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    A WILD BEAR CHASE
   Someone was up here with him, and that someone was obviously after his bear.
   The boot tracks stayed well to the side of the paw prints. Justin followed both sets through the snow halfway across the meadow and stopped. He put one foot down next to the boot track and then picked it up. The imprint was identical.
   He was following his own tracks! The grizzly knew what Justin was doing and had outsmarted him. The bear had circled around and had cut back into the same trail.
   She was hunting him.
   Published by
   Bantam Doubleday Dell Books for Young Readers
   a division of
   Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc.
   1540 Broadway
   New York, New York 10036
   Copyright © 1997 by Gary Paulsen
   All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law.
   The trademarks Yearling® and Dell® are registered in the
   U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries.
   eISBN: 978-0-307-80407-5
   Series design: Barbara Berger
   Interior illustration by Michael David Biegel
   v3.1
   Dear Readers:
   Real adventure is many things—it’s danger and daring and sometimes even a struggle for life or death. From competing in the Iditarod dogsled race across Alaska to sailing the Pacific Ocean, I’ve experienced some of this adventure myself. I try to capture this spirit in my stories, and each time I sit down to write, that challenge is a bit of an adventure in itself.
   You’re all a part of this adventure as well. Over the years I’ve had the privilege of talking with many of you in schools, and this book is the result of hearing firsthand what you want to read about most—power-packed adventure and excitement.
   You asked for it—so hang on tight while we jump into another thrilling story in my World of Adventure.
   Contents
   Cover
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Chapter 13
   Gary Paulsen Adventure Guide
   Other Books by Yearling
   CHAPTER 1
   A low snarl filled the room. Justin McCallister’s eyes flew open. He rolled out of bed. His feet barely touched the cold wooden floor planks as he ran to the window. “What is it, Radar? You hear something out there, girl?”
   Justin crouched and put his hand on the young collie’s neck. The dog was tense and the hair on her back was standing up. “Don’t worry, girl. Old Molly is on duty tonight. She’ll take care of any sorry coyotes that come around trying to bother the sheep.”
   Radar’s ears went up. The growling changed to a high, piercing bark. She scratched wildly at the windowpane, then flipped around and tore out the bedroom door.
   Justin was right behind her. He grabbed his uncle Mack’s rifle from the rack above the living room fireplace, took a flashlight from the mantel, and yanked open the front door.
   A bitter blast of cold Montana spring wind slammed into his body. It felt like a solid wall of ice and reminded him that he was barefoot and wearing only the lower half of his long johns.
   Radar bounded into the darkness. Old Molly was barking now too, and Justin could hear the lambs in the south pen bleating. Shivering in the freezing wind, he pointed the light in the general direction of the noise.
   “Can you see anything?”
   Justin turned. His aunt Polly was standing in the doorway, holding out a down jacket.
   “Not yet.” Justin quickly slipped into the jacket and stepped off the porch.
   “Be careful.”
   Justin nodded but didn’t say anything. He levered a shell into the rifle.
   A shrill yelp from one of the dogs cut the night. Justin stopped, fired one shot in the air, and started running.
   When he reached the sheep he found the gate on the lamb pen ripped off its hinges and tossed aside. A mass of quivering animals were crushing each other in an effort to huddle in one corner of the pen.
   Old Molly was on the ground near the opening. She was whimpering and blood was dripping from a long gash in her side.
   Dead lambs were everywhere. Their bodies had been slashed and ripped to the bones. Great claw marks dug deep into their flanks.
   Justin swallowed and pointed the light at the soft dirt. The tracks were plain: two large pads with five long scissorlike claws on each.
   A grizzly.
   CHAPTER 2
   “Hold her, Justin. I need to get in at least three more good stitches.”
   Old Molly was stretched out on the kitchen table. She was weak from loss of blood. But that didn’t stop her from trying to move every time Aunt Polly stuck the long needle and thread into her side to sew the ragged pieces of skin and fur together.
   Justin tried to comfort the old dog as he put all his weight into holding her still. “It’s for your own good, girl. A few days’ rest and you’ll be good as new.”
   “Wish I could say the same for that new crop of lambs.” Uncle Mack sat near the table in his wheelchair, holding a clean bowl of hot water and some bandages.
   Aunt Polly cut the thread and took a roll of bandages from her husband. “These things happen, Mack. It’s part of ranching up here. You know that. We’ve been doing it almost thirty years.”
   “But grizzlies don’t usually bother us. Whenever they did in the past it was because they were hungry. And then they only took a stray lamb or two. This is different. That bear was out for blood.”
   “You think it’s the same one that hit Mr. Davis’s place last week?” Justin asked.
   “Gotta be.” Uncle Mack looked thoughtful. “If I didn’t have this broken hip, I’d go after it. Somebody’s got to put a stop to the killing before all the ranchers up here are wiped out.”
   Radar sat up where she’d been lying by the door and started barking. Justin went to the window and moved the curtain. There were headlights approaching from down the road. “Someone’s coming.”
   In a few moments there was a knock at the door. Justin opened it and a short man with a fringe of a white beard under his chin and a floppy felt hat on his head, stepped inside.
