Little Dog, Lost

Home > Other > Little Dog, Lost > Page 5
Little Dog, Lost Page 5

by Marion Dane Bauer


  stretching toward the dog,

  held steady,

  his voice wavered

  just a bit.

  “Here, little dog.”

  Charles Larue watched the boy,

  watched the dog.

  Both boy and dog

  were coiled springs,

  waiting to be released.

  What were they doing here

  outside his gate

  in the night,

  anyway?

  Buddy stretched toward the reaching hand.

  She touched it,

  just lightly

  with her cool, damp nose.

  A boy hand.

  A good boy hand.

  She breathed it in.

  And Mark,

  feeling the coolness,

  the dampness

  of the nose

  and the snuffle of warm breath

  against his palm,

  fell instantly,

  deeply,

  helplessly

  in love.

  This . . .

  this . . .

  this little dog

  was exactly what he’d begged for,

  what he’d longed for,

  what he’d needed

  his entire life!

  If only his mother . . .

  But no,

  there was no point

  in expecting his mother

  to change.

  He’d been asking for a dog

  forever,

  and the answer

  had always been the same.

  Besides,

  how could he expect his mother—

  his practical,

  no-nonsense mother—

  to believe

  that a stray dog

  had called his name

  in the night?

  Mark took a step forward

  anyway.

  Close enough

  to reach down and gather the dog

  into his arms . . .

  if she would let him.

  What he would do with her

  after he picked her up,

  he had no idea.

  But he needed to hold her,

  if only for a few seconds.

  That step,

  though—

  that one step—

  was too much

  for Buddy.

  Instead of remembering

  all the good boy moments

  that had filled her life,

  she remembered, “Shoo!”

  She remembered, “Go away!”

  She remembered flapping dish towels

  and cross voices.

  The spring that held her tight

  sprung.

  Without even deciding,

  she found herself running

  fast,

  fast,

  fast.

  But where she was going,

  she had no idea.

  Away.

  Only that.

  Away.

  Mark stood

  with his hand still out,

  facing the great bush of white eyebrows

  and the great beak of a nose.

  The night was too dark

  to make out the eyes

  between eyebrows and nose,

  but he imagined them fierce.

  He imagined them cruel.

  And in that sudden imagining

  Mark remembered

  what he had almost forgotten.

  His mother.

  If she woke

  and found him gone,

  she would be wild with worry.

  If she woke

  and found him gone,

  she would be furious!

  She wouldn’t be much interested

  in hearing why he’d gone out

  wandering the streets

  of Erthly

  in the middle of the night.

  She would know,

  with great certainty,

  that he never should have left

  his bed.

  Mark took a long look

  at the little dog

  disappearing down the street,

  then at the silent man

  standing

  before him.

  He turned

  and ran

  toward

  home.

  Little dog running.

  Little dog scurrying,

  scampering,

  panting.

  Nowhere to go.

  No one to take her in.

  Little black dog with brown paws

  and a brown mask

  and a sweet ruffle of brown fur on her bum

  just beneath the black whip of her tail.

  Little dog,

  lost,

  lost,

  lost.

  Charles Larue stood

  for a long time

  in front of his own iron gate,

  the one with spikes.

  The boy was gone.

  The dog was gone.

  Why hadn’t he spoken?

  His voice had grown rusty

  with disuse,

  but surely he still knew how

  to speak.

  What would he have said,

  though?

  What did he have left to say?

  A breeze stirred the oak tree

  above his head,

  setting the leaves murmuring

  to one another.

  Sssspeak . . . sssspeak,

  they seemed to say.

  Charles Larue sighed.

  Even an old oak tree

  had more to say

  to the world

  than he did.

  He turned and plodded back

  toward

  the huge,

  empty

  house.

  This is,

  perhaps,

  the moment to pause

  to consider

  longing.

  Mark’s longing for a dog.

  Buddy’s longing for a boy.

  Charles Larue’s longing for something . . .

  boy or dog or his lost lady,

  anything to give his life shape again.

  Mark went back to his bed,

  carefully stepping around

  the small, cluttered table

  just inside the door,

  still longing.

  Buddy ran through town,

  searching for a place

  to hide,

  still longing.

