<h3>CHAPTER IV—THE CALL OF KIND</h3>
<p>The months came and went. There was plenty of food and no work
in the Southland, and White Fang lived fat and prosperous and happy.
Not alone was he in the geographical Southland, for he was in the Southland
of life. Human kindness was like a sun shining upon him, and he
flourished like a flower planted in good soil.</p>
<p>And yet he remained somehow different from other dogs. He knew
the law even better than did the dogs that had known no other life,
and he observed the law more punctiliously; but still there was about
him a suggestion of lurking ferocity, as though the Wild still lingered
in him and the wolf in him merely slept.</p>
<p>He never chummed with other dogs. Lonely he had lived, so far
as his kind was concerned, and lonely he would continue to live.
In his puppyhood, under the persecution of Lip-lip and the puppy-pack,
and in his fighting days with Beauty Smith, he had acquired a fixed
aversion for dogs. The natural course of his life had been diverted,
and, recoiling from his kind, he had clung to the human.</p>
<p>Besides, all Southland dogs looked upon him with suspicion.
He aroused in them their instinctive fear of the Wild, and they greeted
him always with snarl and growl and belligerent hatred. He, on
the other hand, learned that it was not necessary to use his teeth upon
them. His naked fangs and writhing lips were uniformly efficacious,
rarely failing to send a bellowing on-rushing dog back on its haunches.</p>
<p>But there was one trial in White Fang’s life—Collie.
She never gave him a moment’s peace. She was not so amenable
to the law as he. She defied all efforts of the master to make
her become friends with White Fang. Ever in his ears was sounding
her sharp and nervous snarl. She had never forgiven him the chicken-killing
episode, and persistently held to the belief that his intentions were
bad. She found him guilty before the act, and treated him accordingly.
She became a pest to him, like a policeman following him around the
stable and the hounds, and, if he even so much as glanced curiously
at a pigeon or chicken, bursting into an outcry of indignation and wrath.
His favourite way of ignoring her was to lie down, with his head on
his fore-paws, and pretend sleep. This always dumfounded and silenced
her.</p>
<p>With the exception of Collie, all things went well with White Fang.
He had learned control and poise, and he knew the law. He achieved
a staidness, and calmness, and philosophic tolerance. He no longer
lived in a hostile environment. Danger and hurt and death did
not lurk everywhere about him. In time, the unknown, as a thing
of terror and menace ever impending, faded away. Life was soft
and easy. It flowed along smoothly, and neither fear nor foe lurked
by the way.</p>
<p>He missed the snow without being aware of it. “An unduly
long summer,” would have been his thought had he thought about
it; as it was, he merely missed the snow in a vague, subconscious way.
In the same fashion, especially in the heat of summer when he suffered
from the sun, he experienced faint longings for the Northland.
Their only effect upon him, however, was to make him uneasy and restless
without his knowing what was the matter.</p>
<p>White Fang had never been very demonstrative. Beyond his snuggling
and the throwing of a crooning note into his love-growl, he had no way
of expressing his love. Yet it was given him to discover a third
way. He had always been susceptible to the laughter of the gods.
Laughter had affected him with madness, made him frantic with rage.
But he did not have it in him to be angry with the love-master, and
when that god elected to laugh at him in a good-natured, bantering way,
he was nonplussed. He could feel the pricking and stinging of
the old anger as it strove to rise up in him, but it strove against
love. He could not be angry; yet he had to do something.
At first he was dignified, and the master laughed the harder.
Then he tried to be more dignified, and the master laughed harder than
before. In the end, the master laughed him out of his dignity.
His jaws slightly parted, his lips lifted a little, and a quizzical
expression that was more love than humour came into his eyes.
He had learned to laugh.</p>
<p>Likewise he learned to romp with the master, to be tumbled down and
rolled over, and be the victim of innumerable rough tricks. In
return he feigned anger, bristling and growling ferociously, and clipping
his teeth together in snaps that had all the seeming of deadly intention.
But he never forgot himself. Those snaps were always delivered
on the empty air. At the end of such a romp, when blow and cuff
and snap and snarl were last and furious, they would break off suddenly
and stand several feet apart, glaring at each other. And then,
just as suddenly, like the sun rising on a stormy sea, they would begin
to laugh. This would always culminate with the master’s
arms going around White Fang’s neck and shoulders while the latter
crooned and growled his love-song.</p>
<p>But nobody else ever romped with White Fang. He did not permit
it. He stood on his dignity, and when they attempted it, his warning
snarl and bristling mane were anything but playful. That he allowed
the master these liberties was no reason that he should be a common
dog, loving here and loving there, everybody’s property for a
romp and good time. He loved with single heart and refused to
cheapen himself or his love.</p>
<p>The master went out on horseback a great deal, and to accompany him
was one of White Fang’s chief duties in life. In the Northland
he had evidenced his fealty by toiling in the harness; but there were
no sleds in the Southland, nor did dogs pack burdens on their backs.
So he rendered fealty in the new way, by running with the master’s
horse. The longest day never played White Fang out. His
was the gait of the wolf, smooth, tireless and effortless, and at the
end of fifty miles he would come in jauntily ahead of the horse.</p>
<p>It was in connection with the riding, that White Fang achieved one
other mode of expression—remarkable in that he did it but twice
in all his life. The first time occurred when the master was trying
to teach a spirited thoroughbred the method of opening and closing gates
without the rider’s dismounting. Time and again and many
times he ranged the horse up to the gate in the effort to close it and
each time the horse became frightened and backed and plunged away.
It grew more nervous and excited every moment. When it reared,
the master put the spurs to it and made it drop its fore-legs back to
earth, whereupon it would begin kicking with its hind-legs. White
Fang watched the performance with increasing anxiety until he could
contain himself no longer, when he sprang in front of the horse and
barked savagely and warningly.</p>
<p>Though he often tried to bark thereafter, and the master encouraged
him, he succeeded only once, and then it was not in the master’s
presence. A scamper across the pasture, a jackrabbit rising suddenly
under the horse’s feet, a violent sheer, a stumble, a fall to
earth, and a broken leg for the master, was the cause of it. White
Fang sprang in a rage at the throat of the offending horse, but was
checked by the master’s voice.</p>
<p>“Home! Go home!” the master commanded when he had
ascertained his injury.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>“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!”</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>“Go home!” came the sharp command, and this time he obeyed.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>“Weedon’s back,” Weedon’s mother announced.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>“I confess, he makes me nervous around the children,”
she said. “I have a dread that he will turn upon them unexpectedly
some day.”</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>“A wolf is a wolf!” commented Judge Scott. “There
is no trusting one.”</p>
<p>“But he is not all wolf,” interposed Beth, standing for
her brother in his absence.</p>
<p>“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—”</p>
<p>He did not finish his sentence. White Fang stood before him,
growling fiercely.</p>
<p>“Go away! Lie down, sir!” Judge Scott commanded.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>“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.”</p>
<p>“He’s trying to speak, I do believe,” Beth announced.</p>
<p>At this moment speech came to White Fang, rushing up in a great burst
of barking.</p>
<p>“Something has happened to Weedon,” his wife said decisively.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
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