Ungava Bob - A Winter's Tale by Dillon Wallace
page 49 of 251 (19%)
page 49 of 251 (19%)
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across to my trail, which I can do handy enough in a day, havin' no
pack." An hour before dark on Friday evening they reached the tilt. Dick was the first to enter it, and as he pushed open the door he stopped with the exclamation: "That rascal Micmac!" VI ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS The stove and stovepipe were gone, and fresh, warm ashes on the floor gave conclusive proof that the theft had been perpetrated that very day. Some one had been occupying the tilt, too, as new boughs spread for a bed made evident. "More o' Micmac John's work," commented Dick as he kicked the ashes. "He's been takin' th' stove an' he'll be takin' th' fur too, an' he gets a chance." "Maybe 'twere Mountaineers," suggested Bill. "No, 'twere no Mountaineers--_them_ don't steal. No un ever heard o' a Mountaineer takin' things as belongs to _other_ folks. _Injuns_ be |
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