Holiday Memory: The Cowardly Catatonic Christmas Canine of '76 and Points Thereafter

Each year rather than a “in other news this year the thing on my back stopped bleeding and my petunias are just lovely!” Christmas letter I send a “Substantively True Christmas Story”. I was a bit stumped this year but then I remembered Corky, who came to us on Christmas and had a very interesting resolution and afterward and whose story I’ve always wanted to use, so this year he stars in the story-letter. Since it’s mundane and pointless I thought I’d share it.
THE ODD BUT TRUE TALE OF CORKY THE COWARDLY CHRISTMAS DOG, or **KITTY & CARRIE’S MOST UNLIKELY PROTECTOR AND THE COMING OF THE FUZZY BITCH NIMUE **

Part 1

12 Days or So Before Christmas, 1976

My sister celebrated the third hour of her second Saturday at her first job by quitting on the spot and bringing home a filthy psychotic homeless purebred and buying a Reese’s bar. It was her freshman year of college and she had taken a weekend job at Kimball’s Novelties & Gifts at the Eastdale Mall in Montgomery, Alabama to earn her first ever “own” Christmas money. When she pulled into our driveway that Saturday, several hours before she was supposed to be home, she told our perplexed mother “the boss was a jerk and wanted me to do something morally repulsive so I walked out… but look what I brought home!”

My mother was too busy trying to get her to elaborate on “morally repulsive” to notice what Becki had brought home when she noticed not the dog but its olfactory carte de visite. “If he tried to force you to… what in the hell is that stench?”

“Oh, that…” said Becki. “I may not have Christmas money this year, but…”

“Well, you’ve got the money you earned for the two days you worked…”

“I don’t care about it. I’m not going back in that place to get my check. But…”

“What do you mean? It’s your money, they owe it to you…”

“It’s not worth it. I’ll sell my hair first. But anyway, I was upset about not having Christmas money because of the asshole manager and about to cry and I was walking out the back door by the dumpsters back to my car and you remember how in Genesis Abraham was crying because he had to sacrifice Isaac and then he sees a calf tangled up in the bush?”

“It was a ram” I volunteered.

“Whatever, the point is God sent an animal in a thicket. Well He did it again! I don’t have the money to buy you gifts so God sent me a calf to give to the family for Christmas…”

“Oh God no! No Becki!” my mother said, putting her foot down. “You are not bringing another wild cat into our house again! That last one damned near killed your brother!”

When my sister started driving the year before she was almost immediately seen as the prophesied Deliverer to every stray cat rummaging in dumpsters from Weokahatchee to Montgomery, a distance of forty miles with a stray cat to mileage ratio of about 1:4. The last one had been a mostly pure Siamese, Mordecai, whose presence had majorly pissed off our existing stray Siamese Bela, a feline Pol Pot (I know, Cambodian, etc.) who though he had long been banished from the house for partially blinding the Pekingese still had a major proprietary interest in the place. Unfortunately with Bela not allowed inside and Mordecai not allowed (or inclined to go) outside they were only able to scratch and “mrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrlllllll” at each other through screen doors and glass windows until a heat wave the summer before. That was when my brother decided the air conditioning and fan would work better if he cracked his bedroom window one night.

The entire house woke at 4 a.m. to my 15 year old brother Daniel’s cries of “Holy shit motherfucker goddamn piss motherfucker motherfucker! Mama! BRING ME A fucking GUN AND KILL THESE COCKSUCKERS!” occasionally muffled by and occasionally overpowering hellish feline shrieking. We all came running, my mother with the gun her oldest son had asked for (when an 18 month old cries for a bottle at 4 a.m. in the country he may or may not get it, but when a 15 year old child yells for a gun at 4 a.m. in Weokahatchee it’s on its way immediately). On his bed and around his legs and arms and chest the title match was still raging.

Bela had come through the window. Mordecai had come into the bedroom and both chose teh bed as the high ground. Both cats had drawn blood from the other but it was nothing like the amount oozing from my brother’s chest and arms. Those looked like he had slashed himself in one of those ancient Baal worship rituals depicted in the *Reader’s Digest * book on People of the Bible.

As my brother lay bleeding and cursing a blue streak from pain and shock and as Becki screamed “PLEASE DON’T SHOOT MORDECAI! SHOOT BELA IF YOU HAVE TO, BUT NOT MORDECAI!” as my mother was raising the .38 to fire a shot out the open window to scare the raging ball of catfight that was more pissed than ever now that my father was flailing at them with a belt grabbed from Daniel’s dresser (for it’s not a good idea to separate two entangled Siamese, they’re Betta fish with claws) I was having a thought I can still remember well. It was “Man, I wish I could draw like those people who drew the Baal worship rituals in that Reader’s Digest book… that would be so cool to be able to draw ancient buildings and pagan rites and tents and Abraham and all”. This is as good a segue as any back to whatever God had sent Becki in a thicket by the dumpster.

“No, no! He’s anything but wild! And he’s not another cat. I promise I’ll never bring home another cat. Unless it’s white or a Persian.” She opened her back door and removed the present acquired from Yahweh’s Ye Olde Christmas Thicket & Dumpster. “Look at him… isn’t he pitiful?”

Pitiful was halfway to a down payment on a description of him. The little dog was filthy, stinking, obviously starving and damned near comatose, making no sound and offering neither resistance nor assistance other than to roll on his back and raise all four legs and tail in a “make no mistake, I am completely submissive and will not fight for my life, take what you want and do what you will, please just make it quick” plea as Becki reached onto the seat. She scooped him up and held him, still on his back like a baby. “Look at him? Did you ever see a little dog so peaceful and tame?”

My mother looked at him and answered “Yeah. Freckles. Just after I ran over his neck”. This dog was less tame than near death, his eyes dilated and glazed in an unfocusing stare. “Is he sick? He looks like he’s almost dead… honey I don’t know that he’s going to live…”

“Oh he’s got plenty of life in him” Becki assured us. “You should have seen how fast those little bitty legs could run when I tried to get near him at the dumpster! If he hadn’t run straight into that light pole and conked his head I’d never have caught him, would I pwecious?”

“Why were you trying to catch him?”

“Because I saw him there last weekend. He was standing by the dumpster when I was coming in last Saturday. He was hungry then but he was cleaner, but when that Chinese lady from the buffet place tossed him some pieces of chicken he ran away from her. I don’t know that he’s had anything to eat since then, cause I couldn’t believe it when he was still there this weekend. Look at him, you can feel his ribs, see… feel…”

“I’ll take your word for it. Baby, that dog is absolutely filthy. He cannot come into the house. There’s not any nametag on that collar?”

“No, I checked first thing once he knocked himself out. Just the collar… and it’s not even a collar really, just an old belt, see…”. Belt and dog had both seen better days. The dog had lost enough weight that it’s a wonder the belt could stay on his neck anymore. This was clearly a dog who was enough of a veteran to the streets that he was starving but not enough of a veteran for anything remotely like survival skills to have formed.

By this time a whole impromptu pack had formed around us, a congress of far healthier and more alert dogs, representatives from every major size category and age and ranging from family retainers of more than a decade like Kitty and Carrie’s visiting delegate Bear VII* to recent transients of the sort who saw our farm as a hostel with vittles on their way home from the war. Only our chosen dogs had names, the others just had temporary designations based on identifying characteristics (“One-Ear”, “Nutless Bob”, “Pregnant Red”, etc.). They all sniffed and stared but none barked and the new dog the Virgin Becki was swaddling did not seem to notice them. Or anything else.

“I think he’s some sort of collie” I volunteered. “See, he’s red and white like a collie… I think… under all the dirt.”

“He might be a Collie mix” my sister allowed, “but he’s got dachshund or something in him too. See how long he is? And those little bitty legs.”

“If he’s a Collie he’s a midget one” my mother observed. “With rickets or something. Hold him upright…”. Becki repositioned the little unfocusing dog with the look of one approaching the guillotine and too resigned to it to be terrfied. Seeing him held vertically, his legs were indeed tiny, and his underbelly was white but you couldn’t

“ARF! ARR!” came the Basset-tine bass from below, for in moving to get a better view of the Dog from the Thicket my mother had accidentally stepped on the tiny tail that gave Nutless Bob his last name and he’d expressed discontent just under New Dog.

