"Oh, yes! Of course, Airedales," says I, like it was something I"d forgotten.
And then I scratches my head. Hadn"t I heard Vee sayin" how she liked some particular kind of a dog? And wasn"t it this kind? Why, sure, it was. Well, why not? Joe says they"re all ready to be delivered, just weaned and everything.
"I"ll go you," says I. "How much?"
Say, I had to gasp when Joe names his bargain price. You see, I"d never been shoppin" for dogs before, and I hadn"t kept track of the puppy market quotations. Course, I knew that some of these fancy, full-grown specimens of cla.s.sy breeds brought big money at times. But little pups like this, that you could hold in your hand, or tuck into your overcoat pocket--why, my idea was the people who had "em sort of distributed "em around where they would have good homes; or else in the case of a party like Joe you might slip him a five or a ten.
No, I ain"t tellin" what I paid. Not to anybody. But after sayin" what I had I couldn"t back out without feelin" like a piker. And when Joe says confidential how he"s knockin" off ten at that I writes out the check more or less cheerful.
"Ought to be good blood in him, at that figure," I suggests.
"Heem!" says Joe. "He got pedigree long lak your arm. Hees mothair ees from Lady Glen Ellen III., hees father ees blue ribbon winner two tam, Laird Ben Nevis, what was sell for----"
"Yes, I expect the fam"ly hist"ry"s all right," I breaks in. "I"ll take your word for it. But what do we feed him--dog biscuit?"
"No, no!" says Joe. "Not yet. Some bread wit" milk warm up in pan.
T"ree, four tam a day. Bymeby put in leetle sc.r.a.p cook meat an" let him have soup bone for chew. Mus" talk to heem all tam. He get wise quick.
You see."
"You flatter me, Joe," says I. "n.o.body ever got wise from my talkin" to "em. Might be interestin" to try it on a pup, though. So long."
And as I strolls along home with this warm, wriggly bunch of fur in the crook of my arm I get more and more pleased with myself. As I dopes it out I ought to make quite a hit, presenting Vee with something she"s been wantin" a long time. Almost as though I"d had it raised special for her, and had been keepin" it secret for months. Looked like I was due to acquire merit in the domestic circle, great gobs of it.
"Hey, Vee!" I sings out, as soon as I"ve opened the livin" room door.
"Come see what I"ve brought you."
She wasn"t long coming, and I got to admit that when I displays Mr. Pup the expected ovation don"t come off. I don"t get mixed up in any fond and impetuous embrace. No. If I must tell the truth she stands there with her mouth open starin" at me and it.
"Why--why, Torchy!" she gasps. "A puppy?"
"Right, first guess," says I. "By the way you"re gawpin" at it, though, it might be a young zebra or a baby hippopotamus. But it"s just a mere puppy. Airedale."
"Oh!" says Vee, gaspier than ever. "An--an Airedale?"
"Well?" says I. "Wasn"t that the kind I"ve heard you boostin" all along?"
"Ye-e-es," says she, draggy, "I--I suppose it was. And I do admire them very much, but--well, I hadn"t really thought of owning one. They--they are such strenuous dogs, you know; and with the baby and all----"
"Say, take a look!" I breaks in. "Does this one size up like he was a child eater? Here, heft him once." And I hands him over.
Course, it ain"t five minutes before she"s cuddlin" him up and cooin" to him, and he"s gnawing away at her thumb with his little puppy teeth.
"Such a dear!" says Vee. "And we could keep him out in the garage, and have Dominick look after him, couldn"t we? For they get to be such big dogs, you know."
"Do they?" says I.
I didn"t see quite how they could. Why, this one was about big enough to go in a hat, that"s all, and he was nearly two months old. But say, what I didn"t know about Airedale pups was a heap. Grow! Honest, you could almost watch him lengthen out and fill in. Yet for a couple of weeks there he was no more"n a kitten, and just as cute and playful. Every night after dinner I"d spend about an hour rollin" him over on his back and lettin" him bite away at my bare hand. He liked to get hold of my trouser leg, or Vee"s dress, or the couch cover, or anything else that was handy, and tug away and growl. Reg"lar circus to see him.
And then I begun to find scratches on my hands. The little rascal was gettin" a full set of puppy teeth. Sharp as needles, too. I noticed a few threads pulled out of my sleeve. And once when he got a good grip on Vee"s skirt he made a rip three inches long. But he was so cunnin" about it we only laughed.
"You young rough houser!" I"d say, and push him over. He"d come right back for more, though, until he was tuckered and then he"d stretch out on something soft and sleep with one paw over his nose while we watched admirin".
We had quite a time findin" a name for him. I got Joe to give his pedigree all written out and we was tryin" to dope out from that something that would sound real Scotch. Vee got some kennel catalogues, too, and read over some of those old Ian MacLaren stories for names, but we couldn"t hit on one that just suited. Meanwhile I begins callin" him Buddy, as the boys did everybody in the army, and finally Vee insists that it"s exactly the name for him.
"He"s so rough and ready," says she.
"He"s rough, all right," says I, examinin" a new tooth mark on the back of my hand.
And he kept on gettin" rougher. What he really needed, I expect, was a couple of cub bears to exercise his teeth and paws on; good, husky, tough-skinned ones, at that. Not havin" "em he took it out on us. Oh, yes. Not that he was to blame, exactly. We"d started him that way, and he seemed to like the taste of me "specially.
"They"re one-man dogs, you know," says Vee.
"Meanin"," says I, "that they like to chew one man at a time. See my right wrist. Looks like I"d shoved it through a pane of gla.s.s. Hey, you tarrier! Lay off me for a minute, will you? For the love of soup eat something else. Here"s a slipper. Now go to it."
