<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER23" id="CHAPTER23">CHAPTER XXIV</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">A LONE BACHELOR</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">If Finn had deliberately thought out a bad way of
beginning his life as one of the wild folk, who have no concern at all with
humans, he could have devised nothing much worse, or more disadvantageous to
himself, than the indulgence of his wild burst of Berserker-like fury, after
being driven out of the clear patch. And of this he was made aware when he set
forth the next morning in quest of a breakfast. Every one of his hunting trails
in the neighbourhood of the encampment he ranged with growing thoroughness and
care, without finding so much as a mouse with which to satisfy his appetite.
Even Koala and Echidna were nowhere to be found. It was as though a blight had
descended upon the countryside, and the only living thing Finn saw that
morning, besides the crows, was a laughing jackass on the stump of a blasted
stringy-bark tree, who jeered at him hoarsely as he passed. Disconsolate and
rather sore, as the result of his frenzied exertions of the night, Finn curled
himself up in the sandy bed of a little gully and slept again, without food.
The many small scavengers of the bush had already made away with the remains of
the different creatures he had slain during his madness.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn did not know it, but hundreds of small bright eyes
had watched him as he ranged the trails that morning; and the most of these
eyes had in them the light of resentment, as well as fear. Finn had been guilty
of real crime according to the standards of the wild; and, had he been a lesser
creature, swift punishment would have descended upon him. As it was, he was
left to work out his own punishment by finding that his hunting was ruined.
These wild folk, who were judging Finn now, tacitly admitted the right of all
flesh-eating creatures to kill for food. But wilful slaughter, particularly
when accompanied by all the evidences of reckless fury, was a crime not readily
to be forgiven, for it struck at the very roots of the wild folk's social
system. It was not merely a cruel affliction for those needlessly slain, and
their relatives (some of whom depended for life upon their exertions); but it
was an affliction for all the rest, in that it spoiled hunting for the
carnivorous, rendered feeding extremely difficult for the non-carnivorous, and
generally upset the ordered balance of things which made life worth living for
the wild people of that range. It was as disturbing to them, and more lastingly
so, by reason of the comparative slenderness of their resources, as the passage
through a town of an armed giant, who was also a thief and a murderer, would be
to humans. Finn had been feared and respected in that corner of the Tinnaburra;
while, by some of the wild folk who, from one cause or another, were able to
afford the indulgence in such an emotion, he had been admired. He was now
feared and hated.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Now the hatred of some thousands of living creatures, even
though they may all of them be lesser creatures than oneself, is a fearsome
thing. Just as the wild people's methods of direct communication are more
limited than ours, so their indirect methods are more perfect, more impressive,
and swifter than ours. A drawing-room full of men and women have before now
shown themselves tolerably capable in the matter of conveying a sense of their
dislike for some one person. But humans waste a lot of their telepathic power
in speech, and their most offensive method of conveying unspoken hatred to its
object and making him feel an outcast, is as nothing by comparison with the
wild folk's achievements in this direction. If you have ever studied the life
of a kennel of hounds, for example, when the pack has made up its corporate
mind that one of its members is for some reason unworthy of its traditions, you
will remember what a masterly exposition you saw of the art of freezing out.
The offending animal, unless removed in time, will positively wilt away and die
under the withering blast of unspoken hatred and scorn with which it is
encompassed. And hounds, from their long intercourse with talkative humans,
have lost half their skill in this respect. The wild kindred have a way of
making hatred tangible, perceptible in the air, and in inanimate nature. They
can almost bewitch the flesh from off the hated creature's bones without ever
looking at him, if a sufficient number of them are in agreement in their
hating.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When Finn rose from his day sleep it was to realization of
the uncomfortable fact that he was stark empty of food. (His first ejection
from the camp on the previous evening had occurred before the evening kill,
and, after the second ejection, Finn had been too furious to think of eating.)
The next thing he realized--and this was before he had walked many hundred
yards through the falling light of late afternoon--was the solid atmosphere of
hatred which surrounded him in his own range of bush. He did not get the full
sting of it at first--that bit into him gradually during the night but he was
aware of its existence almost at once. And he found it singularly daunting.
True, he was the undisputed lord of that range. No creature lived there that
could think of meeting him in single combat. But the concentrated and silent
hatred of the entire populace was none the less a thing to chill the heart even
of a giant Irish Wolfhound.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The silence of the ghostly bush, in that brief half-light
which preceded darkness, spoke loudly and eloquently of this hatred and
resentment. The empty run-ways of the little grass-eating animals were full of
it. The still trees thrust it upon Finn as he threaded in and out among their
hoary trunks. The sightless scrub glared hatred at him till the skin twitched
over his shoulders, and he took to flinging swift glances to left and right as
he walked--glances but little in keeping with his character as hunter, and more
suggestive of the conduct of the lesser hunted peoples. When a long streamer of
hanging bark rustled suddenly behind Finn, he wheeled upon it with a snarl; and
the humiliation of his discovery of what had startled him partook of the nature
of fear, when his gaze met the coldly glittering eyes of a bush-cat (whose body
he could not discern in that dim light) that glared down at him from twenty
feet above his head.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was with a sense of genuine humility, and something
like gratitude, that Finn met Koala a few minutes later, passing hurriedly--for
him--between the trunks of the two trees in which he made his home at that
time. Koala stopped at once when Finn faced him--not from any desire for
conversation, but from fear to move--and waved his queer little hands in an
apparent ecstasy of grief and perturbation, while protesting, as usual, what a
lamentably poor and wholly inoffensive person he was, and what a tragic and
dastardly act it would be if any one should hurt him. Finn whispered through
his nose a most friendly assurance that he had too much respect and affection
for Koala to think of harming him, and the little bear sat up on his haunches
to acknowledge this condescension, tearfully, while reiterating the
time-honoured assertion that there was no more inoffensive or helpless creature
living than himself. With a view to establishing more confidence Finn lay down
on his chest, with fore-legs outstretched, and began to pump Koala regarding
the chilling attitude of all the people of that range towards himself. In his
own dolorous fashion Koala succeeded in conveying to Finn what the Wolfhound
already knew quite well in his heart of hearts, that the attitude he complained
of was simply the penalty of his running amuck on the previous night. Finn
gathered that the native-born wild people would never forgive him or relax
their attitude of silently watchful hatred; but that there were some rabbits
who were feeding in the open a little farther on, in the neighbourhood of the
clear patch.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn thanked Koala for his information, with a little
forward movement of the muzzle, and walked off in a rather cheerless mood,
while the bear wrung his little hands and moaned, preparatory to ascending the
trunk of the giant red-gum upon whose younger leaves he meant to sup before
retiring for the night in one of its hollow limbs. It was not for any pleasure
in hunting, but because he was very empty, that Finn proceeded in the direction
indicated by the bear. He had already developed the Australian taste in the
matter of rabbits, and regarded their flesh with the sort of cold disfavour
which humans reserve for cold mutton on its second appearance at table. Still,
he was hungry now, and when he had stalked and killed the fattest of the bunch
of rabbits he found furtively grazing a quarter of a mile from the clear patch,
he carried it well away into the bush and devoured it steadily, from the
hind-quarters to the head, after the fashion of his kind, who always begin at
the tail-end of their meals. It was noticeable, by the way, that Finn
approached the neighbourhood of the clear patch with reluctance, and got right
away from it as quickly as possible.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">During a good part of that night Finn strolled about the
familiar tract of bush, which he had ranged now for many weeks, observing and
taking note of all the many signs which, though plain reading enough for him,
would have been quite illegible to the average man. And he decided that what he
saw was not good, that it boded ill for his future comfort and well-being. The
simple fact was that he had outraged all the proprieties of the wild in that
quarter, and was being severely ostracised in consequence. The lesser creatures
were still sharper of scent and hearing than he was, and their senses all made
more acute by their fear and indignation, they succeeded in keeping absolutely
out of the Wolfhound's sight. It was shortly after midnight when a crow and a
flying-fox saw Finn curl down to sleep in his sandy gully, and, by making use
of the curious system of animal telepathy, of which even such ingenious humans
as Mr. Marconi know nothing, they soon had the news spread all over the range.
