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bruce-第23部分

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his friend。 And always the dog's plumed tail would beat rhythmic

welcome against the ground as the sentry approached him。



Thus nearly an hour wore on。 A fat moon butted its lazy way

through the smoke…mists of the eastern skyline。



Then something happenedsomething that Bruce could readily have

forestalled if the wind had been blowing from the other

direction; and if a dog's eyes were not as nearsighted as his

nose is farsmelling。



The Missourian paused to run his hand caressingly over the

collie's rough mane; and moved on; down the lonely beat。 Bruce

watched his receding figure; drowsily。 At the end of ninety yards

or more; the Missourian passed by a bunch of low bushes which

grew at the near side of a stretch of hilly and shellpocked

ground。 He moved past the bushes; still watched by the somewhat

bored dog。



It was then that Bruce saw a patch of bushshadow detach itself

from the rest; under the glow of the rising moon。 The shadow was

humpy and squat。 Noiseless; it glided out from among the bushes;

close at the sentry's heels; and crept after him。



Bruce pricked his ears and started to get up。 His curiosity was

roused。 The direction of the wind prevented him from smelling out

the nature of the mystery。 It also kept his keen hearing from

supplying any clue。 And the distance would not permit him to see

with any distinctness。



Still his curiosity was very mild。 Surely; if danger threatened;

the sentinel would realize it。 For by this time the Shadow was a

bare three feet behind him near enough; by Bruce's system of

logic; for the Missourian to have smelled and heard the pursuer。

So Bruce got up; in the most leisurely fashion; preparatory to

strolling across to investigate。 But at almost his first step he

saw something that changed his gracefully slouching walk into a

charging run。



The Shadow suddenly had merged with the sentinel。 For an instant;

in stark silence; the two seemed to cling together。 Then the

Shadow fled; and the lanky Missourian slumped to the earth in a

sprawling heap; his throat cut。



The slayer had been a deft hand at the job。 No sound had escaped

the Missourian; from the moment the stranglingly tight left arm

had been thrown around his throat from behind until; a second

later; he fell bleeding and lifeless。



In twenty leaping strides; Bruce came up to the slain sentinel

and bent over him。 Dog…instinct told the collie his friend had

been done to death。 And the dog's power of scent told him it was

a German who had done the killing。



For many months; Bruce had been familiar with the scent of German

soldiers; so different from that of the army in which he toiled。

And he had learned to hate it; even as a dog hates the vague

〃crushed cucumber〃 smell of a pitviper。 But while every dog

dreads the viper…smell as much as he loathes it; Bruce had no

fear at all of the boche odor。 Instead; it always awoke in him a

blood…lust; as fierce as any that had burned in his wolf…

ancestors。



This same fury swept him now; as he stood; quivering; above the

body of the kindly man who so lately had petted him; this and a

craving to revenge the murder of his human friend。



For the briefest time; Bruce stood there; his dark eyes abrim

with unhappiness and bewilderment; as he gazed down on the

huddled form in the wet grass。 Then an electric change came over

him。 The softness fled from his eyes; leaving them bloodshot and

blazing。 His great tawny ruff bristled like an angry cat's。 The

lazy gracefulness departed from his mighty body。 It became tense

and terrible。 In the growing moonlight his teeth gleamed whitely

from under his upcurled lip。



In a flash he turned and set off at a loping run; nose close to

ground; his long stride deceptively swift。 The zest of the man…

hunt had obsessed him; as completely as; that day; it had spurred

the advance of the 〃Here…We…Comes。〃



The trail of the slayer was fresh; even over such broken ground。

Fast as the German had fled; Bruce was flying faster。 Despite the

murderer's long start; the dog speedily cut down the distance

between his quarry and himself。 Not trusting to sight; but solely

to his unerring sense of smell。 Bruce sped on。



Then; in a moment or two; his hearing re…enforced his scent。 He

could catch the pad…pad…pad of running feet。 And the increasing

of the sound told him he was gaining fast。



But in another bound his ears told him something elsesomething

he would have heard much sooner; had not the night wind been

setting so strongly in the other direction。 He heard not only the

pounding of his prey's heavy…shod feet; but the soft thud of

hundredsperhaps thousandsof other army shoes。 And now;

