Putting on the Dog

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Putting on the Dog Page 35

by Cynthia Baxter


  “This must be da place,” I muttered, glancing over at Max, my tailless Westie, and Lou, my one-eyed Dalmatian, who shared the seat beside me. Even they looked impressed. Or maybe it was just confronting the endless stretches of green grass that had them spellbound. I could almost hear Lou thinking, “Somewhere out there, there’s a tennis ball with my name on it.” Max, I suspected, was imagining all the squirrels and rabbits who were just waiting to be chased.

  I had to keep my jaw from dropping to the ground as I drove along a paved road that curved through an amazing amount of land—especially given the outrageous property values on Long Island. Some of it was dense wooded areas, towering oaks and lush maples, their leaves already taking on a reddish tinge that warned that summer would soon be replaced by fall. But most of Andrew MacKinnon’s estate had been divided into large, grassy paddocks. Most were empty, while a few housed a horse or two. In the distance, I noticed a brown-shingled building that looked like a stable. But on the phone, Heatherfield’s barn manager had told me the stable was yellow, so I kept going.

  After driving nearly a quarter of a mile, I spotted an elegant stone house. Or mansion, depending on how much of a stickler for using the correct word you happen to be. Given the fact that it had enough rooms to pass for a small hotel, I suppose anyone who referred to it as a house would be guilty of understatement.

  I finally spotted the stable. The one-story yellow building was U-shaped, a main section with two wings. I suspected it had originally been built as a carriage house.

  Speaking of carriages, I noticed that so many vehicles were parked on the property that it looked like a used-car lot. A very fancy used-car lot. A Cadillac and a Mercedes sat on the paved semicircle in front of the house. Another half dozen lined the long driveway. Most were parked at haphazard angles, as if they’d been discarded by drivers who didn’t consider them important enough to deal with properly. I spotted two SUVs, a Hummer, and a dilapidated station wagon. There were also two horse trailers, at the moment not hitched up to anything.

  But the shining star of the makeshift parking lot was definitely the red Porsche, so low to the ground that the driver could probably feel pebbles on his butt. I wasn’t sure, but I thought it bore an awfully close resemblance to a snazzy model I’d recently seen in a car magazine. Nick had shown it to me while we were browsing in a bookstore, marveling over its six-figure price tag. That was considerably more than the cost of the van that served as my clinic on wheels, and the Porsche didn’t even come equipped with its own X-ray machine and autoclave.

  I pulled my van up and opened the door. Predictably, Max and Lou shot out, acting as if they’d just been released from two years under house arrest. They spotted a tough-looking barn cat and immediately set off in his direction, hellbent on checking out any living, breathing creature with the audacity to venture within a quarter of a mile of where they were.

  I headed toward the stable, lugging a big black bag with most of the supplies and equipment I expected I’d need to treat Andrew MacKinnon’s prized horse. As soon as I entered, I sensed someone else’s presence. Actually, it wasn’t as much an eerie, Stephen King kind of feeling as a distinctive smell. Cigarette smoke, stinging my nostrils and making my throat raw.

  “Hello?” I called. “Anyone here?”

  For a few seconds, nothing. And then a man stepped out of the shadows, planting himself a foot away from my face. His creepy entrance made me wonder if he’d orchestrated the whole scene for my benefit. Not a very promising beginning, I thought with annoyance.

  He stood roughly six feet tall, lanky, with knobby fingers that curled around his cigarette butt. His fashion statement was Aging Cowboy: jeans and a T-shirt, worn underneath a red plaid flannel shirt. His face looked as scorched as the Arizona desert. Despite the reptilian skin, I estimated his age in the mid-forties. And he positively reeked of cigarette smoke, as if part of his daily grooming routine was dousing himself in Eau de Marlboro.

  He studied me coldly, his eyes a pale shade of hazel that contributed to his lizard-like appearance. “Who the hell are you?” he rasped.

