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Tales of the Wilderness

CHAPTER V.
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at dusk when the snow-wind was rushing through the darkness of the night—a wild turbulent cataract of icy air—the wolf-pack gathered together in the valley and howled. they were calling for a leader.

the sky spread above them, wan and pallid, the wind moaned and whistled through the feathery tops of the pine-trees. amid the snow the wolves sat in a circle on their haunches and howled dismally. they were hungry and had not eaten for six days; their leader had deserted them. he who had led them on their hunts and prowls, who seven years back had killed their former leader and established his own chieftainship, had now left them forlorn.

sitting in a circle, howling with gleaming eyes and bristling hair, they were mournful yet vicious; like helpless slaves they did not know what to do. only one young wolf, a brother of the one their leader had recently killed, strutted about independently and gnashed his teeth, conscious of his strength and agility. in the pride of his youthful vigour he had conceived the ambition to make himself the leader; he certainly had no thought that this was a fatal step entailing in the end his doom. for it is the law of the pack that death is meted out to the usurper of power. he commenced to howl proudly, but the others paid no heed, they only drooped their heads and howled in fear and trembling.

gradually the dawn broke. faint and silvery, the moon was sinking through pale, luminous veils in the west; in the east there glowed a fierce red light like that of a camp fire. the sky was still shrouded in darkness, the snow glimmered a cold pallid blue in the half-light.

the old wolf, fresh from his kill, slowly descended the valley where his pack had gathered. at sight of his grey, gaunt form they rushed forward to meet him, and as they ran none seemed to know what was about to happen; they advanced fawning and cringing until the young wolf, with a savage squeal, dared to throw himself upon the leader in a sudden fierce attack: then they all suddenly remembered his desertion of them, their law which demands death for its infringement, and with glistening bared teeth they too flung themselves upon him. he made no resistance. he died and was torn to pieces which, with his bones, were quickly devoured.

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