   “Hello, Roy.” Uncle Mack turned his chair to face the man. “What brings you out so early?”
   The man saw Molly and removed his hat. “What happened?”
   Uncle Mack sighed. “Justin thinks it was a grizzly, maybe even the one that was at your place a couple of days ago. We lost twelve head, and Old Molly got the stuffing beat out of her.”
   “That’s why I’m here, Mack. I was hoping to warn you but I guess I’m too late. Luke Miller was hit last night too, right before you, it appears. He lost better than half his new crop of lambs.”
   Mack frowned. “Tell us how we can help.”
   “I’ve called a meeting of all the ranchers in a hundred-mile radius. There’s no other way. That bear has to be stopped.”
   CHAPTER 3
   “I’m glad you were safe in the shed when that grizzly came around last night.” Justin playfully pulled the milk bottle out of the little lamb’s greedy mouth. The fuzzy little creature dove for it and landed with both front hooves square in the middle of Justin’s stomach.
   “You are a pig,” Justin laughed. “I should have name
d you Mr. Piggy instead of Blue.”
   “I think Blue is a good name.” Aunt Polly came through the gate. “It suits him. He’s got the look of a blue-ribbon champion. The only way you won’t win first place at the county fair with him this fall is if the judges are stone blind.”
   Justin proudly stroked the pushy little lamb. “You hear that, Blue? You’re gonna be a winner!”
   “You’d better get a move on, Justin. Mack’s already in the truck. If we’re going to be on time for the ranchers’ meeting, we’d better get going.”
   Justin stood up, gave the lamb one last pull on the bottle, then put it up on the shelf. “That’s all for now, Blue. I’ll be back later.”
   Justin followed his aunt to the truck and waited for her to slide in beside Mack. Justin got behind the wheel and looked in the mirror to make sure Radar was safely in the back of the truck before he started the engine. Radar loved to go anywhere the truck was going.
   Justin was only thirteen, too young for a license, but no one out here ever paid any attention to things like that. Practical things were what mattered on a ranch. Things like missing school during lambing season, driving to the store for a load of feed, and staying up in the high meadow in the summer for weeks at a time with the sheep.
   As the old Ford rambled over the bumpy dirt roads, Justin glanced at his uncle. Mack McCallister was the only father he’d ever known. Justin’s parents had died in a car wreck in Helena when he was a baby, and Mack and Polly had raised him.
   Mack was well liked among the ranchers because he worked hard and was always the first to lend a neighbor a helping hand. That was how he’d broken his hip, trying to help some friends round up a stray bull. The bull had butted the horse Uncle Mack was riding, and he had been thrown. The doctors said the break in his hip was bad and would take several months to heal.
   Justin slowed down, changed gears, and turned onto a gravel road. He ran a hand through his thick, dark brown hair.
   “You look fine, son.” Mack winked at him. “At least I’m pretty sure Sally Davis will think so.”
   “Cut it out.” Justin’s face flushed, the pink traveling all the way to the tips of his ears. “We’re here on business.”
   Mack raised an eyebrow. “I’ll be sure and explain that to Sally.”
   Polly elbowed her husband as the truck came to a stop in front of a weather-beaten log house.
   Justin hopped out and took the wheelchair from the back of the truck. “You stay there, Radar. This shouldn’t take long.”
   He helped his uncle into the chair and pushed him up the path to the house. Mrs. Davis invited them in and offered them coffee.
   Justin looked around the room. It was crowded with serious-looking ranchers and farmers worried about their livelihoods.
   Roy Davis banged on the edge of a table with a butter knife. “Now that Mack’s here we can get started.” He waited for the room to quiet down. “As you all know, the reason I asked you to come was because of the killer grizzly.”
   Someone touched Justin’s arm. “You want coffee?” Sally Davis held a cup out and smiled.
   Justin found himself staring at her, trying to figure out what was different. She still had the same blond hair and blue eyes, the same dimples. He’d grown up with her and they had always been best friends. But for some reason, things weren’t the same lately, and he couldn’t quite put his finger on why.
   “Hel-looo? Anybody here want coffee?” Sally said teasingly.
   Justin blinked and reached for the cup. “Uh … thanks.” Embarrassed, he turned his attention back to Sally’s father.
   Mr. Davis was telling the group that he’d been in touch with the local forest rangers. “They say this bear fits the description of one from Yellowstone that lost two cubs to an illegal hunter. I tried to explain what’s been going on up here, but they just don’t seem to understand the problem.”
   “I don’t think we ought to waste time talking.” Luke Miller waved his fist in the air. “I think we should trap the thing and be done with it. All our ranches will be wiped out soon!”
   “It’s gotta be poisoned.” A man in a long brown sheepskin coat stood up. “The only way to make sure it will leave us alone is to kill it.”
   “Maybe a group of us could go out after it,” another man chimed in. “I’d like to go, of course, but we just finished lambing and I have to stay and tend to my stock.”
