clearing, he aimed his whistling and talk in that direction.
Late that evening he left the cabin, putting food on the steps.
He had also left a door open, the one leading into the hall
where the woodpile was. He put a blanket on the floor next
to the soggy jacket, and then rowed away with long, creaking
strokes. Yellow birch leaves floated in the water along the
shore. Now and then he rested on the oars, listening and
looking up towards the top of the rise behind the grey cabin,
where the stove was going cold now that he'd left.
Dusk was falling. The man felt the pull of the black water
as he rowed along the point. The last stretch across the lake
he just glided in the silent darkness. Not until he heard
stones scraping against the bottom of the boat was he
brought back from the fantasy that he was dipping the oars
into an indestructible thick, black mass. When he'd left the
boat and put on his backpack, he stood for a long time staring
across at the point. He thought he sensed a presence
moving along the edge of the woods. When he had stood
there for ages, staring into the shifting, flickering darkness,
he thought he saw a black mask, imagined that for an instant
the two of them were staring at each other.
The vixen had gone in and peed on the jacket. It was bright
daylight when the dog cautiously approached the cabin steps.
The open door and the dim interior made him tense and on
his guard. A powerful smell of the fox and her piss came
from the doorway.
Stiff and awkward from fear and the pain in his ribcage, he
climbed the stairs. No food. And that taunting smell of fox.
Bowl licked clean and everywhere, in every nook and
cranny, she'd poked her pointed snout. She'd even pissed on
the jacket, like a male.
His blood was hot and pounding, his skin prickled under
his coat. He, too, peed on the wet fabric, then climbed back
down the steps, walking a wide arc in front of the cabin,
marking his territory with distinct splashes. He had neither
eaten nor had anything to drink for a long time. His urine
was yellow and pungent. He was very thirsty, needed to go
down to the lake, but his watchfulness and a readily aroused,
stinging sense of anger kept him there. After a while he lay
down at the foot of the steps, soaking up some morning sun.
His eyes never left the little birches on the far side of the pasture
where she tended to emerge when she left the den.
When the sunlight had moved beyond the top step in
front of the cabin, he was still lying there. Towards midday
he went down to the lake and drank his fill, then went back
up again, lying on the steps instead, to have a better view.
When he lay still and breathed calmly he was in less pain. He
lay out of the wind coming off the lake; his coat was dry.
The insects that flickered past were late ones that had not yet
found their death or a crack in which to spend the winter.
Fragile wings flashed by.
He had to rely on his vision that day. The wind was
against him, blowing in the direction of the vixen's den. She
had a litter of growing cubs. They could turn up anywhere
he looked. He kept an eye out for movements, for shapes
that changed.
He was on guard but calm. Deep inside his watchfulness
there was anger without the least bit of fear. It lay there,
poised. It could raise the fur on the ridge of his neck and
make his front half large and threatening without his even
getting up. A dull, rolling growl also lay there, ready. He used
it once or twice when he saw shadows moving in the blurry
area between grass and yellowing ash shoots.
Late in the afternoon he heard the boat. So he clambered
down the steps in spite of the pain, and stood over by the
cookhouse to watch the man disembark. He stood in the
open. When the man caught sight of him he stopped, stood
perfectly still and whistled, softly and gently. After a while he
walked up the grassy slope. The dog moved out of sight.
He hung around the slope in the cleared area all the time
the man was there. When he was alone again he went back
to the cabin, gobbled up the contents of the bowl and lay
back down to watch and wait. Occasionally he had to go off
and relieve himself; the food had made his stomach uneasy.
The first few days most of it had gone right through him,
but he was better now. He never went farther than to the
raspberry patch alongside the cabin. After doing his business
he would lie back down on the steps.
The grass was always wet at this time of year, and it was
hard for him to extricate his paws. There wasn't enough sun
to dry up the pasture. Aspen leaves flashed in the rays of sun,
floating down like stiff wings, flight without life. In the grass
they became mottled, and the brown spots soon grew
larger.
Brown had taken over. Under the blanket of grass, everything
was decaying; the spreading patches emitted a heavy
scent. The late summer darkness hung in the tops of the
rowans; frost had stripped away the dense leaves and berries.
Now the leaves were falling from the treetops into the grass,
decomposing silently. Berries hung bright from leafless
branches.
Along the shore of the inlet, sallow stalks stood straight
and tall. Now that the leaves had fallen he could see the
water and catch a glimpse of the birds down there. When the
strokes from the man's oars scared up a wood grouse on the
point, the grey dog followed its flight from his lookout on
the steps. No leaves blocked his view. The cock rose, neck
long, wingstrokes quick and invisible, a heavy weight flying
in a straight line into the dark spruce forest.
Wind squalls blew beneath a dense cloud cover. The
mountains were never visible any longer. Wisps of cloud
scuttled above the lake and the tarn.
Twilight was brief. Night fell like a black curtain, too fine
for the eye to perceive, merging with the darkness of the
rocks and the darkness dwelling in the spruces. The gusts of
wind ripped at the tops of the grass, rough and dull, like
blunted knives. The heads of the starwort were dry now,
stalks tufted, thin and brittle as skeletons. The cow parsley
plants still had black seeds on their brittle ribs, but the shrew
mice could no longer climb them in the wind.
For the dog, the days disappeared slowly, like leaves sinking
in water. He forgot them all and stored them deep inside. He
no longer hunted. He waited and watched.