“Shut the hell up you good for nothing no sac son of a bitch!” Odd that the same sentence worked on both dogs and my father. “Anyway I was trying to see if that’s a tattoo on his ear or if AAHH! OH GOOD GOD BECKI! That dog just pissed and shit all over itself!”

“No he didn’t… it… well yeah, I guess he did but it’s Nutless Bob’s fault for barking at him! Jon go get Mama a damn towel! But you know he’s got to be scared. He’s probably never been in a car before and he’s hungry and all… Look at him, he’s obviously a house dog and he was out having to fend for himself and didn’t know how! He’ll be a new little dog before nightfall, you’ll see…”

My mother was annoyed, not as much at having to wipe a ricocheted pee splotch from her cut-offs as she had been about to change them anyway (she’d been sweating in the yard all day making camp stew in the pots and decorating the columns to look like candy canes) but more at the prospects of yet another stray. In any given year we hosted a dozen transient dogs in addition to the half dozen or so of our own. Most showed up starving, abandoned by hunters who couldn’t find them when they withdrew or tossed out as unwanted puppies by “town folk” or had been born to dogs from the previous categories or were dogs of the dead from a few miles away.

New Thicket Dog’s catatonia was the exception as most came to us plenty friendly and happy. We’d simply go out to fill the trough with the cheapest brand of dry dog food and see a new canine face poking his or her head in just as if they ate here everyday while wagging, even managing a “not to complain but the scrap bucket wasn’t nearly as full as it could have been tonight was it? How ‘bout some canned food to supplement…” look of entitlement somehow by Day 2. Even the cheapest dry food bought in hundred pound bags at the non-profit Cattleman’s Cooperative got expensive when you had to feed as many welfare dogs as we did, but the alternative was to let them starve and that also just wasn’t… Well, fucked up we may have been but made of the granite outcroppings from Locksley Hall we weren’t. (In case you’re wondering, there was no such thing as a county pound at the time; the nearest humane shelter was in Montgomery 40 miles away and without a Montgomery County address they charged almost as much to drop off a dog as they did to adopt one.)

On the other hand the little thing was just so, the word again- pitiful. And he looked like he might be pretty or cute when cleaned up. And there was a vacancy for a housedog at the moment, Favorite Fritz having been the first housedog ever to voluntarily- at his insistence even- abdicate his position to become an outside dog, while Niko the Half-Blind Pekingese had taken to wandering last year and consequently had seen only half the truck coming, and poor little Freckles the year or so before that having learned permanently and for the third and final time why it was not a good idea to take naps under tires. (If dogs in Weokahatchee had been required to have death certificates the forms would have had lines for make and model.)

So the house was, very unusually, dogless. Even my father had opined that “there’s a certain void… especially at Christmas time- without the presence of an interior dog”. There were far more pictures of dogs from Christmas Past than there were of my brother (as he still points out bitterly whenever a photo album is pulled). And though my mother did bite her bark was worse, especially where animals were concerned, for she really was big softie with anything hungry or aching and we knew it. And it’s not like Becki could just take the starving thing back to the dumpster. He could stay, but only on probation.

“Well… give him a bath" my mother instructed. “I’m sure there’s some of Fritz’s shampoo left somewhere.” Baths had been a major reason why Fritz relocated himself, though the main reason was his love for Bee-Bee the St. Bernard, an ambitious but doomed love considering that he was half dachshund and half poodle. There’s is an interesting love story with a strange and unresolved outcome, but since it wasn’t at Christmas I’ll resume.

"Scrub him good, get all that dirt off and those tangles out, and I mean out here in the yard! Well no, the garage, the sun’s gone down so it’s gonna get cold, but not in the house, you hear me? The garage. And close the door to it so the other dogs can’t get to him. There should be some old blankets in there you can use for a towel, because I mean it, he can’t come inside like that. I don’t want to smell cedar and filthy shit covered Collie mutant all through the holidays, I’m putting my foot down on that one. I will not have that dog thinking he’s home! Jon! Stop laughing at that dog pissing on your sister again and go get her some clean pants. And on your way in put him a couple of hot dogs in the boiler. I’m going to go take a bath myself. Don’t bother me for a while.”

My mother left to go inside but as an afterthought she turned to pass another ultimatum, delivered to me but clearly intended for Becki to let her know that she was *absolutely serious * about not wanting this dog to be treated like a pet. “And when I say cook him some hot dogs for that dog I mean the cheap ones! And get the ones that are already red at the ends. That dog’s not getting any beef wranglers, I don’t care how pitiful he is! ”

We took him into the garage where Becki cooed to him while I boiled hot dogs long enough to take the chill off and brought them back along with her clean pants. We offered him the wieners as he sat motionless on the cold floor, staring blank and straight ahead like the captured Samurai waiting to disembowel himself from the first episode of Shogun that would premiere a few years later. He would not eat even when we broke the wienies into bite sized contingents and tried to put them into his mouth, which our attempts to open met with completely passive resistance. He did not growl or even change expression, but neither would he open or eat, though he could smell the wienies and he was salivating even as he trembled.”

“Well if he’s not going to eat we might as well do the bath. Help me bring the tub in” Becki asked. We went outside to get the galvanized tub, returned less than a minute later and the dog was still sitting motionless save for a tremble and staring straight ahead. The wienies however were gone and it was obvious that where they had been sitting had been licked.

He endured his bath with closed eyed Stoic terror, then the drying with trembling that was obviously not just from cold. Occasional whimpers as he let Becki brush him were the first evidence he could make sounds, but again with Zen monk peasant resignation and discipline he endured it without changing position.

He was even skinner than we’d originally realized. This dog had been homeless for a while though clearly not long enough to get the knack for it. While my sister continued to bathe and groom him and anoint him with the Charlie! (“there’s a fragrance that’s here to stay and they call it…”) from her purse I went back inside and boiled two more wienies. I briefly thought of substituting the beef franks, but I was positive my mother had counted them for it was in minor details rather than major issues that she would usually choose as her own Daniel’s Chest battlefield, so I stuck to the cheap ones.

Again he would not eat from my hand or even my sister’s. The latter particularly appalling as all dogs loved my sister and still do. Even Mad Rex, a beast of significant if not primary lupine ancestry, the only dog who ever had to be chained (the alternative was to shoot him) and who hated everybody but Kitty & Carrie (in whose yard he was chained) had made Beck-Beck his third exception and even let her put a ribbon in his hair when she was a little girl. (Mad Rex’s death of natural causes was the most surprising as the dog had “Use for Target Practice” written all over him, one of the few dogs I’ve ever hated.)

Nevertheless Thicket, his temporary name, was the exception. He did not like her, trust her or want her near him. Once again I crumbled the hotdogs, left them on the ground in front of him and my sister and I backed up a few spaces and watched from the corner. He still would not eat or even look at the wienies. We drug out the tub, emptied it, and once again returned to find the hotdogs gone and this time the dog licking his lips, until he saw us, whereupon he stopped immediately.

Cleaned and brushed we could tell much more about him. He was a beautiful little dog, strawberry blonde with white chest and belly, painfully thin but obviously not naturally so, grown but still young. And though dry he still trembled, more than ever. Becki couldn’t stop herself but stooped low, threw her arms around him and kissed his nose and head saying “Just a few days here of TLC and knowing you’re not at that dumpster wiv a China woman fwowing chicken at you and he’s gonna be a new widdle baby, yes him is! Yes him is!” The baby talk did nothing other than make him continue to stare in glass eyed silence.

When we brought him in the back door my mother looked up from the gifts she was wrapping with a “Let’s get a good look at him. Put him down and stand back a little, Jon.”

