<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER27" id="CHAPTER27">CHAPTER XXVIII</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">DOMESTIC LIFE IN THE MOUNTAIN DEN</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">If a man succeeded in getting himself as much chopped
about as Finn had been since the evening of his departure from the
boundary-rider's gunyah and the severance of his connection with the world of
men-folk, he would require weeks of careful nursing and doctoring before he
could be said to have recovered. Fortunately for the people of the wild, who
have neither nurses nor doctors, and whose ways of life do not permit of
prolonged periods of rest, recovery from wounds is not so serious a business
with them as it is with us.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When the Wolfhound and his admiring mate between them had
thoroughly licked and cleansed his numerous wounds, he stretched himself
deliberately across the rear corner of the den, and there lay, sleeping
soundly, until the next morning was well advanced. His body was lacerated by
the wounds of three considerable fights: the fight with Black-tip and his
friend; the sufficiently violent struggle with the mother-kangaroo; and lastly,
the most serious fight of the Wolfhound's life, which had ended in the death of
Lupus. But even the ten hours which Finn gave to sleep--he opened his eyes two
or three times during that period, but did not move--brought a wonderful change
in the aspect of these numerous wounds. They had advanced some distance in the
direction of healing already. Now they were submitted to another thorough
licking. Then Finn crept out into the sunlight beside the cave's mouth, and
slept again, fitfully, till evening came. Then he sat up and licked all his
wounds over again with painstaking and scrupulous care. They were healing
nicely, and the healing process made Finn as stiff and sore as though he had
had rheumatics in every joint in his body. So he crept painfully into the den
again, and lay down to sleep once more, while Warrigal, with a friendly, wifely
look at her lord, went out hunting.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In this way three full days and nights passed, and on the
fourth night Finn killed for himself--a small kill, and not far from home, but
a kill, none the less, that required a certain agility, of which he already
found himself quite capable. In the matter of strength and vital energy the
Wolfhound had immense reserves to draw upon--greater reserves, really, than any
of the wild folk possessed; for, in his youth, he had never known scarcity of
food, or lack of warmth, or undue exposure; and, on the contrary, his system
had been deliberately built up and fortified by the best sort of diet that the
skill and science of man could devise. Finn could not have stood as much
killing as a dingo, and still have lived; for the dingo is as hard an animal to
kill as any that walks upon four legs. But, as against that, the Wolfhound
could have stood a far greater living strain than any dingo. He had more to
feed upon in himself. For actual toughness under murderous assault a dingo
could have beaten Finn; yet in a test of staying power, an ordeal of long
endurance, the Wolfhound would have won easily, by reason of his greater
reserve of strength and vitality.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">From this point onward, Finn's wounds troubled him but
very little, and in the healing air of that countryside they soon ceased to be
apparent to the eye. An ordinary dingo would assuredly have been obliged to
fight many fights before obtaining ascendancy over the Mount Desolation pack;
but the mastery fell naturally to Finn without calling for any effort upon his
part. He had slain the redoubtable old leader and tyrant of the pack. He had
soundly trounced one of the strongest among the fully-grown young dingoes,
Black-tip, and killed another in single-handed fight against two. Now, he
administered condign punishment to two or three young bucks who ventured to
attempt familiarity with Warrigal, but for fighting he was not called upon.
Most of the pack had taken good measure of his prowess on the night of the
slaying of Lupus, and that was enough for them, so far as mastery went.
Further, the pack found Finn a generous leader, a kingly sort of friend; slow
to anger, and merciful even in wrath; open as the day, and never, in any
circumstances, tyrannical or aggressive. Then in the matter of his kills, Finn
was generosity itself. As a hunter of big game he was more formidable than any
three dingoes, and, withal, never rapacious. Three portions he would take from
his kill; one to satisfy his own hunger, one for Warrigal to satisfy her hunger
upon, and a third to be set aside and taken back to the den against the time
when Warrigal should care to dispose of it. For the rest, be his kill what it
might, Finn made the pack free of it.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But no sort of temptation seemed strong enough to take the
Wolfhound near to the haunts of men. It came to be understood that Finn would
not touch sheep, and, reasoning it out amongst themselves, the rest of the pack
accepted this as a prohibition meant to apply to all of them; so that Finn's
mastership was an exceedingly good thing for the squatters and their flocks all
through the Tinnaburra. But a full-grown kangaroo, no matter how heavy and
strong in the leg, never seemed too much for Finn; and so, all dingoes liking
big game better than small, it came about that every night saw the Mount
Desolation dingoes hunting in pack formation at the heels of the great
Wolfhound. They scorned the lesser creatures whose flesh had fed them hitherto,
and expected to taste wallaby or kangaroo flesh every night. Finn thoroughly
enjoyed the hunting, and did not care how many fed at his kill, so that his
mate and he had ample.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Once, the two youngest members of the pack, puppies quite
new to the trail, were attacked and driven from the remains of a big kill the
leader had made by an outlier, a strange dingo from some other range. The
youngsters, bleeding and yelping, carried their woes to the scrub below the
mountain, and within the hour Finn learned of it. Followed by Black-tip and one
or two others of the more adventurous sort, he set out upon the trail of the
outlier, now full fed, ran it down at the end of four or five miles' hard
galloping, pinned the unfortunate creature to the earth and shook it into the
long sleep, almost before they had come to a standstill together. This was true
leadership the pack felt, a thing Lupus would never have done; something to be
placed to the great Wolfhound's credit, and not forgotten. The mother of the
whelps that were attacked, a big, light-coloured dingo, with sharp, prick ears,
was particularly grateful to Finn.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">During this time a subtle change crept over Finn's
appearance. In its details the change was so slight that the casual observer
would have said it did not exist at all; yet, in truth, it was radical. It
would be impossible to put this change precisely into words. An Irish Wolfhound
is never sleek; at least, that is never a characteristic of the breed. Yet, as
compared with the wild folk, every sort of animal which lives with men has a
certain kind of sleekness or softness about it. It may be imagined that Finn
did not have much of this when he escaped from the Southern Cross Circus. And
in the period which followed that escape, although he had, in a sense,
associated with a man and a man's dog, yet there had not been much in the life
of the boundary-rider's camp to make for sleekness. Nevertheless, when Finn
first met his mate, Warrigal, there had lingered about him still a kind of
trimness, a suggestion of softness, far different, indeed, from that of the
ordinary domesticated house-dog; but yet, in its own way, a sort of sleekness.
Not a vestige of this remained now. Though he fed well and plentifully, and his
life was not a hard one, since he only did that which pleased him, yet Finn had
acquired now the hard, spare look of the creatures of the wild. In his
alertness, in the blaze of his eyes, and the gleam of his fangs when hunting,
in his extreme wariness and in the silence of his movements, and his deadly
swiftness in attack, Finn had become one of his mate's own kindred. He differed
from them in his great bulk, his essentially commanding appearance, in his
dignity, and in a certain lordly generosity which always characterized him. He
never disputed; he never indulged in threats or recrimination. He gave warning,
when warning was needed; he punished, when punishment was needed; and he
killed, if killing was desirable; making no sort of fuss about either process.
Also, upon occasion, though not often, he barked. Otherwise, he was thoroughly
of the wild kindred, and the unquestioned master of the Mount Desolation
range.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Some six or seven weeks after his arrival upon that range,
Finn began to notice that Warrigal was changing in some way, and he did not
like the change. It seemed to him that his mate no longer cared for him so much
as she had cared. She spent more time in lying about in or near the den, and
showed no eagerness to accompany him in his excursions, or to gambol with him,
or even to lie with him on the warm, flat ledge outside the den. She seemed to
prefer her own company, and Finn thought her temper was getting unaccountably
short, too. However, life was very full of independent interest for the
Wolfhound, and it was only in odd moments that he noticed these things. One
night he was thoroughly surprised when Warrigal snarled at him in a surly
manner, without any apparent cause at all, unless because he had touched her
with his nose in a friendly way, by way of inviting her to accompany him, he
being bound for the killing trail in quest of that night's supper.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn walked out of the den, carrying his nose as high as
he could, in view of the stoop necessary at the entrance, and feeling rather
put out. A dingo in his place would have snarled back at Warrigal and, it may
be, have wrangled about it for half an hour. Finn's dignity would not permit of
this, but he was hurt, and decided that his spouse needed a lesson in courtesy.
Since she responded so rudely to his invitation to join him in the hunt, she
might go supperless for him; he would eat where he killed, and bring home
nothing.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn killed a half-grown kangaroo, a lusty red-coated
youngster, that night, and he, with Black-tip and two or three others of the
pack, fed full upon this before going down to the creek together to drink. Finn
even spent an hour in trifling with a pair of sister dingoes who generally
hunted together, and ranged the trails with Black-tip, in more or less sportive
mood, till long after midnight. In the small hours the Wolfhound parted with
Black-tip and the sportive sisters among the scrub at the mountain's foot, and
wended his way alone to his den on the first spur, prepared, as many a male
human has been in like case, to seek his rest without taking any notice of his
mate, unless, perchance, he found her in a repentant mood. At the mouth of the
cave he stooped low, as he was bound to do, to gain admittance, and in that
moment he was brought to a halt by a long, angry, threatening snarl from
within. Warrigal was very plainly telling her mate to remain outside, unless he
was looking for trouble. This was unprecedented, and he was a very angry and
outraged Wolfhound, who withdrew slowly with as much dignity as might be in
walking backward with lowered head and shoulders.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"You will think better of this before morning, my dear!"