  Charles Larue listened to the echo

  of the large double doors

  closing behind him,

  then stood

  in the foyer

  longing for . . .

  he didn’t know what.

  But there was no question;

  he was longing too.

  And let us not forget the first boy,

  now living in the city,

  the one who’d

  given

  Buddy

  up.

  He woke that same night

  and gazed at the many-colored lights

  that streamed through his window.

  All night long in the city,

  light streamed.

  Not many dogs in the city,

  but lots of light.

  The boy liked the lights.

  Sometimes he climbed out of bed

  and sat

  at his bedroom window,

  to watch the colors

  dance up and down

  the always-busy street.

  He’d found a friend yesterday.

  His first one in the city.

  His friend didn’t have a dog

  either,

  but he’d liked hearing

  about Buddy.

  The boy had told his new friend

  everything:

  about her fantastic ears,

  about how high she could leap

  to catch a ball,

  about the stuffed
cat

  she rested her chin on when she slept.

  He hadn’t mentioned

  the kisses,

  though.

  Somehow

  he hadn’t wanted

  to talk

  about the kisses.

  Still . . .

  he’d told his new friend about his dog,

  and he hadn’t cried.

  It was the first time

  he’d managed to talk about Buddy

  without crying.

  That didn’t change the promise

  he had made to himself,

  though,

  the promise he’d made every single day

  since the move.

  When he was grown,

  he would have a dog again,

  and, big or small,

  rough-coated or smooth,

  male or female,

  his dog would be named Buddy.

  And the boy,

  who would then be a man,

  would never

  give Buddy

  away.

  Ever.

  So much longing.

  So many lives

  filled

  with longing.

  It’s what stories—

  all our stories—

  are made of.

  And what is longing

  made of

  except hope?

  Sunlight danced across the kitchen table.

  It glinted in Mark’s orange juice

  and skittered across his bowl of cereal.

  “What are you going to do today?”

  his mother asked.

  Mark knew

  exactly

  what he was going to do.

  He was going to search for the little dog

  he had found

  last night.

  But he didn’t say that.

  “Just ride my bike,

  I guess,” he said.

  It was the truth,

  after all.

  That was exactly what he was going to do,

  ride his bike

  all over town,

  searching.

  “I’ll probably see some of my friends,”

  he added,

  “and their dogs.”

  The word “dogs”

  came out as hard as a stone,

  but his mother

  didn’t seem to notice.

  “I’m working until five,”

  she said.

  Mark nodded.

  He didn’t need to be told that.

  His mother worked at the post office,

  and she usually stayed until five.

  (In a small town like Erthly,

  being mayor

  wasn’t a job.

  It was more like being

  an elected volunteer.)

  “I have a council meeting

  at seven tonight,”

  she said.

  Mark knew that, too.

  He was going to be there.

  “So supper will be early.”

  Mark nodded again.

  Mark’s mother gave his bristly hair

  a gentle tug,

  as though he might not be

  paying attention,

  though he had heard

  every word.

  “Check in

  with Mrs. Morgan

  before you go anywhere,”

  she said.

  “Let her know where you’ll be.”

  Mark didn’t need to be told that,

  either.

  He always checked in

  with Mrs. Morgan.

  She lived next door,

  and she’d looked after him

  while his mother worked

  since he was a baby.

  Besides,

  Mrs. Morgan always kept

  a plate of freshly baked cookies

  on her kitchen table.

  Her snickerdoodles

  were famous.

  “And Mark?”

  his mother said.

  He looked up,

  saw the crease

  between her eyebrows,

  and looked away.

  “I heard a dog howling last night,”

  she said.

  “It was carrying on something awful.

  Must be a stray.

  I’ll let the sheriff know.

  He’ll take care of it.

  In the meantime

  I want you to be careful.

  Don’t go near

  any stray dogs.

  You never know.”

  Mark tried on a smile,

  though it didn’t fit very well.

  You never know,

  he thought,

  when a stray dog

  might be calling your name.

  Then he gave his mom a hug,

  stopped by to check in

  with Mrs. Morgan

  (and collect a snickerdoodle),

  and rode off

  on his bike.

  He had a mission now

  for certain.

  He had to save

  a lost dog

  from the sheriff.

  “Here, dog!” he called,

  again and again.

  “Here, little dog.”

  But no little dog

  with airplane ears

  appeared.

  Buddy stood in the alley

  behind the house.

  There it was.

  At last.

  She’d found it.

  But even though she knew

  this was the house

  she’d come from,

  she didn’t move.

  Her bed was there.

  Her ball,

  her bowl,

  her kibble,

  all were there.

  Buddy’s stomach rumbled

  when she thought

  about her kibble.

  Her cat was there too,

  her orange-marmalade stuffed cat.

  But the woman was in that house too.

  The one who yelled,

  “Shut up, Buddy.”

  The one who said,

  “No!”

  The one who patted her head

  with a stiff,

  flat hand

  and said, “Good dog,”

  but didn’t seem to mean it.

  Buddy checked the fence.

  The hole she had dug

  had been filled in.

  She tested the dirt.

  Soft,

  loose.

  She could dig it again.

  She could dig it

  and crawl back inside

  as easily as she had crawled out.

  But she didn’t.

  Instead

  she turned,

  head hanging,

  ears hanging,

  tail hanging,

  and walked

  away.

  She had a boy.

  She knew she had a boy.

  Somewhere.

  Mark rode his bike along Walnut Street.

  He was getting good

  at hitting all the potholes.

  He turned up First Avenue,

  along Maple Street,

  across Second Avenue,

  down Birch Street.

  “Here, dog,” he called

  the length of every street.

  “Here, little dog.

  Come to me!

  Please!”

  If he had known to peek

  beneath the porch

  of the brick house

  on the corner of Walnut and Fifth,

  he would have found Buddy,

  lying in the cool dark.

  But he didn’t know.

  “Here, dog.

  Come, little dog.”

  Buddy heard.

  She lifted her head.

  She thumped

  her whiplike tail.

  She strained

  her airplane ears

  to captur
e the boy voice,

  the good boy voice.

  “Come to me.

  Please?”

  But it wasn’t her boy voice.

  She lowered her head.

  Her airplane ears

  drooped.

  Her tail went still.

  In the hidden dark beneath the porch

  Buddy closed her eyes

  and slept

  again.

  Mark rode on,

  calling.

  “Here, dog!

  Come, little dog.

  Come to me.

  Please?”

  No little dog came.

  The summer evening

  lay across Erthly

  like a wool blanket,

  heavy and smothering,

  without a breath of breeze.

  Thunder stammered in the distance.

  Storm coming.

  Storm coming,

  it warned.

  But the Dog-Park Pack

  had more important things

  to think about

  than a little rain.

  They had gathered

  once more

  beneath the enormous oak tree

  next to the iron fence

  with spikes,

  ready to do battle

  with the town council.

  Cinder,

  the schnoodle,

  danced around Ryan’s feet,

  tangling his legs.

  Blizzard,

  the white shepherd,

  sat next to Alex,

  as stately as a statue.

  Hotdog,

  the dachshund,

  found something wonderfully smelly

  in the grass

  and rolled in it.

  Fido,

  the orange-marmalade cat,

  touched noses

  with each of his dog friends,

  then sat down primly

  at the end of his leash

  and washed his right paw.

  When he was done

  he used the slick of spit

  on his paw

  to clean his magnificent whiskers.

  He cleaned them

  with the kind of care

  that made it clear

  he knew

  exactly

  how magnificent

  they were.

  Lia arrived with Polly and Daisy,

  her aunt’s goldens.

  Daisy pranced over to check out Hotdog.

  Then,

  pleased with Hotdog’s new smell,

  she rolled in the grass too.

  (The wonderful scent

  in the grass

  had been left,

  quite recently,

  by a passing rabbit.)

  Samantha handed out signs on sticks.

  The signs said

  A KID’S BEST FRIEND

  and

  EQUAL PLAY FOR CANINES

  and

  DOGS ARE CITIZENS TOO.

  “You don’t say anything about dog parks,”

  Mark said.

  “I don’t need to,”

  Samantha replied.

  “You’re going to talk about dog parks.”

  Mark nodded.

  Of course.

  He was going to talk about dog parks.

  In front of the town council.

  In front of his mother.

  He had said he would,

  so he would,

  though he still wasn’t sure

 

‹ Prev