On a warm,
still day, a 36-foot Nonsuch cat boat slid beautifully down the wide Neuse
River past Maggie’s house. Maggie was, as usual, in the yard. She lay gazing at
the water. On clear mornings with bright sun, the river sparkled with thousands
of diamonds in a broad path across the water to dark woods on the other side,
five miles away. Maggie dozed on and off. This day, as she emerged from a
groggy dream about lunch, she saw the boat, and the sailor. He was majestically
handsome, standing on the prow, face into the wind, whiskers ruffling back by
his ears. She sighed. Maggie knew she was not a pretty girl. Nobody ever called
her that. They called her good. But from this distance, even she, a long-faced
plain girl, could stare at the handsome sailor to her heart’s content. A
squirrel ran directly in front of her across the grass, and she didn’t notice,
which was most unusual. And then the handsome sailor did something stunning. He
picked up a bright red ball from the deck, threw it up into the air himself,
and caught it! Maggie yelled in appreciation. The sailor looked her way, nodded
his head, and smiled a little.
Then the boat
glided on. Maggie sighed deeply. She was in love again. She stretched her long
legs out on the grass, closed her eyes, and rested her chin on her paws. He was
the finest specimen of a Golden Retriever she’d ever seen. She, a short-haired
hound mix with a crooked tail, could never hope to attract his notice. Maybe he
was coming into port. Maybe he’d be around town. Maybe he’d walk past her yard.
He was a traveling man; she knew it from the way he gazed at the river. Maggie
rolled on her side and dreamed of red balls and diamonds.
Just as she
was about to step onto the sailor’s boat in her dream, somebody jumped on her
back legs and said, “Hiya! Hey, Mags, wanna play? Huh? Let’s play!”
“Spencer,
leave me alone! I’m napping.”
“You’re
always napping. You’re getting old and fat.” Spencer burped. “Race you to the
river!” And Spencer, a poodle/terrier mix with a shiny apricot coat, leaped
into the air. “Maggie, get up!”
Spencer jumped on Maggie’s neck and chewed on her jowl.
“Alright!
Alright! I’m coming!” she said. “Your breath is disgusting this morning.”
“Yeah. Found
an old mullet by the town dock.” Spencer licked his lips.
Maggie let
out a deep woof!
and dove at her friend. Spencer raced around the yard’s one live oak tree and
turned to face her, head down on his paws, rump high in the air. Maggie ran at
him full tilt, paws thrashing the grass, booming bark ringing across the
water! She careened through the air at Spencer’s grinning face. At the last
minute, he ran for the water’s edge, Maggie pounding after him. She outweighed
him by thirty pounds and was twice as tall, but he zipped to the dock and raced down its length, his nails clicking on the cement, laughing as he ran.
Maggie
screeched to a halt, her paws just brushing the dock’s edge. “No … fair …! You
know I don’t do docks! Spencer, you cheated!”
He cackled at
her, wagging his tail tauntingly. “C’mon, Mags! Chicken! I’ll give you all my
treats for a week, plus Bonnie’s chew toy I stole, if you come out here!” His
tongue lolled out the side of his mouth, and he grinned at her in defiance.
“Ah,
Spencer!”
“I win! I
win, I win, I win!” he howled, and trotted the length of the dock toward her.
“You owe me. Three treats by next Tuesday, Mags, or I’m telling everybody
you’re still afraid of the dock, after all these years.”
Maggie
growled. “Whatever. These new organic treats are nasty anyway.” She
plopped on the grass. Spencer nosed something under an azalea bush with great interest.
“Mmm. Bunny
droppings.”
“You’re
disgusting, Spencer, really.”
Chapter
Two: Billy, The Sailor Dog
“Why do they
call it a cat boat?” Beauregard asked Sandy. “I don’t see any cats on board.”
The two dogs
sat side-by-side on the end of the town’s dinghy dock, watching the anchorage
and the approaching sailboat as its owner took down the sails and threw an
anchor into the water.
“I think it
has something to do with the mast,” Sandy replied.
“The mast?”
Beauregard yipped sharply at the man on board, warning him that a seagull was
overhead. Pomeranians believe firmly that everyone needs a warning about everything,
all the time. “Have you ever seen a cat up a mast?” He sniggered, leaning close
to his friend. “Can you imagine Sky, up a mast? Ha!”
Sandy
stiffened. “Beau, be nice.” She gave him a withering look. “Sky could eat you
for breakfast, and you know it.”
“Yeah, well.
She’d have to catch me first. And you are such a Sheltie!” he added.
