Little Dog, Lost

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by Marion Dane Bauer

Tomorrow evening

  they would march

  down the middle of Walnut Street,

  right to the basement

  of the Catholic Church,

  where the town council

  would be meeting.

  The boys,

  the girls,

  the dogs,

  and Fido

  too.

  Several times during the discussion

  Mark had to run a hand

  over his bristly brown hair

  to keep his courage from flagging.

  What would his mother say?

  Everything was moving so fast!

  But plans had to move fast,

  he reminded himself.

  So, fast was good.

  Wasn’t it?

  Samantha and Alex

  had decided they would paint signs.

  Lia was going to make up chants.

  Trent and Fido

  would lead the parade.

  All the dogs

  were going to be there,

  so,

  of course,

  Fido was coming too.

  (Everyone had agreed

  that pets were

  citizens of Erthly,

  and so they had to be in the rally.

  Mark had rubbed his bristly hair

  extra hard

  over that one.)

  “Let’s call ourselves

  the Dog-Park Pack,”

  Alex said.

  “The Dog-Park Pack!”

  everyone shouted,

  and they pumped their fists in the air.

  Then they yelled it again

  because it sounded so good.

  “The Dog-Park Pack!”

  The ancient oak

  seemed to approve of their plans.

  Dog park, it whispered.

  The Dog-Park Pack!

  But when all of that had been settled,

  the most important question

  still remained.

  “Who’ll make a speech

  to the town council?”

  Mark asked.

  Silence.

  Everyone looked

  off through the iron fence

  as though

  something very interesting

  were happening

  behind the blank,

  staring

  windows

  of the mansion.

  Then they looked at Mark.

  “You’ll do it!”

  Alex

  and Samantha

  and Ryan

  and Lia

  and Trent

  said in one voice.

  “But the mayor is my mother!”

  Mark said.

  “And she doesn’t want to hear

  about dog parks

  from me.”

  “She’ll have to hear,”

  Lia said,

  “because she’s the mayor,

  and the mayor’s job

  is to listen.

  You’ve always said so.”

  “But I don’t have a dog,”

  Mark said.

  “I don’t even have

  a cat who thinks he’s a dog!”

  “That’s all right,”

  Samantha told him.

  “You’ll be speaking for the common good.”

  (Samantha’s mom was a lawyer.

  That’s why she knew phrases like

  “the common good.”)

  “I’ve never made a speech before,”

  Mark said.

  “Nothing to it,”

  Ryan told him.

  “You just open your mouth

  and talk.”

  “If there’s nothing to it,

  then why don’t you—,”

  Mark started to say.

  But just then a door opened

  in the big house

  behind the spiked iron fence,

  and Charles Larue

  stepped out

  onto the broad porch.

  Instantly

  all Mark’s friends decided

  it was time

  to go home.

  “Wait!”

  Mark called after them.

  But no one waited.

  They didn’t even

  look

  back.

  Buddy grew sadder and sadder.

  She grew thinner and thinner.

  When the woman put her bowl of kibble

  on the kitchen floor,

  Buddy always slid her gaze

  toward the bowl,

  but she didn’t get up

  to eat.

  Maybe later,

  when she walked by,

  she’d take a bite

  or even two.

  But she never ate enough

  to fill her belly

  or to make her black coat

  glossy again.

  “I thought dogs were always hungry,”

  the woman said.

  “That goes to show

  how little I know

  about dogs.”

  When Buddy went out

  into the yard

  to use the grass,

  she didn’t run back to the door

  to be near her new owner.

  Instead she settled

  into the corner

  against the fence

  and peered through the slats,

  waiting for her boy

  to come back.

  He didn’t,

  of course.

  We know why he didn’t.

  We know

  her boy wasn’t ever going to come walking back

  from the faraway city

  down the sidewalk

  up to the fence

  where Buddy waited.

  But Buddy knew nothing

  of the city

  that had swallowed

  her boy.

  She knew only that there was a place

  deep beneath her ribs

  that ached

  day and night.

  It wasn’t that Charles Larue

  had ever done anything

  to scare the kids.

