[A Little Boy Lost by Hudson. W. H.]@TWC D-Link book
A Little Boy Lost

CHAPTER II
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They did not fly away at his approach, for the birds were now so accustomed to Martin and his harmless noises that they took very little notice of him.

He knelt on one knee and pointed the gun at them.
[Illustration: ] "Now, birdies, you don't know what a fright I'm going to give you--off you go!" he cried, and pulled the trigger.
The roar of the loud report travelled all over the wide lake, creating a great commotion among the feathered people, and they rose up with a general scream into the air.
All this was of no benefit to Martin, the recoil of the gun having sent him flying over, his heels in the air; and before he recovered himself the echoes were silent, and all the frightened birds were settling on the water again.

But there, just before him, lay one of the spoonbills, beating its great rose-coloured wings against the ground.
Martin ran to it, full of keen distress, but was powerless to help; its life's blood was fast running away from the shot wounds it had received in its side, staining the grass with crimson.

Presently it closed its beautiful ruby-coloured eyes and the quivering wings grew still.
Then Martin sat down on the grass by its side and began to cry, Oh, that great bird, half as tall as himself, and so many times more lovely and strong and beautiful in its life--he had killed it, and it would never fly again! He raised it up very tenderly in his arms and kissed it--kissed its pale green head and rosy wings; then out of his arms it tumbled back again on to the grass.
"Oh, poor bird," he cried suddenly, "open your wings and fly away!" But it was dead.
Then Martin got up and stared all round him at the wide landscape, and everything looked strange and dim and sorrowful.

A shadow passed over the lake, and a murmur came up out of the rushes that was like a voice saying something that he could not understand.


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