  “I’m Dr. Popper,” I replied. “I got a call this morning about a horse that needs tending to.”

  “So you’re the vet.”

  “That’s right.”

  He continued to stare at me, as if he was waiting for me to say, “Naw, only kidding!” Instead, I stared right back.

  “C’mon,” he finally said, turning and heading in the opposite direction. “I’ll take you to Braveheart.”

  “And you are... ?” I asked, counteracting his rudeness by being overly polite.

  “Johnny Ray Cousins,” he mumbled. “Mr. Mac’s barn manager. I’m the one who called you.”

  I drew my breath in sharply when my charming host stopped in front of a stall labeled “Braveheart.” Andrew MacKinnon’s gelding truly was a beautiful animal. The sleek Arabian was a deep shade of chestnut with a flowing mane, intelligent brown eyes, and a proud demeanor.

  “How’re you doing, boy?” I asked him in a soft voice, stroking his nose gently. And then, even though I could feel Johnny Ray’s eyes burning into me, I leaned forward and nuzzled Braveheart’s nose with mine. It was something I’d seen horses do with each other, so I’d adopted it as my own greeting whenever I was getting acquainted with one I was about to treat. When in Rome, I figured.

  I turned back to MacKinnon’s barn manager. “What’s going on?”

  “Looks like his tendon pulled up a little bit sore, over there on his right back leg,” Johnny Ray mumbled. “Happened yesterday. Braveheart probably took a bad step, maybe hit a divot. ’Course, he coulda been struck with a polo mallet, but I didn’t see it happen. Anyway, he stumbled, but Scott, the guy who was riding him, picked up on his reins and kept playing. He told me afterward he felt a funny step, but Braveheart here is a real trooper. He went on to score the winning goal.

  “After the game, we took a look at it. It was a little bit filled and there was some heat. I iced it and gave him a couple of Bute, but a few hours later, it was still sore to the touch. I talked to Mr. Mac about it this morning, and he insisted we give you a call.”

  Johnny Ray shot me a hostile look, no doubt making doubly sure I understood that it had been his boss’s idea to summon me—not his.

  “Let me take a look.” I set down my bag, ready to work.

  Tendon damage is a frequent occurrence in polo ponies, ranging from a simple strain or sprain to a fracture that could put the animal out of commission completely. Injuries of this sort are especially common among higher-goal polo ponies, horses that play the game at its most demanding level. Polo requires them to run fast, then make short stops and turns—moves horses simply aren’t built for. Getting tired out on the polo field is another factor, along with irregularities like stones or divots, clumps of earth pulled from the ground by galloping hooves or mallets. Still, polo fields are generally well-maintained, and tendon injuries usually turn out to be mild.

  “Okay, boy,” I said in a soothing voice. “I’m going to take a look at you. We just want to figure out what happened.”

  Braveheart stood still in his stall, patiently allowing me to examine his right back leg. From what I could see, Johnny Ray’s analysis was correct. It looked like the gelding’s injury was a simple soft-tissue wound—no open wound, no major bone fractures. Still, I couldn’t be sure.

  “I’m going to do an ultrasound,” I said. I opened the carrying case that contained the portable unit. The nifty device consisted of two pieces, an extension probe and a processing computer with a monitor, yet weighed barely two pounds.

  As I ran the extension probe over Braveheart’s bruised tendon, I studied the screen. Sure enough, the image clearly showed a pocket of excess fluid within the superficial digital flexor tendon at the back of the horse’s right leg, an indication of minor structural damage.

  “Okay, I see a weak spot in the tendon,” I told Johnny Ray, pointing to the screen. “I’m going to put Bravehear
t on an anti-inflammatory, Naquasone, for a few days. Give him half a pill in the morning and half at night. I’d also like you to keep up with the icing or cold-hosing during the day, but put on a mud poultice overnight to draw out the heat and get the swelling down. During the day, keep the bandage on and keep him in the stall. I’ll reevaluate his condition in a few days.”