And you should see him shake and worry that around the room. Almost as good as a vaudeville act--until I discovers that he"s gnawed a hole clear through the toe. "Gosh!" says I. "My favorite slipper, too."
At four months he was no longer a handful. He was a lapful, and then some. Somewhere near twenty-five pounds, as near as we could judge by holding him on the bathroom scales for the fraction of a second. And much too lively for any lap. Being cuddled wasn"t his strong point.
Hardly. He"d be all over you in a minute, clawin" you in the face with his big paws and nippin" your ear or grabbin" a mouthful of hair; all playful enough, but just as gentle as being tackled by a quarterback on an end run.
And he was gettin" wise, all right. He knew to the minute when mealtime came around, and if he wasn"t let out on the kitchen porch where his chow was served he thought nothing of scratchin" the paint off a door or tryin" to chew the k.n.o.b. Took only two tries to teach him to stand up on his hind legs and walk for his meals, as straight as a drum major. Also he"d shake hands for a bit of candy, and retrieve a rubber ball. But chiefly he delighted to get a stick of soft wood and go prancin" through the house with it, rappin" the furniture or your shins as he went, and end up by chewin" it to bits on the fireplace hearth rug. Or it might be a smelly old bone that he"d smuggled in from outside. You could guess that would get Vee registerin" a protest and I"d have to talk to Buddy.
"Hey!" I"d remark, grabbin" him by the collar. "Whaddye think this is, a soap fact"ry? Leggo that shin-bone."
"Gr-r-r-r!" he"d remark back, real hostile, and roll his eyes menacin".
At which Vee would snicker and observe: "Now isn"t he the dearest thing to do that, Torchy? Do let him have his booful bone there. I"ll spread a newspaper under it."
Her theory was good, only Buddy didn"t care to gnaw his bone on an evening edition. He liked eatin" it on the Turkish rug better. And that"s where he did eat it. That was about the way his trainin" worked out in other things. We had some perfectly good ideas about what he should do; he"d have others, quite different; and we"d compromise. That is, we"d agree that Buddy was right. Seemed to me about the only thing to do, unless you had all day or all night to argue with him and show him where he was wrong. I could keep it up for an hour or two. Then I either got hoa.r.s.e or lost my disposition.
You remember there was some talk of keepin" him in the garage at first.
Anyway, it was mentioned. And he was kept there the first night, until somewhere around 2 A. M. Then I trailed out in a bathrobe and slippers and lugged him in. He"d howled for three hours on a stretch and seemed to be out for the long-distance championship. Not havin" looked up the past performances in non-stop howlin" I couldn"t say whether he"d hung up a new record or not. I was willin" to concede the point. Besides, I wanted a little sleep, even if he didn"t. I expect we was lucky that he picks out a berth behind the kitchen stove as the proper place for him to snooze. He might have fancied the middle of our bed. If he had, we"d camped on the floor, I suppose.
Another good break for us was the fact that he was willin" to be tethered out daytimes on a wire traveler that Dominick fixed up for him.
Course, he did dig up a lot of Vee"s favorite dahlia bulbs, and he almost undermined a corner of the kitchen wing when he set out to put a choice bone in cold storage, but he was so comical when he tamped the bone down with his nose that Vee didn"t complain.
"We can have the hole filled in and sodded over next spring," says Vee.
"Huh!" I says. "By next spring he"ll be big enough to tunnel clear under the house."
Looked like he would. At five months Buddy weighed 34 pounds and to judge by his actions most of him was watchspring steel geared in high speed. He was as hard as nails all over and as quick-motioned as a cat.
I"d got into the habit of turnin" him loose when I came home and indulgin" in a half hour"s rough house play with him. Buddy liked that.
He seemed to need it in his business of growin" up. If I happened to forget, he wasn"t backward in remindin" me of the oversight. He"d developed a bark that was sort of a cross between an automobile shrieker and throwin" a brick through a plate gla.s.s window, and when he put his whole soul into expressin" his feelin"s that way everybody within a mile needed cotton in their ears. So I"d drape myself in an old raincoat, put on a pair of heavy drivin" gauntlets, and frisk around with him.
No doubt about Buddy"s being glad to see me on them occasions. His affection was deep and violent. He"d let out a few joy yelps, take a turn around the yard, and then come leapin" at me with his mouth open and his eyes rollin" wild. My part of the game was to grab him by the back of the neck and throw him before he could sink his teeth into any part of me. Sometimes I missed. That was a point for Buddy. Then I"d pry his jaws loose and he"d dash off for another circle. I couldn"t say how the score averaged. I was too busy to keep count. About fifty-fifty would be my guess. Anyway, it did Buddy a lot of good and must have been fine practice. If he ever has to stop an offensive on the part of an invadin" bull-dog he"ll be in good trim. He"d tackle one, all right. The book we bought says that an Airedale will go up a tree after a mountain lion. I can believe it. I"ve never seen Buddy tuck his tail down for anything on four legs. Yet he ain"t the messy kind. He don"t seem anxious to start anything. But I"ll bet he"d be a hard finisher.
And he sure is a folksy dog with the people he knows around the house.
Most of "em he treats gentler than he does me, which shows that he"s got some sense. And when it comes to the baby; why, say, he"ll gaze as admirin" at young Master Richard toddlin" around as if he was some blood relation; followin" him everywhere, with that black nose nuzzled under one of the youngster"s arms, or with a sleeve held tender in his teeth.
Any kid at all Buddy is strong for. He"ll leave a bone or his play any time he catches sight of one, and go prancin" around "em, waggin" his stubby tail friendly and inviting "em to come have a romp.