I had been carrying him in my arms like he was a crucifix and I was going to the stake. I put him a few inches from the floor and released him, thinking like all other dogs I’d ever carried (and even though I was 10 that was a lot of dogs) he’d instinctively put out his feet to right himself. Instead he dropped to the floor like a dead midget and just lay there. After a few seconds of silence we righted him whereupon he immediately rolled onto his back to let it be clearly known to my mother and me and Becki and any other dogs or Guinea Pigs or good sized roaches that may be present that he was proudly an Omega 3 submissive boy with no delusions and no plans for trying for even so much as Gamma or Beta status, let alone Alpha. Becki got him back to his feet, almost crying when she realized again just how skinny his long shortlegged body was under that thick and beautiful coat.

My mother examined him from tail tip to nose, a distance of about three feet. “He’s… damn, he’s a beautiful little thing, I’ll give him that. Becki, this dog’s a purebred of some kind… somebody somewhere is looking for him so don’t get attached. He’s a… I know I’ve seen them before…” and still talking she walked to the shelf of Britannica’s and thumbed through various volumes until she finally proclaimed “Eureka! Damn I’m good… I couldn’t remember what he was so I looked under Dogs but there are hundreds of them, then it occurred where I’ve seen them before, the queen has them, so I looked her up and finally saw a picture of her with one who looked like him, so I looked up that entry. That dog is a Corgi! Not only a Corgi but a particularly pretty one.” She us the pictures from the Corgi article and she was right on all counts.

“You’re a Corgi aren’t you? Are you a Corgi?” she asked the dog. Amazingly, for the first time he looked up at her, his head cocked. “Are you a Corgi?” She somehow had his attention. Apparently the dog was southern enough to be interested in his ancestry if not in survival. “Yeah, you’re a pretty little Corgi…” and she reached down to pet him on his head, which he took as a cue to immediately prostrate himself and whimper in terror. “Dog I’ve made it this long without killing a starving animal, I think I can make it a few more minutes! Damn I hate a cowardly animal.

“Anyway Becki, he’s a purebred. Corgis are expensive. Somebody is looking for him. When you go to pick up your paycheck you’ll put flyers up at the mall…”

“I don’t want a paycheck bad enough to go back to that store.”

“Honey you worked seven hours, after taxes and all that’s still got to be $10.”

“Mama that place is vulgar and immoral. I’d rather sell my hair than set foot in there…”

“Well fine!” snapped my mother, few things irritating her more than somebody willingly forgoing cash, especially somebody dependent on her. “But you are going to put flyers up there for this dog!” To this Becki agreed.

In the days before digital cameras or even affordable Polaroids or clear photocopies sketching could come in handy, and though she rarely practiced and took no pleasure in the talent my mother was a gifted free hand artist. On a sheet of typing paper much like the one she’d used to sketch me out the variations on the Baal worship drawing I’d asked for last summer she drew a quick but very identifiable sketch of the little dog under which she wrote

**Found at Eastdale Mall

Looks like a Corgi

Call 5**-6128

after 5 p.m. or on Sundays**

“Maybe after a few meals and a night in a warm house he won’t be so damned terrified. But Becki, you need to know that I don’t care if he has the personality of Dean Martin, he’s not staying here because somebody’s looking for him. Flyers are going up all over Montgomery. I’ll mimeograph this thing first thing Monday morning when I get to work.

Becki was elated and hugged my mother with a “Thank you Mama! I love you!” then to the dog “Did you hear that widdle bit? You dit to stay here!” Becki knew that by Monday this dog would be so out of his shell and the family would be way too attached to give him up.

When my father came home he poured himself a bourbon and Coke, lit a cigar, noticed the dog now prostate and cowering in the corner of the den (the one furthest from people) and inquired “Who the hell is that damned thing? Looks like a collie with polio.” My father’s very deep and resonant voice startled the dog, who backed his rump up further against the wall.

My mother gave him the story, including the details about the queen having Corgis and about how skinny the dog was, how Becki found him by the dumpster while leaving work, how terrified the poor thing was and how he was so cowed he would not even eat when watched even though he was starving. My father listened to it all and it made him visibly upset and emotional.

“What the hell do you mean you’re not gonna pick up that paycheck? Damn girl, you know how long it took to save ten dollars in the Depression? Hell, you’d have walked to Baltimore and back at the rumor there was $10 to be had there! People killed for less than that, died for want of less than that in medicine and food. You’re gonna pick up that check.”

“Daddy you don’t have any idea of what it was I had to put up with and what kind of stuff they sell…”

“I don’t care if they got you selling 14 year old Filipino girls to drunk Marines for ration stamps and chocolate as long as you get your commission! Might not want you going back there but it’s not gonna buy that 14 year old girl any peace if you don’t cash the check for what you already did! Shit, $10 would have gotten you two concubines in their prime and three washwomen and dinner and rotgut coconut whiskey all everynight for a week in the Phillipines.”

I sometimes wonder exactly what stories from his enlistment in the Navy during the last week and two years following World War II he never shared.

Becki was furious. “Daddy do you know what that little son of a bitch tit high tall manager wanted me to do? He wanted me to…”

Daddy’s cigar slumped and my mother stopped frying fish. Both looked at her with a clear “He wanted you to what?” query and when she did not go on they prompted with a “Go on. Tell us. He wanted you to what?”

Becki, red faced and clearly embarrassed and nervous, finally confided. “That little sawed off runt had the nerve to ask me to… to… to…” she was about to cry. “He wanted me to stop blushing when I sold absolutely vulgar stuff, and he wanted me to work Christmas Eve!”

“Oh shit girl, how cloistered did we bring you up? I’m working Christmas Eve. Your Mama would if she wasn’t a teacher. All America works Christmas Eve. Depression you’d have worked all day Christmas and all day on your Mama’s birthday and the Fourth of July and til noon on the Second Coming for the chance to earn a dollar, and here’s ten dollars you’ve done earned and you don’t have the gumption to go get it!”

“Damn it Daddy if that’s what you’re so damned concerned about I’ll make sure you get ten dollars! I’ll give it to you from my allowance.”

“Which comes from me!” my mother added. “Honey, I thought the whole point of your working was to make more than your allowance, and you don’t get $10 in a month allowance!”

“I’m just so sick and tired of Daddy not giving a damn about anything but money! He’d rather me go to hell to get $10 than to… than to… save a dog’s life…”

“I’m sure they’ve got dogs in Hell! One of ‘em has three heads as memory serves. You don’t know what $10 is cause you’ve never had to earn it. I’d a hell of a lot rather have $10 than a dog who pisses the floor whenever someone from the next county farts loud.”

“Well you might be interested to know that dog’s worth a lot more than $10. He’s a purebred Corgi.”

My father took this in, approached the dog with his cigar still lit, bent at the waist as the dog corresponded to the lowering bow by moving further into the tile floor. “You are a champion are you? Are you worth beyond the ten dollars your presence has deprived my daughter of? ARE YA?!”

Something about my father’s demeanor finally broke through Corgi’s reserve and he no longer just trembled and looked in shock when spoken to or approached. Now for the first time he actually got to his short legs and ran whimpering from the room, having no idea where he was going as he had only seen this part of the house. We later found him under the twin bed in my room.

My father turned and addressed us again. “God works in mysterious ways. He denies us funding but delivers us a pissing polio Collie coward in a thicket in a dumpster. Purebred and valuable my big pink ass, if anybody’d give you ten cents for that dog let alone ten dollars it’d mean they’d gotten hit too hard with the lobotomy chisel and the contract wouldn’t be enforceable." Taking the second bottle of bourbon from the cabinet as well as a 32 oz glass bottle of Coke and a glass of ice his last words on the subject were "Call me when supper’s ready. I’ll be out in the car listening to Grand Ol’ Opry and reflecting on what you could buy in the Philippines with $10 and on how Crazy Ass Dog Number 309 just got added to the mix.”

*Footnote to the above: Though Bear VII belonged to Kitty and Carrie my father named him. My father named 8 dogs in his life, six of them Bear [his first dog was Bear II] and the other two he named Shug and Jordan for Auburn’s football coach Shug Jordan. Naming wasn’t what he did particularly creatively; had he been Adam every animal in Eden would likely have been named ‘Bear’.

