loved and trusted members of society. Rufus was
so astonished that he did not think of using his blunderbuss;
he simply whistled.
That whistle appeared to resolve the
doubts of the dogs instantly. They growled menacingly
and sprang away like the wind. Rufus saw them
run across the pasture to the woods, and afterward,
for some minutes, heard them washing themselves in
the brook, as roguish, sheep-killing dogs always do
before returning home.
But in this case the dogs appeared
to know that they had been detected, and that so far
as their characters as good and virtuous dogs went,
the game was up. Not one of them returned home.
All four took to the woods, and thereafter lived predatory
lives. They were aware of the gravity of their
offenses.
During October and early November
they were heard of as a pack of bad sheep-killers,
time and again; but they now followed their evil practices
at a distance from their former homes, where, indeed,
the farmers took the precaution of carefully guarding
their sheep. On one night of October they killed
three calves in a farmer’s field, four miles
from the Frost farm. Several parties set off to
hunt them, but they escaped and lived as outlaws,
subsisting from nocturnal forays until snow came,
when they were tracked to a den beneath a high crag,
called the “Overset,” up in the great woods.
It was Rufus Frost and Emerson Needham,
the former owner of Bender, who tracked the band to
their retreat. Finding it impossible to call or
drive the criminals out, they blocked the entrance
of the den with large stones, and then came home to
devise some way of destroying them since
it is a pretty well-established fact that when once
a dog has relapsed into the savage habits of his wild
ancestry he can never be reclaimed.
Someone had suggested suffocating
the dogs with brimstone fumes; and so, early the following
morning, Rufus and Emerson, heading a party of fifteen
men and boys, came to the Edwards farm and the Old
Squire’s to get brimstone rolls, which we had
on account of our bees. Their coming, on such
an errand, carried a wave of excitement with it.
Old Hewey Glinds, the trapper, was sent for and joined
the party, in spite of his rheumatism. Every
boy in the neighborhood begged earnestly to go; and
the most of us, on one plea and another, obtained permission
to do so.
All told, I believe, there were thirty-one
in the party, not counting dogs. Entering the
woods we proceeded first to Stoss Pond, then through
Black Ash Swamp, and thence over a mountainous wooded
ridge to Overset Pond.
In fact we seemed to be going to the
remote depths of the wilderness; and what a savage
aspect the snowy evergreen forest wore that morning!
At last, we came out on the pond. Very black it
looked, for it was what is called a “warm pond.”
Ice had not yet formed over it. The snow-clad
crag where the cave was, on the farther side, loomed
up, ghostly white by contrast.
Rufus and Emerson had gone ahead and
were there in advance of us; they shouted across to
us that the dogs had not escaped. We then all
hurried on over snowy stones and logs to reach the
place.
It was a gruesome sort of den, back
under an overhang of rocks fully seventy feet high.
Near the dark aperture which the boys had blocked,
numbers of freshly gnawed bones lay in the snow, which
presented a very sinister appearance.
Those in advance had already kindled
a fire of drift-stuff not far away on the shore.
The hounds and dogs which had come with the party,
scenting the outlaw dogs in the cave, were barking
noisily; and from within could be heard a muffled
but savage bay of defiance.
“That’s old Bender!”
exclaimed Emerson. “And he knows right well,
too, that his time’s come!”
“Suppose they will show fight?” several
asked.
“Fight! Yes!” cried
old Hewey, who had now hobbled up. “They’ll
fight wuss than any wild critters!”
One of the older boys, Ransom Frost,
declared that he was not afraid to take a club and
go into the cave.
“Don’t you think of such
a thing!” exclaimed old Hewey. “Tham’s
desperate dogs! They’d pitch onto you like
tigers! Tham dogs know there’s no hope
for them, and they’re going to fight if
they get the chance!”
It was a difficult place to approach,
and several different plans of attack were proposed.
When the two hounds and three dogs which had come
up with us barked and scratched at the heavy, flat
stones which Rufus and Emerson had piled in the mouth
of the cave, old Bender and Tige would rush forward
on their side of the obstruction, with savage growls.
Yet when Rufus or any of the others attempted to steal
up with their guns, to shoot through the chinks, the
outlaws drew back out of sight, in the gloom.
There was a fierceness in their growling such as I
never have heard from other dogs.
The owner of Watch, the collie, now
crept up close and called to his former pet.
“I think I can call my dog out,” said he.
He called long and endearingly, “Come,
Watch! Come, good fellow! You know me, Watch!
Come out! Come, Watch, come!”
But the outlawed Watch gave not a
sign of recognition or affection; he stood with the
band.
Tige’s former master then tried
the same thing, but elicited only a deep growl of
hostility.
“Oh, you can whistle and call,
but you won’t get tham dogs to go back on one
another!” chuckled old Hewey. “Tham
dogs have taken an oath together. They won’t
trust ye and I swan I wouldn’t either, if I was
in their places! They know you are Judases!”
It was decided that the brimstone
should be used. Live embers from the fire were
put in the kettle. Green, thick boughs were cut
from fir-trees hard by; and then, while the older
members of the party stood in line in front of the
hole beneath the rocks, to strike down the dogs if
they succeeded in getting out, Rufus and Emerson removed
a part of the stones, and with some difficulty introduced
the kettle inside, amidst a chorus of ugly growls
from the beleaguered outlaws. The brimstone was
then put into the kettle, more fire applied, and the
hole covered quickly with boughs. And now even
we younger boys were allowed to bear a hand, scraping
up snow and piling it over the boughs, the better to
keep in the smoke and fumes.
The splutter of the burning sulphur
could plainly be heard through the barrier, and also
the loud, defiant bark of old Bender and the growls
of Tige.
Very soon the barking ceased, and
there was a great commotion, during which we heard
the kettle rattle. This was succeeded presently
by a fierce, throaty snarling of such pent-up rage
that chills ran down the backs of some of us as we
listened. After a few minutes this, too, ceased.
For a little space there was complete silence; then
began the strangest sound I ever heard.
It was like the sad moaning of the
stormy wind, as we sometimes hear it in the loose
window casements of a deserted house. Hardly audible
at first, it rose fitfully, moaning, moaning, then
sank and rose again. It was not a whine, as for
pity or mercy, but a kind of canine farewell to life:
the death-song of the outlaws. This, too, ceased
after a time; but old Hewey did not advise taking
away the boughs for fifteen or twenty minutes.
“Make a sure job on’t,” he said.
Choking fumes issued from the cave
for some time after it was opened and the stones pulled
away. Bender was then discovered lying only a
few feet back from the entrance. He appeared
to have dashed the kettle aside, as if seeking to
quench the fire and smoke. Tige was close
behind him, Watch farther back. Very stark and
grim all four looked when finally they were hauled
out with a pole and hook and given a finishing shot.
It was thought best to burn the bodies
of the outlaws. The fire on the shore was replenished
with a great quantity of drift-wood, fir boughs and
other dry stuff which we gathered, and the four carcasses
heaved up on the pile. It was a calm day, but
thick, dark clouds had by this time again overspread
the sky, causing the pond to look still blacker.
The blaze gained headway; and a dense column of smoke
and sparks rose straight upward to a great height.
Owing to the snow and the darkening heavens, the fire
wore a very ruddy aspect, and I vividly recall how
its melancholy crackling was borne along the white
shore, as we turned away and retraced our steps homeward.