Just as at one time he could not be parted from Saeve, so now he could not
be separated from this boy. He had a thousand names for him, each one more
tender than the last: “My Fawn, My Pulse, My Secret Little Treasure,” or
he would call him “My Music, My Blossoming Branch, My Store in the Heart,
My Soul.” And the dogs were as wild for the boy as Fionn was. He could sit
in safety among a pack that would have torn any man to pieces, and the
reason was that Bran and Sceo’lan, with their three whelps, followed him
about like shadows. When he was with the pack these five were with him,
and woeful indeed was the eye they turned on their comrades when these
pushed too closely or were not properly humble. They thrashed the pack
severally and collectively until every hound in Fionn’s kennels knew that
the little lad was their master, and that there was nothing in the world
so sacred as he was.
In no long time the five wise hounds could have given over their
guardianship, so complete was the recognition of their young lord. But
they did not so give over, for it was not love they gave the lad but
adoration.
Fionn even may have been embarrassed by their too close attendance. If he
had been able to do so he might have spoken harshly to his dogs, but he
could not; it was unthinkable that he should; and the boy might have
spoken harshly to him if he had dared to do it. For this was the order of
Fionn’s affection: first there was the boy; next, Bran and Sceo’lan with
their three whelps; then Caelte mac Rona’n, and from him down through the
champions. He loved them all, but it was along that precedence his
affections ran. The thorn that went into Bran’s foot ran into Fionn’s
also. The world knew it, and there was not a champion but admitted
sorrowfully that there was reason for his love.
Little by little the boy came to understand their speech and to speak it
himself, and at last he was able to tell his story to Fionn.
There were many blanks in the tale, for a young child does not remember
very well. Deeds grow old in a day and are buried in a night. New memories
come crowding on old ones, and one must learn to forget as well as to
remember. A whole new life had come on this boy, a life that was instant
and memorable, so that his present memories blended into and obscured the
past, and he could not be quite sure if that which he told of had happened
in this world or in the world he had left.
