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Wonder whut all them buzzards are doin yonder, squire, he said, pointing upward with his whipstock. Whut buzzardswhere? asked the squire with an elaborate note of carelessness in his voice. Right yonder, over Little Niggerwoolsee em there? Oh, yes, the squire made answer. Now I see em. They aint doin nothin, I reckinjest flyin round same as they always do in clear weather. Must be somethin dead over there! speculated the man in the buggy. A hawg probably, said the squire promptlyalmost too promptly. Theres likely to be hawgs usin in Niggerwool. Bristow, over on the other side from herehes got a big drove of hawgs. Well, mebbe so, said the man; but hawgs is a heap more apt to be feedin on high ground, seems like to me. Well, Ill be gittin along towards town. Gday, squire. And he slapped the lines down on the mares flank and jogged off through the dust. He could not have suspected anythingthat man couldnt. As the squire turned away from the road and headed for his house he congratulated himself upon that stroke of his in bringing in Bristows hogs; and yet there remained this disquieting note in the situation, that buzzards flying, and especially buzzards flying over Little Niggerwool, made people curiousmade them ask questions. He was half-way across the weed-field when, above the hum of insect life, above the inward clamour of his own busy speculations, there came to his ear dimly and distantly a sound that made him halt and cant his head to one side the better to hear it. Somewhere, a good way off, there was a thin, thready, broken strain of metallic clinking and clankingan eerie ghost-chime ringing. It came nearer and became plainertonk-tonk-tonk; then the tonks all running together briskly. A sheepbell or a cowbellthat was it; but why did it seem to come from overhead, from up in the sky, like? And why did it shift so abruptly from one quarter to anotherfrom left to right and back again to left? And how was it that the clapper seemed to strike so fast? Not even the breachiest of breachy young heifers could be expected to tinkle a cowbell with such briskness. The squires eye searched the earth and the sky, his troubled mind giving to his eye a quick and flashing scrutiny. He had it. It was not a cow at all. It was not anything that went on four legs. One of the loathly flock had left the others. The orbit of his swing had carried him across the road and over Squire Gathers land. He was sailing right toward and over the squire now. Craning his flabby neck, the squire could make out the unwholesome contour of the huge bird. He could see the ragged black wingsa buzzards wings are so often ragged and unevenand the naked throat; the slim, naked head; the big feet folded up against the dingy belly. And he could see a bell tooan undersized cowbellthat dangled at the creatures breast and jangled incessantly. All his life nearly Squire Gathers had been hearing about the Belled Buzzard. Now with his own eye he was seeing him. Once, years and years and years ago, some one trapped a buzzard, and before freeing it clamped about its skinny neck a copper band with a cowbell pendent from it. Since then the bird so ornamented has been seen a hundred timesand heard oftenerover an area as wide as half the continent. It has been reported, now in Kentucky, now in Texas, now in North Carolinanow anywhere between the Ohio River and the Gulf. Crossroads correspondents take their pens in hand to write to the country papers that on such and such a date, at such a place, So-and-So saw the Belled Buzzard. Always it is the Belled Buzzard, never a belled buzzard. The Belled Buzzard is an institution. There must be more than one of them. It seems hard to believe that one bird, even a buzzard in his prime, and protected by law in every Southern state and known to be a bird of great age, could live so long and range so far and wear a clinking cowbell all the time! Probably other jokers have emulated the |
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