  “Now I suppose you want to be paid,” Johnny Ray said gruffly. “I’ll take you inside to meet Mr. Mac.”

  He tossed his cigarette butt onto the ground, snuffing it out halfheartedly with the sole of his boot—not the best idea around wooden stables and the horses that were confined in them. I immediately opened my mouth to protest, then reconsidered. Andrew MacKinnon’s barn manager and I hadn’t exactly started out on the best terms, even though I suspected the reason was simply that I had the nerve to be female, a veterinarian, or a combination of both. Since he and I were going to be working together over the next week or two to ensure that Braveheart made a complete recovery, the last thing I wanted was to create any more bad feelings.

  As we walked toward the house, I caught another glimpse of the elegant horseman I’d noticed earlier. “Who is that?” I asked.

  Johnny Ray glanced at the field. “Oh, him. Eduardo Garcia. One of the Argies. He plays on Mr. Mac’s team.”

  “Argies?” I repeated, confused.

  “Argentines.”

  “Oh. I don’t know much about polo, but it looks like he’s really good.”

  “One of the best. Sometimes I come out here just to stand by the fence and watch him stick-and-balling. That means practicing. Y’know, hitting the ball around with the mallet.”

  He turned so that his back was to the polo player, scowling. “Those Argies have a helluva life. I wonder if them spics even know how good they got it.”

  It was a good thing Lou and Max chose that moment to come bounding toward me, panting with glee as if thinking, “Isn’t this place the greatest?” Their arrival provided just the distraction I needed to keep myself from giving Johnny Ray Cousins a piece of my mind.

  Not that he hung around long enough to continue our fascinating conversation. He strode toward Andrew MacKinnon’s mansion, walking fast enough to stay at least six feet ahead of me.

  Fine with me, I thought, trailing after him. Even being treated like a second-class citizen by a man with a chip on his shoulder the size of that Hummer over there is better than attempting to converse with him.

  I took a moment to appreciate the fact that, thanks to my career choice, I spent more time in the presence of animals than people. And to reflect on how ironic it was that animals, not people, were referred to as “dumb.”

  I followed Johnny Ray across a brick patio at the back of the house, but stopped short when we reached a pair of elegant French doors. Peering through the glass, I saw they led into the mansion’s center hallway. I had a feeling that wet paws and damp noses wouldn’t be particularly welcome inside, even though this was an estate on which animals were clearly a priority.

  “Stay!” I instructed Max and Lou. They looked at me in disbelief, clearly indignant that they were being left behind. Reluctantly, Lou lowered his butt to the ground. Max, meanwhile, stared at me hard, as if thinking, “How could you?”

  As Johnny Ray and I stepped into the elegant hallway with its smooth marble floor, a young woman appeared in one of the doorways and rushed over to us.

  “Hey, Inez,” he mumbled. “Mr. Mac around? Or has he gone into the city already?”

  “Meester Mac is in his study,” the pretty young woman answered, lowering her head shyly. “I will tell him you wish to speak with him.”

  “No need.” The barn manager barged right past her—in the process, tracking dirt across what looked to me like a very expensive Oriental carpet.

  “Meester Johnny!” she called. “Per favor, Meester Mac does not like—”

  Johnny Ray ignored her, striding down the hallway. “Damn Port-o Rican,” he muttered.

  Horrified, I glanced at Inez, hoping she hadn’t heard. If she had, she showed no sign of it. Instead, she kept her head down, making a point of not looking at either of us.

  I trailed after Mr. Congeniality, hoping Andrew MacKinnon wouldn’t hold his bad manners against me. Then again, I thought, Johnny Ray works for him, so chances are he already knows what a Neanderthal he’s dealing with.

