<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER6" id="CHAPTER6">CHAPTER VII</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">REVELATIONS</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It is the custom at dog shows for the authorities to
distribute certificates on coloured cardboard of all the awards made by the
judges. At this show of Finn's great triumph, first prize cards were all blue,
second prize cards red, and third prize cards yellow. The custom was for
exhibitors proudly to affix these cards to the wire net-work stretched above
the bench of the winning dog. So it fell out that soon after the judging of
Wolfhounds was over, two red cards and two blue cards were fixed over
Kathleen's bench, and the Mistress of the Kennels lavished considerable
attention upon her, lest she should be moved to jealousy of Finn. The
decoration of the wire-work over Finn's bench was most striking.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">First, there were four blue first prize cards, for his
sensational win in Open, Limit, Novice, and Junior classes. Then there was a
very handsome card with ribbons attached, signifying that Finn had won the
Challenge Shield for the best Irish Wolfhound in the Show. And then there were
two other blue cards telling that Finn had won two special prizes; one, a medal
offered by a member of the Irish Wolfhound Club for the best hound at the Show
bred by its exhibitor; and another, of two guineas, offered by a well-known
Irish sportsman for the biggest Irish Wolfhound in the Show. And so Finn sat in
state beneath a sort of dome consisting of no fewer than seven trophies. It
seemed a little hard on that magnificent hound, his sire, who occupied the next
bench, under the shelter of but one solitary red card. But Dermot Asthore was a
philosopher, and, as has been said, weary of shows. He lay curled, like a great
cat, and slept stolidly, presenting nothing more conscious to the passing
throng than a small triangular section of one blood-shot eye.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">With Finn matters were otherwise. His numerous trophies
won him much attention, even from the large majority who were ignorant of his
great technical claims to fame. There was always a little group in front of
Finn's bench, and those of his admirers who had claims upon the Master--besides
many who had none--were continually begging that he should be taken down from
the bench, so that they might admire his full stature. Then there were
newspaper men with cameras and note-books; and there were dealers with
cheque-books, and a ready hand and eye for deprecation. But these were given no
sort of encouragement by the Master. Finn received as much attention in the
evening papers that day as any leader of human society; and in the papers
devoted to doggy interests, a great deal more. He was conscious of more of this
than you might suppose, even though he could not read newspapers: but the thing
he was most keenly conscious of was the fact that he had managed greatly to
please the Master and the Mistress of the Kennels. Finn felt happy and proud
about this, but, although he was taken down from the bench several times and
led into out-of-the-way corners where his chain could be removed and he was
able to stretch his limbs, still, he became pretty thoroughly tired of the
publicity and racket of the Dog Show before he was led out of the building at
ten o'clock that night, with Kathleen, by the Master. The Mistress had gone
home to Tara, early in the evening; but the Master was sleeping in lodgings
near the Palace, which he had engaged on the clear understanding that he was
allowed to bring the Wolfhounds there with him. Finn had not realized as yet
that one of the penalties of the fame that he had won lay in the fact that he
was obliged to spend another two whole days in the show building.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> But though Finn and Kathleen knew it not, their lot was a
far more fortunate one than that of the great majority of their kind at the
Show. Knowing that they would be unhappy if left in the building at night, that
they probably would be too much wrought up to eat there, and that they would
feel being chained up for so long more than most dogs, the Master had arranged
to take them out at night, in order that they might have half an hour's freedom
before supper and retirement to a sleeping place in the room he had taken for
himself. There were dogs in the Show whose masters did not come near them after
the judging on the first day, until the end of the third day. These
unfortunates were left to the rather chancy attentions of the show attendants,
who, with thousands of dogs to care for, could hardly be expected to give any
of them much individual notice.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">On the evening of the second day of the Show, while the
Master was engaged in conversation at some distance from Finn's bench, the
young hounds from the cottage by the Downs received a visit from a man who
showed the utmost admiration for them, and particularly, of course, for Finn.
