<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER20" id="CHAPTER20">CHAPTER XXI</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">THREE DINGOES WENT A-WALKING</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Wallaby Bill showed himself a kind and shrewd nurse where
Jess, his one intimate friend, was concerned. He had no milk to give the sorely
wounded hound, but the thin broth he made for her that Sunday night formed
almost as suitable a food for her; and before leaving her for the night the man
was very careful to see that her lacerated body was well covered. For her part,
Jess was too weak and ill to be likely to interfere with the wound; even the
slight lifting of her head to lap a little broth seemed to tax her strength to
the utmost. All night Finn lay within a couple of yards of the kangaroo-hound;
and in the morning, soon after dawn, he brought her a fresh-killed rabbit and
laid it at her feet. Finn meant well, but Jess did not even lick the kill, and
as soon as Bill appeared he looked in a friendly way at Finn, and then removed
the rabbit. But he afterwards skinned and boiled it for Finn's own delectation,
and at the time he said--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"You're a mighty good sort, Wolf, and you can say I said
so."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">After making the black hound as comfortable as he could,
Bill rode off for his day's work. He had rigged a good shelter over Jess with
the help of a couple of sheets of stringy-bark and a few stakes. He gave her a
breakfast of broth, and left a dish of water within an inch of her nose, where
she could reach it without moving her body. Lastly, as a precaution against the
possibility of movement on Jess's part, he stitched the old blanket behind her
in such a way as to prevent its leaving her wound exposed. He looked over his
shoulder several times after riding away, thinking that Finn would be likely to
follow him. But the Wolfhound remained standing, some twenty paces from Jess's
shelter, and, when the man was almost out of sight, stepped forward and lay
down within a yard or two of the kangaroo-hound.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Queer card, that Wolf!" muttered Bill, as he rode away.
"But he's pretty white, too; whiter'n some men, I reckon, for all he's so
mighty suspicious."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In some climates any dog would have succumbed to the
injuries Jess had sustained; and even in the beautiful air of the Tinnaburra, a
town-bred dog would probably have gone under. But Jess was of a tough,
bush-bred stock; she had lived in the open all her life, and the air she
breathed now, in her shelter beside the gunyah, was aromatic with the scent of
that useful antiseptic which in every part of the world has done good service
in the prevention of fever--eucalyptus. Blue gum, red gum, grey gum,
stringy-bark, iron-bark, and black-butt; the trees which surrounded Jess for
fifty miles on every side were practically all of the eucalyptus family.
Insects bothered her a good deal it is true, but Finn did much in the way of
warding off their attacks, and the wound itself was well protected.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was an odd and very interesting and pleasant life that
Finn led now, his time divided pretty evenly between bearing the wounded
kangaroo-hound company and foraging on his own account in the bush within a
radius of two or three miles of the gunyah. He found that countryside
wonderfully full of different forms of wild life, and wonderfully interesting
to a born hunter and carnivorous creature like himself. He did not know then
that the country he traversed, all within four miles of the camp, was but the
fringe of a vastly more interesting tract of bush; and in the meantime the
range he did learn to know thoroughly proved sufficiently absorbing and
various.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Five miles from Bill's gunyah, in a direct southerly line,
stood the big, rambling station homestead, where Bill's bachelor employer had
lived for many years. He did not live there now, because six months before this
time he had died, and his station had reverted to distant relatives in other
countries. This was the man who was to have met the Master and the Mistress of
the Kennels on their arrival in Australia. His executors had seen no reason to
dispense with Bill's services as yet; and, truth to tell, they had never seen
the man, nor heard of his doings. It was only during the last few months that a
manager had been placed in charge of the station, and during his time Wallaby
Bill had stuck closely to his work.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Jacob Wilton Hall, the man who had made Warrimoo station,
had all his life long been something of an eccentric; and yet, withal, a man
who generally accomplished what he had set out to do, and one who had converted
a modest competence into a handsome fortune. He had been an indiscriminate
admirer of animals, and an interested student of the manners and customs of all
the creatures of the wild. When the rabbit pest first began to be severely felt
in the neighbourhood of his home-station, he had tried a variety of methods of
coping with it, and in the execution of some of these methods he had met with a
good deal of opposition and ridicule from his neighbours. He had, for instance,
imported fifty ferrets and weasels of both sexes and turned them loose in
pairs, in rabbit-earths situated in different outlying portions of his land.
