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The Unwanted Puppy

Page 1

by Holly Webb




  For Zoe and Zach, Lucy and Georgia

  www.hollywebbanimalstories.com

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Extract

  Collect them all

  Biography

  Copyright

  Zoe wandered along behind her dad, looking for daisies in the grass. She wanted the ones with the fat stalks and pink-tipped petals to make into a bracelet. There were just a few starting to open up, now that spring was coming.

  She was gazing so closely at the grass around her feet that she was almost nose to nose with the dog before she saw it. She stopped, half crouching, staring into a curious, furry face. Zoe loved dogs and she thought she was good at recognizing what sort they were – she had a huge dog-breed poster on her wall. But she didn’t know this one.

  It had thick soft fur that was mostly black on its head, but with a white muzzle going into a white stripe up its forehead. There was a splash of gingery-brown on the sides of its muzzle and it had the most gorgeous ginger eyebrows. They stood out against its black fur and made it look very surprised to see her. Its ears were fluffy and long, and a bit like a spaniel’s. Though it definitely wasn’t a spaniel, Zoe was sure.

  Even though the dog was quite big, Zoe thought it must be a puppy. It had that teddy-bear look – cuddly and fat-legged, as though it hadn’t yet grown into its paws.

  It was beautiful.

  “Hello, sweetheart…” Zoe whispered, wondering if the puppy was a boy or a girl. She eyed the puppy sideways, trying not to stare too much into its eyes and make it scared. Her old dog Honey hadn’t minded – she even quite liked being hugged, which lots of dogs didn’t, but she had known Zoe forever.

  The puppy leaned forwards – and licked Zoe’s cheek, making her giggle. Without even thinking, she reached out and stroked one of its fluffy black ears. Then she stared at it guiltily. She loved dogs, but her mum and dad had made her promise never to stroke one without asking the owner if it was OK first. Not all dogs were as friendly as they looked so it was always best to ask. Zoe hadn’t meant to break her promise, it was just that this cute puppy had licked her…

  “You’re beautiful,” she murmured. “I wish I could make a big fuss of you! I’m sure you are friendly. Where’s your owner, hey?” She looked around. The puppy’s lead was tied to the playground fence, so perhaps it belonged to one of the families who were playing inside. The playground was busy, though, just after school pick-up time, and Zoe wasn’t sure who had brought the puppy.

  “Zoe!” Her dad waved from the gate. “Come on!”

  Zoe sighed and smiled at the puppy. “Bye, gorgeous! Maybe I’ll see you again sometime,” she added.

  “Did you see that cute dog?” she asked her dad, as she ran up to him. “Look, over there by the fence.”

  “Wow. Very cute,” her dad agreed.

  “I don’t know what sort of dog it is.” Zoe said thoughtfully. “But I reckon it’s a large breed – it was really big already and I think it’s still a puppy.”

  “I don’t know, either.” Her dad looked back over his shoulder. “Do you really think it’s a puppy?”

  “Yes! Well … probably.” Zoe sighed, and slipped her hand into her dad’s, leaning her head against his arm. “I miss Honey.”

  “Me, too.” Her dad sighed. “That dog reminds me of her a bit – I think it’s the fluffy ears.”

  “Hers were even fluffier,” Zoe said loyally. “She was the best dog ever.”

  Honey had died in the autumn the year before and Zoe had been devastated. Her parents had owned the gentle Golden Retriever from before Zoe was born, so she’d never known their house without her. She still woke up some mornings and forgot that Honey wouldn’t be there when she went downstairs, sniffing and licking and loving her, all one giant wag.

  “She was,” her dad agreed. He was silent for a moment as they came through the park gate and out on to the road, just a little way down from their house. “Maybe we’ll have another Golden Retriever one day,” he suggested. “I bet you’d enjoy having a puppy.”

  Zoe looked up at him in surprise. After Honey had died, Dad had said he didn’t want to think about having another dog, not yet. She tried to imagine a different Golden Retriever lying in Honey’s favourite spot, next to the kitchen radiator. It was difficult – the new dog looked just like Honey.