This man, whose appearance rather reminded Finn of one whom he had heard
referred to as the gamekeeper, down in Sussex, looked up Finn's name and
ancestry in the show catalogue, and gave particular heed to the fine display of
prize cards over his head. He fondled Finn for several minutes, and Finn knew
by the various smells which hung about the man that he was accustomed to mixing
a good deal with dog-folk. Before turning away, this friendly and admiring man
presented Finn with a small piece of meat which he took from a paper-bag in one
of his pockets; and, of all the meat that Finn had ever tasted, this piece had
the most fascinating smell and the most provocatively exciting and pleasing
flavour. He meditated over this piece of meat for quite a long time, and when,
during the last afternoon of the Show, the friendly stranger appeared before
him again, Finn welcomed the man effusively, and, with nose and paw, plainly
asked for some more of that fascinating meat. The man chuckled, and rubbed the
backs of Finn's ears in an affectionate manner for several minutes. What Finn
found more to the point was that, before leaving, the man did present him with
another small section of this delicious meat with the fascinating smell. Finn
wished there was more of it, but he felt exceedingly grateful to the stranger
for the one piece and for the rest of his friendly attention.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">By payment of a small fee the Master was enabled to take
Finn and Kathleen away from the Show much earlier on that evening than before,
and a few hours later they were all three being welcomed at home by the
Mistress of the Kennels and Tara. Tara, by the way, was hardly able to spare
time for a remark at first; she was so busy sniffing all round Finn and
Kathleen, and reading for herself the sort of record of their recent adventures
which their coats and her delicate sense of smell provided. The three hounds
dined sumptuously, and in a row, while the Master and the Mistress sat before
them fighting their battles over again and discussing their triumph in the
show-ring. Then, the night being fine, the three were allowed to wander out
into the orchard for a quarter of an hour or so before going to bed. The Master
remained in his den talking.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Directly Tara reached the orchard she barked out loud,
"Who's there?"--an unmistakable sort of bark one would have thought. But the
Master was pretty thoroughly tired, and, perhaps, the fact that he was chatting
with the Mistress prevented his understanding Tara's bark. At all events, he
paid no heed to it. Tara promptly trotted across to the gate between the
orchard and the open down, followed closely by Finn and Kathleen. There, much
to Finn's delight, they found the friendly stranger of the Show. Tara eyed the
man with hauteur, as one whose acquaintance she had not made. Kathleen remained
modestly in the background. Finn, with lively recollections of the peculiarly
savoury meat which the stranger dealt in, placed his fore-paws, on the top of
the gate, and lolled his tongue at the man in friendly greeting. The man gave
Finn a provokingly tiny fragment of the savoury meat, and rubbed the young
hound's ears in the coaxing way he had. Then he stepped back a pace or two, and
produced a large piece of the meat.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Here, boy! Here, Finn! Jump, then, Finn!" The gate was
less than five feet high, and the seductive odour of this peculiar meat floated
just beyond it in the still night air. Finn drew back a pace or two, and then,
with a beautiful spring, cleared the gate easily. While giving Finn the piece
of meat he had been holding, the man slipped a swivel on to the ring of the
handsome green collar, and attached to the swivel there was a strong leather
lead. The man moved on slowly, with another piece of meat in his hand, and Finn
paced with him, willingly enough. When Finn had finished the next piece of meat
he was a hundred yards away from the orchard. He looked back then, and an
uncomfortable thrill passed through his young heart; a vague thrill it was,
conveying no definite fear or impression to his mind. Still, it was
uncomfortable. He had half a mind to go back and rejoin Tara and Kathleen, and
so, tentatively, he halted. If the friendly stranger had tried to force Finn
then, there would have been trouble. But he did not. Instead, he bent down and
played with Finn's ears, and then brought another piece of meat out of his
pocket. Holding this out, he moved on again; and the dog followed, forgetful
now of his momentary thrill of discomfort. After all, he thought, vaguely, very
likely this unaccustomed night walk was all part of the Show and its many novel
experiences. There had been night walks at the end of each show day. When Finn
had had another morsel of the meat, the friendly stranger put another collar on
his neck, and removed the green one. Then he began to trot, and Finn trotted
with him, quite contentedly. Finn was always glad to run.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">So the two trotted for miles, through the mild, still
October night, the man breathing heavily. Once something made Finn pause
suddenly; and the pause let him into a secret. The collar he was wearing now
was different from any other he had known in his short life. If you pulled
against it, it slipped round your throat so tightly as to stop your breathing
instantly and absolutely. The only thing to do was to go the way the collar and
lead pulled; then, immediately, the pressure relaxed. It was a collar that had
to be obeyed, that was evident. These "slip-collars" are well known to some
members of the Great Dane family, and particularly to those who are owned by
dealers; but their use came with rather a shock to lordly young Finn, who,
living the free and happy life he always had lived, there beside the Sussex
Downs, had rarely been asked to wear a collar of any sort.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">After a time, Finn and the stranger came to a little town,
and walked into the yard of an inn. There another man met them, to whom Finn's
friend said, hurriedly--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"I'll walk straight on. You drive on with the cart after
me. Don't stop till you're clear of the village."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"You've got him, then?" said the second man.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Never you mind about that. Can't yer see I've got him?
You get the pony out."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">And then Finn followed his leader out of the yard, and
through the quiet little village to the open country beyond. But by this time
Finn was beginning to feel that the night walk had been prolonged far enough.
