[The Prairie by J. Fenimore Cooper]@TWC D-Link bookThe Prairie CHAPTER XII 18/18
Then arose two loud and piercing cries, in quick succession, which were followed by a quiet, still more awful and appalling. "Come back, come back, my children!" cried the woman, the feelings of a mother getting the ascendency. But her voice was hushed, and every faculty seemed frozen with horror, as at that instant the bushes once more parted, and the two adventurers re-appeared, pale, and nearly insensible themselves, and laid at her feet the stiff and motionless body of the lost Asa, with the marks of a violent death but too plainly stamped on every pallid lineament. The dogs uttered a long and closing howl, and then breaking off together, they disappeared on the forsaken trail of the deer.
The flight of birds wheeled upward into the heavens, filling the air with their complaints at having been robbed of a victim which, frightful and disgusting as it was, still bore too much of the impression of humanity to become the prey of their obscene appetites..
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