At that
minute, the sailor dog emerged from the cabin and jumped onto the deck. Even
Beau, vain as he was of his fluffy coat and extensive tail, had to admit that
this dog was a looker. He nosed the air, turned kindly toward his human, gave a
friendly woof!,
and raised his feathery tail. What a tail! It rose behind him like a banner,
masses of lovely fur cascading down in a full arc, nearly meeting the brilliant
feathers on his back legs.
“Wow!” said
Sandy.
“Wow is
right!” said Beau.
“I wonder if
he’s coming off that boat,” Sandy mused.
“I wonder if
he’s sticking around,” Beau said. “He could complicate things.”
“I’ll say,”
Sandy replied.
A third dog
met them on the dock. “Who’s that?” Spencer asked.
“Mr.
Somebody,” Sandy whispered.
“He looks
like a home-wrecker to me,” Spencer commented. “Too good-lookin’ by half. Has
he introduced himself?”
“Nope,” Beau
replied. “Hasn’t even looked our way. I bet he’s a snob. Anybody with a tail
like that has to be a snob.”
“Ha!” Spencer
barked. “You’re one to talk! You’ve got more tail vanity than any dog I know!”
This
conversation ended with Spencer racing under the marina at the yacht club, Beau
yelping and growling behind him. A tussle ensued with both dogs deep in mud.
Sandy
remained on the dinghy dock, ignoring their childish antics. She was waiting
for the sailor. He looked at her from the boat’s bow, and sent her a friendly,
low woof! She
yipped in reply.
“Billy,” the human
said to him, “Bring me that line.” And the dog secured the coiled rope in his
mouth and delivered it to the man. “Good boy.” They exchanged tail-wagging and head-patting.
In a few
minutes Billy and his man came to the dingy dock in a little sailing pram.
Beauregard and Sandy |
“Hi,” said
Sandy.
“Hello,”
replied Billy in a lovely, deep voice.
“Welcome to
Oriental,” she said, “Best town anywhere for dogs. Been here before?”
“No, never.
Nice dogs here?”
“Yeah, just
about everybody. Watch out for Jake. He does road work, and doesn’t talk much.”
Billy stopped
to scratch his ear. “Are the roads safe?”
“Pretty
much.”
“Leash laws?”
“No! Isn’t
that great?”
“Very nice to
hear. What’s your name, by the way?”
“Sandy. And
you’re Billy?”
“Nice to know
you. We’re not here for long. On our way to the southern islands, I think.” He
panted lightly and asked, “Any good nibbles nearby?”
“Ah,” said
Sandy. “Up the street is the boat store. Fresh water bowl on the stoop. Down
from there is the Coffee Cup, and their trash cans are generally good for a
scrap or two in mid afternoon. How’s your human’s food?”
They walked
along together, discussing all dogs’ favorite topic in tasty detail. Soon
Spencer and Beau strolled up, caked in mud and river muck, trailing a little algae
and reeking of dead fish.
“Oh my!”
Billy said, and Sandy rolled her eyes.
“Billy, here
are the two messiest dogs in town. And nearly the stupidest.”
“I beg your
pardon!” Beauregard barked, and trotted more proudly, trying to raise his tail
from its low-hanging, mud-plastered state. “I have the finest tail in town!” he
said.
“I’m sure you
do,” Billy replied graciously. “Well, must stick with my man. He’s a great
sailor, but he has a terrible sense of direction on land and tends to get
lost.” And he walked ahead.
The three
friends watched as Billy trotted down Water Street beside his sailor. Billy
raised his nose toward the beef aromas wafting from Mimi’s Restaurant. He
whined a little at the smells coming from Fulcher’s Fish Works. And at the
front porch of Mrs. Harris’s pretty little cottage, Billy paused briefly and
raised his hind leg gingerly above her front door mat. A spray of yellow
trailed through the air for a moment, and he walked on.
“Did you see that?!” Spencer yelped. “He just peed
on Mrs. Harris’s door mat! Well, I never!”
All three
dogs shook their heads. “Sailors are peculiar,” Sandy said.
Chapter
Three: Daisy Makes a Call
Daisy |
When Daisy’s
old woman went to the grocery on Tuesday mornings and the beauty salon on
Friday mornings, Daisy got on the telephone. Thankfully her human didn’t
believe in cell phones, but had an old-fashioned landline with a push-button
array. Daisy kept one front nail long and firm, for calling her friends. This
Friday morning, she called Sky. Daisy keeps all her dog friends’ numbers in the
back of the old lady’s rolodex. Sky was the only cat.
Sky |
Sky’s owner
also leaves the house on Friday mornings to go to yoga class. When the phone
rings then, Sky knows it’s probably Daisy. Sky leaps onto the kitchen counter
and waits for the answering machine. When she hears Daisy’s voice, she knocks
the receiver from the cradle.
“Yello?” she
meowed.
“Sky. Daisy
here. What’s happening on the river today?”
“You’re late
calling, Daisy dear. I’ve been too busy with Mister’s shoes to bother with the
front windows much today. Honestly! That man and his feet! The smells he
produces are enough to drive a kitty crazy!” Sky yawned largely, shoving the knife block over and
upsetting the toaster.
“Well?” Daisy
persisted.
“Oh,
alright.” The cat poked the button for speaker-phone, leapt to the floor,
dashed under the dining room table and onto the window ledge. A manicured
expanse of lawn stretched before her, and a narrow street, and the water’s
edge. She turned her head and plastered one ear to the glass. Then she
screeched these words back into the kitchen:
“Maggie is
moaning. Clearly in love again. I hear Spencer and Beau fighting. Fish are
involved as usual. Another voice, unfamiliar. Low, rumbling. Either a Golden
Retriever or a Labrador. Male. Sandy is yipping. She sounds pleased, so he must
be good-looking. Oh, and here comes Bonnie down the street with her woman.
Third time this morning.”
“I thought
you said you weren’t watching, something about shoes?”
“Whateveh.
So,” Sky added huskily as she leaped to the phone again, “we have a visitor in
town. Wonder who he is?”
“Sailor
perhaps? Did you see any boats come in?”
Sky yawned
loudly to let Daisy know she was being imposed upon. “Boats? Notice boats? What
do you think I am, a watchcat? There’s been boats all morning! It’s warm and
lovely out there, if you like that kind of thing.” She sniffed and looked
longingly at her man’s slippers, hidden carefully under a large geranium in a
pot. “Yes, I’ve seen boats, one or two. He might have come in on one of them.
Is that all?”
Daisy paused.
“I s’pose. Put Jacques on, please. I need to speak to him.”
“He’s
upstairs. Hasn’t been down yet. He’s feeling particularly anti-social today,
I’m afraid. And I’m not getting him down here. I am not his social secretary, you know!”
“Sky ….” Daisy
growled lightly.
“Daisy!” the
cat yowled in reply.
“What’s going
on down there?!” a booming voice inquired from upstairs.
Jacques |
“Cat!
Begone!” he bellowed, and Sky whisked away magically, disappearing instantly,
silently. Jacques, unable to stand on his hind legs due to his healthy appetite
and long habit of food thievery, howled toward the kitchen counter, “Daisy, is
that you?”
“Yes,
Jacques. It’s me.”
“Something’s
afoot in town. Did you note the squirrel behavior this morning?”
“I did.”
“And the
porpoise pods on the river yesterday afternoon?”
“And the
porpoise pods.”
“And the
ants. Did you make note of the unusual ant line patterns three days ago? It was
most peculiar.”
“I did not. I
need more lessons on that,” Daisy admitted. “I believe we must be vigilant for
a couple of days, Jacques.”
“Agreed. I’ll
watch the river. Sky will help.” A hissing growl emanated from the living room.
“Well, Sky may help. You watch downtown. I don’t like this one bit, Daisy.”
“Could it be
time for a Canine Concourse? It’s been quite a long time, Jacques, since
anything demanded a concourse.”
“Heaven
forbid! Let’s not be hasty, Daisy. No emergency yet.”
“Oh! My
lady’s coming. Must run. Keep me posted!” And Daisy rang off.
Jacques stood
on his short legs in the kitchen, his feet turned out and looking as if his
socks were coming off. His black eyes twinkled in anticipation. The phone
buzzed above him.
“Sky! Sky,
get in here and hang up this phone! The lady will return in thirteen minutes
exactly. Sky!”
In reply, she
gave only a hiss and a yowl.
Chapter
Four: Billy Goes Walking
Bonnie, a
tall, long-legged, wiry dog of happy disposition, trotted past Maggie who was
napping-in-yard, past Sky who was fighting a dust bunny under the sofa, past
Spencer and Beauregard barking at squirrels in the park, past the Coffee Cup
eatery on Hodges Street, right up to Sandy and Billy who sat outside the boat
store with their chins on their paws. Billy’s man was inside, talking boats.
Bonnie |
“Hiya, guys!”
Bonnie was a Yankee dog. Her lady was from Long Island. “What’s up?” Bonnie
grinned at Sandy and nudged her head sideways toward Billy as if to say, “Who’s
the fellah?”
Sandy yawned.
“Hi, Bonnie. This is Billy. He’s off a boat.” She turned to Billy. “Bonnie used
to keep her lady on a leash, but now she’s got her on voice command. Those
Yankees are tough to train, but Bonnie does a remarkable job.”
“Congratulations,”
Billy said. “My man’s inside. I don’t own a leash for him. If I did, we could
go somewhere more interesting!”
“Oh, if he’s
a sailor, then he’s talking to Pete, and you’ll be here awhile.” Bonnie sat
next to them on the store stoop. She licked her front paws affectionately and
gazed at Billy. “There’s an old geezer that works in there with Pete. He came
in on a boat too. Went in to talk about a new outboard and some rigging. By the
end of the day, Pete hired him, and he never has left. His boat’s over at
Whittaker Creek. Hasn’t been out sailing in over six months.”
“That’s
horrible!” Billy declared, and stood halfway up on his front legs. “What’ll I
do? I gotta get him out of there!”
“Oh, calm
down,” Sandy said. “Bonnie, don’t exaggerate. Old Tom’s way past sailing. He
must be 92.” She smiled at Billy comfortingly. “Besides, he doesn’t have a
dog.” She nuzzled Billy’s shoulder and licked him on the ear in a friendly way.
This was, of course, a sign to Bonnie that Billy was her particular friend, and
Bonnie got the message.
“So, Billy,”
she said. “What kind of boat do you have? Sandy here has a Cape Dory Typhoon.
I’ve got a Pearson 28, not an especially pretty boat, I’m sorry to say, but she
does alright.”
Billy
replied, “I’m on a Nonsuch 36, a fine cat boat. Had her for seven years now.”
He looked with greater interest at Sandy. “A Typhoon, eh? That’s a sweet boat.
Do you go out on her often?”
“She’s on the
hard right now, I’m sorry to say,” Sandy said. “My man’s working on her
diligently though. I’m proud of him. None of this
boat-in-the-yard-for-three-years behavior. I sit out there to encourage him
along. We should be back on the water in a few months.”
Billy looked
up and down Hodges Street, taking in the town dock, the old-fashioned cottages,
the fish shack, the inn and marina, the old yacht club. It was a lovely town,
for sure. The Coffee Cup sat at the center of it all across from the dock, a
few bikes leaning nonchalantly against a picnic table out front and a handful
of bandy-legged sailors on the porch talking about the evils of fiberglass repair.
“This is a
nice town you got here,” he noted.
“Best town
anywhere,” Bonnie and Sandy said together. They smiled knowingly.
“But I’d
never want to settle down on land,” Billy added. “I’m a sea dog through and
through.
The girls’
smiles sank. This was sad news. Then laughter erupted from inside the boat
store. Billy stood up and poked his head inside the open door.
“He’s sitting
down, drinking coffee, looking at charts. This could take a while,” he said.
Bonnie stood
up as well. “C’mon, guys. Let’s get outa here and see what’s smelling up the
town. You could sit here forever waiting on those men to finish, Billy.” You’ve
got at least till afternoon treat time. Let’s go!”
In front of
the Coffee Cup, they passed Jake. Jake, a medium-sized brown-and-white mongrel
sporting a red bandana, lay in the middle of the street.
“He’s gonna
get hit,” Billy said.
“Yeah, we
know,” Sandy responded. “That’s Jake. He’s the speed bump.”
“The speed
bump?” Billy asked. “You mean the cars stop for him?”
“Mostly,”
Bonnie replied. “At least they slow down. Keeps the speed limit on Hodges
Street to about 10 miles per hour.”
“I say! That’s remarkable! A dog who risks
life and limb to do traffic control!”
Billy raised
his eyebrows and stared at Jake. Jake stared back.
Jake, the speed bump |
From her
perch on her lady’s armchair, Daisy saw them ambling down Hodges Street away
from her. New dog in town,
she said to herself. That always stirs things up for a few days. The fact that the new dog was
leaving his man alone in a strange town was not especially worrisome. But
Bonnie – Bonnie will get that new dog into some trouble or other, I’ll bet my
food dish on it!
Daisy thought.
Daisy pulled
her daily planner out from under the couch. On it she scratched the time – 1:37
p.m. – that Billy, Bonnie, and Sandy rounded the curve on Hodges and made their
way toward the park and the river, where Spencer and Beauregard were now
wrestling with minks among the rough rocks that line the water there. Across
the street from their antics, Sky and Jacques were napping heavily in the warm
afternoon.
