Every Dog Has His Day

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by John R. Erickson




  Every Dog Has His Day

  John R. Erickson

  Illustrations by Gerald L. Holmes

  Maverick Books, Inc.

  Publication Information

  MAVERICK BOOKS

  Published by Maverick Books, Inc.

  P.O. Box 549, Perryton, TX 79070

  Phone: 806.435.7611

  www.hankthecowdog.com

  First published in the United States of America by Maverick Books, Inc. 1988,

  Texas Monthly Press, 1988, and Gulf Publishing Company, 1990.

  Subsequently published simultaneously by Viking Children’s Books and Puffin Books, members of Penguin Putnam Books for Young Readers, 1999.

  Currently published by Maverick Books, Inc., 2011.

  1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

  Copyright © John Erickson, 1988

  All rights reserved

  library of congress cataloging-in-publication data

  Erickson, John R.

  Every dog has his day / John Erickson ; illustrations by Gerald L. Holmes.

  p. cm.

  Originally published in series: Hank the Cowdog ; 10.

  Summary: Hank the Cowdog gets into more trouble before he is able to find a happy solution to his problems.

  ISBN 0-14-130386-7 (pbk.)

  [1. Dogs—Fiction. 2. West (U.S.)—Fiction. 3. Humorous stories.] I. Holmes, Gerald L., ill. II. Title. III. Series: Erickson, John R. Hank the Cowdog ; 10.

  PZ7.E72556Ev 1999 [Fic]—dc21 98-41808 CIP AC

  Hank the Cowdog® is a registered trademark of John R. Erickson.

  Printed in the United States of America

  Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  Dedication

  To the members of the Texas Library Association

  Contents

  Chapter One The Case of the Jingling Bells

  Chapter Two A Working Hippopotamus Takes Shape

  Chapter Three Benny the Cowdog

  Chapter Four HUH?

  Chapter Five Steel Cable Is Hard to Chew

  Chapter Six Using Laser Logic on the Cat

  Chapter Seven Miss Scamper Is Impressed

  Chapter Eight The Big Showdown

  Chapter Nine Found by the Coyote Brotherhood

  Chapter Ten The Wolf Creek Decathalon

  Chapter Eleven Out-Singing the Cannibals

  Chapter Twelve I Win the Singing Contest and Rescue the Boss

  Chapter One: The Case of the Jingling Bells

  It’s me again, Hank the Cowdog. When you’ve been on the side of law and order as long as I have, it’s hard to get used to being a fugitive and an outcast.

  But that’s by George what happened in June of whatever year that was when it happened—last year, I suppose you might say. But it definitely happened.

  I’ll take first things first and one thing at a time because I’ve found, over my years in security work, that it just doesn’t pay to do it any other way. This job pays little enough under the best of circumstances, and how did I get on the subject of pay?

  It’s an important subject but it seems to me that I had something else on my mind. I’ll get it here in a minute. Weather’s been nice, hasn’t it? Had a little shower the other morning.

  What the heck was I going to talk about? It really burns me up when I . . . oh yes. The fugitive and outcast business.

  Okay, here we go. This may turn out to be one of my more exciting stories, so hang on. It started out as a normal day in June. I had been out on routine patrol most of the night, checking things out, making sure my ranch was secure from coyotes, coons, skunks, badgers, and the many species of monsters we have around here.

  At daylight, everything checked out, so I went down to the sewer and freshened up and made my way to the gas tanks, where I had every intention of keeping a date with my gunnysack bed.

  Drover was there, as you might have guessed, wheezing and twitching in his bed. He heard me pawing at my gunnysack and opened one eye. His eyeball went around in circles.

  “You should have someone look at that eye, Drover. There’s something wrong with it.”

  “Tblckw dkvlskc with murgle skiffer.”

  “Maybe so, but that doesn’t alter the fact that it goes around in circles. And speaking of circles, did you make your patrol? I’ll need a full report on conditions in the eastern quadrant of headquarters. Might as well get it over with now, before I go off duty.”

  “Lorken tonsils skiffer murgle skungling pork chops.”

  “How can you be sure of that? Did you check it out yourself or is it just hearsay?”

  “Humlum morkin reskiffering sardines.”

  “And you’re positive about that?”

  His other eye slid open and he stared at me for a moment. “Where am I?”

  “That depends on your location, Drover. Once you get that settled, the rest of it will fall into place. Where were you the last time you remembered?”

  “I don’t remember.”

  I flopped down on my gunnysack and released my grip on the world. “That’s one of your problems, son. You need to work on developing your memory. Memory is very crucial to success in the security business. Try it again, and this time, concentrate.”

  “Okay. What am I concentrating on?”

  “You’re concentrating on trying to remember.”

  “Oh. Remembering what?”

  “Remembering where you were the last time you were somewhere.”

  “Boy, that’s a tough one.”

  “Yes, but I don’t need to remind you that you could use a little toughening up. Go ahead and scuffle with it. When you come up with an answer, wake me up.”

  “You going to sleep?”

  “Not entirely. Although it may appear that I’m falllllling azzzzzzleep, tblckw dkvlskc with murgle skiffer.”

  “Oh good. It sure gets boring around here when I have to think and remember. Now let’s see, where was I the last time I was somewhere?”

  “Lorken tonsils skiffer murgle skungling pork chops.”

  “No, I don’t think so, because that would have made it Saturday and that was the day all the clouds went over, wasn’t it? Clouds sure are pretty.”

  “Humlum morkin reskiffering sardines.”

  “Sometimes I wish I could be a cloud. Wouldn’t that be fun, just float around all day and take naps and skiffer murgle chicken bone.”

  “Mumlumnum hoosh.”

  “Lumnum hooshy morkin skumble.”

  “Zzzzzzzzzzzz.”

  “Zzzzzzzzzzz.”

  I must admit that some of this conversation didn’t make sense to me, for you see, Drover fell asleep. Another thing that didn’t make sense was that, suddenly, I heard the jingling of distant bells.

  My ears shot up and I leaped to my feet. “Zzzwait a minute, pork chops don’t sound like that! Wake up, Drover, I think I’ve got it.”

  His eyelids popped open, revealing two crossed eyes behind them. “Clouds ride chicken bone motorcycles. What?”

  “I said, wake up, I think I’ve got it. It’s all coming clear now. If the bells are jingling, this must be Christmas!”

  He staggered to his feet and walked around in a circle. “Oh my gosh, do they bit
e?”

  “What?”

  “Where am I?”

  “How should I know where you are, and what difference does it make? The point is that there’s something very strange going on here and it’s our job to sound the alarm, so don’t just bark there. Stand!”

  “Oh, okay.” The little dunce just stood there.

  “Are you going to bark or not?”

  “You said to stand here. I think that’s what you said.”

  “It’s time for you to stop thinking, Drover, and trust your cowdog instincts, even though you’re not a cowdog. There’s a time to stand up for what you believe in and there’s a time to think, but this is the time to bark your little heart out.”

  “Oh, okay.”

  “Because something very strange is going on around here.”

  He rolled his eyes around. “What is it?”

  “I . . . I don’t remember what it is, but that’s neither here nor there. Bark, Drover, that’s the important thing right now!”

  And that’s just what we did. We gave whatever it was a good old-fashioned barking, I with my deep masculine roar and Drover adding his yip-yip-yip. We must have barked for a solid minute, and at the end of that time my head had begun to clear.

  “Wait a minute, hold on, Drover. What are we barking at?”

  “I don’t know. I asked you that a while ago, and you said . . .”

  “Never mind what I said. It’s foolish for us to waste our reserves if we don’t know what we’re barking at. Let me think.” I thought. “Yes, it’s coming back to me now. I heard bells, Drover, the jingling of bells. And I guess you know what that means.”

  “No, I don’t think I do.”

  “Good, because I don’t either, but that’s the whole point. If we heard bells jingling and can’t define the source, then what we have here is the Case of the Jingling Bells.”

  “Oh my gosh!”

  “Yes indeed. Now listen very carefully.” He was staring up at the sky. “Are you listening very carefully?”

  “What? No, I was just looking at the clouds. There sure are a lot of clouds this morning.”

  “Never mind the clouds. Pay attention. In thirty seconds, we will proceed to Checkpoint Charlie. I’ll go first. You guard the flanks and the rear. We’re going to find out who or whom has been jingling those alleged bells, and I don’t need to tell you that this could get us into some combat. You ready?”

  “I guess.”

  “All right. Form a line, pick up your feet, and let’s move out.”

  We went streaking toward the saddle shed, the point from which the jingling bells had come from. I took the lead and Drover brought up the rear.

  By this time it had become clear to me that both Drover and I had fallen asleep beneath the gas tanks and that this probe of the enemy’s position had grown out of a fairly incoherent conversation.

  Nevertheless, it had to be checked out. Some­times your best leads in this business come from strange sources. A good cowdog will check them all out. It’s just part of the job.

  We went crashing through some tall weeds, and by the time we reached a point adjacent to the point at which the garden lay adjacent to the saddle shed, I heard the bells again. And this time I couldn’t dismiss it as a mere dream or a product of Drover’s shriveled intelligence.

  Yes indeed, we had bells on the ranch. I hadn’t cleared anyone to jingle bells on my ranch, and I was fixing to pull rank and give somebody a rude surprise.

  “All right, Drover,” I yelled over my shoulder, “let’s initiate Barking Mode One. Ready? BARK!”

  Fellers, we barked! Maybe I don’t need to point out how difficult it is to go into Barking Mode One while running at top speed, but it’s a pretty nifty trick that requires concentration and a good deal of raw athletic ability.

  When I saw the saddle shed door hanging open, I knew we had ourselves a live one. Something or someone had broken in there—without clearance, I might add—and we had caught the culprits in an unauthorized entry. As you might have guessed, I don’t allow unauthorized entries on my outfit.

