O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1921 - BestLightNovel.com
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When he was only three weeks old he pointed a b.u.t.terfly that lit in the yard in front of his nose.
"Come here, Molly," yelled Jim to his wife. "Pointed--the little cuss!"
When Thompson started taking the growing pups out of the yard, into the fields to the side of the Devants' great southern winter home, Oak k.n.o.b, it was Comet who strayed farthest from the man's protecting care. And when Jim taught them all to follow when he said "Heel," to drop when he said "Drop," and to stand stock-still when he said "Ho,"
he learned far more quickly than the others.
At six months he set his first covey of quail, and remained perfectly staunch. "He's goin' to make a great dog," said Thompson.
Everything--size, muscle, nose, intelligence, earnestness--pointed to the same conclusion. Comet was one of the favoured of the G.o.ds.
One day, after the leaves had turned red and brown and the mornings grown chilly, a crowd of people, strangers to him, arrived at Oak k.n.o.b. Then out of the house with Thompson came a big man in tweed clothes, and the two walked straight to the curious young dogs, who were watching them with s.h.i.+ning eyes and wagging tails.
"Well, Thompson," said the big man, "which is the future champion you've been writing me about?"
"Pick him out for yourself, sir," said Thompson confidently.
After that they talked a long time planning for the future of Comet.
His yard training was now over (Thompson was only yard trainer), and he must be sent to a man experienced in training and handling for field trials.
"La.r.s.en's the man to bring him out," said the big man in tweeds, who was George Devant himself. "I saw his dogs work in the Canadian Derby."
Thompson spoke hesitatingly, apologetically, as if he hated to bring the matter up. "Mr. Devant, ... you remember, sir, a long time ago La.r.s.en sued us for old Ben."
"Yes, Thompson; I remember, now that you speak of it."
"Well, you remember the court decided against him, which was the only thing it could do, for La.r.s.en didn't have any more right to that dog than the Sultan of Turkey. But, Mr. Devant, I was there, and I saw La.r.s.en's face when the case went against him."
Devant looked keenly at Thompson.
"Another thing, Mr. Devant," Thompson went on, still hesitatingly; "La.r.s.en had a chance to get hold of this breed of pointers and lost out, because he d.i.c.kered too long, and acted cheesy. Now they've turned out to be famous. Some men never forget a thing like that.
La.r.s.en's been talkin' these pointers down ever since, sir."
"Go on," said Devant.
"I know La.r.s.en's a good trainer. But it'll mean a long trip for the young dog to where he lives. Now, there's an old trainer lives near here, Wade Swygert. There never was a straighter man than him. He used to train dogs in England."
Devant smiled. "Thompson, I admire your loyalty to your friends; but I don't think much of your business sense. We'll turn over some of the others to Swygert, if he wants 'em. Comet must have the best. I'll write La.r.s.en to-night, Thompson. To-morrow, crate Comet and send him off."
Just as no dog ever came into the world under more favourable auspices, so no dog ever had a bigger "send-off" than Comet. Even the ladies of the house came out to exclaim over him, and Marian Devant, pretty, eighteen, and a sports-woman, stooped down, caught his head between her hands, looked into his fine eyes, and wished him "Good luck, old man." In the living-room the men laughingly drank toasts to his future, and from the high-columned portico Marian Devant waved him good-bye, as in his clean padded crate he was driven off, a bewildered youngster, to the station.
Two days and two nights he travelled, and at noon of the third day, at a lonely railroad station in a prairie country that rolled like a heavy sea, he was lifted, crate and all, off the train. A lean, pale-eyed, sanctimonious-looking man came toward him.
"Some beauty that, Mr. La.r.s.en," said the agent as he helped La.r.s.en's man lift the crate onto a small truck.
"Yes," drawled La.r.s.en in a meditative voice, "pretty enough to look at--but he looks scared--er--timid."
"Of course he's scared," said the agent; "so would you be if they was to put you in some kind of a whale of a balloon an' s.h.i.+p you in a crate to Mars."
The station agent poked his hands through the slats and patted the head. Comet was grateful for that, because everything was strange. He had not whined nor complained on the trip, but his heart had pounded fast, and he had been homesick.
And everything continued to be strange: the treeless country through which he was driven, the bald house and huge barns where he was lifted out, the dogs that crowded about him when he was turned into the kennel yard. These eyed him with enmity and walked round and round him. But he stood his ground staunchly for a youngster, returning fierce look for fierce look, growl for growl, until the man called him away and chained him to a kennel.
For days Comet remained chained, a stranger in a strange land. Each time at the click of the gate announcing Larson's entrance he sprang to his feet from force of habit, and stared hungrily at the man for the light he was accustomed to see in human eyes. But with just a glance at him the man would turn one or more of the other dogs loose and ride off to train them.
But he was not without friends of his own kind. Now and then another young dog (he alone was chained up) would stroll his way with wagging tail, or lie down near by, in that strange bond of sympathy that is not confined to man. Then Comet would feel better and would want to play, for he was still half puppy. Sometimes he would pick up a stick and shake it, and his partner would catch the other end. They would tug and growl with mock ferocity, and then lie down and look at each other curiously.
