I washed and dried my hands. “This little bitch isn’t anywhere near whelping, Mrs. Cook. Are you sure you haven’t got your dates wrong?”

  “No, I ’aven’t, it was sixty three days yesterday.” She paused in thought for a moment. “Now ah’d better tell you this, young man. Cindy’s had pups before and she did self and same thing—wouldn’t get on with t’job. That was two years ago when I was livin’ over in Listondale. I got Mr. Broomfield the vet to her and he just gave her an injection. It was wonderful—she had the pups half an hour after it.”

  I smiled. “Yes, that would be pituitrin. She must have been actually whelping when Mr. Broomfield saw her.”

  “Well whatever it was, young man, I wish you’d give her some now. Ah can’t stand all this suspense.”

  “I’m sorry.” I lifted Cindy from my lap and stood up. “I can’t do that. It would be very harmful at this stage.”

  She stared at me and it struck me that that dark face could look very forbidding. “So you’re not goin’ to do anything at all?”

  “Well…” There are times when it is a soothing procedure to give a client something to do even if it is unnecessary. “Yes, I’ve got some tablets in the car. They’ll help to keep the little dog fit until she whelps.”

  “But I’d far rather have that injection. It was just a little prick. Didn’t take Mr. Broomfield more than a second to do.”

  “I assure you, Mrs. Cook, it can’t be done at the moment. I’ll get the tablets from the car.”

  Her mouth tightened. I could see she was grievously disappointed in me. “Oh well if you won’t you won’t, so you’d better get them things.” She paused. “And me name isn’t Cook!”

  “It isn’t?”

  “No it isn’t, young man.” She didn’t seem disposed to offer further information so I left in some bewilderment.

  Out in the road, a few yards from my car, a farm man was trying to start a tractor. I called over to him.

  “Hey, the lady in there says her name isn’t Cook.”

  “She’s right an’ all. She’s the cook over at the Hall. You’ve gotten a bit mixed up.” He laughed heartily.

  It all became suddenly clear; the entry in the day book, everything. “What’s her right name, then?”

  “Booby,” he shouted just as the tractor roared into life.

  Funny name, I thought as I produced my harmless vitamin tablets from the boot and returned to the cottage. Once inside I did my best to put things right with plenty of “Yes, Mrs. Booby” and “No, Mrs. Booby” but the lady didn’t thaw. I told her not to worry and that I was sure nothing would happen for several days but I could tell I wasn’t impressing her.

  I waved cheerfully as I went down the path.

  “Goodbye, Mrs. Booby,” I cried. “Don’t hesitate to ring me if you’re in doubt about anything.”

  She didn’t appear to have heard.

  “Oh I wish you’d do as I say,” she wailed. “It was just a little prick.”

  The good lady certainly didn’t hesitate to ring. She was at me again the next day and I had to rush out to her cottage. Her message was the same as before; she wanted the wonderful injection which would make those pups pop out and she wanted it right away. Mr. Broomfield hadn’t messed about and wasted time like I had. And on the third, fourth and fifth mornings she had me out at Marston examining the little bitch and reciting the same explanations. Things came to a head on the sixth day.

  In the room at Lilac Cottage the dark eyes held a desperate light as they stared into mine. “I’m about at the end of my tether, young man. I tell you I’ll die if anything happens to this dog, I’ll die. Don’t you understand?”

  “Of course I know how you feel about her, Mrs. Booby. Believe me, I fully understand.”

  “Then why don’t you do something?” she snapped.

  I dug my nails into my palms. “Look, I’ve told you. A pituitrin injection works by contracting the muscular walls of the uterus so it can only be given when labour has started and the cervix is open. If I find it is indicated I will do it, but if I gave this injection now it could cause rupture of the uterus. It could cause death.” I stopped because I fancied little bubbles were beginning to collect at the corners of my mouth.

  But I don’t think she had listened to a word. She sunk her head in her hands. “All this time, I can’t stand it.”