  Still… A puppy…! Zoe smiled to herself, thinking of walks with a dog again and curling up to read a book with a loving dog’s nose in her lap. “Yeah … maybe…”

  Scout turned to watch the girl walking away from the playground, his tail still wagging faintly. Was she going to come back? He had liked her petting his ears and fussing over him. He let out a hopeful whine, standing up to peer further around the fence. But she was gone.

  The puppy heaved a sigh and slumped down, stretching out his fat tan and white forepaws and resting his muzzle on them. He wished Jack would hurry up and come and play with him. It wasn’t much fun sitting here. He could hear baby Tilly wailing and he sat up again, looking worriedly into the playground. Jack was on the top of the climbing frame and Tilly was in the pushchair, with her mum leaning over to comfort her. Everything was all right…

  Still, he stayed watching, ears pricked a little. Tilly’s crying made him feel anxious, as if he ought to be doing something to help her, but he didn’t know what. Jack was coming back across the playground now, looking a bit grumpy. They were about to go home, Scout realized, wagging his tail so hard that it thwacked against the bars of the fence. Jack came hurrying over to pet him and untie his lead. Scout bounced around his feet, whining and jumping excitedly, while Jack giggled. As Jack and Tilly’s mum came out of the playground gate, Jack called, “Can Scout pull me?”

  Scout looked round curiously as Jack picked up his scooter, which had been lying against the fence. His tail began to wag again – he knew this game! He began to pull hard against the lead. Jack squeaked and sprang on to his scooter as Scout raced down the path, Jack and the scooter bumping and rattling behind him. They bounced and clattered towards the park gates, with Jack giggling and Scout panting happily. Playing with Jack was his favourite thing to do.

  Zoe kicked the tennis ball towards the fence, catching it with the side of her foot on the rebound. She kept on tapping and catching the ball until at last it bounced off into a flower bed and she had to crawl through the bushes to find it. It was one of Honey’s old toy balls, Zoe realized, as she picked it up. She used to throw it for Honey to fetch all the time.

  Zoe wandered back up the length of the garden with the ball in her hand. What would it be like to have another dog? Honey would have been out here with her, racing up and down, desperate to play. Even though she’d slowed down a lot in her last year, she still loved to run. Zoe had even built her an agility course out of old flowerpots and garden sticks – she’d been very good at weaving in between them. It would be a lot of fun to teach a puppy to do things like that… Zoe smiled to herself, imagining that gorgeous puppy from the park trying to fit between the sticks. From the look of it, the puppy was the perfect size now, but it wouldn’t be long before it was just too huge.

  She left the ball on the patio bench and hurried inside, remembering that she’d wanted to find out what sort of dog it was. She started off looking at the dog-breed poster on her bedroom wall, but she’d been right, it definitely wasn’t on there. It was a bit similar to the sheepdogs, but the colouring wasn’t quite the same and Zoe was sure it was bigger all over. She grabbed her book of d
og breeds off the shelf instead and started to flick through. She had a feeling that maybe the puppy was some kind of shepherd dog, so she started off in the Working Dogs section, laughing at the photo of a massive black Newfoundland. It really did look like a teddy bear.

  Then she turned over a couple of pages and her face lit up in a smile. “Yes! That’s you!” The dog in the book was fully grown, not a puppy like the one she’d seen, but the markings were almost identical. “A Bernese mountain dog…” Zoe murmured. She’d never even heard of them before. One of the smaller photos showed two Bernese mountain dogs pulling a little cart with two toddlers sitting in it. It made it clear just how enormous the dogs were. “These giants are gentle but determined,” Zoe read aloud to herself, leaning back against her bedroom wall and smiling. She was trying to imagine that lovely chunky puppy all grown up. It was going to be so handsome.

  The next day, Zoe kept a hopeful eye out as she and her mum headed home from school through the park, looking for the Bernese mountain dog. She gave a delighted squeak as they got close enough to see the playground. Her mum glanced at her in surprise. “What is it? Have you seen one of your friends?”

