Rusty or the dog. Or maybe to both of them.
“We’re dead,” Rusty said.
Glancing at him, Slim asked, “Have you got anything to feed it?”
“Like what?”
“Food?”
He shook his head very slightly. A drop of sweat fell off the tip of his nose.
“Nothing?” Slim asked.
“You’ve always got food,” I told him.
“Do not.”
“Are you sure?” Slim asked.
“I ate it back in the woods.”
“Ate what?” I asked.
“My Ding-Dong.”
“You ate a Ding-Dong in the woods?”
“Yeah.”
“How come we didn’t see you?” I asked.
“I ate it when I was taking my piss.”
“Great,” Slim muttered.
“I didn’t have enough to share with you guys, so ...”
“Could’ve saved some for the Hound of the goddamn Baskervilles,” Slim pointed out.
“Didn’t know ...”
The hound let out a fierce, rattling growl that sounded like it had a throat full of loose phlegm.
“You got anything, Dwight?” Slim asked.
“Huh-uh.”
“Me neither.”
“What’re we gonna do?” Rusty asked, a whine in his voice. “Man, if he bites us we’re gonna have to get rabies shots. They stick like a foot-long needle right into your stomach and ... ”
Slim eased herself down into a crouch and reached her open hands toward the dog. Its ears flattened against the sides of its skull. It snarled and drooled.
“You sure you wanta do that?” I asked her.
Ignoring me, she spoke to the dog in a soft, sing-song voice. “Hi there, boy. Hi, fella. You’re a good boy, aren’t you? You looking for some food? Huh? We’d give you some if we had any, wouldn’t we?”
“It’s gonna bite your hand off,” Rusty warned.
“No, he won’t. He’s a good doggie. Aren’t you a good doggie, boy? Huh?”
The dog, hunkered down, kept growling and showing its teeth.
On the ground around us, I saw small pieces of broken glass, little stones, some cigarette butts, leaves and twigs that must’ve blown over from the woods, a pack of Lucky Strikes that was filthy and mashed flat, a few beer cans smashed as flat as the cigarette pack, a headless snake acrawl with ants, someone’s old sock ... a lot of stuff, but nothing much good for a weapon.
Slim, still squatting with her hands out and speaking in the same quiet sing-song, said “You’re a nice doggie, aren’t you? Why don’t you guys see if you can climb the nice snack stand, huh, doggie? Yeahhh. That’s a good doggie. Maybe Dwight can give Rusty a nice little boost, and they can wait for me on top of the nice little snack stand? Is that a good idea? Huh, doggie? Yeah, I think so.”
Rusty and I looked at each other.
We were probably both thinking the same things.
We can’t run off and leave Slim with the dog. But she TOLD us to. When she says stuff, she means it. And she’s smarter than both of us put together, so maybe she has some sort of fabulous plan for dealing with the thing.
I rebelled enough to ask Slim, “You sure?”
She sing-sang, “I’m so sure, aren’t I, doggie? Are you sure, too? You’re such a good doggie. It’d be so nice if you two lame-brain dingle-berries would do as I ask, wouldn’t it, fella?”
With that, Rusty and I started easing ourselves backward and sideways.
The dog took its eye off Slim and swiveled its head to watch us. The threats in its growl told us to stay put, but we kept moving.
With only one eye, it couldn’t watch both of us at once.
Ignoring Slim straight in front of it, the dog jerked its head from side to side like a frantic spectator at a tennis match. Its growl grew from threat to outrage, drowning out Slim’s quiet voice.
She reached to her waist, grabbed her T-shirt and skinned it up over her head.
The dog fixed its eye on her.
“Go, guys!” she yelled.
Rusty and I dashed for the snack stand. I slammed my side into its front wall to stop myself fast. As I ducked and interlocked my fingers, I saw Slim in a tug-o-war with the dog. She had her right knee on the ground. Her left leg was out in
Arnold Nelson, Jouko Kokkonen