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The Way of the Wild by F. St. Mars
page 21 of 312 (06%)
half-hidden by flying, finely powdered snow, Gulo did his prey horribly
to death.

There was something ghastly about this murder, for the deer was so big,
and Gulo comparatively small. The fearful work of his jaws and his
immense strength seemed wrong somehow, and out of all proportion to his
size. This remarkable power of his jaws had that sinister
disproportion only paralleled by the power of the jaws of a hyena;
indeed, his teeth very much resembled a hyena's teeth.

With the deer rushing all around him, Gulo fed, ravenously and
horribly, but not for long. A new light smoldered in his eyes now as
he lifted his carmine snout, and one saw that, for the moment, the
beast was mad, crazed with the lust of killing, seeing red, and blinded
by blood.

Then the massacre began. It was not a hunt, because each deer,
thinking only of itself, feared to break from the trodden mazy path of
the "yard," and risk the slow, helpless, plunging progress necessary in
the deep snow. Wherefore panic took them all over again, and they
dashed, often colliding, generally hindering each other, hither and
thither, up and down the paths of the "yard" with the hopeless,
helpless, senseless, blind abandon of sheep. The result was a shambles.

This part we skip. Probably--nay, certainly--Nature knows best, and is
quite well aware what she is up to, and it is perhaps not meant that we
should put her in the limelight in her grisly moods. Suffice it to say
that Gulo seemed to stop at length, simply because even he could not
"see red" forever, and with exhaustion returned sense, and with
sense--in his case--in-born caution. He removed, leaving a certain
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