There was no sign of any more of the aromatic meat coming his way, and he had
given up asking for it, and nosing the man's pocket. He thought he would like
to turn now, and get back to Kathleen and Tara and the Master. The day, and its
immediate predecessors, had been tiring, and Finn thought with strong desire of
his fragrant wheaten straw bed in the coach-house at home. Yes, it was
certainly time to return.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Accordingly, Finn asked his leader to stop, and, finding
that the man took no notice, he asked again, through his nose, and urgently.
The man paid not the slightest heed to this, and that rather angered Finn, who
was not accustomed to being ignored; so he planted his fore-feet firmly, and
stopped dead. As the lead tightened, the slip-collar pressed painfully on
Finn's throat; but he felt that the time had arrived to bring this excursion to
an end, and so steeled himself to ignore this pressure.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"None o' that, now!" said the man, with a new note in his
voice, of extreme harshness. "Come along now; d'ye hear!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn's fore-legs remained rigid. He had made up his mind
now, and already he was beginning to regret having stayed so long with this
stranger.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The man now gave a powerful tug at the leather lead, and
at that the pressure of the slip-collar forced Finn's tongue out between his
teeth. This was really painful, but it was clear in Finn's mind that he must go
home, so he remained straining backward.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Come on 'ere, ye brute!" growled the man savagely, and,
with a vicious jerk at the lead, he took a step to one side, and then kicked
Finn on the hind-quarters as hard as he could. That was the first real blow
Finn had ever received, and it taught him quite a lot. Up till this point it
had not occurred to him for a moment that the man entertained any other than
kindly, friendly feelings for him. In fact, he supposed that every one
entertained kindly feelings towards him. He had never experienced any other
sort of attitude. But this savage kick was a revelation to him. Also, it hurt.
Finn turned in his tracks and plunged forward in the direction from which, they
had come with such sudden strength that he almost dragged the lead from the
man's strong hand, and would undoubtedly have freed himself, but for the
slip-collar. As it was, the sudden jerk nearly throttled Finn, and brought him
rolling on his back with all four feet in the air. Before he could rise again,
the man had planted two ferocious kicks on his ribs; and Finn was thankful then
to draw a free breath by moving towards his persecutor, so as to slacken the
pressure on the lead. But, the moment he had drawn breath, the desire to escape
possessed him once more, and he repeated his leap for freedom. This time the
man was prepared, and, in addition to the pressure brought about by Finn's
reaching the end of his tether, there was the savage extra pressure of a quick
backward jerk at the lead, to bring the hound on his back a second time. This
time the man kicked him very severely, and, in addition, smote him violently on
the nose with clenched fist, as he staggered to his feet, gasping for
breath.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Just then the dim, smoky lights of a cart appeared at the
bend in the road, twenty yards away, in the direction of the village.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"That you, Bill?" cried the man who held Finn, and an
affirmative answer reached him from the cart. "Come on, then, and let's get
this stubborn beast into the cart." He gave a savage jerk at Finn's slip-collar
as he spoke, and once more his nailed boot crashed against the bewildered
Wolfhound's ribs. The man had an itch of anger and brutality upon him by this
time. Finn leaped sideways with a quick gasp as the man's boot struck him and
the cruel collar tightened; and at this sharp movement of his great body, there
in the middle of the road, the pony shied violently, just as it was being drawn
in to a standstill; the cart swerved sharply into the hedge, and a cracking
sound betrayed the breaking of a shaft.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">This was the finishing touch required to round off the
naturally vicious temper of the man who held Finn into a passion of sullen,
brutal anger. He cursed unceasingly while the man in the cart made the
necessary repairs with cord and a couple of sticks from the hedge; and with
every curse there was a kick, or a vicious blow, or a savage jerk at the
torturing slip-collar, and sometimes all three together. Finn could have killed
the man with ease; but, so far, the thought of even biting him never occurred
to the Wolfhound. Every hour that he had spent in the world had taught him that
humans were his friends, his very kindly protectors, his guardians and
governors, so to say. Every hour of his mother's life, with but very few
exceptions, had borne the same belief in upon her, and her nature was the
sweetest and gentlest imaginable. With his father, now, the case was somewhat
otherwise. There were those who said that the rather taciturn and shy Dermot
owed some of his wonderfully heavy coat to the mesalliance of a forbear of his
with a Tibetan Sheep Dog of a half-wild sort, with a temper far from reliable.
