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Updated: June 26, 2025


In the next instant a ball, aimed at himself, and fired from another quarter, passed through the window, grazing the shoulder slightly bitten by Loup Garou, and lodged in the opposite logs of the room. A third loud yell followed as the corporal drew in his head and disappeared from the window. The Indians evidently thought he had been hit, and thus gave utterance to their triumph.

There are strange creatures in the woods and wilds of this new world." "There is the Loup Garou, but I have not seen him. He gets changed from a man to a fierce dog, and if you kill the dog, the man dies. There is the Windigo, and the old medicine woman can call strange things out of a sick person who has been bewitched, and then he gets well. But M. Destournier laughs at these stories."

Lou Garou continued: "Ruddy says: 'Hans dassen't not cash it. He's scared of me, the pot-bellied old fool." The stout German blinked behind his horn spectacles. He feared neither God nor man, but he was very patient. He made no remark. "'If Hans won't, says Ruddy, 'Stewart sure will!" The foreman of the jury rose like a spring slowly uncoiling. He looked like a snake ready to strike.

By gosh, boss," looking for the first time at him who stood in that position to the rest of the party "If WE can't smell the varmint, I take it Loup Garou does." At this early period of civilization, in these remote countries, there was little distinction of rank between the master and the man the employer and the employed.

But bowing to this authority, we must accept the Loup Garou and all its kith and kin as stern realities, and not attribute it, as we might perhaps have been inclined to do, to a deadly fear of wild beasts, coupled to a thorough knowledge of the unpleasant qualities of primitive human nature.

It is not for me, or such as I am, to question the opinion of these wise men of the West, but if ghosts, and phantoms, and witchcraft and hag-ridings are to be accepted on such grounds, I must be allowed to put in a plea, for similar reasons, in favour of the Loup Garou, the Were-Tiger, and all their gruesome family.

Here he was interrupted by the gradually approaching sounds of rattling deer hoofs, so well known as composing one of the lower ornaments of the Indian war-dress, while, at the same moment, the wild moaning of Loup Garou, then standing at the front door-way, was renewed even more plaintively than before. Mr. Heywood's cheek blanched.

"Nothin' particular, Jimmy," said Lou Garou. "He only said somethin' general, like 'them bally-washed hawgs over to the Central Store, I think it was." "The court," said the judge stiffly, "knows the deceased to have been a worthless braggart. Proceed with your story."

The birds all know her, and she has a tame doe that follows her about, except that it will not venture inside the palisade. I'm not sure but she could charm a wolf." "The Loup Garou," laughed the younger man. "I think nothing would dare harm her. But I should like my sister to see her. Oh, I am sure you will like her, even if she is a woman grown." "Come," said Destournier, holding out his hand.

No Ruddy, Friday. Saturday I see the weather was bankin' up black for snow, so I says: 'Jenny, it's credit or bust. I'll step up to the store and talk to Hans. So Jenny puts me up a snack of lunch, and I goes to see Hans. Hans," said Lou Garou, addressing that juror directly, "did I or didn't I come to see you that Saturday?" Hans nodded.

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