If any attention had been paid him by La.r.s.en, Comet would have quickly overcome his feeling of strangeness. He was no milksop. He was like an overgrown boy, off at college or in some foreign city. He was sensitive, and not sure of himself. Had La.r.s.en gained his confidence, it would all have been different. And as for La.r.s.en--he knew that perfectly well.
One fine sunny afternoon La.r.s.en entered the yard, came straight to him, and turned him loose. In the exuberance of his spirits he ran round and round the yard, barking in the faces of his friends. La.r.s.en let him out, mounted a horse, and commanded him to heel. He obeyed with wagging tail.
A mile or more down the road La.r.s.en turned off into the fields. Across his saddle was something the young pointer had had no experience with--a gun. That part of his education Thompson had neglected, at least put off, for he had not expected that Comet would be sent away so soon. That was where Thompson had made a mistake.
At the command "Hi on" the young pointer ran eagerly around the horse, and looked up into the man's face to be sure he had heard aright. At something he saw there the tail and ears drooped momentarily, and there came over him again a feeling of strangeness, almost of dismay.
La.r.s.en's eyes were mere slits of blue gla.s.s, and his mouth was set in a thin line.
At a second command, though, he galloped off swiftly, boldly. Round and round an extensive field of straw he circled, forgetting any feeling of strangeness now, every fibre of his being intent on the hunt, while La.r.s.en, sitting on his horse, watched him with appraising eyes.
Suddenly there came to Comet's nose the smell of game birds, strong, pungent, compelling. He stiffened into an earnest, beautiful point.
Heretofore in the little training he had had Thompson had come up behind him, flushed the birds, and made him drop. And now La.r.s.en, having quickly dismounted and tied his horse, came up behind him, just as Thompson had done, except that in La.r.s.en's hand was the gun.
The old-fas.h.i.+oned black powder of a generation ago makes a loud explosion. It sounds like a cannon compared with the modern smokeless powder now used by all hunters. Perhaps it was only an accident that had caused La.r.s.en before he left the house to load his pump gun with black powder sh.e.l.ls.
As for Comet he only knew that the birds rose; then above his head burst an awful roar, almost splitting his tender eardrums, shocking every sensitive nerve, filling him with terror such as he had never felt before. Even then, in the confusion and horror of the surprise, he turned to the man, head ringing, eyes dilated. A single rea.s.suring word, and he would have steadied. As for La.r.s.en, though, he declared afterward (to others and to himself even) that he noticed no nervousness in the dog; that he was only intent on getting several birds for breakfast.
Twice, three times, four times, the pump gun bellowed in its cannon-like roar, piercing the eardrums, shattering the nerves. Comet turned; one more glance backward at a face, strange, exultant--and then the puppy in him conquered. Tail tucked, he ran away from that shattering noise.
Miles he ran. Now and then, stumbling over briars, he yelped. Not once did he look back. His tail was tucked, his eyes crazy with fear.
Seeing a house, he made for that. It was the noon hour, and a group of farm hands was gathered in the yard. One of them, with a cry "Mad dog!" ran into the house after a gun. When he came out, they told him the dog was under the porch. And so he was. Pressed against the wall, in the darkness, the magnificent young pointer with the quivering soul waited, panting, eyes gleaming, the horror still ringing in his ears.
Here La.r.s.en found him that afternoon. A boy crawled underneath the porch and dragged him out. He, who had started life favoured of the G.o.ds, who that morning even had been full of high spirits, who had circled a field like a champion, was now a cringing, shaking creature, like a homeless cur.
And thus it happened that Comet came home, in disgrace--a gun-shy dog, a coward, expelled from college, not for some youthful prank, but because he was--yellow. And he knew he was disgraced. He saw it in the face of the big man, Devant, who looked at him in the yard where he had spent his happy puppyhood, then turned away. He knew it because of what he saw in the face of Jim Thompson.
In the house was a long and plausible letter, explaining how it happened:
I did everything I could. I never was as surprised in my life. The dog's hopeless.
As for the other inhabitants of the big house, their minds were full of the events of the season: de luxe hunting parties, more society events than hunts; lunches in the woods served by uniformed butlers; launch rides up the river; arriving and departing guests. Only one of them, except Devant himself, gave the gun-shy dog a thought. Marian Devant came out to visit him in his disgrace. She stooped before him as she had done on that other and happier day, and again caught his head between her hands. But his eyes did not meet hers, for in his dim way he knew he was not now what he had been.
"I don't believe he's yellow--inside!" she declared, looking up at Thompson, her cheeks flushed.
Thompson shook his head.
"I tried him with a gun, Miss Marian," he declared. "I just showed it to him, and he ran into his kennel."
"I'll go get mine. He won't run from me."
But at sight of her small gun it all came back. Again he seemed to hear the explosion that had shattered his nerves. The Terror had entered his very soul. In spite of her pleading, he made for his kennel. Even the girl turned away from him now. And as he lay panting in the shelter of his kennel he knew that never again would men look at him as they had looked, or life be sweet to him as it had been.