CHAPTER 7
on ed to timber wolf.
it ceased from its ried to sense alked into tly togetail straigiff, feet falling ed care. Every movement advertised commingled tening and overture of friendliness. It ruce t marks ting of s t prey. But t sigo overtake. o a blind cimber jam barred t, pivoting on er tling, clipping eetogetinuous and rapid succession of snaps.
Buck did not attack, but circled and , ime and again ed, tion or Buck could not so easily aken ill Bucks bay, only to das t opportunity.
But in tinacity no ended, finally sniffed noses in ts belie ter some time of tarted off at an easy lope in a manner t plainly s clear to Buck t o come, and t issued, and across t took its rise.
On te slope of terso a level country retc and many streams, and t stretceadily, er last anso, and irring to tirred to ties of again, no, the wide sky overhead.
topped by a running stream to drink, and, stopping, Buck remembered Joon. doarted on tourned to ions as to encourage Buck turned about and started slorack. For tter part of an ly. t doed and fainter until it in tance.
Joon ing dinner urning ing ;playing tom-fool,quot; as Joon cerized it, th and cursed him lovingly.
For t ton out of . at ce, sa nig of t after t began to sound more imperiously tlessness came back on ed by recollections of t stretcook to tened the mournful howl was never raised.
o sleep out at nigaying a a time; and once t doo timber and streams. t as raveled and traveli