The first night Thicket tried to sleep under my bed, probably because it was the room that was the fastest to run to from the den. He came out long enough to run out the door and take refuge under the living room sofa when I came to bed, though when the Christmas Tree lights were turned back on the next morning he charged into the den and hid under an end table with his obeisant snout behind the sofa.

The one advance in his behavior was that after a day rather than cowering to every touch he simply would not be touched. He would run if you approached and Becki was right, those little bitty legs were fast.

He would eat and drink, heartily even, so long as you pushed the food under whatever piece of furniture he was cowering under at the moment and then left the room. He would later emerge long enough to shit and piss on the floor as close to his lair as possible and then return to his cell.

The second night of his residency he took shelter under my bed again. This time, determined to keep him inside, I closed the door behind me and my sympathy “ouch!” was louder than his whimper when he bolted into it a few seconds later. With the door shut he tried to run into my closet but he was too short to clear the barricade of toys and clothes in front of it (which had not been placed there as a barrier to him, it was just always there). Helpless and cornered he darted between my legs and took refuge under my bed again.

I held my hand down between the bed and the wall and stroked any part of him that remained still long enough, surprised to learn that tails could tremble as well as wag. I sang him every lullaby I could think of in the softest voice I could muster, but whenever I touched him he would move and he wanted nothing of me but my absence.

There was progress later during the night when he came out from under the bed and, though it took several attempts with his limited little legs, he actually jumped onto the mattress and curled into a little ball at the footboard. Unfortunately this progress only occurred because I had crawled out of and under the same bed in order to hold and pet him in an attempt to get him to trust me. He was beginning to snore in something like peace by the time I fell asleep myself under the same bed.


Becki did as she was instructed with the flyers but still refused to pick up her check. There may still be Montgomerians who remember the sight that occurred fifteen minutes after a spirited call between my father from his office and Becki from home ended with both slamming down the phone. The sight was of a fat gray haired man in a cowboy hat, duster and three piece rumpled suit blacklit from the bulbs that glowed on the velvet Elvis paintings and LOUDLY hurling stentorian charges of “proletarian suppressor” and “fleshpit proprietor” against the college aged manager who refused to release his daughter’s paycheck to him. The security guard was called, came, and having already in place dislike for Becki’s tit-high son of a bitch seven hour former boss and great respect for his favorite former teacher who was railing said boss, he appreciatively enjoyed the show, especially my father’s characterization of the manager as an “officious over privileged milksop whose surival when 50,000 boys of superior character died in Vietnam is in and of itself sufficient proof that if monotheism indeed prevails then only Deism can properly explain its functioning!” Nevertheless the dustered old man did not receive a check for store policy clearly stated that the last check had to be signed for in person. The only exception was if the employee had died.

“Did I not mention that my dear daughter died last weekend?" he asked. "She was tragically bitten and mostly eaten by a starved and rabid Corgi of the sort the queen has.” When told he would need the death certificate he turned in a huff and a duster and departed, furious at his daughter for impugning the morals of a Filipino girl for no pay or whatever it had built into in his mind.

School broke for Christmas that week and the Corgi was still our houseguest. On the Sunday before Christmas I answered the phone and an elderly sounding man asked to speak to “Blankie”. (Why the name Blanche gave so many people trouble over the years I’ll never know.) My mother spoke to him.

“This is Blankie.”

“Heidi there, I was at the mall doin’ some shoppin’ for my grandsons and I saw this here sign bout a Corgi dog. This the right number?”

“Yes sir.”

“That dog, was he wearin’ a belt for a collah?”

“Yessir he sure was!”

“Kinda strawberry blonde and white chested?”

“That’s him!”

“Little bitty legs? Scare’t of his own shadda?”

“That’s him exactly!”

“Reckoned it must be. Aren’t too many them dogs around. His name’s Corky if you’re wonderin’. He b’longed to my Mama what lived in an apartment behind that mall and she was hard a hearin’. When they told her he’s a Corgi back when he was a pup she thought they was sayin’ his name’s Corky, so it just stuck.”

There was a long silence which Mama Blankie finally broke with

“Well how about that?”

“Yep. Pretty dog. She was crazy ‘bout him and him ‘bout her but couldn’ no one else git near to him. He got loose after she died and run like hell when we tried to git him but he just run faster. He can go like a bat outta you know even wid those little legs when he’s scare’t. And that’s pretty much always, near as I saw. Reckon that’s how he winded up at the mall.”

“Well, he’s here now and he’s healthy and well. Would you like directions to come get him? We live about forty miles from…”

“Oh hell no, but thank ya…”

“Well, we’ll be in Montgomery tomorrow, we can drop him off anywhere you’d like to meet us…”

“Oh no, lissen, hadn’t any of us got no use for him. Don’t want him, in fact. I just wanted to call and let ya’ll know who he is and that he’s all your’s. Sounds to me like he’s got a sweet deal up there in the country up there and I wouldn’t dream of takin’ him out of it.”

“Well, the thing is sir that we have about ten dogs already and he’s just not…”

“I’m sorry I’m a little hard of hearin’ myself…”

“I said that…”

“Well that’s good. Y’all have a merry Christmas and give that dog a bone from us. Bye now and God bless y’all…” and the next sound was a dial tone. He never gave his name or called back but told enough about the dog that we knew he was legitimate. And “Corky” was all ours.

We’d give him the news once he stopped shaking. And we found him. He had been hiding behind the clothes dryer when last seen.

Every year we take out the Christmas Train set which runs around the Christmas tree from Thanksgiving to whenever we feel like tossing out the Christmas tree. This would fascinate our dog, who would bark at it. :slight_smile:

Then, one rainy Christmas, we came home to find the train gone. :mad:
But our presents were still there. :confused:
In the dog bedding we found the Tin Soldier horribly mutilated. The Christmas tree and Angel was found clinging to the top of the drapes. For the next week we found random wheels and blocks of wood under things and behind things. The big question was: Where the hell(or should I say heaven or North Pole) did Santa go? :stuck_out_tongue:

Poor Corky had to go. There was simply no option. Even Becki agreed for in more than a week even she had been unable to bring him out of his shell. Her only request was that we not take him to the pound just yet but that we try to find a home for him ourselves first, “Just for a week or so”, since it was “my fault he’s here to begin with”. It was agreed, though my mother vetoed my father’s demand for $10 to consider the notion. My mother drew yet another picture of the dog and made yet another flyer. This one read
**JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS

PUREBRED CORGI

NO PAPERS

VERY SHY

FREE TO

GOOD HOME

Call 5**-6128 **

As school was out for Christmas she gave it to my father to give to his secretary to mimeograph. He did, and he posted the flyers. Making one or two “corrections” along the way that damned near caused him to be divorced.

[to be cont’d soon]

yay!

Ahem. I have finished reading thus far and really, really want you to post the rest now, please. Please?

Daddy had been forbidden to write copy ever since he began a newspaper ad for a used Buick that began with a Robert Browning quote and blamed the lack of calls on the “half retarded stenographer whose illiterate typos threw off the cadence” (very true, in case you’re wondering) but when he asked permission to “at least redress an unclear matter” in the flyer Mama granted it without asking what it was. As passionate as the middle-aged old-man could be about literature (and history and cattle and land) he was equally if not more passionate about money, and somehow the dog’s presence had become so conflated with Becki’s refusal to pick up her paycheck that ultimately the dog became the personific- anthropomor- caninomorp- reason that his daughter, and thus by extension he (since any money she spent would be provided by his coffers), was out $10, plus an estimate $4 for cost of food and inconvenience.

Meanwhile, since it looked as if the dog might be with us for a while, we called our vet (an old man named Thomas Jefferson Washington- his real name, and he had a brother named Alexander Hamilton Washington) to ask for advice on how to deal with the dog or if perhaps there was a physical problem due to malnutrition or whatever that could cause his behavior. The vet, one of the best in his field, simply said

“Naw, some animals is jist skittery by nature. Some people too for that matter. I’m guessin’ he’s one of ‘em.”

Did he have any advice for how to make the dog less afraid of us, because “the poor little crazy thing pees if we try to touch him!”