Chapter
Five: Dog Talk
Oriental is a
dog-friendly town, and the park is dog central. As the three dogs from the
harbor approached the grassy acre with its spread of live oak trees, another
dog came from the opposite direction. Goldie, a retriever mix with a stout body
and deep rusty color, weaved across the street in front of a golf cart. The
cart crept along with an elderly lady at the wheel. Balloons and flags
protruded from every possible point along the roof of the cart, and across the
front and back were hung white signs that said, “Be Careful of the Dog!” The
driver was Gaye Price, the town matriarch. Goldie took Miss Gaye riding each
day for her health. Gaye and Goldie, both Oriental natives, owned the road, and
basically owned the town. They were two females in whose good graces everybody
wanted to reside.
Goldie emerged
from a ditch that ran off the river. Low water levels meant the ditch was murky
with sludge, and Goldie’s bottom half sagged with greenish-brown goo. Her
tongue lolled from the side of her mouth. She shook happily, spinning river
muck through the air.
“Goldie!”
Miss Gaye admonished. “Stop that!”
Goldie ran to
Bonnie. “Hey, Bonnie! Come see what’s in this ditch – smells fabulous!”
“Not today,”
said Bonnie, raising her eyebrows and leaning her head meaningfully toward the
handsome retriever next to her. “Billy’s in town. Say hello, Goldie.”
“ ‘Lo,”
Goldie mumbled, without looking at Billy. The two dogs did the customary
end-to-end investigation. Goldie glanced at Bonnie. “Stop being so fussy,
Bonnie. You like a good ditch dig as much as I do. Where’s your lady?”
“Left her at
the Coffee Cup. She’s had trouble with her through-hull. She’ll be there for
hours.”
Goldie turned
to Sandy. “Hey, San.”
“Hey,
Goldie.”
“You free
today? Where’s your man?”
“He’s
recoring the boat deck today. Deep in fiberglass and epoxy for the week, I’d
say. I got nothing to do.”
Finally,
Goldie cut a glance at Billy. “New in town, huh? Where you from?”
“I’m from a
boat. I haven’t lived on land in over seven years,” Billy replied stiffly. He
knew a rude girl when he saw one. “I brought my man here for the day to get his
outboard worked on. We’ll be leaving soon.”
“Hmm,” Goldie
replied. “You’ve got a funny accent.”
“Goldie!”
Sandy interjected.
“Well,”
Goldie continued. “Welcome, for as long as you’re here.” She turned, heading to
the park. “It’s a nice town, for those who like towns,” she said to him, over her
shoulder.
Then she was
off to the rocks with Spencer and Beauregard, who were howling in anger at a
mink who’d escaped capture. Goldie joined into the fray. Bonnie whined in
despair.
“Oh, go on,
Bonnie. You know you want to,” Sandy said.
Bonnie
bounded to the rocks. The ruckus from the water’s edge was immense. Miss Gaye
edged her golf cart gently to the curb and opened her newspaper. Soon her
neighbor Wanda joined her in a second cart and conversation grew regarding care
of the local cemetery, whether Brentley Adams would keep running his restaurant
or sell it again, and how well old Sarah Midyette was doing after her heart
attack. Gradually the women’s voices increased in volume to match the dogs’
racket. They were shouting.
“You say he’s
closing down?”
“No! It’s close
to town!”
As the ladies
bellowed at the curb, the dogs engaged in more frivolity. A family of minks had
been discovered, and a particularly aggravating squirrel was cornered near the
rocks. Beau and Goldie were barking wildly. Bonnie was leaping in the air.
Spencer was chasing his tail. The din reached such a state that Sky woke from
her nap with a screech and hid under the sideboard in the dining room. Even
Jacques woke with a start.
“Hrrrmph,” he
said. “Something’s up. Sky!” he bellowed. “Sky! Call Daisy!”
(To read the rest of this story, click here.)
(To read the rest of this story, click here.)
All text, photos, and artwork copyrighted by the author. No copying of any kind is allowed; however, please feel free to link to this page for other readers to find the story. Thank you!
5 comments:
Brilliant! Thanks for sharing this. Are you hoping to get it published?
Dasha, I'd love to be published in print, but it's expensive, and difficult for any writer not previously published. Ironically perverse, but there it is :) Still, if Billy only gets read about here, it's okay, and anybody can enjoy the story. Glad you did!!
This is charming, Mary Kathryn: I love the canine perspective on the doings of Oriental! I'll be interested to see what happens with Billy: does he sail off, into the west (or east)?
Middle school kids like animal stories! Your doggies are adorable! A dog on a boat is a great idea! Go, MK, go!
I bet the people of Oriental would enjoy this story a lot! They would feel so famous! Okay, I must know...Dorgi? Doberman/Corgi? :D
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