Page:Furcountryorseve00vernrich.djvu/104

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5a THE FUR COUNTRY. With marvellous rapidity. We generally hunt them at night, as they very seldom venture from their homes iu the trunks of trees or the holes of rocks in the daytime, and even expert hunters find it very difficult to discover their retreats." " And are these otters also becoming scarcer and scarcer?" inquired Mrs Barnett. "Yes, madam," replied the Sergeant; "and when this speciea becomes extinct, the profits of the Company will sensibly decline. All the hunters try to obtain its fur, ;ind the Americans in particular are formidable rivals to us. Did you not meet any American agents on your journey up. Lieutenant?" " Not one," replied Hobson. " Do they ever penetrate as far as this ? " " Oh yes 1 " said the Sergeant ; " and when you hear of their approach, I advise you to be on your guard." " Are these agents, then, highway robbers ? " asked Mrs Paulina Barnett. " No, madam," replied the Sergeant ; " but they are formidable rivals, and when game is scarce, hunters often come to blows about it. I daresay that if the Company's attempt to establish a fort on the verge of the Arctic Ocean be successful, its example will at once be followed by these Americans, whom Heaven confound ! " "Bah!" exclaimed the Lieutenant; " the hunting districts are vast, and there 's room beneath the sun for everybody. As for us, let 's make a start to begin with. Let us press on as long as we have firm ground beneath our feet, and God be with us ! " After a walk of three hours the visitors returned to Fort Confi- dence, where a good meal of fish and fresh venison awaited them. Sergeant Long did the honours of the table, and after a little pleasant conversation, all retired to rest to forget their fatigues in a healthy and refreshing sleep. The next day. May 31st, Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson were on foot at five a.m. The Lieutenant intended to devote this day to visiting the Indian encampment, and obtaining as much useful information as possible. He asked Thomas Black to go with him, but the astronomer preferred to remain on terra firma. He wished to make a few astronomical observations, and to determine exactly the latitude and longitude of Fort Confidence ; so that Mrs Barnett and Jaspar Hobson had to cross the lake alone, under the guidance of an