despite the adverse wind; the odor of innumerable soldiers came

to his fiercely sniffing nostrils。 Not only was it the scent of

soldiers; but of German soldiers。



For the first time; Bruce lifted his head from the ground; as he

ran; and peered in front of him。 The moon had risen above the

low…lying horizon vapors into a clear sky; and the reach of

country was sharply visible。



Bruce saw the man he was chasing;saw him plainly。 The German

was still running; but not at all as one who flees from peril。 He

ran; rather; as might the bearer of glad tidings。 And he was even

now drawing up to a group of men who awaited eagerly his coming。

There must have been fifty men in the group。 Behind themin open

formation and as far as the dog's near…sighted eyes could see

were more men; and more; and morethousands of them; all moving

stealthily forward。



Now; a collie (in brain; though never in heart) is much more wolf

than dog。 A bullterrier; or an Airedale; would have charged on at

his foe; and would have let himself be hacked to pieces before

loosing his hold on the man。



Buteven as a wolf checks his pursuit of a galloping sheep when

the latter dashes into the guarded foldBruce came to an abrupt

halt; at sight of these reenforcements。 He stood irresolute;

still mad with vengeful anger; but not foolish enough to assail a

whole brigade of armed men。



It is quite impossible (though Mahan and Vivier used to swear it

must be true) that Bruce had the reasoning powers to figure out

the whole situation which confronted him。 He could not have known

that a German brigade had been sent to take advantage of the

〃Here…We…Comes〃 temporarily isolated positionthat three

sentries had been killed in silence and that their deaths had

left a wide gap through which the brigade hoped to creep

unobserved until they should be within striking distance of their

unsuspectingly slumbering victims。



Bruce could not have known this。 He could not have grasped the

slightest fraction of the idea; being only a real…life dog and

not a fairytale animal。 But what he could and did realize was

that a mass of detested Germans was moving toward him; and that

he could not hope to attack them; single…handed; also; that he

was not minded to slink peacefully away and leave his friend

unavenged。



Thwarted rage dragged from his furry throat a deep growl; a growl

that resounded eerily through that silent place of stealthy

moves。 And he stepped majestically forth from the surrounding

long grass; into the full glare of moonlight。



The deceptive glow made him loom gigantic and black; and tinged

his snowy chest with the phosphorous gleam of a snowfield。 His

eyes shone like a wild beast's。



   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *   *



Corporal Rudolph Freund; of the Konigin Luise Regiment; had just

finished his three…word report to his superior。 He had merely

saluted and announced



〃He is dead!〃



Corporal Freund did not thrill; as usual; to the colonel's grunt

of approval。 The Corporal was worried。 He was a Black Forest

peasant; and; while iron military life had dulled his native

superstitions; it had not dispelled them。



The night was mystic; in its odd blend of moon and shadows。

However hardened one may be; it is a nerve…strain to creep

through long grass; like a red Indian; to the murder of a hostile

sentinel。 And every German in the 〃Pocket〃 had been under

frightful mental and physical stress; for the past week。



Corporal Rudolph Freund was a brave man and a brute。 But that

week had sapped his nerve。 And the work of this night had been

the climax。 The desolate ground; over which he had crawled to the

killing; had suddenly seemed peopled with evil gnomes and

goblins; whose existence no true Black Forest peasant can doubt。

And; on the run back; he had been certain he heard some unseen

monster tearing through the underbrush in hot pursuit of him。 So

certain had he been; that he had redoubled his speed。



There were no wolves or other large wild animals in that region。

When he had wriggled toward the slow…pacing American sentinel; he

had seen and heard no creature of any sort。 Yet he was sure that

on the way back he had been pursued byby Some
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