  “No, it’s that puppy! Oh, I forgot, you didn’t see it yesterday, it was Dad.” Zoe’s mum and dad took turns picking her up from school – it depended on who was working where. Luckily they both got to work from home some of the time. “It’s a Bernese mountain dog, I think, I looked it up last night. It’s so cute.”

  Zoe’s mum peered at the dog across the park. “It looks quite big.”

  “If it is a Bernese, it’s going to be massive. They can pull carts!” Zoe looked sideways at her mum. “I sort of accidentally stroked it… I didn’t mean to! I wasn’t looking and it licked me, and I patted its ears…”

  Her mum rolled her eyes. “Why am I not surprised?”

  Zoe giggled. “But I’d really like to see who it belongs to, so I could ask to stroke it properly. And maybe find out what it’s called.”

  “Well, you’re in luck.” Her mum nodded towards the puppy. “I think that must be its owner, with the pushchair.”

  “Oh, yay! Hurry up, Mum.” Zoe grabbed her mum’s arm, and started to tow her across the park. There was a little boy standing close to the puppy now as well. He was wearing the same school uniform as Zoe. “Oh, he goes to Gardner Lane, too. I don’t think I’ve ever talked to him, though. He looks as if he’s in Reception, or Year One maybe.”

  As they came closer to the little group round the puppy, Zoe slowed down a bit, feeling shy. The lady with the pushchair was strapping in a little girl and she looked up curiously as Zoe came over to her.

  “Um, hi!” Zoe felt her cheeks go pink. “I just wanted to ask about your dog… Is it a Bernese mountain dog?”

  The puppy’s owner smiled at her. “Well done! Most people don’t know what he is.”

  “He’s called Scout!” the little boy told Zoe proudly. “He’s from Switzerland.”

  “Sort of,” his mum agreed. “Scout didn’t actually come all the way from Switzerland, did he, Jack? But Bernese mountain dogs are from Switzerland.”

  “I saw him here yesterday and I went and looked it up,” Zoe admitted. “I hadn’t heard of Bernese mountain dogs before. He’s beautiful.”

  “You can stroke him, if you like,” the puppy’s owner told her. “He can be a little nervous sometimes, though, so be careful. He does jump up.”

  Zoe nodded, moving a little closer to Scout, but not looking him straight in the eyes. It was the way Mum had explained it was best to get to know a dog – to let the dog come to her, instead of marching straight up and expecting the dog not to mind being patted or hugged.

  The big puppy sniffed at her eagerly, his heavy tail waving, and then nudged his cold nose into her hand. Zoe crouched down and ran her hand gently along his back.

  “You’re very good with him,” his owner commented, smiling at her.

  “He’s lovely!” Zoe told her. “Oh!” She looked on a little worriedly as Jack bounced up behind Scout and tried to stroke him, too. The puppy backed away as the little boy grabbed at his collar, his paws skittering on the tarmac.

  “Careful now, Jack.” His mum leaned over, murmuring gently to the dog. “It’s OK, Scout. Good boy.”

  Jack looked at Scout and Zoe anxiously. Zoe could see Jack didn’t really understand what he’d done wrong – he had just wanted to hug his big teddy-bear dog. He probably didn’t realize that he was making Scout feel scared. She smiled at him. “You’re so lucky to have him,” she said. “He’s so big and so fluffy!”

  “Yes!” Jack agreed, cheering up. “He pulls me along on my scooter. He’s really strong.”

  “We need to be getting home now,” Jack’s mum said. “Say goodbye, Jack.” She smiled at Zoe and her mum. “Maybe we’ll see you in the park tomorrow. It’s nice for Jack to talk to one of the older children from school. We’ve only just moved here and he’s having to get used to a new class. It’s great having this park so close to the school, though.”

  Zoe nodded – so that was why she hadn’t seen Scout around before. She knew almost all the dogs in the park to say hello to, as they walked through it every day on the way home from school.

  “Bye! See you tomorrow!” She watched Scout and Jack and his mum heading off down the path, feeling a little envious.

  “Isn’t he beautiful?” she said to her mum, as they set off for the park gate.

