|
Mackenzie lay under his covers in the dark. He
counted each flat footstep slamming up the
stairs.
One, two, three … He pulled his pillow close and
peered into the night.
Seven, eight, nine … His bones locked.
Eleven, twelve … The door swung open. Bright
light from the hall invaded his room, and a dark
figure walked up to the bed. ‘Here,’ a voice grunted.
‘Tried to cash in my chips and ended up with this for
my trouble. Mind you don’t let it chew up my shoes.’
A wet lump landed on Mackenzie’s bed. Seconds
later the door slammed shut. The bedroom was black
again.
Mackenzie curled away from the damp weight that
trembled on top of the blanket. He could feel hot air
whistle past his ear. He could smell fear. And he
could make out the splotches of white. When he
found the courage to touch one of them, it crumpled
in his hand like heavy silk.
It was an ear, a soft silky ear.
Something began to whack his leg. Mackenzie
worked it out. A tail was beating against his leg. The
prod in his tummy was a paw. And the cold dry poke
under his neck, well, that was a nose.
The thing on his bed was a dog. A dog! His father
had thrown a dog on the bed.
In the dark Mackenzie lay still, holding the ear
lightly. Just as he was getting used to the soft way it
folded in his fingers, the dog licked his chin, a slurpy
ice-cream lick. Mackenzie slid his hand from the ear
to the smooth damp head. He ran his hand on down
the neck and curled his fingers into the loose skinny
folds. He waited. After a bit the dog stopped trembling
and settled into the covers like warm butter. It
was going to sleep.
‘Cash,’ whispered Mackenzie. His father had called
the dog Cash. Mackenzie closed his eyes and
breathed carefully, breathing in with the dog, breathing
out with the dog. He stayed as still as a sleeping
boy.
It wasn’t that long before he was a sleeping boy.
So that’s how Mackenzie and Cash spent their first
night together, wrapped up close, nose to nose. In
the morning they got quite a surprise when they
opened their eyes. Both of them jumped. They didn’t
know that the other was really there. They thought it
was just a dream.
Mackenzie took a good look at the dog lying on
his pillow. It yawned, so he got a good look inside
and out. It had a long pink tongue and bright brown
eyes. And it was a puppy, a girl puppy. Mackenzie was
pretty certain about that.
The puppy looked back at Mackenzie. She saw a
freckled nose. She looked right into Mackenzie’s
blue eyes with her big brown ones, and sneezed. She
blew spit all over his face.
They both scrambled out of bed.
Mackenzie followed Cash down the stairs. The
puppy was in so much of a hurry, her paws slipped
on the bare wood and Mackenzie had to grab her tail
to slow her down. He pushed her out into the back
garden. It was early spring and still chilly, so they
both shivered while the puppy did her business. She
was as glad as Mackenzie was to get back into the
house, especially when the morning train whistled
shrilly beyond the fence.
Back in the middle of the kitchen, the puppy
looked at Mackenzie and wagged her tail. Where was
breakfast?
Mackenzie didn’t know what puppies ate for
breakfast. Whatever it was, he knew they didn’t have
it in the house. Finally he gave the puppy a bowl of
bran flakes swimming in milk, and a piece of bread
and peanut butter. She seemed to like that a lot.
With fifteen minutes to go before the school bus,
Mackenzie and Cash climbed back upstairs. Cash
didn’t know that going up steps was just as tricky as
going down. She slipped and knocked her noggin.
Mackenzie picked her up and hauled her the rest of
the way so she didn’t come to any more harm. It was
a tough job. The puppy wriggled, and bits and pieces
of her kept slipping out of his grasp. It was like
trying to hang on to a sack of rubber balls.
When they finally got to Mackenzie’s bedroom,
Mackenzie took a long look at his new dog. He had
to go to school, and he wanted a picture to carry
with him all day long. She looked good enough to
eat. Her coat was a caramel colour, laced with brown
sugar and milk. Next to her nose, where the hair was
short, you could see her skin, pink as bubble gum.
Mackenzie thought she was going to be a big dog, a
beautiful big dog. But right then, she was just a
pudding pot of puppy with a wet nose and a plump
rump full of wriggles.
All the while Mackenzie was memorizing Cash, she
was memorizing him. She must have liked the way he
looked. Her tail wagged the whole time.
Anybody could see they were love-struck.
At the last minute Mackenzie remembered to leave
Cash a drink. He filled his old fish bowl at the
bathroom sink, letting the water run until it was ice
cold. He put some newspapers in the corner too, just
in case. Then he gave the puppy a hug and closed his
door. ‘I’ll be back before you know it, Cash,’ he
called as he ran downstairs. ‘We’ll go out!’
Cash was asleep under the bedclothes before the
school bus got to the end of the road. She hadn’t felt
so warm and safe for a long time, or so full either.
She stuck her pink snout into the pillow, where it
still smelled of the boy, and let her belly spread out
wider than a jam doughnut.
At school, Mackenzie didn’t have it as easy. But he
did his best to make the day go by. He wrote a sum
on the board and read a poem out loud. In between
lessons he thought about Cash. ‘I’ve got a dog,’ he
thought.
At lunch he cleaned the chalk ledge for his teacher
and emptied the recycling bin. ‘She’s waiting for me,’
he thought.
During the music lesson he kept time with the
rhythm sticks. ‘We’ll go to the park,’ he decided.
Mackenzie looked out of the window anxiously.
The sun was shining. The sky was bluer than a
robin’s egg.
‘I’ve got a dog named Cash,’ he wrote in the
corner of his notebook.
From Dog Lost. Copyright © 2008 by Ingrid Lee. All rights reserved.
|