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The Council Meetings were always held in the back part of the wood in a fairly large open space bordered on one side by the little stream with the rhododendrons behind it on the far bank and, on the other three, by a semi-circular belt of smaller rhododendrons, old tree stumps and new young birch and ash saplings. As Brock walked along the bank at the back of the wood he could hear hundreds of little crunching and rustling noises as the inhabitants of the wood made their way over the frozen snow. Suddenly, from behind him, he heard an enormous splash and he turned round to see Sam, the dog from the village, swimming vigorously and noisily across the stream.

He had spotted Brock on the far bank and now he bounded up to greet him. ‘What a creature!’ muttered Brock under his breath as the dog stood shaking himself and sending a shower of little drops of water spinning out which almost hit the badger. Brock then watched in amusement as the big dog started to roll on his back, his legs flailing from side to side in an effort to get thoroughly dry. Standing up again he gave himself another shake, which seemed to start from the tip of his tail and work its way slowly along his body until his whole head rotated and the black tip of his nose span round. He stood still for a second and then said, ‘Hello Brock, how are you?’ in a loud voice, so that Brock had to move close to him and tell him to keep his voice down. In general dogs had little to fear from the Great Enemy provided they were kept in a good home, and they had lost the natural instinct of all wild animals to be as quiet as possible at all times and their desire to remain unnoticed and unknown which had developed over the ages of man’s domination of the earth. Dogs occupied a strange place in the relationship between man and animals in that they were to all intents and purposes allies of man and even helped him when man was out killing with the death sticks, running to pick up the dead or injured animal and taking it back to their human to save him the effort of going to fetch it. Sometimes whole packs of dogs would be used to chase and kill a fox or a hare while the Great Enemy rode behind on another animal ally, the horse; or when a hare was being chased man would run behind, shouting and yelling. For these reasons dogs were, in general, feared, hated and despised by all wild animals and at first, when Brock had tried to introduce Sam to the Council, he met with great resistance. However, as time passed and Brock brought to the Council more and more extremely valuable information which Sam had given him about the details of future killing times, the Council had finally relented and allowed Sam to attend. Warrigal would fly over the house where Sam lived and give him the call and the dog would bark in reply to let the owl know he had received the message. Some of the animals still did not completely trust Sam, but he had earned from most of them a grudging respect and a few had begun to count him as a friend. Of course, when the Killing was taking place Sam would be with his human but the animals now recognized this and realized that it was the only way the dog could keep bringing them the information they found so useful.

Brock and Sam now made their way towards the comer of this back part of the wood, and they could see clearly, in the moonlight, the other animals heading for a gap in a belt of trees; this was the only way in for the larger creatures although the smaller ones like the rabbits and hedgehogs could squeeze through anywhere. When they went through the narrow gap, knocking some snow down on to themselves as they brushed against the branches of a little ash tree on one side, they saw that many animals were already there, arranged against the outside of the semi-circle. Facing this semi-circle, sitting along the straight side of the amphitheatre with their backs to the stream, on the far side of which stood the huge solid bank of rhododendrons, were the Council. Here were the legendary figures of the wood whose names had been linked with so many heroic stories and deeds that even they themselves had forgotten which were true and which imagined. They had arranged themselves along the far side of a large fallen tree-trunk which ran parallel to the stream and were now fully engrossed in conversation amongst themselves. The members of the Council were not so much elected as elevated; there was never any dispute as to who was entitled to sit; if there had been then that animal would not go on to the Council for he could not have earned his proper place. Meetings were held once in every season so that the necessary arrangements for that particular season could be made, but they were also held when there was a special need.

These extra meetings were usually concerned with matters such as security when they knew there was a Killing due, or with other emergency items such as plague or upset of the wood when the Urkku were carrying out some new operation such as digging a new drainage ditch or putting up a new fence. The meeting tonight was one of these extra meetings, as the regular winter one had already taken place. Any animal from the wood could go to a meeting and sometimes when an animal had a particular contribution to make or where it was of special interest to him, he would be specially asked to attend.

Brock loved going to these meetings; he always got a great thrill from seeing the famous names whose stories had been told to him when he was a cub by old Bruin, himself a member of the Council for the last three seasons. As he settled down now with Sam, their backs against a large elm and next to them some young rabbits, Brock could see Bruin at one end of the log talking to Rufus, whose magnificent russet red coat shone, in the moonlight so that it almost looked polished.. Here was the fox who had outrun and outsmarted every pack of hounds in the area and who was a master in the arts of doubling back, water-running (to conceal his scent) and sheep-mingling, which consisted of hiding in the middle of a flock of sheep to confuse the hounds and annoy the farmer whose land was being used for hunting. On one memorable day in the autumn many seasons ago Rufus had actually been caught by the leading hounds in a particularly fast pack and had been brought to the ground by them: snarling, he had sunk his teeth into the necks of two of them and broken the leg of a third before running off again like the wind to vanish in the wood, leaving the furious and disappointed huntsmen nursing their wounded dogs and shaking their fists at him. Recently he had taken to going into the village at night and getting food from the bins of rubbish which the Urkku kept; while there he would look through the windows of the houses and had learnt a lot about the ways of the Urkku. But he was getting old and he was losing that edge of speed which had made him famous and kept him out of the clutches of the hunt for so long. Brock, looking at his fine noble head with its two sharp triangular ears and long pointed nose, pondered with great sadness that it could only be a matter of time before Rufus was caught by the hounds and tom to pieces by them.