  “He really is,” her mum agreed. “I’m not sure I’d be able to cope with two small children and a huge dog, though. Jack’s mum must be even more of a dog fan than you.”

  Zoe grinned at her. “Not possible.”

  Over the next couple of weeks, Zoe saw Scout and his family almost every day after school, and sometimes on the way to school, too – Jack’s mum, Lauren, brought him with her when she dropped Jack off. Zoe’s mum and Lauren chatted to each other. Zoe’s mum said she thought she was quite lonely – the family had moved because Jack’s dad had got a new job and she didn’t know that many people in the area yet. It was nice for Jack as well – Zoe always said hello to him at break time. She even heard some of the other boys in his class asking Jack if she was his sister. It made him look cool, knowing one of the older children.

  “You can’t wait to get to the park and look for that dog, can you,” Zoe’s dad said, laughing at her as she hurried along the pavement one afternoon. He heaved a dramatic sigh. “I wish you were that excited about seeing me…”

  “Ah, Dad…” Zoe raced back and hugged him. “I do like seeing you – but—”

  “I’m not a dog, I know.”

  “There they are!” Zoe waved to Jack, who was on the path up ahead. The Reception class came out ten minutes before the rest of the school, so Jack was usually at the park before they got there. Jack didn’t wave back, though – he seemed to be arguing with his mum, and Zoe wasn’t sure he’d noticed them coming up behind.

  “I want to go on the slide!” He glared angrily at Lauren.

  Zoe hung back – she was keen to say hello to Scout, who was looking miserable, but she didn’t want to make anything worse.

  “I know you do,” Lauren said patiently. “But Scout hasn’t had a proper walk today! I was late picking up Tilly from the childminder this morning, so Scout missed his walk. We haven’t got time for both, Jack, and it’s not fair on Scout to make him sit outside the playground right now…”

  “It’s not fair on me!” Jack wailed. “I want to go on the slide!” Then he noticed Zoe and her dad, dawdling along the path. “She can take Scout for a walk.”

  “Oh…” Lauren glanced round and smiled at Zoe, and then at her dad, looking a bit embarrassed. “Sorry. No, Jack, that’s silly.”

  “I could take him for a run about, if it helps?” Zoe put in eagerly. “I mean, if that’s OK, Dad?”

  Her dad nodded. “We’ve got time.” He shrugged his shoulders at Lauren, grinning. “Zoe used to get in a real tizz if I wouldn’t let her go on the swings… I k
now how you feel.”

  Lauren smiled, looking relieved. “Oh, if you really wouldn’t mind, that would be such a help. We’re having trouble fitting proper walks in just now. Jack’s dad always used to walk Scout at lunchtime, but he can’t do that with his new job. Scout knows you, so I’m sure he’d love it. Just be careful, Zoe, he is very strong. And don’t let him off the lead, will you? He’s not good at coming back. We need to do some more obedience classes, but I haven’t found a session we can get to yet.”

  Zoe nodded. “I’ll make sure I’m holding him tight. And Dad’ll be there, too.” She beamed at her dad as Lauren put the lead into her hand, and Scout pulled eagerly, his tail suddenly speeding up. The park was huge – she and Mum and Dad used to bring Honey here nearly every day.

  “Shall we run?” she whispered to Scout. “Shall we? Would you like that?”

  Scout’s tail wagged even faster and he gave a tiny woof. Zoe laughed and raced off across the grass with the puppy bounding beside her, his ears flapping and his paws thumping the grass.

  It was the best feeling ever.

  Scout paced up and down the kitchen, whining over and over. He was worried and lonely. Everyone was out and he wasn’t used to it. Usually either Lauren or her husband, Ben, was at home and he felt safe. Even if Lauren or Ben weren’t paying him attention, he knew that they were there. But over the last few days, they had been going out and leaving him behind for what seemed like forever. It made him miserable. He didn’t understand what was going on and he wanted his people back.

  He had watched Lauren and Jack and baby Tilly leaving this morning, and realized that it was going to happen again. What if they never came back? He had started to whine, but Lauren hadn’t understood that he was worried, and Jack had just told him to shh.

 

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