<h3><SPAN name="XXI" id="XXI"></SPAN>XXI</h3>
<h3>THE FOREST FIRE</h3>
<p>It was quite late in the fall. And Blue Mountain looked very
different from the way it had looked all summer. The leaves had
turned to brown and yellow and scarlet, except where there were
clumps of fir-trees, as there were around Mr. Bear's house.
Indeed, Blue Mountain looked almost as if it were all aflame,
so bright were the autumn colors. Mr. Bear remarked as much to
Mrs. Bear one day.</p>
<p>"For goodness' sake, don't say that!" she exclaimed. "Don't
mention fire to me. The very thought of it makes me nervous.
Everything's <i>so</i> dry! I shall be glad when it rains
again."</p>
<p>"It <i>is</i> dry," Mr. Bear agreed. "But don't worry. It's
like this every fall." And he went slowly down the
mountain.</p>
<p>Cuffy and Silkie were playing together that morning. Cuffy
was teaching Silkie to box, though, to be sure, he knew very
little about boxing. But he found it easy to tap Silkie on the
nose. And he had tapped her so hard that Mrs. Bear heard a
sound very much like quarreling; and she came to the door to
see what was the trouble.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bear was just going to call to her children, when she
noticed a peculiar odor in the air. And she stood quite still,
and sniffed, just as Cuffy had when he smelled the haymakers'
lunch. You remember that the more Cuffy sniffed, the less
alarmed he had been. But it was different with Mrs. Bear. The
longer she stood there, with her nose twitching, and snuffing
up the air, the more uneasy she became. And pretty soon she saw
something that gave her a great start.</p>
<p>It was something white that Mrs. Bear saw, and it hung over
the tree-tops; and where the wind had caught it it was spun out
thin, like a veil.</p>
<p>It was exactly what Mrs. Bear had feared—it was smoke!
The forest was afire! And Mrs. Bear was very much alarmed. She
sent Cuffy and Silkie into the house, because she wanted to be
sure that they wouldn't wander off into the woods. And then
their mother stood in the doorway and watched. She was looking
for Mr. Bear. While she waited there the smoke kept rising more
and more until there were great clouds of it; and at last Mrs.
Bear could see red flames licking up to the tops of the
trees.</p>
<p>Several deer came bounding past, and a great number of
rabbits and squirrels. And then followed other animals that
couldn't run so fast—such as raccoons, and skunks, and
woodchucks. Not for years had Mrs. Bear seen so many of the
forest-people—and they were all so frightened, and in
such a hurry to get away from the fire, that not one of them
noticed Mrs. Bear as she stood in her doorway.</p>
<p>"Where are they going, Mother?" It was Cuffy who asked the
question. He had crept up behind his mother and had been
looking at the strange sight for some time.</p>
<p>"They're going over to the lake, on the other side of the
mountain," Mrs. Bear said.</p>
<p>"Are they going fishing?" Cuffy inquired.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bear shook her head. And then Cuffy squeezed past her
and saw what was happening.</p>
<p>"Oh-h, hurrah! hurrah!" he shouted.</p>
<p>His mother looked at him in astonishment.</p>
<p>"It's father's birthday!" he cried. You remember that
Cuffy's mother had told him that Mr. Bear was born on the day
of a great forest fire, and that he never had a birthday except
when the woods caught fire again. "Now maybe father will bring
home another little pig for a feast!" Cuffy said hopefully.</p>
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