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and again he knew, and more bitterly, the enfeeblement of oncoming age.  His attempt to maintain his dignity was heroic.  Calmly turning his back upon young dog and shin-bone, as though both were beneath his notice and unworthy of his consideration, he stalked grandly away.  Nor, until well out of sight, did he stop to lick his bleeding wounds.

The effect on White Fang was to give him a greater faith in himself, and a greater pride.  He walked less softly among the grown dogs; his attitude toward them was less compromising.  Not that he went out of his way looking for trouble.  Far from it.  But upon his way he demanded consideration.  He stood upon his right to go his way unmolested and to give trail to no dog.  He had to be taken into account, that was all.  He was no longer to be disregarded and ignored, as was the lot of puppies, and as continued to be the lot of the puppies that were his team-mates.  They got out of the way, gave trail to the grown dogs, and gave up meat to them under compulsion.  But White Fang, uncompanionable, solitary, morose, scarcely looking to right or left, redoubtable, forbidding of aspect, remote and alien, was accepted as an equal by his puzzled elders.  They quickly learned to leave him alone, neither venturing hostile acts nor making overtures of friendliness.  If they left him alone, he left them alone—a state of affairs that they found, after a few encounters, to be pre-eminently desirable.

In midsummer White Fang had an experience.  Trotting along in his silent way to investigate a new tepee which had been erected on the edge of the village while he was away with the hunters after moose, he came full upon Kiche.  He paused and looked at her.  He remembered her vaguely, but he remembered her, and that was more than could be said for her.  She lifted her lip at him in the old snarl of menace, and his memory became clear.  His forgotten cubhood, all that was associated with that familiar snarl, rushed back to him.  Before he had known the gods, she had been to him the centre-pin of the universe.  The old familiar feelings of that time came back upon him, surged up within him.  He bounded towards her joyously, and she met him with shrewd fangs that laid his cheek open to the bone.  He did not understand.  He backed away, bewildered and puzzled.

But it was not Kiche’s fault.  A wolf-mother was not made to remember her cubs of a year or so before.  So she did not remember White Fang.  He was a strange animal, an intruder; and her present litter of puppies gave her the right to resent such intrusion.

One of the puppies sprawled up to White Fang.  They were half-brothers, only they did not know it.  White Fang sniffed the puppy curiously, whereupon Kiche rushed upon him, gashing his face a second time.  He backed farther away.  All the old memories and associations died down again and passed into the grave from which they had been resurrected.  He looked at Kiche licking her puppy and stopping now and then to snarl at him.  She was without value to him.  He had learned to get along without her.  Her meaning was forgotten.  There was no place for her in his scheme of things, as there was no place for him in hers.

He was still standing, stupid and bewildered, the memories forgotten, wondering what it was all about, when Kiche attacked him a third time, intent on driving him away altogether from the vicinity.  And White Fang allowed himself to be driven away.  This was a female of his kind, and it was a law of his kind that the males must not fight the females.  He did not know anything about this law, for it was no generalisation of the mind, not a something acquired by experience of the world.  He knew it as a secret prompting, as an urge of instinct—of the same instinct that made him howl at the moon and stars of nights, and that made him fear death and the unknown.

The months went by.  White Fang grew stronger, heavier, and more compact, while his character was developing along the lines laid down by his heredity and his environment.  His heredity was a life-stuff that may be likened to clay.  It possessed many possibilities, was capable of being moulded into many different forms.  Environment served to model the clay, to give it a particular form.  Thus, had White Fang never come in to the fires of man, the Wild would have moulded him into a true wolf.  But the gods had given him a different environment, and he was moulded into a dog that was rather wolfish, but that was a dog and not a wolf.

And so, according to the clay of his nature and the pressure of his surroundings, his character was being moulded into a certain particular shape.  There was no escaping it.  He was becoming more morose, more uncompanionable, more solitary, more ferocious; while the dogs were learning more and more that it was better to be at peace with him than at war, and Grey Beaver was coming to prize him more greatly with the passage of each day.

White Fang, seeming to sum up strength in all his qualities, nevertheless suffered from one besetting weakness.  He could not stand being laughed at.  The laughter of men was a hateful thing.  They might laugh among themselves about anything they pleased except himself, and he did not mind.  But the moment laughter was turned upon him he would fly into a most terrible rage.  Grave, dignified, sombre, a laugh made him frantic to ridiculousness.  It so outraged him and upset him that for hours he would behave like a demon.  And woe to the dog that at such times ran foul of him.  He knew the law too well to take it out of Grey Beaver; behind Grey Beaver were a club and godhead.  But behind the dogs there was nothing but space, and into this space they flew when White Fang came on the scene, made mad by laughter.