The man brought his food. He didn't come every single
day and no longer from the open part of the lake where the
wind tossed the water up against the stones. He would land
the boat in the marshy inlet. The wind carried off the sounds
and scents; often the man would appear unexpectedly from
the undergrowth at the edge of the pasture. The dog would
rise from his spot and move away stiffly. As soon as the man
had left, he would go back down and eat and continue his
watch. He never saw so much as a shadow of the vixen. But
he never forgot her.
Between himself and the man something happened every
time they met: the voice and the food. That was the good
part. It was a warm stomach and a pleasant sensation sifting
like strong sunlight through his fur. It touched nerves and
awakened memories with no images.
The scent of fox remained in the mouldy jacket. When he
came inside, his nose clear from the strong wind, he smelled
it. That was the bad part. It made him edgy. Between him
and the man there was this as well: he had to keep the fox
away. Not until the man's boots could be heard tramping
through the overgrown pasture could he abandon his post.
He stretched his back legs, squatting down to do what he'd
needed to do for hours. But he seldom went farther than to
the barn nowadays, although his pain had let up and no
longer slowed him down.
The wind rose to storm strength. One night the rumbling
in the tops of the spruces intensified until the dark night
roared from a hole no one could see. The lake thrashed and
thrashed against the stones, lifting heavy logs of loose timber
far up onto the shore.
He lay in the dark cabin by the woodpile, his body tightly
curled around muzzle and paws, listening through the open
door to the cracking of branches and the crashing of tree
trunks. Although the wind was coming from the other side,
the door kept slamming on the wire loop the man had made.
It jerked all night long, creaking, trying to come loose along
with the other things being blindly tossed about outside.
Day arrived with bright light and a cold wind under a sky
with scuttling wisps of cloud. There was a glimmer of blue
beneath them, and now and then the sun glistened in high
breakers on the lake. He went out to pee, and then headed
down to the lake to drink at the shore that was sheltered
from the wind. The grass lay in brown drifts. It caught at his
paws as if wanting to drag him down into the wetness. Gusts
of wind tore at his coat, combing it up sharply on end.
The storm that tore at his fur was not merely cold and
unpleasant. It robbed him of his dignity and composure. He
needed to present a strong, cohesive front to the world. But
now, shaggy and hunched down, he was being buffeted
towards the water, half fearful, half angry, and vulnerable. By
the time he headed back up, though, he was whole again,
although his ears were still pressed back and the white fur on
his chest was matted.
For two more days the wind continued to blow. He
curled up around his hunger, not leaving the cabin to hunt.
One cold morning when the tail end of the storm was still
surging against the rocks on the shore, the man returned.
The dog didn't see him until he was at the bottom of the
slope between cabin and lake. They hadn't been this close to
each other since the dogfight at the shore. But this time the
man didn't crouch down and he didn't say anything.
If the dog left the steps he would have to approach the
figure standing down there. Or he could rush into the tall,
straight raspberry canes alongside the cabin. From there he
could sidle off towards the cleared area.
He rose slowly, standing still, his back legs bent. His ears
were perked. The fur on his back had risen and darkened to
a sharp strip running like a fin all the way to the root of his
tail. The mane of fur around his neck and muzzle was also
on end. His slanted eyes in the stiff, black mask stared at the
man. But he still hadn't moved.
There was a flutter. The last brittle leaves from the crown
of an aspen had resisted the storm but now let go in a puff of
wind that blew through the branches. Perhaps the man
thought it was a bird taking flight. He took his eyes off the
dog.
And the dog went down the steps. He descended in three
quick leaps, with no limp and no trace of his ribcage injury.
He stopped at the bottom, suddenly unfurling his tightly
coiled tail. It twitched.
The man made a sound: exhaling. The grey dog flicked
his tail again. His head was cocked and he'd relaxed his ears.
His smooth brow creased straight across. Twisting, he moved
in an arc down towards the man, simultaneously approaching
and keeping his distance. In spite of being out of
practice, he looked genuinely friendly. The hair on his back
had settled down, without depriving him of his dignity or
composure. His curly tail, almost floppy, was wagging. The
whole hind part of him was in motion and he took little
tripping steps in smaller and smaller loops around the man.
That was when the man started to talk. He muttered and
mumbled, head turned aside, moving in the direction of the
cabin. When he went into the hall, putting pieces of bread
and meat in the enamel bowl, the dog sat nearby, staring
intently in through the doorway. He listened to the crinkling
of the plastic bag and to the soft, rhythmic voice. When the
man had gone back down to the shore, the dog went straight
up and ate. For the first time he ate while being watched. He
gobbled the food; the enamel bowl rattled against the floorboards.
When it was empty he didn't take the time to lick it
clean. He ambled out, settling in partway up the pasture
slope, watching the man.
A series of bright, clear days followed. The wind was sharp
and churned up the lake, but only on the surface, and never
enough to prevent him from hearing the creaking of the oarlocks
as the man came rowing.
One evening he barked when he heard the boat. He
wasn't accustomed to barking. His voice cracked and his
yapping became a howl. Soon, though, it carried well.
He would bark out across the lake now. Sometimes when
he heard the creaking of the oars, sometimes just because he
had the urge. He would sit out at the end of the point listening
to his yaps reverberate against the cliffs by the narrows.