The lesser marsupials and other groundlings were glad to have this
intelligence, and the approach of dawn found them all busily feeding, watchful
only with regard to the ordinary enemies among their own kind, the small
carnivorous animals and the snake people. Indeed, they fed so busily that a
pair of wedge-tailed eagles who descended among them with the first dim
approach of the new day, obtained fat breakfasts almost without looking for
them, a fact which, unreasonably enough, earned new hatred for Finn among the
circle upon which the eagles swooped.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"If that great brute had not obliged us to feed so
hurriedly, <em>this</em> wouldn't have happened!" a mother bandicoot thought,
as she gazed out tremulously from her den under a rotten log upon the specks of
hair and blood which marked the spot where, a few moments before, that fine
strapping young fellow, her only son, had been busily chewing grubs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">For another three days Finn continued in his old
hunting-ground, and during the whole of that time he had to content himself
with a diet consisting exclusively of rabbit meat. Indeed, during the last
couple of days he found that even the despised rabbit required a good deal of
careful stalking, so deeply had the fear and hatred of the Wolfhound penetrated
into the minds and hearts of that particular wild community. If it had not been
for the rabbits' incorrigible habit of forgetting caution during the hours of
twilight and daybreak, Finn might have gone hungry altogether. Apart from their
hatred and resentment, the wild people of that range felt that the giant's
madness might return to him at any moment, and that for this reason alone it
would be unsafe to permit of any relaxation in their attitude towards him.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">On the fourth evening, with a rather sad heart, Finn
turned his back on the familiar trails, and hunted west and by south from the
little gully in which he slept, heading toward the back ranges and the stony
foot of Mount Desolation, that is. For a mile or more, even in this direction,
he found that his evil fame preceded him, and no good hunting came his way. But
presently a flanking movement to the eastward was rewarded by a glimpse of a
fat wallaby-hare, which Finn stalked with the most exquisite patience, till he
was able to spring upon it with a snap of his great jaws that gave
instantaneous and everlasting sleep. Finn carried this fat kill back to his
den, and feasted right royally that night for the first time since he was
expelled from the purlieus of the gunyah and the easy-going old life. These few
days had changed the Wolfhound a good deal. He walked the trails now with far
less of gracious pride and dignity, and more of eager, watchful stealth than he
had been wont to use. He walked more silently, he stalked more carefully, and
sprang more swiftly, and bit more fiercely. He was no longer the amateur of the
wild life, but an actual part of it, and subject to all its laws and
customs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Thus it was that, in the afternoon of the day following
that of his first hunt outside his own range, he leaped in a single instant
from full sleep to fullest wakefulness in response to the sound of a tiny twig
rolling down the side of his little gully. There, facing him from the western
lip of the gully, with a rather eager, curious, inviting sort of look upon her
intelligent face, stood a fine, upstanding, red-brown female dingo, or
warrigal. The stranger stood fully twenty-three inches high at the shoulder,
and was unusually long in the body for such a height--thirteen inches less than
Finn's shoulder height it is true, but yet about the same measurement as a big
foxhound and of greater proportionate length. Her ruddy brown tail was bushy
and handsome, and at this moment she was carrying it high and flirtatiously
curled. Also, she wagged it encouragingly when Finn's eyes met her own, which
were of a pale greenish hue. Her hind feet were planted well apart; she stood
almost as a show cob stands, her tail twitching slightly, and her nostrils
contracting and expanding in eloquent inquiry. She had heard of Finn some time
since, this belle of the back ranges, but it was only on that day, when Nature
recommended her to find a mate, that she had thought of coming in quest of the
great Wolfhound. Now she eyed him, from her vantage-point, fearlessly, and with
invitation in every line of her lissom form.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn sniffed hard, and began a conciliatory whine which
terminated in a friendly bark, as he scrambled up the gully side, his own
thirty-inch tail waving high above the level of his haunches. Warrigal
fled--for ten paces, wheeling round then, in kittenish fashion, and stooping
till her muzzle touched the ground between her fore feet. But no sooner had
Finn's nose touched hers than the wild coquette was off again, and this time a
little farther into the bush. To and fro and back and forth the shining
bushy-coated dingo played the great Wolfhound with even more of coquettishness
than is ever displayed in human circles; and twilight had darkened into night
when, at length, she yielded herself utterly to his masterful charms, and
nominally surrendered to the suit she had actually won. As is always the case
with the wild folk, the courtship was fiery and brief, but one would not say
that it was the less passionately earnest for that; and, at the time, Warrigal
seemed to Finn the most gloriously handsome and eminently desirable of all her
sex.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When their relations had grown temperately fond and
familiar they took to the western trail together, and presently Warrigal
"pointed" a big bandicoot for Finn, and Finn, delighted to exhibit his prowess,
stalked and slew the creature with a good deal of style. Then the two fed
together, Finn politely yielding the hind-quarters to his inamorata. And then
they lay and licked and nosed, and chatted amicably for an hour. After this,
Warrigal rose and stretched her handsome figure to its full length--there was
not a white hair about her, nor any other trace of cross-breeding--her nose
pointing west and by south a little, for the back ranges, whence she came. When
she trotted sedately off in that direction Finn followed her as a matter of
course, though he had never been this way before. There were no longer any ties
which bound him to his old hunting-ground. It was not in nature to spare a
thought for lugubrious Koala or prickly Echidna, when Warrigal waved her bushy
tail and trotted on before. Finn had never before been appealed to by the scent
of any of the wild people, but there was a subtle atmosphere about Warrigal's
thick red-brown coat which drew him to her strongly.</p>
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