Dogs were another matter. There was nothing that they did that was in any way harmful to his person or his property; he just didn’t like them. Thought they should be exterminated from the United States. They slobbered and licked and smelled bad, and worst of all, in social situations where interaction could not be avoided, he had to camouflage his repugnance.
One day dear friends of my parents
were coming from New Haven for a visit. Their children were grown, and the
light of their lives was their Dalmatian, Jires. For an hour-and-a-half before
their arrival there was animated discussion about the likelihood, or not, of
their being accompanied on this visit by Jires. My father could not believe that
they would be so presumptuous as to do
this without at least calling first. My mother, sister, and I thought it was
extremely unlikely that they would appear at our door without Jires. My father suggested that we put our money where our
mouths were and make a three-to-one wager: if Jires came, he had to give us
each a buck, and if there was no Jires, we owed him three bucks.
When the couple arrived, we tried
not to be too obvious peering past them when we opened the front door, but
there was no Jires to be seen. After the initial greetings my father, barely
concealing his smirk, casually inquired as to the absence of Jires. Our guests’
faces fell, simultaneously. “We were too upset to break it to you over the
phone,” the wife said, struggling for composure, “but we lost Jires last
Thursday!” My father, perhaps utilizing the Thespian abilities that had dazzled
his philosophy students, let out an anguished, “Oh no!!! What happened???”
whereupon the details of Jire’s passing were laid out – a scenario during which
there was minimum eye contact among the members of the host family. After our
friends had gone, we agreed that under the circumstances, my father’s was not a
clean victory, and by the time we all went to bed, he had magnanimously waived
the three dollars we owed him.
My father’s antipathy toward dogs
was not limited to situations in which he was forced to be in close contact
with them. A particular object of dislike was the German Shepherd owned by his
neighbor, Sweeny, who himself was not a favorite. Sweeny had made the mistake
early on of appearing uninvited in his bathing suit at the edge of my father’s pond. Sweeny’s house was located at
the end of my father’s long driveway, part way up the dirt road that led to the
highway. Whenever you drove away from our house you had to Pass Sweeny’s place
and brace yourself for the onslaught of the Shepherd, who would come tearing
out of the bushes, barking and leaping toward the car. It was indeed unnerving,
partly because you knew it was going to happen, like waiting for the toast to
pop, and partly because you were afraid you might inadvertently run him over.
My mother and sister and I didn’t like it any more than my father did, but we
were extremely uneasy when he came back from an errand one day and announced,
“I’ve solved the Sweeny dog problem!” To our relief, the solution turned out to
be simply that he keep a pile of fire crackers on his dashboard, and as the dog
crept out for his attack, my father would light one with his Zippo lighter and
toss it out the window as he drove by. After his initial success it took only
one more drive-by and detonation for the dog to lie low whenever my father
approached. As my mother and sister and I weren’t interested in dealing with
incendiary devises while we drove, we continued to endure the annoyance of the
dog. One day, however, I was low on gas and borrowed my father’s car to go to
the market. My stomach muscles tightened as I approached Sweeny’s place, but
the dog took one look at the car and did an immediate about-face, slinking away
with his tail between his legs. When I got back and reported this to my father,
he was pleased with the carry-over effectiveness of his method, but seemed
slightly deflated that the dog’s fear was based solely on the car, rather than
on his intimidating presence. He did grudgingly admit that the car recognition
on the part of the dog indicated a certain amount of intelligence—an attribute
he had never been willing to ascribe to the dog’s owner, Sweeny.
My father’s attempts to control his
environment were occasionally thwarted by creatures other than dogs and deer.
One evening when my parents came home after a party, they were greeted with the
sight of a large raccoon in the middle of the dining table, making a meal of
the fruit decoratively assembled in a glass-stemmed bowl at the table’s center.
It had apparently entered through the special door my father had rigged up for
our cat. The cat, who was never allowed on the table, was sitting off to the
side on the rug, observing this tableau with what my parents claimed was an
unmistakable smile, anticipating the punishment she knew awaited the raccoon.
A wild chase ensued, with my father
shouting, “Scram, beat it!” and the raccoon running with fructose paws all over
the chairs and the couch, in every direction but toward the door opening
onto the deck. By the time my father succeeded in getting it out, there were
juice stains on every surface, and the only vestige of contentment was on the
part of the cat, who followed the raccoon out, perhaps feeling that this was
the beginning of a beautiful friendship.
Several weeks later, it was the deer who were again to be my father’s bete noir, when he spied two of them at the far side of the meadow, gnawing at his andromeda bushes. When he went to the garage to get a cherry bomb he discovered that he had run out. Thinking quickly, he grabbed the covers of two tin garbage cans, and using them as cymbals, tore across the field clashing them and wildly shouting at the deer. As my mother and sister and I looked on from the deck, the deer glanced up at my father, turned to look at each other, looked back at my father and resumed peacefully munching.
What fun this was. Once bitten, one never looks upon dogs in quite the same loving way.
ReplyDeletepaul pekin