   “Unfortunately that’s the boat most of us are in right now.” Roy Davis rubbed his beard. “So I propose we send a representative to the head ranger’s office in Billings and force them to take action. And I nominate Mack McCallister to be that representative.”
   CHAPTER 4
   “I don’t like leaving you,” Aunt Polly said as she watched Justin put her bags and Uncle Mack’s in the bed of the truck. “Especially with that crazy bear roaming around.”
   Mack leaned across the seat. “So far the grizzly hasn’t come back to any place twice, but if he does, I don’t want you taking any chances.”
   “You guys worry too much. It’s not like you’ve never gone away before.” Justin stepped back from the pickup. “Go on. And have a good time in Billings. I’ll see you in a few days.”
   Aunt Polly put the truck in gear and started down the road. Justin waved and yelled, “Don’t worry!”
   When they were out of sight, he gave Radar a pat and headed for the pens. “We’ll give everything one last check before we turn in.”
   He stopped by Blue’s pen first. The lamb ran to the gate, sniffing for food. “It won’t do you any good to beg. You’ve already had your supper. Now get back in the shed and go to sleep.” All evidence of the grizzly’s attack the night before was gone. Justin had worked hard to clean things up and calm the sheep down.
   Old Molly was nestled in a bed of straw in the barn. Justin dumped her water and gave her a clean bowl. “Here you go, girl. Just take it easy.”
   Justin closed the barn door and he and Radar trotted to the house. “Okay. It’s just us guys. What should we do first?”
   The collie barked and wagged her tail.
   “Popcorn and a movie? Good choice.” Justin opened the door and Radar ran past him into the kitchen.
   Justin took a skillet out of the cabinet and put it on the stove. He poured in some oil and added the popcorn.
   Radar’s ears went up. She growled at the window. “I’m hurrying. This stuff’ll only cook so fast.”
   The collie barked and nervously ran to the window and back.
   “What is it, girl? We were just out there. Everything’s all right.”
   The dog snarled and jumped at the door.
   “Okay, let’s go take a look.” Justin turned off the burner. “Hang on. I better get the rifle.”
   There was still enough light to see the outline of the pens from the porch. Justin squinted, trying to get a look at the sheep. Nothing seemed out of place, but Radar took off like a shot.
   Before Justin could make it to the bottom step he heard an enraged bellow and a crashing sound coming from the shed.
   He ran to the barn, flattened himself against the wall, took a deep breath, and peered around the corner.
   A huge bear had her head and one front shoulder through a hole she had punched in the shed wall and was angrily trying to get farther in.
   She was the biggest animal Justin had ever laid eyes on. Her fur was tipped with silver and glistened, even in the dim light. The hump behind the bear’s head told Justin she was a grizzly.
   Radar ran up and bravely nipped at the bear’s hind leg, darted back, then did it again. The grizzly was in no mood for games. She took a swipe at the dog with her front paw, catching Radar alongside the head.
   It was like watching someone swat a fly. The collie sailed through the air, hit the barn wall, and fell to the ground, motionless.
   The hole in the shed wall was bigger, and the bear was still trying to push inside.
   Justin leveled his rifle. He took aim and pulled the trigger.
   It was ha
rd to tell in the fading light where the bullet hit. There was a dull thud, and the wounded bear arched sideways, pulling free of the hole. She stopped for a moment and looked at Justin, whose shaky hands were frantically trying to lever another round into the chamber of the rifle. Then the bear bolted into the woods.
   Radar crawled weakly to her feet and barked at the shadows. Justin leaned the gun against the barn wall and knelt to examine the dog. As best he could tell, there were no broken bones. He stood and scolded the dog. “Next time, you better wait for me, girl. It’s a miracle you aren’t hurt.”
   Justin turned to the shed. The thick planked plywood wall was ruined. He’d have to patch it up for now and then try to rebuild it tomorrow.
   He walked around to the front of the pen that was attached to the shed, and opened the gate. “Come on out, Blue. You’re safe now. Blue?”
   At the back of the pen near the shed door Justin saw a crumpled ball of white wool.
   “No!” Justin ran to the lamb. Bright crimson blotches covered Blue’s woolly side. Justin picked him up. But it was too late.
   The lamb was dead.
   CHAPTER 5
   It was too dark to see the cold, angry puffs of air coming from Justin’s nose and mouth. It was just barely morning. He’d already fed and watered the stock, making sure there was extra food and water in case he wasn’t back in time for the night feeding.
   He shrugged into his backpack and reached inside the gun cabinet for his uncle’s favorite rifle. Justin had fired the gun once before. It had left a purple bruise above his armpit that hadn’t gone away for a week.
   He found a box of shells and loaded four rounds into the rifle’s magazine. The gun was powerful. He only hoped it would be powerful enough.
   “Let’s go, Radar.” Justin knew the grizzly was wounded. That would mean she couldn’t travel as quickly as usual. It also meant she’d be meaner than ever.
   Justin stepped off the porch and let Radar lead him through the pens to the edge of the woods. He unclipped a flashlight from his belt and scanned the ground. The grizzly’s tracks were plainly visible, and so were several drops of dried blood.
   

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