He thought a while and said “Y’all ever saw that movie got the gal from that twins show who’s married to that Gomez Addams fella, you know who I’m talkin’ bout, and got that Mrs. Robinson in it, and they played like they was Helen Keller and her teacher?” (Old Southerners who were adults before they ever saw a movie and middle-aged before they ever saw a television could be delightful in referring to pop culture.) “Well it’s just like she Mrs. Robinson had to do with that Keller gal. She had to make her totally dependant on her, make her have to trust her in order to live. Now this dog, he eatin’ and drinkin’?”

“Yessir, but only when we put it under the bed or wherever he is and then go away.”

“Well al’right, there’s your mistake. Here’s what you do. You take his food and his water and you keep it wherever y’all are, you got me? Make it where that little skittery dog gotta come to where y’all are to eat, and when he does, you pet him, just real gentle. He’ll come ‘round eventually, might not ever be friendly, but his survival instinct, it ain’t gone let him go without water for very long. Even if he gotta come to where you are, he’ll come and drank.”

We did as he suggested. Unfortunately the dog was as stubborn as he was cowardly and he would not come out from under the bed. We decided to make a total siege and even when we went to bed at night his food and his water dish were in the middle of my parents bedroom, which Corky knew because we’d picked him and taken him in there to show him. If he ate at all it was only while he was in front of the dish while we were changing clothes where he had peed on us.

The first phone call did not come until the day before Christmas Eve. It was from a mother who wanted to know “Do you think he’d be good with kids? I’ve got four wild younguns who’d love a little dog for Christmas…” we had to tell her honestly that “We’re sorry, he’s terribly shy just like the sign says.”

“The sign doesn’t say that, it jus… oh… that’s weird…maybe it does. It’s kind of hard to understand.” She hung up, appreciative but disappointed.

The next call was stranger.

“Yeah, that dog you got… you say it’s a purebred?”

“Yes sir.”

“You got the AKC registration and all?”

“No sir. But he is a purebred.”

“Yeah, but without papers you can’t get nothin’ for breeding him. Shame about that.”

“I’m sorry. He’s a stray. That’s why he’s free’.”

“Free? He’s not free on the sign I saw, it says… oh… here it is… well… y’all seen this sign lately? Looks like someone had a little fun with what y’all wrote. Got two different handwritings and all on it.”

This was definitely weird and we resolved to ask Daddy exactly what “unclear matter” he had redressed. Meanwhile, the new treatment with Corky finally seemed to work a little. He certainly didn’t love us but at least we were finally able to pick him up without him peeing on us. We thought he must be monitoring our movements and only coming to get water when we’ve stepped away, but at least he’s a little friendlier.

According to the vet that afternoon when we took suddenly ill Corky in it was probably less that he was growing accustomed to us that made him stop peeing on us than it was the dehydration. The damned dog had simply refused to drink once it became clear we were part of the bargain. One saline solution and a $12 vet bill later (though Washington did not charge us for the after-hours part since he felt partly responsible- “I was wrong, you just got what we in vet’inary medicine call ‘one crazy ass dog’”) he returned home and we resumed feeding and watering him under the bed.

When interrogated my father stated the absolute truth. Yes, he had mimeographed that advertisement just as he said he would. Yes, it was the same ad. Yes, it still said Free to Good Home and he resented the impression he took anything out when he had promised he would not. No, he did not happen to have a copy of the new advertisement with him, all it said different was that…

“Well shit… get out of the car! I can’t believe you’d get in the car and drive forty miles away the night before your whole family’s coming for Christmas Eve just to see a copy of the ad!”

“Garland there’s something you’re not mentioning about that ad. I want to see it.”

Well, my father remembered, he might happen to have a copy of it in his car. And he did. And he was telling the truth, he had not changed a word. He had just added to them a bit. Most conversations and ads such as this have to be recreated from memory but not this one as my brother still has a 30 year old faded mimeograph copy (with a very barely discernible vaguely dog like face visible). The ad now read:

JUST IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS* comes a babe the likes of which may have made the angels of Bethlehem switch to tidings of dogs. This one of a kind*
PUREBRED CORGI*
would raise gasps of supreme admiration at her Britannic Majesty’s court*
NO PAPERS* can attest to the majesty of this
exquisite specimen of canine nobility.*
VERY SHY indeed would be the person who would not sing in public
The praises of this beautiful animal.

FREE TO* inspect
in the very*
**GOOD HOME **in Alabama’s pastorally poetic cattle countrywhere he currently resides
this dog can be delivered unto you this Christmas for a nominal payment of $25 o.b.o.
(Will deliver to Montgomery for an extra $5 or an extra $10 on Christmas Day.)

**Call 567-6128 for directions or on evenings only but
FIRST CALL 8
-5850 daytime to hear more testimony or to arrange delivery and payment.

“By your own damned evaluation he is a chosen dog of royalty and perhaps worth $100! I find $25 to not only be a bargain but opportunity to provide a learning experience for our daughter on the value of property and money!”

My mother was not amused. She saw this ad as the reason the damned dog was still with us and even now up another $12 for a vet bill. She just wanted him gone. There was a less than cordial mood that night, but since that would take time away from the “Miracle that Befell Corky the Cowardly Christmas Corgi” the next day I’ll skip it.

Brilliant!

Part 2. A CHRISTMAS EVE MIRACLE

On Christmas Eve the house filled with people, relatives and their own human strays tagging along. Corky was originally removed to the garage to spare his nerves, but that was unfortunately also where the pool table was and all of the loudest members of the family wanted to play. The master bedroom was occupied by drunk and loud family and guests seeking privacy to continue their conversations away from the louder and drunker people in the living room. My bedroom, location of Corky’s favorite bed to hide under, was occupied by me and my cousin Luna’s son and other kids present, all of us playing loud and rough, while Becki’s bedroom was occupied by Luna’s baby and also the baby who belonged to the buxom neo-hippie woman with the pigtails who we was the sister or cousin or friend or something of the girl who my cousin Jerry had met the night before and brought with him. Whoever she was she spent all of her time flirting with my grandfather, Mustang, who was more than reciprocating and offered to give her some “hands on pointers” on her pool game.

My brother’s bedroom was occupied by my napping father (who I probably ‘caught the narcolepsy’ from in retrospect and who Corky feared most of all) with a “Do Not Open Until Christmas” sign not so facetiously placed on the door. This was after all the same man who told his children and later his grandnephews “If you wake up early on Christmas morning Santa comes to take the gifts back”.

Bereft of his usual hiding places Corky found refuge under a desk in the corner of the den. All were instructed not to bother him, the few who disobeyed soon learning why as bladder leakage and whimpering took the place of the running he could not do to get away from them.

The revelry continued. After proving his pool lesson 80-something widower Mustang earned a kiss under the mistletoe from the 20-something single mother who who was related to somebody who was with Jerry, which encouraged Mustang to take her out back and prove his equal prowess with a .22 pistol. He gave her an impressive demonstration shooting leaves and branches of her selection off of trees, a racket that got him another kiss but also started all of the dogs including the mammoth St. Bernard penned out back to barking which made Corky retreat even further under the desk until he was a fetus again. Few were noticing by then.

The evening kept getting louder, various cousins and others not familiar with the dog kept trying to lay offerings at the psychotic dogs cute little feet only to have him return their kindess with a tightly closed eyes pleading “if you’re here to kill me please make it fast”, but soon he was ignored altogether and far too nervous to eat the offerings at his paws.

The last arrival of the day, the one before dinner, was The Annual Arrival of the Ancients when Kitty and Carrie, the senior members of the Christmas gathering (though both spry and only in their late 80s at the time) were brought from their cabin to the Big House amidst much hail and circumstance. Even Mustang, their junior by only three years, bowed at the waist upon their arrival, though mainly to inform his flirtmate he was flexible enough to bend at the waist. The twins as always took it in good humor, Kitty smiling (since she had the teeth) and giving a little wave and Carrie doing her imitation of Johnny Carson (not a description of her gestures but literal: it was her imitation of Johnny Carson- she’d put her arms behind her back and nod and smile, we used to beg her to do it) before finally being seated in the guest of honor seats, those on the big sofa in the den closest to the television.