  I was wondering if I could stand much more of it myself. Bulging Yorkshire Terriers had begun to prance through my dreams at night and I greeted each new day with a silent prayer that the pups had arrived. I held out my hand to Cindy and she crept reluctantly towards me. She was heartily sick of this strange man who came every day and squeezed her and stuck fingers into her and she submitted again with trembling limbs and frightened eyes to the indignity.

  “Mrs. Booby,” I said. “Are you absolutely sure that dog didn’t have access to Cindy after the service date you gave me?”

  She sniffed. “You keep askin’ me that and ah’ve been thinking about it. Maybe he did come a week after, now I think on.”

  “Well that’s it, then!” I spread my hands. “She’s held to the second mating, so she should be due tomorrow.”

  “Ah would still far rather you would get it over with today like Mr. Broomfield did…it was just a little prick.”

  “But Mrs. Booby…!”

  “And let me tell you another thing, me name’s not Booby!”

  I clutched at the back of the chair. “It’s not?”

  “Naw!”

  “Well…what is it, then?”

  “It’s Dooley…Dooley!” she looked very cross.

  “Right…right…” I stumbled down the garden path and drove away. It was not a happy departure.

  Next morning I could hardly believe it when there was no call from Marston. Maybe all was well at last. But I turned cold when an urgent call to go to Lilac Cottage was passed on to one of the farms on my round. I was right at the far end of the practice area and was in the middle of a tough calving and it was well over three hours before I got out at the now familiar garden gate. The cottage door was open and as I ventured up the path a little brown missile hurtled out at me. It was Cindy, but a transformed Cindy, a snarling, barking little bundle of ferocity; and though I recoiled she fastened her teeth in my trouser cuff and hung on grimly.

  I was hopping around on one leg trying to shake off the growling little creature when a peal of almost girlish laughter made me look round.

  Mrs. Dooley, vastly amused, was watching me from the doorway. “My word, she’s different since she had them pups. Just shows what a good little mother she is, guarding them like that.” She gazed fondly at the tiny animal dangling from my ankle.

  “Had the pups…?”

  “Aye, when they said you’d be a long time I rang Mr. Farnon. He came right away and d’you know he gave Cindy that injection I’ve wanted all along. And I tell you ’e wasn’t right out of t’garden gate before the pups started. She’s had seven—beauties they are.”

  “Ah well that’s fine, Mrs. Dooley…splendid.” Siegfried had obviously felt a pup in the passage. I finally managed to rid myself of Cindy and when her mistress lifted her up I went into the kitchen to inspect the family.

  They certainly were grand pups and I lifted the squawking little morsels one by one from their basket while their mother snarled from Mrs. Dooley’s arms like a starving wolfhound.

  “They’re lovely, Mrs. Dooley,” I murmured.

  She looked at me pityingly. “I told you what to do, didn’t I, but you wouldn’t ’ave it. It only needed a little prick. Ooo, that Mr. Farnon’s a lovely man—just like Mr. Broomfield.”

  This was a bit much. “But you must realise, Mrs. Dooley, he just happened to arrive at the right time. If I had come…”

  “Now, now, young man, be fair. Ah’m not blamin’ you, but some people have had more experience. We all ’ave to learn.” She sighed reminiscently. “It was just a little prick—Mr. Farnon’ll have to show you how to do i
t. I tell you he wasn’t right out of t’garden gate…”

  Enough is enough. I drew myself up to my full height. “Mrs. Dooley, madam,” I said frigidly, “let me repeat once and for all…”

  “Oh, hoity, toity, hoity toity, don’t get on your high horse wi’ me!” she exclaimed. “We’ve managed very nicely without you so don’t complain.” Her expression became very severe. “And one more thing—me name’s not Mrs. Dooley.”

  My brain reeled for a moment. The world seemed to be crumbling about me. “What did you say?”

  “I said me name’s not Mrs. Dooley.”

  “It isn’t?”

  “Naw!” She lifted her left hand and as I gazed at it dully I realised it must have been all the mental stress which had prevented me from noticing the total absence of rings.

  “Naw!” she said. “It’s Miss!”

  34

  “IS THIS THE THING you’ve been telling me about?” I asked.

  Mr. