Authors: Iain Lawrence
fifteen
They took their food in a paper bag that Danny held in his lap, feeling the heat on his legs and stomach, smelling the burgers and french fries. He knew it was not to be opened; they had a routine.
They drove to the river, to their favorite spot, where there were a park and a waterfall. Danny carried the bag to the same place they’d gone the last time, and maybe fifty times before that, to a jumble of flat rocks made hot by the sun. They even had their own rocks—three in a circle, and a fourth like a table—overlooking the pool where people went swimming, where kids floated around on air mattresses.
On the grass at the riverside, there were families having picnics. A harried-looking man with a great potbelly was trying to fish at the foot of the rapids. The Old Man and the boys ate their burgers and fries, then crunched all the garbage into the paper bag. They lay for a while like lizards on the stones, watching big cumulus clouds tumble along.
They were just climbing into the truck when the dogs appeared. One came from the east, and one from the west, and they raced to the river together. They stood and barked across it, then each twirled once around and plunged into the stream. In the middle they collided and the water frothed, then both came bursting onto the grass. They stood nose to nose, their tails wagging, then each of them pressed its chin to the ground, like gentlemen bowing, and suddenly they sprang up and started running. Soon everyone in the park—even the potbellied man—was watching them run. The black dog led the brown dog on a crazy chase between the benches and the tables, through the trees and down the river. It snatched up sticks; it ducked and weaved.
The Old Man had his door open, one foot up on the running board, a hand reaching for the wheel. He stopped there, like a statue, staring through the frame of the rolled-down window. His head turned to and fro as he followed the dogs with his eyes, down the park and back again. “They’re a couple of kids,” he said.
Danny was already in the truck, in his place in the middle, watching through the windshield. “You mean puppies, Dad,” he said.
“No, Danny, they’re kids,” said the Old Man, as though there were no other word for it. “They’re little boys. No worries or cares; look at them. Little boys forever. I bet they meet here every afternoon and play some sort of game.”
All over the park, people were standing up now. They were grinning at each other, laughing, as the dogs whirled in and out from the tables. The brown one chased the black one, then the black one chased the brown one, weaving between the garbage cans. Two little toddlers went trundling after them, and their mothers after
them,
and the Old Man laughed more loudly than Danny could ever remember him laughing. He had to wipe tears of laughter from his eyes.
Beau had watched quietly until then, standing up on the running board at his side of the truck. Now he sighed and said, “It would sure be neat to be a dog.”
“I know just what you mean,” said the Old Man.
The mothers caught the toddlers before the toddlers could catch the dogs. They swept them up, and people cheered. Then the black dog and the brown dog suddenly turned and dashed toward the river, bounding over the grass. They hurled themselves into the water—they
cannon-balled
into the water—and the potbellied man was drenched with the spray. He threw up his arms and laughed with everyone else as the dogs vanished into the trees on the far side of the river.
Old Man River pulled himself up behind the wheel. “That was something, huh, Danny?” he said.
Danny nodded. “It was neato, Dad.”
“If you were a dog, you’d be like that black one, playing and laughing all the day.”
Beau moved onto the seat. “No, he’d be a wiener dog, the wiener.” He closed his door. “How would I be, Dad?”
“Well, you’d talk a mile a minute,” said the Old Man with a chuckle. He gave the gas pedal a pump. “You’d go on big adventures and you’d sit and think on things.” He turned the key, and the engine started. “You’d be a thoughtful kind of dog.”
Beau seemed pleased by that. He put his head out the window and watched behind them as the Old Man backed up.
“Now, if I was a dog,” said the Old Man, “I guess I’d want to be a collie.” He shoved the lever into first gear and pulled out onto the street. “I always liked collies.”
Danny looked at Beau, who suddenly seemed embarrassed.
“I used to have one. Did you know that?”
“No, I didn’t know that,” said Danny. “We never would have guessed, would we, Beau?”
Beau said nothing. The Old Man leaned forward and jangled his ring of keys from under his hip. “Yup. He was called Nelson. Looked like him, too. Missing one eye and one leg.”
Danny frowned. He was sure that the dog he’d seen in the picture had all four of its legs. He wondered—how could it have moved with only three? Could it shake hands?
The Old Man grinned. “Oh, I’m just pulling your leg,” he said. “There was nothing wrong with poor old Nelson. I called him that ’cause he was admirable.”
“What happened to him, Dad?” asked Danny. “Did he drown at sea?”
The Old Man was working the gearshift, coaxing the truck up a hill. Without all its weight, it moved more quickly, and it didn’t sway so much from side to side. “Now why would you ask that?” he said.
Danny had to swallow. “Just wondering, Dad. ’Cause you were in the navy.”
“Huh. Well, yes, Danny, that’s pretty much what happened. Except he wasn’t at sea. He drowned in a puddle of water, no deeper than Highland Creek.” The Old Man sighed. “He fell through the ice on Christmas Day, poor old Nelson.”
“Gosh, that’s sad,” said Danny.
“Yup,” said the Old Man with another sigh. “I’ve got a picture of him somewhere. Tell you what—I’ll look it up when we get home. You might like to have it, Danny.”
“Oh, that’s okay,” said Danny.
“Yeah, that’s okay,” said Beau. “It’s not like he’s going to call a dog Nelson, are you, Danny?”
“No,” said Danny. “When I get a dog I’m going to call it Billy Bear.” He reached up to the name tag, but his hand didn’t find the string. He yanked the front of his T-shirt down and peered inside it. “Oh, no. Dad!”
The Old Man slammed his foot on the brake pedal. The tires squealed, and Danny nearly flew up against the windshield. Behind them, a car honked.
“What’s the matter?” said Old Man River.
“I lost my name tag,” Danny said.
“Oh, Danny boy, for crying out loud. You nearly caused an accident.” With a shake of his head and a terrible sigh, the Old Man clenched his teeth. He pulled so hard on his cap that it covered his eyes for a moment.
Danny was searching frantically through the cab, down on the floor, and the Old Man kept ramming the gearshift into his leg. “Ow!” Danny cried.
“Get up!” said the Old Man. More cars were honking now. One crept past the side of the truck, and the driver scowled up at them. He had a cigar in his mouth, and a long mustache, and he looked like a smoking walrus. He tapped his finger on his temple, as though he thought the Old Man was crazy.
“We have to go back,” Danny was saying. “I musta left it at the park.”
The Old Man didn’t even know that Danny had kept Billy Bear’s little tag. Beau had to explain, because Danny was too upset to talk slowly. Then Old Man River said it was a stupid thing to want to keep, the name tag of a dead dog, and he wouldn’t go back if his life depended on it.
Beau prodded Danny in the ribs. “See?” he said. “Dad, I told him it was a creepy thing to do.”
sixteen
Mrs. River almost screamed when she heard the plan about Florida. Danny had never seen her so excited.
“Going through Georgia!” she said. “Seeing the South in the summer? Oh, great balls of fire!”
Danny liked it when she used her Southern voice. He watched her run to the calendar, and in a moment—on the page for the next year—she had ten days marked in for August. And that seemed to make it official.
“Oh, Charlie,” she said, “I’m going home.”
“Home?” The Old Man chuckled. “It’s hardly home to you, Flo.”
Nothing could take away her happiness. “My grandfather was born in Virginia. Y’all can’t get more Southern than that.”
seventeen
On the first day of school, Danny and Beau sat eating their breakfast, wearing clothes that were fresh and new. Their jeans were so tightly creased that it looked as though the Old Man had run over their legs with his truck.
“You look so smart, the two of you,” said Mrs. River. She was eager to get down to the basement, to get back to her novel, and she hurried the boys along. “Now, Beau, are you sure you don’t want to wear a tie?”
“Mom!” he said. “Only browners wear ties.”
“Oh, fiddle-dee-dee. Smart young men wear ties.” She wiped the milk from Danny’s lips, then tried to flatten his hair with spit on her fingers. But he tilted away each time she came near.
Danny felt doomed. He could hardly believe that summer was over, that the very last moments of it were passing away as the kitchen clock went
tick…tock…tick
. It was shaped like a black cat, with the cat’s tail for a pendulum, and its big eyes looked side to side with every tick and tock. Danny watched the minute hand jump forward. When Beau got up, so did he. They went to the door; they put on their new shoes. As Danny tied his laces he knew how Doc Holliday had felt as he’d dressed for the walk to the OK Corral.
Danny was laden down that morning. His pockets were filled with the best of the things he had found through the summer, the shiniest stones and the oldest pennies, the most interesting bottle caps—the things he would show off to his friends. He had to hurry along to keep up with Beau, and his pockets sort of sloshed, like the stuff in the tank on the Old Man’s truck.
They were crossing the bridge when Dopey Colvig leapt out from the bushes, holding a stick as stout as a rolling pin. Feet apart, hands at his side, he stood right at the fork in the trail. He was half again as wide as Beau.
He made those sounds, those hoots and groans that only Creepy could understand. His great hollow head with its pudding of a face watched them like an owl’s.
Danny pressed up against his brother. “Let’s go back,” he said. “Let’s go over the big bridge instead.”
“That’s too far that way. You want to be late?” asked Beau.
Dopey came forward. He grunted and mumbled. The way he walked, he looked like a giant to Danny, though he wasn’t really big enough for that. He looked like the world’s smallest giant, ready to grind their bones into bread.
Beau didn’t move. “Get lost, Dopey,” he said.
Danny reached into his pocket of stones. He pulled out a round one that was red and fiery, like a blazing eyeball. He threw it at Dopey and hit him smack on his dopey forehead. The sound of it hitting was like a walnut bursting in a nutcracker.
Dopey’s eyes blinked, but that was all. His eyes blinked, and he came forward again. He raised the stick and made a sound like a squealing pig.
“Oh, geez,” said Danny. “I made him mad.”
Dopey started running. It was more like a boulder crashing along, but he came down the trail in heavy, thudding steps, and he mumbled and shrieked again. Danny wanted to run, but Beau stayed where he was. “I think I can take him,” said Beau.
Then a voice shouted out from beyond the trees, from the clearing down below. “What’s going on up there?” it asked.
Danny said, “That’s Creepy Colvig.”
Dopey looked up at the sound of the voice, like a dog looking up to a whistle. And Beau hunched down and raised his shoulder, and caught the giant boy off guard. Dopey staggered backward. His left foot landed on the bridge, and his right went over the edge. Then he stumbled down the slope and crashed against a tree. The branches shivered. Leaves came drifting down.
Beau hit him again. “You leave my brother alone!” he cried.
Now Creepy was coming up the trail. Through the twigs and leaves, Danny could see his yellow hard hat bobbing along like a big, fat chicken, and knew that Creepy had been on his way to work. A minute later, and they would have missed him.
“Here, you!” shouted Creepy Colvig. “Come down here and pick on someone who can fight back!”
Beau grabbed Danny and hauled him along, and up they went on the twisting path. Pebbles and pennies spilled from Danny’s pockets. The sharp edges of his bottle caps prickled on his leg. He couldn’t run fast enough, and Beau had to drag him up the steep part.
Dopey was howling behind them, while Creepy shouted, “I see you there. I know who you are!”
Danny heard a crackling in the trees, then a thud in the bushes. “Beau, he’s throwing rocks!” he cried.
“Then come on, Danny.”
They scrambled up the hill with their new shoes squeaking, their new jeans rubbing like sandpaper. The cries of Creepy Colvig seemed to chase them up the slope: “You’re the River boys. You’ll pay for this, you hear?”
eighteen
Danny took the long way home in the afternoon, and his mother was furious when she saw him come into the house.
“Look at your new clothes!” she said. “Your pocket’s torn, your jeans are filthy. Tarnation, Danny, why do I bother with you? It would save both time and money if I dressed you in rags from the rag shop.”
“It wasn’t my fault,” said Danny. “It was Dopey Colvig. Then Creepy threw a rock at us, and—”
“He
what
?”
So again Old Man River went round to “have a talk” with Creepy. Again, neither Danny nor Beau knew what was said, but suddenly the Rivers and the Colvigs were like the Hatfields and the McCoys, feuding away in Hog’s Hollow. A bag of trash—nibbled corncobs and coffee grounds and chicken bones—appeared one night in the Old Man’s pit. The next night it was all spread across the Colvigs’ lawn. Then Old Man River found the windshield of his pumper truck smeared with the yolks of many broken eggs.
There were people who found it all very funny. “The hillbillies are feuding now,” they’d say, and laugh behind their hands.
The Old Man didn’t worry. “I want you boys to keep going to school the way you always have,” he said. “If there’s any trouble, you just tell me. Not that I think there will be. Colvig’s a bag of wind, and he’ll be moving on again pretty soon, I think. He’s worn out his welcome here, like he did at the last place, and the place before.”
Danny knew all that. There was a sort of children’s telegraph that had spread the story of the Colvigs and how they kept moving every time Dopey got in trouble. For Danny, the next move couldn’t come fast enough. He stuck more closely than ever to Beau in the mornings, and took the long way home nearly every day. Beau stayed for football on Mondays and Thursdays and for Rocket Club on Tuesdays. On Wednesdays he had NASA Club, and that was his favorite. There were only three kids in the club, but Beau was the president because he had started it. “What do you do at NASA Club?” Danny had asked him once.
“We sort of sit around and talk about the space race,” Beau had told him.
“For two
hours
?”
“Well, sometimes we just sit around and look at Miss Jenkins.” She was the sponsor. She wore miniskirts and leather boots.
“Why?” asked Danny. “I don’t understand why you’d want to do that.”
“Well, that’s why you’re not in the club,” said Beau.
Fridays were the only days that Beau didn’t have to stay late. So there were just three days in September when Danny walked home with his brother, through the woods and down the trails, past the place where the Catholics held their Camp Wigwam in the summer. Danny came to love Fridays, but in October that ended.
“Don’t wait for me after school, okay?” said Beau on the first Friday of the month.
“But it’s Friday,” Danny said.
“Yeah, I know, but…” Beau was just ahead of Danny, walking up the hill in the morning, with the birds whistling in the trees. “Danny, I just want to hang around a bit.”
“I can wait,” said Danny. “I don’t care how long.”
“I don’t
want
you to wait,” said Beau. “And I don’t mean just today. I mean every Friday.”
Danny was puffing up the hill, trying to keep right behind Beau. “What if we ask the Old Man to meet us on Fridays? Maybe he can come by the school, and we can go to the Dub?”
“No, Danny.” Beau stopped on the trail and turned around. He was carrying his books in both arms, like a girl. He always switched them over to one hand when they came up to the street. “Don’t even ask him that, okay? I don’t want people to see me in the poop-mobile anymore.”
Danny gasped. He really, actually gasped for the first time in his life. He had read in stories about people gasping, but hadn’t thought it was really true. The
poop-mobile
. How could Beau say that?
“So don’t wait for me, okay?” said Beau.
Danny spent days thinking about this, with the terrible feeling of a hole in his stomach. He didn’t ever want his mother, or especially his father, to learn what Beau had said. But he wanted just as badly to tell
someone,
as though the name was trying to get out from inside him, like the words he had written on a matchbook.
So he told a dog; it made sense to him. He told the nearest dog, the only one in the Hollow.
It belonged to Mrs. Elliot, who lived in the oldest house, and was so old herself that Danny imagined the great cotton wood trees had only been saplings when she’d arrived. She had told him once, with a smile that was both shy and horrible, that she had carved her initials on one of them when she was very young, and Danny imagined that he would have to climb to the very tip of the tree—a hundred feet up—to find where her letters had grown to. She was always pleased when he came to play with her dog, a tiny thing she called Josephine. Danny thought it was the ugliest dog in the city, like a shaved rat with half its tail cut off, but he’d grown quite fond of it, and knew that Josephine thought of herself as a big and beautiful poodle. He was glad that dogs didn’t really understand mirrors.
Josephine had listened to many of his problems, from the time when he was four and he was frightened to tell his mother that he’d lost his mittens again. Now he explained about Beau and the poop-mobile as they played in Mrs. Elliot’s yard. The dog sat and listened, with her little rat face all screwed up in thought; then she leapt up and licked his nose, and Danny knew she’d understood.
“Yeah, it’ll be okay,” he said. “It just bothered me, you know.” He stretched out on his back, and Josephine bounced on his chest, trying to lick his eyes as Danny wriggled and laughed.
Mrs. Elliot came out and watched, sitting on the back steps with her dress bundled up to her gray knees. “You’re a sweetheart to play with her, Danny,” she said. “When I pass on, I think she should go to you.”
Danny said, “Well, thanks, Mrs. Elliot. But I’m going to have a dog of my own pretty soon. I just know it.”