White Fang


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White Fang was disinclined to desert him.  The master thought of writing a note, but searched his pockets vainly for pencil and paper.  Again he commanded White Fang to go home.

The latter regarded him wistfully, started away, then returned and whined softly.  The master talked to him gently but seriously, and he cocked his ears, and listened with painful intentness.

“That’s all right, old fellow, you just run along home,” ran the talk.  “Go on home and tell them what’s happened to me.  Home with you, you wolf.  Get along home!”

White Fang knew the meaning of “home,” and though he did not understand the remainder of the master’s language, he knew it was his will that he should go home.  He turned and trotted reluctantly away.  Then he stopped, undecided, and looked back over his shoulder.

“Go home!” came the sharp command, and this time he obeyed.

The family was on the porch, taking the cool of the afternoon, when White Fang arrived.  He came in among them, panting, covered with dust.

“Weedon’s back,” Weedon’s mother announced.

The children welcomed White Fang with glad cries and ran to meet him.  He avoided them and passed down the porch, but they cornered him against a rocking-chair and the railing.  He growled and tried to push by them.  Their mother looked apprehensively in their direction.

“I confess, he makes me nervous around the children,” she said.  “I have a dread that he will turn upon them unexpectedly some day.”

Growling savagely, White Fang sprang out of the corner, overturning the boy and the girl.  The mother called them to her and comforted them, telling them not to bother White Fang.

“A wolf is a wolf!” commented Judge Scott.  “There is no trusting one.”

“But he is not all wolf,” interposed Beth, standing for her brother in his absence.

“You have only Weedon’s opinion for that,” rejoined the judge.  “He merely surmises that there is some strain of dog in White Fang; but as he will tell you himself, he knows nothing about it.  As for his appearance—”

He did not finish his sentence.  White Fang stood before him, growling fiercely.

“Go away!  Lie down, sir!” Judge Scott commanded.

White Fang turned to the love-master’s wife.  She screamed with fright as he seized her dress in his teeth and dragged on it till the frail fabric tore away.  By this time he had become the centre of interest.

He had ceased from his growling and stood, head up, looking into their faces.  His throat worked spasmodically, but made no sound, while he struggled with all his body, convulsed with the effort to rid himself of the incommunicable something that strained for utterance.

“I hope he is not going mad,” said Weedon’s mother.  “I told Weedon that I was afraid the warm climate would not agree with an Arctic animal.”

“He’s trying to speak, I do believe,” Beth announced.

At this moment speech came to White Fang, rushing up in a great burst of barking.

“Something has happened to Weedon,” his wife said decisively.

They were all on their feet now, and White Fang ran down the steps, looking back for them to follow.  For the second and last time in his life he had barked and made himself understood.

After this event he found a warmer place in the hearts of the Sierra Vista people, and even the groom whose arm he had slashed admitted that he was a wise dog even if he was a wolf.  Judge Scott still held to the same opinion, and proved it to everybody’s dissatisfaction by measurements and descriptions taken from the encyclopaedia and various works on natural history.

The days came and went, streaming their unbroken sunshine over the Santa Clara Valley.  But as they grew shorter and White Fang’s second winter in the Southland came on, he made a strange discovery.  Collie’s teeth were no longer sharp.  There was a playfulness about her nips and a gentleness that prevented them from really hurting him.  He forgot that she had made life a burden to him, and when she disported herself around him he responded solemnly, striving to be playful and becoming no more than ridiculous.

One day she led him off on a long chase through the back-pasture land into the woods.  It was the afternoon that the master was to ride, and White Fang knew it.  The horse stood saddled and waiting at the door.  White Fang hesitated.  But there was that in him deeper than all the law he had learned, than the customs that had moulded him, than his love for the master, than the very will to live of himself; and when, in the moment of his indecision, Collie nipped him and scampered off, he turned and followed after.  The master rode alone that day; and in the woods, side by side, White Fang ran with Collie, as his mother, Kiche, and old One Eye had run long years before in the silent Northland forest.

CHAPTER V—THE SLEEPING WOLF

It was about this time that the newspapers were full of the daring escape of a convict from San Quentin prison.  He was a ferocious man.  He had been ill-made in the making.  He had not been born right, and he had not been helped any by the moulding he had received at the hands of society.  The hands of society are harsh, and this man was a striking sample of its handiwork.  He was a beast—a human beast, it is true, but nevertheless so terrible a beast that he can best be characterised as carnivorous.

In San Quentin prison he had proved incorrigible.  Punishment failed to break his spirit.  He could die dumb-mad and fighting to the last, but he could not live and be beaten.  The more fiercely he fought, the more harshly society handled him, and the only effect of harshness was to make him fiercer.  Strait-jackets, starvation, and beatings and clubbings were the wrong treatment for Jim Hall; but it was the treatment he received.  It was the treatment he had received from the time he was a little pulpy boy in a San Francisco slum—soft clay in the hands of society and ready to be formed into something.

It was during Jim Hall’s third term in prison that he encountered a guard that was almost as great a beast as he.  The guard treated him unfairly, lied about him to the warden, lost his credits, persecuted him.  The difference between them was that the guard carried a bunch of keys and a revolver.  Jim Hall had only his naked hands and his teeth.  But he sprang upon the guard one day and used his teeth on the other’s throat just like any jungle animal.

After this, Jim Hall went to live in the incorrigible cell.  He lived there three years.  The cell was of iron, the floor, the walls, the roof.  He never left this cell.  He never saw the sky nor the sunshine.  Day was a twilight and night was a black silence.  He was in an iron tomb, buried alive.  He saw no human face, spoke to no human thing.  When his food was shoved in to him, he growled like a wild animal.  He hated all things.  For days and nights he bellowed his rage at the universe.  For weeks and months he never made a sound, in the black silence eating his very soul.  He was a man and a monstrosity, as fearful a thing of fear as ever gibbered in the visions of a maddened brain.

And then, one night, he escaped.  The warders said it was impossible, but nevertheless the cell was empty, and half in half out of it lay the body of a dead guard.  Two other dead guards marked his trail through the prison to the outer walls, and he had killed with his hands to avoid noise.



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