Where the Red Fern Grows (22 page)

Read Where the Red Fern Grows Online

Authors: Wilson Rawls

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Ages 9-12 Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #People & Places, #Children's Books, #Children's & young adult fiction & true stories, #YA), #Children's Fiction, #United States, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9), #Social Issues, #Dogs, #Adventure stories, #Classics, #Animals, #General fiction (Children's, #Children: Grades 2-3, #Social Issues - General, #Animals - Dogs, #Oklahoma, #Boys & Men, #Friendship, #Blind, #General (see also headings under Family), #Ozark Mountains

BOOK: Where the Red Fern Grows
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    Getting up, I said, "Come on, let's go home so I can take care of those wounds."

    I hadn't gone far when I heard a cry. At first I thought it was a bird, or a night hawk. I stood still and listened. I glanced at Little Ann. She was looking behind me. I turned around and looked for Old Dan. He was nowhere in sight.

    The cry came again, low and pitiful. Instantly Little Ann started back the way we had come. I followed as fast as I could run.

    I found Old Dan lying on his side, pleading for help. What I saw was almost more than I could stand. There, tangled in the low branches of a huckleberry bush, were the entrails of my dog. With a gasping cry I knelt down by his side.

    I knew what had happened. Far back in the soft belly, the slashing, razor-sharp claws of the lion had cut into the hollow. In my inspections I had overlooked the wound. His entrails had worked out and had become entangled in the bush. The forward motion of his body had done the rest.

    He whimpered as I laid my hand on his head. A warm, red tongue flicked out at it. With tears in my eyes, I started talking to him. "Hang on, boy," I said. "Everything will be all right. I'll take care of you."

    With trembling hands, I unwound the entrails from the bush. With my handkerchief I wiped away the gravel, leaves, and pine needles. With fingers that shook, I worked the entrails back into the wound.

    Knowing that I couldn't carry him and the ax and lantern, I stuck the ax deep in the side of a white oak tree. I blew out the lantern and hung the handle over the other blade. I wrapped my dog in my old sheepskin coat and hurried for home.

    Arriving home, I awakened my mother and father. Together we doctored my dogs. Old Dan was taken care of first. Very gently Mama worked the entrails out and in a pan of warm soapy water, washed them clean of the pine needles, leaves, and grit.

    "If I only knew what I was doing," Mama said, as she worked, "I'd feel better."

    With gentle hands, she worked the entrails back through the opening. The wound was sewn up and bandaged with a clean white cloth.

    Little Ann wasn't hard to doctor. I held her head while Mama cleaned her wounds with peroxide. Feeling the bite of the strong liquid, she whined and licked at my hands.

    "It's all right, little girl," I said. "You'll be well in no time."

    I opened the door and watched her as she limped off to the doghouse.

    Hearing a whimper, I turned around. There in the doorway to the room stood my sisters. I could tell by the looks on their faces that they had been watching for some time. They looked pitiful standing there in their long white gowns. I felt sorry for them.

    "Will Little Ann be all right?" my oldest sister asked.

    "Yes," I said, "she'll be all right. She only had one bad wound and we've taken care of that."

    "Old Dan's hurt bad, isn't he?" she said.

    I nodded my head.

    "How bad is it?" she asked.

    "It's bad," I said. "He was cut wide open."

    They all started crying.

    "Now here," Mama said, going over, "you girls get back in bed. You'll take a death of cold being up like this in your bare feet."

    "Mommie," the little one said. "God won't let Old Dan die, will He?"

    "I don't think so, honey," Mama said. "Now off to bed."

    They turned and walked slowly back to their room.

    "The way your dogs are cut up," Papa said, "it must have been a terrible fight."

    "It was, Papa," I said. "I never saw anything like it. Little Ann wouldn't have fought the lion if it hadn't been for Old Dan. All she was doing was helping him. He wouldn't quit. He just stayed right in there till the end. I even had to pry his jaws loose from the lion's throat after the lion was dead."

