and the flick of matches. Stiff fabric swished against straps.
They had other dogs with them. When they came closer
they growled. The black one lying by the fire leapt up, his
ragged ears rising. He rushed off towards the other dogs,
then stopped in his tracks halfway and put his nose to the
ground. He'd caught the scent of the grey dog.
Running excitedly, he took up the trail. When he came
dangerously close the grey one rushed up and fled out
towards the far end of the point. He heard the black dog in
pursuit. Behind them the men were shouting and tying up
the other loudly barking dogs.
He zigzagged through the undergrowth on the point. His
heart was pounding; bursting with fear. There were no steep
hills to hide in here, no endless marshes, no mountain
forests. At the end of the point there were just cliffs on either
side. More than once he ran down to the edge of the water
and turned back. Finally he stopped. The black dog stopped
too. They weren't far apart. The grey one lowered his head,
ears pulled back, baring his teeth with a fierce expression.
That was too much for the other dog. He attacked.
They fought, growling deeply all the time. The black
dog's body was heavier and his legs shorter. He wasn't easily
thrown off balance. He bit wherever he could reach, vicious
warnings, while continuing to growl, urging his opponent to
bare his neck and give up.
The grey one was still young, and emaciated. He'd never
been in a fight before. But now he was fighting for his life.
He bit back, wherever he could reach, and his bites were
sharper than the black dog's. They didn't hear the voices
shouting all around them. The men and the other dogs, on
leashes, were there now, too. One man grabbed the hind legs
of the black dog and pulled at him. He lost his balance and
his jaws released their grip. Another man aimed a kick at the
THE DOG
chest of the grey dog. They were separated. Someone managed
to get the black foxhound on a leash, pressing a glove
over the bleeding wound on his cheek.
The grey dog stood all alone on the lakeshore, facing the
men and three dogs. His body was rigid. When one of the
men began to approach he didn't flee, but pulled back his
upper lip and lunged.
So many voices and bodies. He had to keep each individual
in the crowd in sharp focus while he was looking for a
hole to escape through. Then something happened that confused
him.
All but one of the men withdrew. They left, taking the
other dogs with them. He could still hear them among the
trees. Only one man stayed behind, alone. But he didn't
come closer. He went down on his knees. Then he lowered
his head so neither his eyes nor his teeth were visible. A
voice came out. It wasn't like the others. It murmured and
clucked. It was a gentle stream of soft talking that awakened
a strong urge in the young grey dog, in the midst of all his
confusion.
Something might happen here. He didn't know what. He
was still frightened. Every time the crouching man moved,
the dog's muscles went taut. The voice, though, made him
feel weak with longing. He wanted to run up to the man.
But at the same time he was terrified.
So he sat down heavily on his bottom and started thumping
his back paw against his neck, behind his ear. The
motion made his chest ache. After some time he got up and
moved to one side. His body was no longer so rigid. He
i
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lid
bear soft sounds and dogs whining from the woods
But instead of fleeing for his life he walked along the shore
at a measured, leisurely pace. Once or twice he turned
around to look at the crouching man, who was still talking,
on and on, in a soft, lulling tone. When the grey dog was
out of sight the man stood up and whistled for him. Short,
high-pitched sounds.
The grey dog stopped. He was part of the way up the
slope, heading for the pasture, and he knew he was visible.
The whistling was like the lulling voice. He was drawn to it.
Deep inside, deep down, was everything that had happened
between himself and the man. It had happened
between a litter of puppies and a deep-voiced fellow who
could shrink to half his own size by going down on his
knees. He had a voice that made them so excited they would
pee all over the linoleum and nip at his sweater sleeves and
fingertips.
It was not lost. It did not begin to happen again when
the man whistled and called. But something shifted,
moved.
He didn't go any farther than the barn. Once there he lay
down and listened. He licked his coat thoroughly clean. He
had a bleeding sore high up on one shoulder that his tongue
couldn't reach. He tried rubbing it with one paw and then
licking the paw clean. He was thirsty and would have wandered
farther afield for water, would have gone all the way to
the beaver tarn, enveloping himself in the silence, if it hadn't
been for that whistling. The short, high-pitched sounds
reached him off and on. His chest ached where he had been
kicked. He wanted to lie still for a long time. It hurt when
he breathed.
He didn't see the men pull the female moose up out of
the lake. But the sickening smells of blood and excrement
came to him on the wind. When the men left, carrying
heavy loads and taking the dogs, straining at their leashes, he
withdrew. But he came back to listen. All he could hear was
the rustling of the leaves and the little waves breaking against
the stones on the shore.
When he walked down to the lake the injured rib in his
chest ached; it hurt more when he moved. But thirst
drove him. Lapping up water, he stood with his paws in the
lake, feeling the chill spread through him, deadening the
pain. He walked a little farther out, letting himself be
numbed.
Then he heard the whistling again. He turned fast, trying
to run up out of the water, but he stumbled, hunched and
stiff. Once he was out of the lake he didn't stop until he was
halfway up to the barn. The man was still at the spot where
they had cut up the moose. He'd been completely still until
that moment.
The soft whistling kept the dog there. He lay in the grass
listening to what the man was doing. Most of his tasks were
silent ones, but now and then he would break dry branches
or split a log. The smell of smoke wafted up. And that occasional
whistling.
Once they both appeared in the open. The dog stood up
in the grass. The man stepped forward to the edge of the
birch brushwood that extended from the point up towards
the pasture. After a while they both withdrew again, one
silently, the other whistling softly.
Late that afternoon two boats came and collected the
man and the moose meat, which he had butchered into
manageable pieces. The man paced uneasily. When he left
with the other men he was whistling, but the dog didn't let
himself be seen. When the voices and the sound of the oars
in the water were gone he went down. He was extremely
tense and agitated by the whiffs of scent crossing every
which way in the rough terrain. Now, though, he was alone
at the point.
At the spot where the moose had been slaughtered there
were patches of blood but no remains. He sniffed around.
The smells awakened the hunger pangs in his belly. But he
was tired and his injured chest hurt. He couldn't hunt in the
pasture when his body wouldn't respond. He licked at the
patches of blood but found nothing to eat. In the end he
wandered back up to the cabin and rested at the foot of the
steps. He lay very still, curled tightly into his own dizziness
and pain.
At dusk he went back down. He walked on stiff legs and
with slow, jerky movements. There was a strong wind
blowing from off the mountains to the west. It had picked
up as night fell, and it washed through his coat and cleared
his nose and ears after all the confusion of the day and the
jumble of scents and loud noises.
Then he caught a whiff of the man. He knew he wasn't
there. But his smell was. It was at the spot where he'd been
fighting with that black dog; a compact odour, not just a
residual scent from the morning. His instinct was to turn tail,
but his muscles wouldn't obey. Then he smelled the blood.
He moved closer to something dark between the stones.
Next to it he found the food.
He ate, pressed low and tail uncurled. It didn't take long
to devour the pile of meat. Before he hobbled off, he sniffed every bit of the fabric, its familiar smell.
That night he slept up in the cleared area, where he could
hear all the sounds coming off the lake, even the most distant
ones. His belly was heavy from the meat. He slept for long
stretches and the pain receded. At dawn he went back down
to the spot where the man had left his jacket spread across
the stones alongside the pile of chopped moose lung.
Sniffing the whole area thoroughly, he found a few scraps
he'd missed.
It was a windy day. He couldn't hear any noise from the
forest, no gunshots. He lay still for so long that when he got
up there were yellow birch leaves stuck to his coat.
The man returned that evening, rowing across. The creak
of the oarlocks cut through the wind. As he stepped out of
the boat he whistled and talked, but he didn't stay long.
When darkness was falling he pushed the boat out into the
lake and it vanished, along with the creaking and splashing.
The grey dog lay in the clearing, ears pricked, following the
journey.
There was food down there. The man had put it where
the wind would carry the scent to the cleared area. The dog
had revealed himself there for an instant, a grey-black mask
and a pair of attentive ears in the undergrowth.
Things had gone quiet all around the pasture. Only the softest
voices were still there. He heard the chirping of the
titmice and the soft calls of the bullfinches from among the
trees. The Siberian jays fluttered gently among the birch
leaves, which fell even on windless days. The aspen leaves
were ready to fall. Sometimes on frosty mornings he heard
soft clicking sounds as they snapped loose.
The water that had filled green leaves and made the grass
grow tall was receding. The blanket of pasture was withering
and turning yellow. At the roots, where the soil was still damp and warm, the mouldering process began, working on
leaves and whatever else was on the ground. Everything that
happened now took place deep down, and from the earth
rose the heavy, powerful scent of decomposition. When the
rain began to sweep in off the ocean beyond the mountains,
the pasture became a brown place of rough grass and rotting
stalks. It was silent there. The short-eared owl rarely
swooped, and eventually it flew away. Not even the vixen
caught any voles.
The dog's shoulder healed but his bruised rib continued
to ache in the cold weather. Most of the time he lay still,
though he had to guard the food spot out at the point and
keep the vixen away. She sniffed around, sticking her pointy
snout in between the stones where there were still patches of
blood. He moved awkwardly from the pain in his ribcage, so
he was careful not to rush at her, just letting himself be seen
so she wouldn't become overconfident. The fur on his
shoulder was long again. He raised his head and chest, and
she ran off. But she would soon be back unless he stayed out
at the point, guarding the spot.
The man arrived late each afternoon. After a few days he
moved the food spot over to the cabin, laying the chopped
entrails in a bowl at the bottom of the outside steps, his rain
soaked jacket across them. Before he headed home he sat in
the boat for a long time, whistling and talking.
Rain and days passed by. One blue-sky day when the sun
was warm but the frost was thick and the air still, the boat
appeared in the morning instead. The man pulled it further
up than usual. Glancing towards the cleared area, he noted a
pair of alert ears following the noise made by the bottom of
the boat scraping on the damp gravel. He walked past the
cookhouse and up to the cabin with loud steps, tossing his
backpack down with a thump that reverberated in the still
air. He settled in, with slamming doors and groaning
window frames. He lit the stove, knowing that the gusts of smoke, and later the smell of coffee, would reach all the way
up to the cleared area. But the dog didn't appear. In the
evening the man put out food as usual, but this time right on
the steps. Then he shut himself inside the cabin. In the
morning the food remained untouched.
All day he busied himself around the pasture. He felled
birch saplings and repaired a broken pane in the cookhouse
window. Although he could see no signs of life up at the