In the third year of his life there came a great famine to the Mackenzie Indians.  In the summer the fish failed.  In the winter the cariboo forsook their accustomed track.  Moose were scarce, the rabbits almost disappeared, hunting and preying animals perished.  Denied their usual food-supply, weakened by hunger, they fell upon and devoured one another.  Only the strong survived.  White Fang’s gods were always hunting animals.  The old and the weak of them died of hunger.  There was wailing in the village, where the women and children went without in order that what little they had might go into the bellies of the lean and hollow-eyed hunters who trod the forest in the vain pursuit of meat.

To such extremity were the gods driven that they ate the soft-tanned leather of their mocassins and mittens, while the dogs ate the harnesses off their backs and the very whip-lashes.  Also, the dogs ate one another, and also the gods ate the dogs.  The weakest and the more worthless were eaten first.  The dogs that still lived, looked on and understood.  A few of the boldest and wisest forsook the fires of the gods, which had now become a shambles, and fled into the forest, where, in the end, they starved to death or were eaten by wolves.

In this time of misery, White Fang, too, stole away into the woods.  He was better fitted for the life than the other dogs, for he had the training of his cubhood to guide him.  Especially adept did he become in stalking small living things.  He would lie concealed for hours, following every movement of a cautious tree-squirrel, waiting, with a patience as huge as the hunger he suffered from, until the squirrel ventured out upon the ground.  Even then, White Fang was not premature.  He waited until he was sure of striking before the squirrel could gain a tree-refuge.  Then, and not until then, would he flash from his hiding-place, a grey projectile, incredibly swift, never failing its mark—the fleeing squirrel that fled not fast enough.

Successful as he was with squirrels, there was one difficulty that prevented him from living and growing fat on them.  There were not enough squirrels.  So he was driven to hunt still smaller things.  So acute did his hunger become at times that he was not above rooting out wood-mice from their burrows in the ground.  Nor did he scorn to do battle with a weasel as hungry as himself and many times more ferocious.

In the worst pinches of the famine he stole back to the fires of the gods.  But he did not go into the fires.  He lurked in the forest, avoiding discovery and robbing the snares at the rare intervals when game was caught.  He even robbed Grey Beaver’s snare of a rabbit at a time when Grey Beaver staggered and tottered through the forest, sitting down often to rest, what of weakness and of shortness of breath.

One day While Fang encountered a young wolf, gaunt and scrawny, loose-jointed with famine.  Had he not been hungry himself, White Fang might have gone with him and eventually found his way into the pack amongst his wild brethren.  As it was, he ran the young wolf down and killed and ate him.

Fortune seemed to favour him.  Always, when hardest pressed for food, he found something to kill.  Again, when he was weak, it was his luck that none of the larger preying animals chanced upon him.  Thus, he was strong from the two days’ eating a lynx had afforded him when the hungry wolf-pack ran full tilt upon him.  It was a long, cruel chase, but he was better nourished than they, and in the end outran them.  And not only did he outrun them, but, circling widely back on his track, he gathered in one of his exhausted pursuers.

After that he left that part of the country and journeyed over to the valley wherein he had been born.  Here, in the old lair, he encountered Kiche.  Up to her old tricks, she, too, had fled the inhospitable fires of the gods and gone back to her old refuge to give birth to her young.  Of this litter but one remained alive when White Fang came upon the scene, and this one was not destined to live long.  Young life had little chance in such a famine.

Kiche’s greeting of her grown son was anything but affectionate.  But White Fang did not mind.  He had outgrown his mother.  So he turned tail philosophically and trotted on up the stream.  At the forks he took the turning to the left, where he found the lair of the lynx with whom his mother and he had fought long before.  Here, in the abandoned lair, he settled down and rested for a day.

During the early summer, in the last days of the famine, he met Lip-lip, who had likewise taken to the woods, where he had eked out a miserable existence.

White Fang came upon him unexpectedly.  Trotting in opposite directions along the base of a high bluff, they rounded a corner of rock and found themselves face to face.  They paused with instant alarm, and looked at each other suspiciously.

White Fang was in splendid condition.  His hunting had been good, and for a week he had eaten his fill.  He was even gorged from his latest kill.  But in the moment he looked at Lip-lip his hair rose on end all along his back.  It was an involuntary bristling on his part, the physical state that in the past had always accompanied the mental state produced in him by Lip-lip’s bullying and persecution.  As in the past he had bristled and snarled at sight of Lip-lip, so now, and automatically, he bristled and snarled.  He did

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