  It was just

  that they had told one another

  so many stories about him,

  no one could quite remember

  what was story

  and what was fact.

  If you live in a small town like Erthly,

  you know most

  of the people

  there.

  But since no one actually knew Charles Larue,

  the kids had to make do

  with stories.

  There were the stories

  about ghosts

  in Charles Larue’s attic,

  lost

  and lamenting.

  There were the stories

  about corpses

  in Charles Larue’s cellar,

  unburied

  and stinking.

  There were even stories

  about how he turned into a vampire

  whenever the moon

  grew fat.

  Kids said he skulked across town,

  thirsting

  for innocent

  blood!

  (Why is the blood

  that vampires thirst for

  always said to be innocent?

  Wouldn’t guilty blood

  taste just as good?)

  So many stories!

  So many kids full of stories!

  And here stood Charles Larue

  watching

  the boys and girls

  hurry

  away

  down the street.

  He watched Mark,

  too,

  standing

  alone

  beneath the oak tree.

  Mark decided it was time

  for him to go home

  as well.

  Buddy lay curled

  in the corner of the yard,

  tight againstr />
  the picket fence.

  She lay with her pointy nose

  tucked

  beneath her whiplike tail,

  her airplane-wing ears

  sagging.

  Her entire body

  remembered

  her boy.

  The itch

  behind her left ear

  remembered his scratching hand.

  Her lips

  remembered his kiss.

  Her legs

  remembered leaping

  after a high-flung ball.

  All gone . . .

  gone.

  Buddy rose

  from the ground.

  She turned around

  twice,

  three times.

  She lay down

  again.

  She got up once more.

  Some of the dirt

  in the corner,

  right close to the fence,

  was loose.

  Some of the dirt

  looked soft,

  easy to dig.

  Buddy tested it with a paw.

  She tested it with both paws.

  She threw the dirt behind her,

  grandly,

  wildly.

  She kept on digging.

  “Bad dog!”

  came a voice from the house.

  “Bad, bad dog!

  You’re ruining

  my yard!”

  Buddy stopped digging.

  She lay down.

  She tucked her pointy nose

  beneath

  her whiplike tail.

  She sighed

  deeply.

  For just a moment there,

  she had

  almost

  been having

  fun.

  Charles Larue stood

  in the big double doorway

  watching the children

  disappear down the street.

  They always did that.

  Whenever he came outside

  to see what they were doing,

  they ran away.

  He didn’t know why they ran.

  He had never spoken an unkind word

  to a child of Erthly.

  In fact,

  he’d never spoken any word at all.

  He liked children,

  certainly.

  He’d always wished

  he’d had a child

  of his own.

  He’d been proud

  to take care of his lady,

  but a child would have been nice.

  Maybe two or three.

  Perhaps a dog

  as well.

  But for that to have happened

  he’d have needed a different kind of life.

  For that to have happened

  he’d have needed to find the courage

  to say more than

  “Pecan pie and coffee, please”

  to the redheaded waitress

  at the Erthly Café.

  In the life he’d been given,

  children and dogs

  never seemed

  to want to come near.

  Charles Larue thrust his hands

  deep into his pockets

  and turned back

  to his enormous,

  empty

  house.

  For a long time

  Buddy lay curled

  in the corner

  by the fence.

  When she stood,

  finally,

  she turned to examine

  the soft dirt

  once more.

  She patted it.

  She poked at it.

  She tossed it behind her.

  One paw full,

  two.

  She stopped to study the house.

  Nothing.

  Not a sign.

  Not a sound.

  Maybe the woman had gone away.

  People had a way of doing that.

  Buddy began digging again.

  When the hole was deep,

  crumbly,

  and coolly inviting,

  she scooted

  under the fence

  and out

  into the world.

  The world where

  she was sure

  her boy

  waited.

  Buddy padded a few steps,

  then paused

  to look back.

  She had never been on her own

  before.

  Behind her,

  on the other side of the fence,

  she had a bowl,

  a bed,

  a ball.

  (She had chewed up her bone,

  and no new one

  had appeared.)

  Behind her,

  on the other side of the fence,

  she had an orange-marmalade stuffed cat,

  the one she used to toss into the air

  and catch again.