Oh, and Grandmother came with them.

She wasn’t as hailed. She noticed. “I don’t know what’s so damn special about two old maid twins. Only ten years older than I am. Don’t see me getting a tickertape just for never getting married and never earning a paycheck do ya?” She was also soon ignored as the dog, however, seated in the kitchen to sample food as soon as it was placed on the table to cool. This year’s offering of her own seemed to be some sort of congealed salad with tuna and beans that Corky wasn’t the only dog who would not eat (for we always took some to the dogs when she was not looking lest she not be offended that nobody ate any, for offended she could be especially vile.)

I can’t remember the gifts she brought that year but Grandmother’s gifts were always classic. One year I was left richer by a bar of soap wrapped in tin foil (foil and soap both had been only slightly used) while Becki hauled in almost half a box of talcum powder and my mother got a Ziploc bag full of e pluribus unum candy (i.e. penny candies fused into a ball after being exposed to heat sometime over the last few decades). My father explained Grandmother’s gifts to us as follows: “She survived the Depression and many emerged from that with a near inability to spend money on frivolities for other people. Especially those like Muh, who went into the Depression that way.”

Dinner was as always served buffet style, Kitty and Carrie served first and the rest forming a long and never ending recycling line. Kitty and Carrie in some order and in tandem complimented everything and talked to each other and to all passersby. Their voices were easy to sometimes drown out in the din, but when I heard them say “What are you wantin’ baby dog? You wantin’ to come see us? Or just some of this food?” I looked over out of curiosity.

Corky was out from under the desk and, in spite of all the people and the din, he was standing in the middle of the den floor! Not only that but his big brown eyes were open and raised towards Kitty and Carrie. This was the first time the dog had ever looked at any human being without terror and an escape plan clearly in his eyes. This was more… respect.

“Mama… Becki… look….” And they did, and as I started to say something else they both went “Shhhhhhh!” They couldn’t believe what they were seeing.

Others around us kept talking but our eyes were watching Corky. He had never willingly come close or even closer to any of us, and as relatives and guests gradually filed into the kitchen to reload plates or glasses some stopped to see what we were looking at until ultimately Corky was the center of attention of a dozen or more people.

“Aren’t you a pretty thing?" a twin said, then both twins in some order: " You must be new, I don’t think we’ve seen you before, what’s your name? Hey there doll baby, you can come over here, we don’t bite.”

And the amazing thing was that Corky did come to them. It was very slow, almost crawling, but he had girded his unneutered little loins and half slithered/half walked, one tiny foot closer at a time… then another… he made Miss Jane Pittman look like Jesse Owens but he walked all the way to the old ladies. Corky the crazy cowardly Corgi was voluntarily within an inch of touching not just one but two human beings!

Both twins reached out their hands to touch him. I tried to warn them that “I wouldn’t do that… he’s really skittish!” but it was too late. They had already touched him.

And he had let them!

Corky had a total of more than 170 years of wrinkled twin hands on his head and he was not only allowing it, he even gave something like a doggie sigh of contentment. He began to pant. He whimpered in what was a plea for more petting rather than mercy. When one of the twins offered him a bite of her country fried steak, he took it! Then he asked for one from the other twin… Corky had voluntarily gone to another person… TWO other people!

“You sure are a sweet little feller! And pretty too! You’re just some kind of a tute widdle tingy ain’t ya?”

And let them touch him, and let them feed him!

He even asked for another bite from each!

And when he was finished he put his tiny front legs on the sofa between them, stood on his hind legs and licked the twins, clearly not for scraps but from affection!

Grandmother, among the most evil humans in history never to have been actually placed in the same house as a newly slaughtered baby and perhaps wanting to steal some of the twins attention, reached down from her seat at the opposite end of the same sofa to pet the dog. This was the ultimate test. Grandmother was frigid and most dogs sensed this (one exception: an Australian sheepdog named Shep loved her and she even grudgingly came to like him slightly). If Corky would let Grandmother pet him and not complain then that would mean… her hand was on his head, between his ears… he gave a happy little barklet!

Corky had just said “Waaaaah… waaah…”. CAPTAIN KELLER! HE KNOWS! HE KNOWS! Corky knows! G, -O, -O, -D B, -O, -Y!

Even my father was smiling, which he never did for a dog. None of us could have been more surprised or elated. Becki was even crying.

On this Holy Eve Corky had finally decided he was safe, finally decided he was homeless no longer, he had finally joined our family. And we could not contain ourselves.

My sister and my mother and a couple of cousins and I all ran into the room cheering and swooped down to hold and pet Corky, who was a real boy at last!


It took several paper towels and half a can of comet to soak up all the pee but luckily he had been running too fast for more than a teaspoon full or so to get on the sofa. The shit was the bigger problem, because had Corgis been the only dogs born with a cloaca he wouldn’t have been able to evict that much shit that fast as he had made his shrieking howling getaway. Still, some PineSol and Comet ultimately did the trick, and the nice thing about Kitty and Carrie having grown up in a cabin on an active farm is that the smell of exrement didn’t take away from their appetite. They just observed “He’s a nervous little thang. But ain’t he cute, though?”

“Cute if you don’t mind seeing two pounds of shit fly out while the Christ Child’s on TV” my Grandmother added, biting another plug out of her Cornish hen. “Damn, I’ve had times I wished I could do that much that quick, but I gotta take pills and prunes and cherries if I wanna go more than two or three times a week these days. How often y’all go, twins?”

Since the bedrooms had been abandoned for dinner Corky had been able to find a nice place to hide for the rest of the night. I suppose ultimately we had just expected too much too soon.

Conclusion of Christmas Eve next, then The Epilogue (in which Corky… well, wait and see)

As Corky quaked in a backroom the party regained its momentum from the Dog Mess Incident. The wagon trains full of presents were passed out and opened, the guests began to depart, and by the time the Channel 12 newsman began tracking Santa at 10:00 p.m. the only folks left were those of us who lived there, the Ancients and the various who were too drunk to drive.

When twins and Grandmother asked to leave (for they were all early risers) my father helped up his mother while my brother and I each helped one from the sofa to their feet. As they prepared to go they called out in their quaky but noble voices

“That was a wonderful feast as always Blanche! Thank ye… we always eat too much I fear. So good though…”

As my brother and I turned to each escort one of the twins on our arms we noticed Corky’s head peering around the door of the bedroom where he had taken refuge. I didn’t approach him of course but I did say “There’s the Christmas crapper there.” The old ladies focused their spectacles down the hallway to see what I was talking about.

“Well goodbye little pretty thing. We shore hope ya git to feelin’ better, ain’t nobody here in this place out to harm you t’at’all! Hope ya know that.” As the twins made slow strides towards the door, Corky whined.

My mother, now in the den but at a safe twenty paces from the dog, asked him “Do you want to go with them? You can if you want to…”

"Like that damned nut understands you” said my father.

But apparently he did. For the second time since he had been at Locksley Hall he braved the family enough to walk a few inches forward and stare wistfully at the old twins.

“Would you like to have him?” we asked the twins.

“Oh no, honey… he’s your dog. He’s too pretty for the likes of our place. He looks like he’s got blood in him.”

“Oh, you would be doing us a tremendous favor by taking him” we assured them honestly. “If you don’t then we’re going to have to get rid of him somehow. He can’t stay here. He’s scared to death of us and he’s miserable and he makes us miserable.”

“Please take him” begged Becki. “If you don’t he has to go to the shelter and there’s no way he can stand up for himself and they’ll have to kill him…”

“And it’ll cost me $30 to incarcerate the little bastard while he’s on death row” added my father.

“How could that pretty thing make anyone miser’ble enough to kill ‘em? I declare… reckon what’s into him? Well, since Ol’ Rex and Hungry Boy me and Sister was sayin’ the other day we bet Bear’s gotten right lonely, he might think it’s good to have another little dog around keep him company when we’re not there… We’ll let him come and see how he likes it and if he don’t then he come back here I reckon or travel on." Then to Corky: "Do you wanna come stay with us for a while pretty thing?”