But, as yet at all events, Finn's temper was that of a clean run, well-bred
English boy; frank, open, trusting, and kindly; and, sorely as he ached, sorely
bewildered as he felt under the rain of blows and kicks, curses and strangling
tugs at his collar, he had as yet no thought of vengeance. His only desire was
for escape, and a return to the sweet, free life he knew beside the Downs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The man who held Finn instinctively recognised all this,
and the knowledge whetted the savagery of his temper, and withdrew all
restraint from its cruel indulgence. He had no conscious wish to injure the
hound; quite the contrary, since Finn represented money to him, and money was
what he desired more than anything else; but he was tired, things seemed to be
going ill with him, his temper was thoroughly roused, and the innocent cause of
all this, a sensitive, living creature, was tethered and helpless beside him;
and so he kicked and cursed, and jerked at the lead, and found relief in Finn's
gasps of pain and want of breath.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When the shaft was mended, the tail-board of the little
cart was let down, and, with a savage kick at Finn's hind-quarters, the man
bade him "Get up, there, ---- ye! Get up, ye brute!" Another kick. Poor Finn
tried to squirm forward under the cart to escape the heavy boot of his
persecutor. Then he was furiously jerked backward and half throttled.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Steady with 'im, matey," said the other man. "Don't knock
the dollars off of 'im."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Who asked you to shove your jaw in?" snarled the first
man. "You didn't get the brute, did ye--curse him!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Another kick.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The other man was used to his friend's temper, and said
nothing; but he hated to see a valuable animal knocked about, just as he would
have hated to see money thrown in the gutter instead of into a publican's till;
so he stooped down and lifted Finn's fore-feet from the ground, and placed them
on the floor of the cart.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"My oath!" he said, "but 'e's a tidy weight, ain't he? Up
ye go, my bully boy!" And up Finn went, on the spur of another violent kick,
which broke the skin across one of his hocks. The lead was now fastened close
down to a staple in the floor of the cart, Finn being forced down on his side
by the simple process of being knelt upon by his persecutor. To make doubly
sure of him, his fore-legs were then tightly lashed together with his own green
collar; and then the two men mounted the front of the cart and drove off.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The memory of that night's drive burnt itself deep into
Finn's young mind. He never really forgot it; that is to say, its effect upon
his attitude toward men and life was never completely lost. His skin was broken
in three or four places; every bone in his body ached from the heavy kicks he
had received; an intolerable thirst kept him gasping for every breath he drew;
the cramp set up in his fore-legs by their being strapped tightly together, one
across the other, was an exquisite pain; and his muzzle was held hard down
against the grimy floor-boards of the cart, while his mind was full of a black
despairing fear of he knew not what. It was a severe ordeal for one who, up
till then, had never even known what it meant to receive a severe verbal
scolding; for one who had never seen a man's hand lifted in anger.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">An end came at last to this horrible drive.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Thank Gawd, 'ere's 'orley!" said the man who drove; and
after another minute or two the little cart came to a standstill in a walled-in
yard. The pony was taken out and stabled, and then the man addressed as
"Matey," still sullen and sour, let down the tail-board of the cart with a
jerk, and dragged Finn out by the collar, allowing him to fall with a thud from
the cart to the ground, rendered helpless by the strap round his fore-legs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"'Ere, get up outa that!" growled the man, with a careless
kick. Then, seeing that Finn could not move, he bent down, unbuckled the green
enamelled strap, dragged it roughly away, and kicked the dog again. Cramped and
sore beyond belief, Finn staggered on to his feet. A door was opened, and Finn
was jerked and dragged into a perfectly dark, evil-smelling hole, about four
feet square, with an earthen floor, from which horrible odours rose. The ground
in this place was filthy. It had no drainage and no ventilation, except a few
round holes in the door; which door was now slammed to and locked on the
outside.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Ain't ye goin' to give 'im a drink, matey?" asked Bill,
outside.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Drink be blowed! Let 'im wait till mornin'. Come in an'
'ave one yerself. I'm blessed glad this night's job's done; an' if I can't make
fifty quid out 've it, I shall want to know the reason why, I can tell yer.
Big, ugly brute, ain't 'e! Strong as a mule, too. <em>I'd</em> want to be paid
pretty 'andsome fer the keepin' o' such a brute; but the American gent's red
'ot ter get 'im, I can tell yer. Biggest ever bred, they tell me. I think I
shall 'ave to stick on another tenner, eh, Bill? Come on!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Their very voices were a misery to the shrinking, aching,
choking Finn, who stood shuddering in his fetid den, his sensitive nose
wrinkling with horror and disgust. His need of water was the thing which hurt
him the most cruelly; but the nature of his prison was a good deal of a
torture, too. Remember that his life so far had been as cleanly and decent in
detail as yours or mine. Certainly this was a sad plight for the hero of the
Kennel Club Show, and the finest living descendant of a fifteen hundred year
old line of princes among dogs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal c1"><ANTIMG alt="wolfhound fleeing through downland"
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