   Glancing at Old Dan, Papa said, "It's in his blood, Billy. He's a hunting hound, and the best one I ever saw. He only has two loves-you and hunting. That's all he knows."

   "If it hadn't been for them, Papa," I said, "I probably wouldn't be here now."

    "What do you mean," Mama said, "you wouldn't be here now?"

    I told them how the lion had leaped at me and how my dogs had gotten between him and me.

    "They were so close together," I said, "when they came up off the ground they looked just like one."

    There was a moaning sigh from Mama. She covered her face with her hands and started crying.

    "I don't know," she sobbed, "I just don't know. To think how close you came to being killed. I don't think I can stand any more."

    "Now, now," Papa said, as he walked over and put his arms around her. "Don't go all to pieces. It's all over. Let's be thankful and do our best for Old Dan."

    "Do you think he'll die, Papa?" I asked.

    "I don't know, Billy," Papa said, shaking his head. "He's lost an awful lot of blood and he's a mighty sick dog. All we can do now is wait and see."

    Our wait wasn't long. My dog's breathing grew faster and faster, and there was a terrible rattling in his throat. I knelt down and laid his head in my lap.

    Old Dan must have known he was dying. Just before he drew one last sigh, and a feeble thump of his tail, his friendly gray eyes closed forever.

    At first I couldn't believe my dog was dead. I started talking to him. "Please don't die, Dan," I said. "Don't leave me now."

    I looked to Mama for help. Her face was as white as the bark on a sycamore tree and the hurt in her eyes tore at my heart. She opened her mouth to say something but words wouldn't come out.

    Feeling as cold as an arctic wind, I got up and stumbled to a chair. Mama came over and said something. Her words were only a murmur in my ears.

    Very gently Papa picked Old Dan up in his arms and carried him out on the porch. When he came back in the house, he said, "Well, we did all we could do, but I guess it wasn't enough."

    I had never seen my father and mother look so tired and weary as they did on that night. I knew they wanted to comfort me, but didn't know what to say.

    Papa tried. "Billy," he said, "I wouldn't think too much about this if I were you. It's not good to hurt like that. I believe I'd just try to forget it. Besides, you still have Little Ann."

    I wasn't even thinking about Little Ann at that moment. I knew she was all right.

    "I'm thankful that I still have her," I said, "but how can I forget Old Dan? He gave his life for me, that's what he did-just laid down his life for me. How can I ever forget something like that?"

    Mama said, "It's been a terrible night for all of us. Let's go to bed and try to get some rest. Maybe we'll all feel better tomorrow."

    "No, Mama," I said. "You and Papa go on to bed. I think I'll stay up for a while. I couldn't sleep anyway."

    Mama started to protest, but Papa shook his head. Arm in arm they walked from the room.

    Long after my mother and father had retired, I sat by the fire trying to think and couldn't. I felt numb all over. I knew my dog was dead, but I couldn't believe it. I didn't want to. One day they were both alive and happy. Then that night, just like that, one of them was dead.

    I didn't know how long I had been sitting there when I heard a noise out on the porch. I got up, walked over to the door, and listened. It came again, a low whimper and a scratchy sound.

    I could think of only one thing that could have made the noise. It had to be my dog. He wasn't dead. He had come back to life. With a pounding heart, I opened the door and stepped out on the porch.

    What I saw was more than I could stand. The noise I had heard had been made by Little Ann. All her life she had slept by Old Dan's side. And although he was dead, she had left the doghouse, had come back to the porch, and snuggled up close to his side.

    She looked up at me and whimpered. I couldn't stand it. I didn't know I was running until I tripped and fell. I got to my feet and ran on and on, down through our fields of shocked corn, until I fell face down on the river's bank. There in the gray shadows of a breaking dawn, I cried until I could cry no more.

    The churring of gray squirrels in the bright morning sun told me it was daylight. I got to my feet and walked back to the house.

    Coming up through our barn lot, I saw my father feeding our stock. He came over and said, "Breakfast is about ready."