  In other words, they had made a very serious miscalculation and had walked right into my trap. For you see, there was only one door into the saddle shed, which meant there was only one door OUT. We had them cornered.

  “All right, Drover, we’ll take up positions in front of the door and initiate Barking Mode Two. When they come out, give them the full load. I’ll go for the first one, you take the second one.”

  “What if there’s three?”

  “If there’s three, Drover, we’ll play it by ear. Ready? Bark!”

  We sent up an amazing barrage of barking, just by George fractured the silence of morning with alarms and threatening sounds. Even though we had the situation pretty well under control, it wouldn’t have made me mad if High Loper had come rushing down from the house with his gun.

  Well, we were in the midst of our barking procedure when all of a sudden a two-legged, human-type monster leaped out the door. He had two clawed hands and a ferocious expression on his face. Oh yes, and he made a terrible sound: “HEE-YAHHHH!”

  The hair shot up on the back of my neck and my deep roar of a bark suddenly turned into a squeak, and you might say that I plowed little Drover under trying to get away from the monster, thought I would give a little ground, see, and then establish another . . .

  Let me say here that the cowboys on this outfit have a twisted sense of humor, and sometimes I get the feeling that they don’t take my job as seriously . . .

  Okay, maybe it was Slim. Maybe the jingling bells had actually been his spurs. Maybe he was trying to be funny, jumping out the door with his claws out. But the point is that nobody had cleared . . . never mind.

  Chapter Two: A Working Hippopotamus Takes Shape

  Oh, he got a big chuckle out of it, Slim did, just laughed and howled and held his sides and fell on the ground. I didn’t think it was so funny myself.

  “Did you think I was going to get you, Hankie? You’d better be more careful what you bark at.” He went back into the saddle shed, chuckling to himself. It’s always a little shocking to realize how childish these cowboys can be.

  Well, it took me a whole minute to get the hair to lay back down on my neck, and then I looked around for Drover. He had disappeared. I went looking for him, figgered he might have high-balled it up to the machine shed, but I found him hiding behind one of them big Chinese elms just east of the garden. I could see his eyes peeking around the trunk.

  “You can come out now, Drover.”

  “What was that thing?”

  “Just Slim, trying to be funny.”

  “Oh. Sure didn’t look like Slim to me.”

  “First impressions are often wrong, Drover. You must learn to probe deeper and look for the forest instead of the trees.”

  Drover stared at me and twisted his head. “I thought you said it was Slim.”

  “I did say it was Slim.”

  “Oh. I thought that’s what you said, but then you said he was a tree.”

  “No, you weren’t paying attention. How could Slim be a tree?”

  “I don’t know. I didn’t think he looked much like a tree. He didn’t have enough bark.”

  “He didn’t bark at all, Drover. WE barked at HIM.”

  “Yeah, I know, but he didn’t have enough bark to be a tree.”

  “Of course he didn’t, you dunce, because trees don’t bark! Now stop wasting my time and . . .” All at once I heard a pickup coming down the road from the mailbox. “Wait a minute, what is this?”

  Drover looked up. “I think it’s a tree.”

  “What? No, coming down the road.”

  “Oh. Gosh, it looks like a pickup to me.”

  “Indeed it is a pickup, pulling a green stock trailer. The question is, what is it doing on my ranch?�


  “Beats me, but I wonder what it’s doing here?”

  “Good question, Drover, and we’re fixing to find some answers. Come on!”

  We went streaking toward the unidentified pickup and barked it all the way down to the corrals. Just as I was about to sniff out the tires and mark them for future reference, another pickup came rolling in. And another!

  I called to Drover and we went rushing out to meet the trespassers, gave each one of them as much of a barking as we could manage under the circumstances. Something very strange was going on here, and I needed to find out what it was.

  I picked up some clues right away. All three of the pickups were pulling stock trailers. All three stock trailers had four wheels. Two were green and one was brown—no pattern there, but I noticed it anyway. And finally, inside each of the trailers was a horse—not the same horse, you see, but three different horses—and all three horses were saddled.

  The drivers got out and two of them stretched their arms. I recognized two out of the three suspects. One was named Baxter, the other was Billy. Both lived on ranches down the creek, which meant they were neighbors. I didn’t recognize the third man.

  Oh, and they were all wearing spurs and chaps. That was kind of revealing too. When the neighbors come prowling around in shurs and spaps, spurs and chaps, that is, it usually indicates that some type of work is planned for the day.

  I called my assistant over for a conference. “Drover, circulate around, sniff things out, keep your ears open. Something’s going on around here.”

  “I thought so.”

  I glared at the runt. “Maybe you thought so, but I thought so first. Don’t forget who’s in charge around here.”

  “Oh, okay.”

  “Now get going. I’ll expect a full report.”

  “Okay, Hankie, here I go!” And off he went.

  I had my doubts that he would turn up any good leads, but when you’re short-handed, you have to use whatever warm bodies happen to be available. Drover was what you would call your Basic Warm Body.

 

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