[The Moon-Voyage by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link book
The Moon-Voyage

CHAPTER XXI
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In these meetings the Yankees are often accompanied by their dogs, and both sportsmen and game go on for hours.
"What demons you are!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, when his companion had depicted the scene with much energy.
"We are what we are," answered J.T.Maston modestly; "but let us make haste." In vain did Michel Ardan and he rush across the plain still wet with dew, jump the creeks, take the shortest cuts; they could not reach Skersnaw Wood before half-past five.

Barbicane must have entered it half-an-hour before.
There an old bushman was tying up faggots his axe had cut.
Maston ran to him crying-- "Have you seen a man enter the wood armed with a rifle?
Barbicane, the president--my best friend ?" The worthy secretary of the Gun Club thought naively that all the world must know his president.

But the bushman did not seem to understand.
"A sportsman," then said Ardan.
"A sportsman?
Yes," answered the bushman.
"Is it long since ?" "About an hour ago." "Too late!" exclaimed Maston.
"Have you heard any firing ?" asked Michel Ardan.
"No." "Not one shot ?" "Not one.

That sportsman does not seem to bag much game!" "What shall we do ?" said Maston.
"Enter the wood at the risk of catching a bullet not meant for us." "Ah!" exclaimed Maston, with an unmistakable accent, "I would rather have ten bullets in my head than one in Barbicane's head." "Go ahead, then!" said Ardan, pressing his companion's hand.
A few seconds after the two companions disappeared in a copse.

It was a dense thicket made of huge cypresses, sycamores, tulip-trees, olives, tamarinds, oaks, and magnolias.


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