Corky didn’t charge into their arms at the opportunity, but he did take another step, a visible gulp, another step, then he closed his eyes and held perfectly still and stiff. It was clear he was bracing to be picked up, for if this was the price he had to pay to be with his chosen geriatric bi-owners of choice, he would pay it.

For the next to last time in his life Corky rode in a car, near comatose the entire way, but a quarter mile down the road when the car stopped in front of Kitty and Carrie’s home his were the first feet out the door. He made a beeline to the wildly uneven concrete steps, climbed them onto the porch and into the aptly named dogtrot hall and walked straight into the front room where the twins watched TV and slept just as if he’d done so a thousand times.

When we entered with the twins Corky was standing stock still before the just risen from a slumber Bear VII, the red haired giant son of Mad Rex the half-a-wolf and Sweet Blackie of Blessed Memory (a huge black mutt who had been Kitty and Carrie’s favorite dog of all time with the possible exception of Bear VII, and the sole reason they cared for Mad Rex- they felt Blackie would have wanted them to). Bear was a great hunter whose bark could be heard from our house and who was clearly able to do some serious damage if he so desired, but he was also among the gentlest dogs on Earth. Corky had no way of knowing the latter however and Bear was not used to small dogs, so we worried what may happen.

Corky froze for inspection, bowing his head low when Bear approached. Bear looked him over, could tell by the cut of his jib and the smell of his butt the little dog was no threat, and returned to his pallet in the corner after the canine equivalent of a shrug. Amazingly, Corky settled on the floor not far from him, eyeing me with some suspicion as I helped my twin to her chair. With a kiss goodnight for each of the ladies and a grateful “Bye Corky” to our almost Christmas Corgi we departed.

Fritz had set a precedent when he left the house for the outside, but never before or since had a dog willingly left The Big House for The Cabin. It was a bit odd to see a dog surrender a gig most of our own outside dogs would have gladly been neutered to get (the finest table scraps, air conditioning, soft beds, lots of attention, etc.), but if the twins were okay with it and Corky was okay with it then we were certainly willing to comply, for we hated the notion of a pound as much as Kitty and Carrie hated the very mention of an “Old Folks Home”.

As we left we could hear the twins through their door introducing the “Pretty Thing” to their cats. “Lessee, Corky, that’s Linus, and over there’s Paula, and that’s Beatrix and… Oh Sister you’re gettin’ old! That’s not Beatrix that’s Brownie!.. Is that Brownie? Why sho nuff it is… where is Beatrix… there she is on the sewing machine… and that’s Old Mama Snuff laying next to the TV set, you don’t wanna mess with her doll baby…"

I don’t know if Corky got all of the names straight. But I left, literally praying, that the arrangement would work.

Next: The Short but Really Weird Epilogue (and it’s not depressing)

I’m sitting here counting down the minutes of the last day at work before Christmas. Everyone else hauled ass hours ago, and the phone’s only rung about four times all day. I’m truly grateful to get to read this story on this long dull afternoon. Thanks, Sampiro!

Ditto what Dung Beetle said. This story would be a great read any day, but I needed it today the most. Thank you for sharing it with us!

Very good, it’s the type of stories I like to read. I had a playmate that had a father just like yours. The kids stayed out of the house per orders if he was home, until dark. That family was the only one with kids near by, so I don’t know if we would have hung out otherwise.

WEIRD EPILOGUE I: The Misfit

It worked out amazingly well. The twins liked Corky, he liked them, he got along with the cats and Bear actually took him on as a son of sorts. (Bear [VII] was that rare creature who was born on the place and lived to old age without ever being hit by a car.) Periodically he would even accompany Bear to our house, and though he still did not like anybody but Kitty and Carrie near him he at least did not run from us anymore. We could only figure that it was due to his first owner having been an old woman- he’d even let Grandmother pet him.

The first epilogue is not a Christmas story but I include it because in my opinion it’s not only true but the best part of Corky’s story. It happened when my brother was in college at Auburn which dates it to at least 2.5 years after Corky moved in with Kitty & Carrie.

Daniel (my brother) was home one weekend, stopped by the twins’ house and came back to our place slinging gravel and yelling “MAMA! DADDY! GET YOUR GUNS! SOME MOTHERFUCKING SON OF A THREE DOLLAR WHORE SHOWED KITTY AND CARRIE HIS PECKER AND THEN DAMNED NEAR KILLED THEIR DOG AND I’M GONNA FIND HIM AND KILL HIM!”

My parents calmed him down as much as they could and then we all went to the twins’ home to find the story. Sure enough, some motherfucking son of a three dollar whore had showed Kittie and Carrie his pecker and then damned near killed their dog, or at least he had tried to kill their dog. The twins were understandably offended and upset about the exposure but they were far more upset that he had hurt Corky.

They had been working in their flower beds in their front yard when the man pulled into their drive. He was obviously drunk, slurring his words, and was driving a blue car- that was about as specific as Kitty and Carrie, who did not know one model from another, could identify the vehicle. He did not look familiar. He had gotten out of the car in broad open daylight and as if not noticing their presence he had urinated in their yard a few feet from where the 90+ year old twins were gardening. Kitty had addressed him with the coldest “Can we help you?” she could muster.

He turned, looked at them and laugh, then held his penis while asking “Y’all ever seen one of these before, gals?” Kitty, the more aggressive of the twins, had picked up her hoe and advised him to “Get off our place now! I said git!” He laughed at them again, took a couple of steps forward and said something like “Or what, shug, you gonna hit me with that hoe…” which was as far as he got before Bear was attacking him full force.

Bear (VII) was an excellent hunter always bringing rabbits and even occasional turkeys and bigger game to the house (none salvageable) but to the best of our knowledge, had never attacked a human before. He was old by this time, the same age I was which would have made him at least twelve or so, and he had been dozing on the porch along with Corky when the drifter pulled into the yard. He had given no bark, no growling, no warning of any kind, but when he sensed that his ladies were threatened he had been on his feet, off the porch and onto the man so fast even the twins were shocked and instinctively called for him to back down, but he would not. The genes of his half-wolf dad and his enormous shepherd mix mom trumped his long life of pampered laissez faire however and he knew exactly what to do. Within seconds the man was on his back (and I hope still exposed and suffering from third degree zipper cuts but I’ll never know). Offended as they were, Kitty and Carrie were afraid he was going to kill the man and began yelling for him to “Git down Bear!” and hitting him with a stick (not violently, just to get his attention).

Craven little Corky had also been dozing on the porch and had also bristled when Bear did, but unlike Bear he did not jump off of the porch to defend the honor of his mistresses. His little legs were just too short.

Instead he ran down the eccentric concrete steps first, and then joined in the attack! Not only did he fight, he showed as much ferociousness as old Bear, “barkin’ and carr’'in on like we hadn’t never heard him go off before”. While Bear pinned the man Corky attacked his ankles, legs, arms, face and anything else that he could while the man cursed and hit and fought and scrambled back to his feet. Both dogs continued the attack even when he ran back to his car, Bear eventually turning and running back to his ladies, probably to make sure they were okay, but Corky pursuing the man to his car. The man kicked at Corky as hard as he could, the twins heard Corky yelp and saw he was obviously hurt, and then the man tore out of the driveway. The twins both observed that “he was a cussin’ and a bleedin’- these dogs done downright hurt him I’m afraid”.

The man took off north at a high speed. It was Corky, not Bear, yelping in pain and hopping on three legs, who not only managed barks between yelps but braved his terror of both humans and cars to run down the road behind the man until the car was out of sight. It was the 90 year old twins themselves who went into the road after him, catching up as the not quite as cowardly as before little dog slowly returned to the house limping with one twin in each lane ready to hold up hands and stop traffic with their hands and bodies if necessary while their wounded protector returned from combat.