These fierce little creatures were a scourge to the countryside by reason of
their attacks upon poultry; but it was freely stated that they adopted the
curious attitude of nearly all the native-born animals in ignoring the rabbits
they had been expected to prey upon.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Jacob Hall had then imported two pairs of wild cats, and
turned these loose in the back-blocks of his land, besides encouraging a number
of cats of the domesticated variety to take to the bush life and become wild,
as they have been doing all over Australia for many years. With great
difficulty and considerable expenditure of money, the eccentric squatter had
succeeded in securing a pair of Tasmanian Wolves and a pair of Tasmanian
Devils, and, having successfully evaded the customs and quarantine authorities,
he turned these exceptionally fierce and bloodthirsty creatures loose in the
wildest part of his land. Indeed, he took up an extra few thousand acres of
quite unprofitable "Church and School land," hilly, rocky, and heavily timbered
on the flats, largely, it was said, for the purpose of turning his Tasmanian
importations into it. The Wolves and the Tasmanian Devils killed a number of
his sheep; and it was stated among the neighbours that if Jacob Hall had lived
he would eventually have imported Bengal tigers and African lions before trying
the commonplace virtues of rabbit-proof fencing. It was supposed that the
persistent efforts of hunters and boundary-riders had resulted in these wild
creatures being driven well into the back country; and it is certain that,
despite an occasional strange story from bushmen regarding the animals whose
tracks they had come upon in the back-blocks, nothing was ever actually seen of
Jacob Hall's more fantastic importations. It was said, however, that there were
already notable modifications in certain of the wild kindred of that
countryside. There was talk of wild cats of hitherto unheard-of size and
fierceness, and of dingoes having suggestions about them of the untameably
fierce marsupial wolf of Tasmania. But such talk did not amount to much in this
district, for the rocky ranges of the Tinnaburra country, its densely wooded
gullies, and wild scrub-dotted flats, was almost entirely in the hands of a few
big squatters, who had long since pre-empted the back-blocks in the hinterland
of their stations for very many miles up country.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Naturally, Finn and Jess knew nothing of these things. To
the one the native denizens of such small portions of the bush of that
neighbourhood as he had ranged were quite sufficiently numerous and interesting
to keep his mind occupied; while Jess, for her part, was fully engaged in the
task of regaining her hold upon mere life. They lived for themselves, these
two; but Jess was deeply interested in the return of her man to the camp each
night, and Finn was equally keen and interested in his daily foragings and
explorations in the bush of that particular quarter. They neither of them knew
that they themselves were objects of the greatest interest to a very large
circle of the wild folk. But they were.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Within twenty-four hours of the fight with the old-man
kangaroo in the blind gully, the news had gone abroad among all the wild folk
in that strip of bush which surrounded the camp that a redoubtable hunter had
been laid low, and was lying near to death and quite helpless beside the
gunyah. Jess, having always been well fed by her man, had never been a great
hunter of small game; but she had accounted for a goodly number of wallabies,
and had played her part in the pulling down of a respectable number of
kangaroos. And, though she had seldom troubled to run down the smaller fry, she
was as greatly feared by them as though she lived only for their destruction;
and innumerable small marsupials, from the tiny, delicate little
kangaroo-mouse, up to the fleet and muscular wallaby-hare, with bandicoots,
kangaroo-rats (bushy-tailed and desperately furtive), 'possums, native cats,
and even a couple of amiable and sleepy-headed native bears, and a surly,
solitary wombat, all took an opportunity of peering out from the nearest point
of dense covert for the sake of having a glimpse of the helpless
kangaroo-hound. To the wild folk, an animal that cannot rise and fend for
itself is regarded as an animal practically dead, and but one remove from
carrion; which, of course, Jess would have been, lacking the friendly
attentions of her man, and, it may be, lacking the protection of the great
Wolfhound.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Be that as it may, it is a fact that news reached the
rocky hills behind Warrimoo of Jess's condition, and during the second night of
her helplessness three dingoes left their hunting range to come and look into
this matter for themselves. A dying hound might prove well worth investigating,
they thought. The movements of these dingoes, once they reached within a couple
