Ted, Jan and Nora could see the sharp nose and the bright
eyes more plainly now. As for Trouble, he did not know what it was all
about, and he wanted to go back in the water to wade, which was as
near swimming as he ever came.
Then the strange creature turned and suddenly made for a small rock,
which stood out of the water a little way from the sandy beach. It
climbed out on the rock, while the children and Nora watched eagerly,
and then Ted gave a laugh.
"Why!" he exclaimed, "it's nothing but a big muskrat!"
"A muskrat?" echoed Jan.
"Yes."
"And see, he has a mussel, or fresh-water clam," said Nora. "Look at
him crack the shell."
And this is what the muskrat was really doing. It had been swimming in
the lake--for muskrats are good swimmers--when it had found a fresh-
water mussel, which is like a clam except that it has a longer shell
that is black instead of white. Muskrats like mussels, but they cannot
eat them in water.
They have to bring them up on shore, or to a flat rock or stump that
sticks up out of water, where they can crack the shell and eat the
mussel inside.
"If I'd a known what it was I wouldn't 'a' been scared," said Ted, who
felt a little ashamed of himself for hurrying toward shore. "You
frightened me yelling so, Jan."
"Well, I didn't want to see you get bit by a shark, Teddy.
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