"Be careful where you shoot," Ken warned repeatedly. "Be cool--think quick--and aim."
Ken settled down for a long wait, some fifty yards from the deer carcass. A wonderful procession of wild fowl winged swift flight over his head. They flew very low. It was strange to note the difference in the sound of their flying. The cranes and herons softly swished the air, the teal and canvasbacks whirred by, and the great Muscovies whizzed like bullets.
When the first deer came down to drink it was almost dark, and when they left the moon was up, though obscured by clouds. Faint sounds rose from the other side of the island. Ken listened until his ears ached, but he could hear nothing. Heavier clouds drifted over the moon. The deer carcass became indistinct, and then faded entirely, and the bar itself grew vague. He was about to give up watching for that night when he heard a faint rustling below. Following it came a grating or crunching of gravel.
Bright flares split the darkness--crack! crack! rang out George's rifle, then the heavy boom! boom! of the shotgun.
"There he is!" yelled George. "He's down--we got him--there's two! Look out!"
Boom! Boom! roared the heavy shotgun from Hal's covert.
"George missed him! I got him!" yelled Hal. "No, there he goes--Ken! Ken!"
Ken caught the flash of a long gray body in the hazy gloom of the bar and took a quick shot at it. The steel-jacketed bullet scattered the gravel and then hummed over the bank. The gray body moved fast up the bank. Ken could just see it. He turned loose the little automatic and made the welkin ring.
XIV
A FIGHT WITH A JAGUAR