of miles of Bill's gunyah, would have interested any student of the wild. The
caution with which they advanced was extraordinary. Not a dry leaf nor a dead
twig on the trail but they scanned it shrewdly with an eye for possible traps
or pitfalls. They moved as noiselessly as shadows, and poured in and out among
the scrub like liquid vegetation of some sort; a part of their environment, but
volatile. When the three dingoes from the hills reached the edge of the clear
patch in which the gunyah stood, they saw the almost black, smouldering remains
of a camp-fire, and, stretched within a couple of yards of the ashes, Finn. His
shaggy coat was not that of a kangaroo-hound, and his place beside the man-made
fire seemed to forbid the possibility of his being a monster dingo. Vaguely,
the dingoes told themselves that Finn must be some kind of giant among wolves
who was connected in some mysterious way with men-folk. They had learned
something during the past few years with regard to the possibilities of Nature
in the matter of strange beasts; and they remembered that the new-comers in
their country had arrived with a strange and persistent taint of man about
them; were even brought there by man, some said.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In the meantime, it was quite evident to the dingoes'
sensitive nostrils that man inhabited the gunyah at that moment; and that,
therefore, quite apart from the presence of the huge strange beast near the
fire, it would never do to investigate the shelter at the gunyah's side just
then. The dingoes ate where they made their kills that night, within a couple
of miles of the camp, thereby spreading terror wide and deep throughout that
range; for the little folk feared these fiercely cunning killers far more than
they had learned to fear big ghostly Finn, who roamed their country more in
student fashion than as a serious hunter of meat, so far.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When the dawn came, the three dingoes were crouched in a
favourable watching-place opposite the gunyah, and saw Finn rise, stretch his
great length, and stroll off leisurely in the direction of the bush on the
shanty's far side. They looked meaningly one at the other, with lips drawn
back, as they noted Finn's massive bulk, great height, long jaws, and springy
tread. They decided that the Wolfhound might, after all, be of the wild
kindred, since he evidently had no mind to face the owner of the gunyah by
daylight. Then, with hackles raised, and bodies shrinking backward among the
leaves, they saw Bill come out, and yawn, and stretch his arms, and go to look
at Jess, under her shelter. Now as it happened, Finn stumbled upon a fresh
wallaby trail that morning, a trail not many minutes old; and he followed it
with growing excitement for a number of miles. To his nose it was more or less
the same scent as that of the old-man kangaroo; and there was hot desire in his
heart to pit his strength against such an one, without the sport-spoiling
assistance of Bill's knife. Finn's hunting of the wallaby took him a good deal
farther from the humpy than he had been before, since his first arrival there;
and so it fell out that Bill left upon his day's round without having seen the
Wolfhound that morning.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"I guess he's after an extra special breakfast of his
own," muttered Bill, before he left; "but I'll leave him this half a rabbit, in
case." And he left the hinder part of a boiled rabbit on the big log beside the
fire, and rode away. The patient dingoes watched the whole performance closely,
licking their chops while Bill ate his breakfast, and again when he placed the
cooked half-rabbit on the log. The whole proceeding was also watched by several
crows. It was largely as a protection against these, rather than against the
elements, that Bill had given Jess her substantial bark shelter, under which
the crows would be afraid to pass. Otherwise, as Bill well knew, Jess would
have been like to lose her eyes before she had lain there very long.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">After Bill's departure, the crows were the first to
descend upon the camp; and they soon had the meat left for Finn torn to shreds
and swallowed. Then they swaggered impudently about the fire, picking up
crumbs, a process they were in the habit of attending to daily during Finn's
absence. The presence of these wicked black marauders gave courage to the
waiting dingoes, and they determined to proceed at once with the business in
hand: the examination of the dying kangaroo-hound of which they had heard. As
for the huge spectral wolf, it was evident that he had no real connection with
the camp. Indeed, the bigger of the three dingoes told himself, with a
regretful sigh, that this great grey wolf had in all probability dispatched the
kangaroo-hound at an early stage of the night, and had been sleeping off the
first effects of his orgy, when they first saw him lying near the camp-fire. At
all events, the wolf had disappeared.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The three dingoes advanced, still exhibiting caution in
every step, but marching abreast, because neither would give any advantage to
the others in a case of this sort. When they got to within five-and-twenty
paces of the shelter, poor Jess winded them, and it was borne in upon her that
the hour of her last fight had arrived. She knew herself unable to run a yard,
probably unable to stand; and the dingo scent, as she understood it, had no
hint of mercy in it. With an effort which racked her whole frame with burning
pain, the helpless bitch turned upon her chest and raised her head so that she
might see her doom approaching. She gave a little gulp when her eyes fell upon
the stalwart forms of no fewer than three full-grown dingoes, stocky of build,
massive in legs and shoulders, plentifully coated, and fanged for the killing
of meat. Their eyes had the killing light in them too, Jess thought; and a
snarl curled her writhen lips as she pictured her end, stretched helpless there
under the bark shelter. Well she knew that even three such well-grown dingoes
as these would never have dared to attack her if she had been in normal
condition.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Very slowly the three dingoes approached a little nearer
in fan-shaped formation, and, with a brave effort, Jess succeeded in bringing
forth a bark which ended in something between growl and howl, by reason of the
cutting pain it caused her. The three dingoes leaped backward, each three
paces, like clockwork machinery. Jess glared out at them from under her thatch
of bark, her fangs uncovered, her nose wrinkled, and her short close hair on
end. The dingoes watched her thoughtfully, pondering upon her probable reserves
of strength. Then, too, there was her shelter; that was endowed with some of
the mysterious atmosphere which surrounds man. But the biggest of the dingoes
had once stolen half a sheep from a shepherd's humpy, and no disaster had
overtaken him. He advanced three feet before his companions, and that spurred
them to movement. Again Jess essayed a bark; and this time the predominant note
in her cry was so clearly one of anguish that the three dingoes took it almost
as an encouragement, for Nature had not endowed them with a sense of what we
call pity for weakness or distress. They thought Jess's cry was an appeal for
mercy, and mercy was foreign to their blood. As a fact, poor Jess would rather
have died a dozen deaths than call once upon a dingo for mercy. It was the pain
in her lacerated body, resulting from the attempt to bark, that had introduced
that wailing note into her cry. And now, as the dingoes drew nearer, inch by
inch, the black kangaroo-hound braced herself to die biting, and to sell her
flesh as dearly as might be.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">As the snout of the foremost dingo, the largest of the
three, showed under the eave of Jess's shelter, she managed to hunch her
wounded body a little farther back against the side of the gunyah, meaning
thereby to draw the dingo a little farther in, and give herself a better chance
of catching some part of him between her jaws. With a desperate effort she drew
back her fore-legs a little, raising herself almost into a sitting position
against the side of the gunyah. The faint groans that the pain of moving forced
from her were of real service to her in a way, for they made the foremost dingo
think she was in her death agony, and gave a sort of recklessness to his plunge
forward under the thatch. He meant to end the business at once and slake his
blood thirst at the hound's throat. Well he knew that hounds do not groan
before a dingo's onslaught unless their plight is very desperate.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In the instant of the big dingo's plunge for Jess's
throat, several things happened. First, Jess's powerful jaws came together
about the thick part of the dingo's right fore-leg, and took firm hold there,
while the snarling and now terrified dingo snapped at the back of her neck, the
rough edge of the bark thatch on the middle of his back producing in him a
horrible sense of being trapped. That was one thing that happened in that
instant. Another thing was that the two lesser dingoes between them produced a
yelp of pure terror, and, wheeling like lightning, streaked across the clear
patch to the scrub, bellies to earth, and tails flying in a straight line from
their spines. And the third thing that happened in that instant was the arrival
at the end of the gunyah of Finn. The arrival of the Wolfhound was really a
great event. There was something elemental about it, and something, too,
suggestive of magic. The Wolfhound had caught his first glimpse of the two
lesser dingoes as he reached the far side of the clear patch, and, for an
instant he had stood still. He was dragging a young wallaby over one shoulder.