  I decided to forget about Johnny Ray. Instead, I concentrated on my surroundings. My original assessment of Heatherfield, that it wasn’t exactly in the same league as the thousands of ranch houses and split-levels that covered Long Island, hardly did the place justice. As if the size alone weren’t enough to knock your socks off, it was outfitted with elegant furniture, paintings, and accessories that made it clear that this part of Long Island still deserved to be labeled the Gold Coast.

  Mr. MacKinnon’s study drove that point home. As I stepped inside, I was enveloped by a room that had the restful feeling of a hideaway, created by the skillful integration of rich textures and intense colors. The walls were painted the same dark green as a billiard table, with dark wooden wainscoting all around. The deep, masculine tones were echoed in the couches and chairs, upholstered in brown leather the color of creamy milk chocolate. I placed my hand on the back of a chair and found it was as thick as a saddle but as soft to the touch as a kitten’s ear.

  The walls were covered with pictures, hung at every possible height. Whether they were big or small, framed photographs or signed lithographs or huge oil paintings with gilt frames, they all featured horses. And most of those horses had polo players on their backs, their expressions grim and determined as they leaned forward to whack the ball.

  I couldn’t help being curious about the man who had amassed enough wealth to buy himself such an impressive playground. I pictured Andrew MacKinnon as a suave James Bond type, wearing a burgundy-colored silk bathrobe and carrying a brandy snifter. Then I shifted to a slick Mississippi riverboat gambler with a waxed mustache and a string tie and the distinctive gleam of greed in his dark, beady eyes. Next, I tried on a dignified Anthony Hopkins type in a gray morning coat, smoking a cigar and reading the Financial Times.

  None of the personas I’d invented for Andrew MacKinnon came even close to the paunchy man in his early sixties who stood up as we barged in unannounced. Instead of the shiny, slicked back hair of my riverboat gambler, he hardly had any hair left at all. What there was of it was almost completely gray, barely hinting at the fact that a decade or two earlier, he had been a redhead. He had a ruddy complexion to match, along with pale blue eyes rimmed with nearly colorless lashes.

  And forget the string tie. Ditto for the silk bathrobe. This particular captain of industry was dressed in wrinkled khaki pants that sagged in the back and a loosefitting lemon yellow golf shirt marred by a small but distinct stain. His abundant stomach protruded like Santa Claus’s, stretching the knit fabric more than I suspected its designer had ever intended.

  It certainly wasn’t easy picturing him riding the princely Braveheart, galloping across a polo field with a team of muscular young horsemen like the one I’d seen stick-and-balling earlier that morning. In fact, I had to remind myself that this undistinguished businessman actually owned the castlelike estate that surrounded us: the mansion, the cars and trucks and trailers, the stables, the polo fields, and of course the magnificent horses I knew were worth plenty.

  “How’s my horse?” he demanded, dropping the Wall Street Journal he’d been reading onto his chair.

  “You’ll have to ask Dr. Pepper,” Johnny Ray replied sullenly.

  I could feel my blood starting to boil. I’ve been called Dr. Pepper more times than I can count. But being mistaken for a rival to Coke and Pepsi was usually accidental. The sneer on Johnny Ray’s face made it clear that his slip was completely intentional—and that he wanted me to know it.

  I decided to ignore him. “Mr. MacKinnon, I’m Dr. Popper,” I said, stepping forward and shaking his hand. “I checked out Braveheart, and it loo
ks as if he’s suffered some minor structural damage on the back of his right leg—”

  The sound of screaming, accompanied by quick footsteps across the marble floor, stopped me mid-sentence.

  “What the hell... ?” Andrew MacKinnon muttered, stepping out into the hallway.

  “Meester Mac! Meester Mac!” Inez cried. “Come quickly! It’s Eduardo! He fell off his horse—and he’s not moving!”

  PUTTING ON THE DOG

  A Bantam Book / August 2004

  Published by

  Bantam Dell

  A division of Random House, Inc.

  New York, New York

  All rights reserved

  Copyright © 2004 by Cynthia Baxter

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  eISBN : 978-0-307-41829-6

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