    "I don't want any breakfast, Papa," I said. "I'm not hungry and I have a job to do. I'll have to bury my dog."

    "I tell you what," he said, "I'm not going to be very busy today, so let's have a good breakfast and then I'll help you."

    "No, Papa," I said. "I'll take care of it. You go and eat breakfast. Tell Mama I'm not hungry."

    I saw a hurt look in my father's eyes. Shaking his head, he turned and walked away.

    From rough pine slabs, I made a box for my dog. It was a crude box but it was the best I could do. With strips of burlap and corn shucks, I padded the inside.

    Up on the hillside, at the foot of a beautiful red oak tree, I dug his grave. There where the wild mountain flowers would grow in the spring, I laid him away.

    I had a purpose in burying my dog up there on the hillside. It was a beautiful spot. From there one could see the country for miles, the long white crooked line of the river, the tall thick timber of the bottoms, the sycamore, birch, and box elder. I thought perhaps that on moonlight nights Old Dan would be able to hear the deep voices of the hounds as they rolled out of the river bottoms on the frosty air.

    After the last shovel of dirt was patted in place, I sat down and let my mind drift back through the years. I thought of the old K. C. Baking Powder can, and the first time I saw my pups in the box at the depot. I thought of the fifty dollars, the nickels and dimes, and the fishermen and blackberry patches.

    I looked at his grave and, with tears in my eyes, I voiced these words: "You were worth it, old friend, and a thousand times over."

    In my heart I knew that there in the grave lay a man's best friend.

    Two days later, when I came in from the bottoms where my father and I were clearing land, my mother said, "Billy, you had better look after your dog. She won't eat."

    I started looking for her. I went to the barn, the corncrib, and looked under the porch. I called her name. It was no use.

    I rounded up my sisters and asked if they had seen Little Ann. The youngest one said she had seen her go down into the garden. I went there, calling her name. She wouldn't answer my call.

    I was about to give up, and then I saw her. She had wiggled her way far back under the thorny limbs of a blackberry bush in the corner of the garden. I talked to her and tried to coax her out. She wouldn't budge. I got down on my knees and crawled back to her. As I did, she raised her head and looked at me.

    Her eyes told the story. They weren't the soft gray eyes I had looked into so many times. They were dull and cloudy. There was no fire, no life. I couldn't understand.

    I carried her back to the house. I offered her food and water. She wouldn't touch it. I noticed how lifeless she was. I thought perhaps she had a wound I had overlooked. I felt and probed with my fingers. I could find nothing.

    My father came and looked at her. He shook his head and said, "Billy, it's no use. The life has gone out of her. She has no will to live."

    He turned and walked away.

    I couldn't believe it. I couldn't.

    With eggs and rich cream, I made a liquid. I pried her mouth open and poured it down. She responded to nothing I did. I carried her to the porch, and laid her in the same place I had laid the body of Old Dan. I covered her with gunny sacks.

    All through the night I would get up and check on her. Next morning I took warm fresh milk and again I opened her mouth and fed her. It was a miserable day for me. At noon it was the same. My dog had just given up. There was no will to live.

    That evening when I came in from the fields, she was gone. I hurried to my mother. Mama told me she had seen her go up the hollow from the house, so weak she could hardly stand. Mama had watched her until she had disappeared in the timber.

    I hurried up the hollow, calling her name. I called and called. I went up to the head of it, still calling her name and praying she would come to me. I climbed out onto the flats; looking, searching, and calling. It was no use. My dog was gone.

    I had a thought, a ray of hope. I just knew I'd find her at the grave of Old Dan. I hurried there.

    I found her lying on her stomach, her hind legs stretched out straight, and her front feet folded back under her chest. She had laid her head on his grave. I saw the trail where she had dragged herself through the leaves. The way she lay there, I thought she was alive. I called her name. She made no movement. With the last ounce of strength in her body, she had dragged herself to the grave of Old Dan.

    Kneeling down by her side, I reached out and touched her. There was no response, no whimpering cry or friendly wag of her tail. My little dog was dead.

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