Then it came over him that these were enemies attacking his crippled friend
Jess. He made no sound, but, dropping his burden, flew across the clearing with
deadly swiftness. As he reached the end of the gunyah, a kind of roar burst
from his swelling chest and, in that instant, the two dingoes flung themselves
forward in flight, Finn after them. Five huge strides he took in their rear;
and then the power of thought, or telepathy, or something of the sort, stopped
him dead in the middle of his stride, and he almost turned a somersault in
wheeling round to Jess's assistance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">As Finn plunged forward again toward Jess, the big dingo
succeeded by means of a desperate wrench in freeing his leg from the
kangaroo-hound's jaws, and with a swift turning movement leaped clear of the
shelter. Then the big dingo of the back ranges found himself facing Finn, and
realized that he must fight for his life.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The dingo has been called a skunk, and a cur, and a
coward, and by most other names that are bad and contemptuous. But the dingo at
bay is as brave as a weasel; and no lion in all Africa is braver than a weasel
at bay. Finn had brought himself to a standstill with an effort, a towering
figure of blazing wrath. He had made one good kill that morning, his blood was
hot; the picture of these dogs of the wild kindred attacking his helpless
friend had roused to fighting fury every last little drop of blood in his whole
great body. Rage almost blinded him. He flung himself upon the big dingo as
though he were a projectile of some sort. And then he learned that the
creatures born in the wild are swifter than the swiftest of other creatures. He
had learned it before, as a matter of fact; he had seen a striking illustration
of it only a few days before, when the kangaroo stretched Jess helpless on the
ground at a single stroke. Finn only grazed the dingo's haunch, while the dingo
slashed a three-inch wound in his right shoulder as he passed. Even while Finn
was in the act of turning, the wild dog's fangs clashed again about his flank,
ripping his skin as though it were stretched silk.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It may be imagined that Finn's wrath was not lessened, but
his blind rage was, and he pulled himself together with a jerk, a cold
determination to kill cooling his brain like water. This time he allowed the
dingo to rush him, which the beast did with admirable dexterity, aiming low for
the legs. Finn plunged for the back of the dingo's neck, and missed by the
breadth of two hairs. Then he pivoted on his hind-legs and feinted low for the
dingo's legs. The dingo flashed by him, aiming a cutting snap at his lower
thigh--for the wild dog was a master of fighting, and worked deliberately to
cripple his big opponent and not to kill him outright--and that gave Finn the
chance for which he had played in his feint. Next moment his great fangs were
buried in the thickly furred coat of the dingo's neck, and his whole weight was
bearing the wild dog to earth.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">His legs lost to him, by reason of Finn's crushing weight,
the frenzy of despair filled the dingo, and he fought like ten dogs, snarling,
snapping, writhing, and scratching, all at the same time. Despite Finn's
vice-like hold, the dingo did considerable execution with his razor-edged fangs
in the lower part of the Wolfhound's fore-legs. But his race was run. Finn
gradually shifted his hold, till his front teeth gripped the soft part of the
dingo's throat, and then he bit with all the mighty strength of his great jaws,
closer, closer, and closer, till the red blood poured out on the ground and the
struggles of the wild dog grew fainter and fainter. Finally, Finn gave a great
shake of his head, lifting the dingo clear of the ground, and flinging him back
upon it, limp and still.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">For two whole minutes Finn glared down at the body of the
dingo, while licking the blood from his own lips, and working the torn skin of
his body backward and forward as though it tickled him. Then he turned to look
to Jess. And then an extraordinary thing happened; the sort of thing which does
not happen save in the life of a dingo; the thing, in short, that couldn't
happen, but that just is, sometimes. That dingo's glazing eyes opened wide, and
looked at Finn's back. Then the slain dingo (Finn had almost torn out its
throat) dragged itself to its feet and staggered off like a drunken man toward
the bush. A feeble snarl escaped from Jess, whose head faced this way. Finn,
who had been licking her, wheeled like a cat, and in that amazing moment saw
the dingo he supposed he had killed staggering towards the scrub thirty paces
distant. Five seconds later the still living dingo was on its back, and its
throat was being scattered over the surrounding ground. In his fury Finn did
actually tear out the beast's jugular vein, practically severing the head from
the trunk, smashing the vertebrae, and tearing open the chest of the dead
creature as well.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When Wallaby Bill came to look at that corpse some hours
later he said--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Well, by ghost! If I didn't tell that Wolf this very
morning that he was a mighty good sort. Wolf, you can say I said that John L.
Sullivan and Peter Jackson, and the Wild Man o' Borneo were suckin' infants in
arms to you. My colonial oath, but that blessed dingo has been killed good an'
plenty, and a steam-hammer couldn't kill him no more!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">There was a wallaby lying beside the fire, Finn having
been too busy licking his own wounds and comforting Jess to think of feeding,
though common prudence had reminded him to bring in his kill from the edge of
the clear patch. Bill gave a deal of time and attention to Jess that night, but
Finn was fed royally on roughly cooked wallaby steaks and damper. But even upon
this special occasion the Wolfhound, still mindful of his awful circus
experience, refused to come within touch of the man.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
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