When we saw Corky we knew he was in shock. While Daddy and Daniel drove off to look for the man (this had been about an hour before) and Mama waited with the twins in case he returned, Becki and I took Corky to the vet, knowing he was nearly gone when he didn’t even protest as we picked him up and tore off down the road. While we were gone Daddy and Daniel gave up the hunt, the sheriff was called on the CB, and as he stood making out a report he was red with fury. My father of course was also extremely concerned at the events.

“Is there any chance, ya think, that son of a bitch could sue me for any damage these dogs did?” (It must not be thought that he did not care about the twins- they had raised them- but money was always his default fallback.)

“Gahlun’ Jr.,” said the sheriff, a lifelong acquaintance and Masonic brother (who owed my father some major favors and would one day “forget to mention it” when my mother shot at him), “if that fool is dum enough to come forward and press charges agin them dogs, he’s got more to worry about than medical bills. There’s three things you don’t do if you don’t wanna go to the bottom of the prison ladder. You don’t mess with dogs, old folks or young’uns, and he’s done mess with two out of three just here just now. He wouldn’t live long enough to get to court.”

At Dr. Washington’s the news was better than expected. Much better. Corky had some bruised ribs and a broken bone in his paw, but he would not only live but should make a full recovery. The reason we thought he was in shock was a combination of pain from the injuries and his usual terror at being picked up by us and driven in a car. He left the vet’s office in a corset, a cast, a Cadillac and a catatonic state in some order and returned home sore but basically alright to a delighted Kitty and Carrie (though they still fussed at him for attacking the man :dubious: ).

We spread the news and made inquiries everywhere about the man in the car. There were suspects but nothing definitive, nobody knew who he was, and though my family was not always particularly popular with the locals whom they’d lived around for the past century his offense to two ninety year old ladies who all liked incensed all who heard it. I’ve little doubt his own mother would have handed him over already hog tied with key points circled in lipstick for easy cattle prodding, because while these people would screw you when selling a car or a cow and maliciously gossip about you and maybe even steal your goods once in a blue moon, exposing yourself to old virgins was something they didn’t tolerate. It’s an odd bushido.

That night my mother cooked hamburger steaks in gravy. While she usually made extra for the old ladies, this time she also cooked an extra large helping, soaked in gravy for a full hour, for each of the two unlikely attack dogs.

We gave Bear his in the big recycled margarine tub we brought it in and he gulped it down with evident gratitude to us and pride in himself. He had the appetite as well as the spark of a young dog this day.

Corky’s steak we put onto a paper plate and slid under the bed, secure in the knowledge that once we left and he knew it was safe he would come out from the corner where he was cowering and eat it. Just as Mad Rex had had Kitty and Carrie and Becki who he could stand, for Corky Kitty and Carrie and threatening perverts would remain the only three people he never had no fear of approaching.

Conclusion: Nimue

The Final Book of Corky (also non-Christmas but interesting):

When Kitty died (Corky was in the room when it happened) and Carrie came to live with us there was nobody left at the house to care for him. Bear VII had died a few months before (old age- it was sad but he had a good 15 years) and the cats could fend for themselves (and did- most came and went). Corky would not get in the car with us and we worried about him as much as we could with the stress of the circumstances, but there were just too many more pressing concerns.

After finally giving him up as lost, one day he simply showed up at the house and moved in (not into the house, but to the place anyway). He had come far enough that he was not afraid of our own outdoor dogs, perhaps because he somehow had the strange friendship of Susie.

Susie, one of my favorite dogs of all times, had belonged to Mustang and we brought her to live with us when he died. She had obvious rat terrier blood and only weighted about 15 pounds or so but from day one she was the undisputed Alpha of our whole pack. She loved us and most other humans but she could take or leave most other dogs and hated any who did not bow to her. She particularly hated our poor St. Bernard Bee-Bee, a dog who outweighted by 1000% or 100 lbs., and they would occasionally get into fights. I kid you not: Susie won ever last one of them before we could even get there to break them up, because that little dog fought DIRTY.

There were only three dogs that Susie ever particularly liked. One was our Labrador for a season, Sam, who she absolutely tried to mate with even though she was old and spayed and he was way bigger. Another, strangely, was Nutless Bob, the old neutered bassett like dog who came and went from our place for a decade, each time older and slower and uglier than before but still just happy to be alive. The third, for no apparent reason, was Corky, and she was nuts about him. With her as his patroness, he was quite well off at the house.

In case I haven’t mentioned it, damn I love dogs.

We occasionally brought him inside to see Carrie, but he was uncomfortable in there, perhaps the Pekingese who addressed him with contempt or perhaps memories of his brief tenure, or perhaps confusion over “where’s the other one” or horror at the memory of her demise. Poor little Corky’s world had changed again, though at least this time he was well fed.

Perhaps that was why it was now, when he was no longer young and no longer “employed” in the service of the twins, that he let himself fall in love. He had had the affection of a lady before, a stray hound who took refuge at Kitty and Carrie’s one winter and gave birth to a litter of pups that spring of ancestry more mixed than Keanu Reeves, some with short legs and others clearly Bear’s, though when we gave them away it was the decidedly “interesting looking” half Blue-tick half Corgis that went first, but it was not a lasting relationship. When we gave the Blue Tick to one of my father’s co-workers who had hunting dogs neither Corky nor his co-paramour Bear seemed to be the least bit heartbroken to see mother or progeny depart.

But Nimue was different. I called her that because by this time I was a fan of the musical CAMELOT and particularly loved the song “Follow Me”, and I could see her casting her spell on the old dog. She was a fuzzy light brown vaguely Schnauzerish mutt who showed up one day, a good six inches taller at the shoulder than Corky, but the only time I ever heard him bark in anger (for I had not been present when he fought for his mistresses) was in chasing away a much younger and much larger half-Lab/half-St. Bernard Newfoundland lmuch younger dog who had cast wistful eyes upon Nimue. His assertiveness found another outlet in his old age, and that outlet was fuzzy and brown.

One day Corky and Nimue were nowhere to be found. We called them for days but they didn’t return. We finally assumed they were dead by the time it turned cold, though we decided not to tell Carrie, and that’s when they returned, this time accompanied by a much younger male dog who looked like neither of them, though they were clearly a trio.

They wintered with us, Corky coming into the house once or twice during that time (and by major encouragement) to pay respects to Carrie but no friendlier than he ever was to us. He had a family now.

I do not know where or how Corky and Nimue lived when they were not at our place. Did he somehow learn to hunt? Did Nimue have a house somewhere (she didn’t wear a collar other than the flea collar we put on her)? Whatever the case was, they never looked undernourished at all when they came around. They would occasionally visit us, we’d come home to find them on the porch, for old time’s sake we would even be glad to see them, but then as suddenly as they’d arrived they’d be gone. This went on for a couple of years, the visits getting rarer and shorter, Corky visibly aging (for marriage to a much younger gal will do that to you), then it was just Corky and Nimue again (the third dog didn’t return), and finally by the mid 1980s they stopped altogether. We never saw Corky or Nimue again.

If you’re ever in the woods on the border of Coosa and Elmore Counties in Alabama and you suddenly are confronted by a strange creature with a brown shaggy face, little bitty short legs and a tendency to pee and cower when approached, it’s probably one of their feral descendants. Don’t panic, he’s far more afraid of you than you are of him. Trust me on that one.

Unless of course you’re exposing yourself to an old woman. In that case, run like hell.

Sampiro, it’s a great story, told with style. Best thing I’ve read in a long time. Thanks for posting.

PS: If Corky died in the end, I would have had to kick your ass.

Sigh I love dogs too. Corky reminds me of so many dogs I knew growing up. Wonderful story Sampiro. I’ve loved all of your stories but this one just might be my favorite. Did I mention I’m a sucker for dogs?

I forgot to mention: my sister later admitted that the “tit high” shop manager’s actual offense was what we would today call sexual harassment. He propositioned here, evidently explicitly. She wouldn’t admit it at the time because she was afraid of what my parents would do to him. “All he really deserved was to be cussed out and slapped and I’d already done that.”

Now well off but stingy as all hell she also regrets not picking up the $10. “Damn I was young then.”

Thank you, Sampiro.