  The one she still

  rested her chin on at night

  when she slept.

  Buddy’s paws hesitated.

  Even her paws remembered

  the orange-marmalade cat.

  But then she thought about her boy,

  about chasing balls,

  ear scratches,

  kisses.

  And she set off again

  at

  a

  steady

  lope.

  “Mom,”

  Mark said,

  “what do people do

  when they want to make a speech

  to the town council?”

  “A speech?” his mother asked.

  “Well,” Mark said,

  “how do people tell the council

  when there is something

  they want

  the town to do?”

  “They just come

  to the meeting

  and talk.

  They tell us

  what they want.”

  Mark nodded.

  Talking sounded easy.

  It was a better word

  than “speech.”

  Except that he hated talking

  in front of his class

  in school.

  What would it feel like

  to talk

  in front of

  the entire

  town

  council?

  In front of his mother, too!

  His mother ran her hand

  across his bristly brown hair.

  “Hey, little porcupine,”

  she said,

  “why do you want to know

  about the town council?”

  “Just wondered,”

  he said.

  Mark turned away,

  smiling.

  He liked being called

  little porcupine.

  At least he liked hearing

  his mother say it

  when no one else was around.

  But he knew—

  maybe she did too—

  that for all their fierce prickles,

  porcupines were exceedingly soft

  underneath.

  Tomorrow he had to talk to the town council.

  But could he?

  Buddy danced

  along the sidewalk.

  She was looking for her boy’s house.

  She was looking for

  her boy.

  I’m coming!

  I’m coming!

  her faithful heart sang.

  I’m here!

  She stopped to consider

  a tall white house.

  But that wasn’t it.

  She sniffed the bushes

  alongside a brick bungalow.

  That wasn’t it either.

  She traveled

  through several backyards.

  None had the right look,

  the right smell.

  In fact,

  nothing Buddy found

  was right.


  None belonged

  to her boy.

  Finally,

  more because she was tired—

  and a bit discouraged—

  than because it seemed like the right one,

  she went up onto the porch

  of a stucco house

  with green shutters

  and lay down

  in front of the door.

  A black Lab

  barked

  from behind the picture window.

  Go away! he barked.

  Go!

  This house is mine,

  mine,

  mine,

  mine!

  Buddy didn’t bark back.

  She just lay there,

  waiting

  for whatever

  or whoever

  was going to happen

  next.

  “What are you doing here?”

  The woman opened the door

  and flapped a dish towel

  at Buddy.

  “Shoo!”

  she said.

  “Go away!”

  Buddy leapt to her feet,

  but then she stood there.

  She didn’t know what to do!

  In her whole life

  no one had ever said

  “Shoo!”

  to her before.

  A man came to the door

  too.

  “Obviously a stray,”

  he said.

  “Just see how thin she is.”

  He opened the door a crack,

  but when Buddy looked up at him

  hopefully,

  he closed it again.

  “We should call the dogcatcher,”

  he said.

  “Except this town is too small

  for a dogcatcher.

  Do you suppose the sheriff

  would have time to come?”

  Buddy tipped her head

  to one side.

  “Dogcatcher”?

  “Sheriff”?

  She didn’t understand those words

  either.

  “Can we keep her?”

  a girl asked,

  appearing between the man and the woman.

  “Please,

  please,

  please,

  can we keep her?”

  “No,”

  the man and the woman said together.

  “What would we do

  with two

  dogs?”

  the woman said.

  She said it

  the way grown-ups sometimes do,

  as though she were asking a question,

  when,

  of course,

  she didn’t want an answer at all.

  The little girl answered anyway.

  “I’d love them both,”

  she said,

  reasonably enough.

  The door

  shut.

  Buddy plodded

  down the steps

  and out to the sidewalk.

  The sun had dropped

  behind the steeple

  of the Catholic Church.

  Walnut Street stood empty.

  Was there no one who wanted

  a little black dog

  with brown paws

  and a brown mask

  and a sweet ruffle of brown fur on her bum

  just beneath her black whip of a tail?

  No one at all?

  Charles Larue trudged

  through the mansion,

 

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