was the sort of thought that Finn had in his mind, as he selected a comfortable
sleeping-place in the shadow of a bush some half-dozen paces away from the
mouth of the den. And then, being well fed and rather tired, he fell into a
sound sleep until just after daybreak, when he woke to the sound of an
unfamiliar small cry. With head slightly on one side and ears cocked sharply,
Finn listened. The small cry was repeated. It certainly was not Warrigal's
voice, though it came from the inside of the den. Also, there were a number of
other small sounds that were strange--weak, quaint, gurgling sounds. Finn
inclined his head a little farther to one side. Yes, his mate was licking
something. Could she have been out and hunted alone? Even that would hardly
account for the queer little, weak, strange voices within the den. The dingo
people are not cats, and when they kill they kill outright. It was extremely
puzzling and interesting, and Finn decided to investigate. After all, this was
his own home and, however rude she may have been, Warrigal was his own mate,
for whom he had fought and bled in the past; the mate who had lovingly dressed
his wounds and shared his kills for nine weeks now--nine long, eventful weeks,
which were more than equal to nine months in human folk's lives.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn stooped low in the entrance and Warrigal snarled. But
this time there was no note of aggression in her snarl. Indeed, to her mate,
there was a hint of appeal in the salutation, which said clearly: "Be careful!
Please be careful!" He advanced with extreme caution into the den, and saw his
spouse lying full at length on her side, her bushy tail curled round to form a
background for the smallest of four sleek puppies, of a yellowish grey colour,
whom she was nursing assiduously. Moving with the utmost delicacy and care,
Finn sniffed all round his mate, refraining from touching the puppies by way of
humouring Warrigal, in whose throat a low growl sounded whenever his nose
approached the little strangers. Then Finn stood and stared at the domestic
group with hanging head and parted jaws, his tongue lolling, and his eyes
saying plainly--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Well, well, well! Who'd have thought of this! They are
really very nice little creatures, in their insignificant way, though I don't
quite see why their presence should make you snarl at your own lawful mate."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Seeing that her lord manifestly entertained no shadow of a
hostile intention toward the family (the history of the male dingo is not
altogether free from blame in the matter of infanticide), Warrigal raised her
nose in friendly fashion to the Wolfhound and permitted him to lick her, which
he did in the most affectionate manner, and with no further thought of her
previous harshness. Then she gave a little whine and glanced round the walls of
the den. Finn barked quietly, bidding his mate rest assured that all would be
well, and ten minutes later he was descending upon a rabbit-earth that he knew
of, a moving shadow of death among young bunnies assembled to welcome the dewy
warmth of the new day. On the way home he dropped his rabbit to stalk a
half-grown bandicoot; and finally, after less than an hour's absence, he
returned to the den carrying a rabbit and a bandicoot, so that Warrigal might
have variety in her breakfast. Being parched with thirst, Warrigal gratefully
accepted both kills, and without actually eating either drew some sustenance
from both. Then with an anxious look at the family she nudged Finn out of the
den with her nose, and, leaving him outside on the ledge, turned and raced for
the creek, like an arrow from a bow. She was back again inside of two minutes
with bright drops clinging to her fur. Finn had sat patiently beside the mouth
of the den waiting, and for this Warrigal gave him a grateful glance of
appreciation before gliding into her puppies, who already were beginning to
whimper for warmth and nourishment.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn took very naturally to the part of father and
bread-winner. He lounged about the mouth of the den through the day, creeping
in occasionally to see how things went with his mate, and returning then to
keep guard outside. She allowed him now to touch the odd little creatures who
were his children; but they did not like the feeling of his tongue, and
wriggled away from it in their blind, helpless way. "There, there!" said Finn
low down in his throat, and withdrew, marvelling afresh at the mysteries of
life and the cleverness of femininity. As for Warrigal, she seemed absurdly
happy and proud about it all now, and assumed considerable airs of importance.
She took her food in brief snatches a dozen times during the day, and when Finn
left her in the early night for the trails, she looked at him in a meaning way
which said plainly that she attached importance to the matter of food supply,
though she could not take to the trails herself, being otherwise and fully
occupied. Finn licked her muzzle reassuringly and went out.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The pack had to forage for itself that night, for when
Finn made his kill--a fat rock wallaby--he announced in the most unmistakable
manner that there was nothing to spare for followers that night, and marched
off mountain-wards, trailing the whole heavy kill over his right shoulder. In
the course of the night it became known to all the wild people of that range
that the mate of the leader of the pack had other mouths than her own to feed,
and that for the time Finn would do all the hunting for the den on the first
spur.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p></p>
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