Waggit's Tale

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by Peter Howe


  The woman looked into his eyes as she stroked that special place behind the ears.

  “You have become so important to me,” she said. “You make my life complete. I hope that we’re together for a long, long time.”

  Waggit looked back at her. He didn’t understand her words, and even if he had, they wouldn’t have meant much to him. Dogs don’t think much about the future beyond the day ahead, or sometimes just the next meal. For them it is the moment that counts, and at that moment it seemed to Waggit that his life would be complete if the woman scratched his stomach. He rolled over onto his back and she willingly cooperated. As she watched him enjoy the sensation she could swear that he was smiling. And, you know, maybe he was.

  Glossary

  Bad water: Gasoline

  Bigwater: The reservoir

  The Cold White: Snow

  Curlytails: Squirrels

  Deepwater: The lake

  Deepwoods End: The north end of the park

  Eyes and ears: Sentry duty

  Feeder: Restaurant

  Flutters: Birds

  Goldenside: The west side of the park

  The Great Unknown: The dog pound

  Hoppers: Rabbits

  Loners: Dogs with no team

  The Long Cold: Winter

  Longlegs: Horses

  Luggers: Carriages pulled by horses

  Nibblers: Mice

  Petulants: Pet dogs

  Realm: Area of the park that is the domain of a team

  Rising: Day

  Risingside: The East side of the park

  Rollers: Cars

  Rollerway: Road going through the park

  Ruzelas: Anyone in authority—rangers, police, etc.

  Scurries: Rats

  Silver claws: Knives

  Skurdie: A homeless person in the park

  Skyline End: The south end of the park

  Stoners: Teenage boys

  Uprights: Human beings

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  According to the dictionary, acknowledgments are “an author’s statement of indebtedness to others.” When the people who wrote the dictionary said others they probably meant the two-legged kind, and indeed there are many of them that I owe big-time. But leading the pack, if you’ll excuse the pun, are my four-footed friends—Molly, Bill, Roo, Bobby Blue, and Rocco—each of whom, in their own ways, introduced me to the wonderful lives of dogs and showed me that living life on life’s terms can be a lot of fun.

  Of the many Uprights who made this book possible, gratitude should be showered on Susan Katz and Kate Jackson of HarperCollins, who took a risk on an author unknown in the world of children’s books, and also on my brilliant editor, Antonia Markiet, aka Toni, who beat my ramblings into acceptable prose. I suspect there may have been times when she wanted to beat the author as much as his prose.

  Thanks should also be given to two talented dog trainers, Phyllis Couvares and Susi Nastasi, both of whom gave me a deeper understanding of canine behavior, and to Rachel McPherson of the Good Dog Foundation for providing a valuable outlet for that knowledge.

  But most of all I want to thank my alpha wife, whose steady support has sustained me through all my strange endeavors, and who is probably the only person on the planet more dog-crazy than I.

  Lastly thanks should always be given to those wonderful people who spend their lives rescuing dogs from the various Great Unknowns and without whom several of my dogs would not have survived long enough to give me the pleasure that they have.

  PETER HOWE

  Litchfield, Connecticut, 2007

  About the Author

  PETER HOWE is the author of WAGGIT’S TALE, which was his first book for children. He was born in London, lived in New York for more than thirty years, and currently resides in Connecticut with his wife and two dogs. He is a former New York Times Magazine and Life magazine picture editor, and he is the author of two books on photography: SHOOTING UNDER FIRE and PAPARAZZI.

  You can visit Peter and the pack at www.waggitstale.com.

  Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.

  ALSO BY PETER HOWE

  Waggit Again

  Credits

  Cover art © 2008 by Tristan Elwell

  Cover design by Amy Ryan

  Copyright

  WAGGIT’S TALE. Text copyright © 2008 by Peter Howe. Interior illustrations copyright © 2008 by Omar Rayyan. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  Adobe Digital Edition April 2009 ISBN 978-0-06-191093-7

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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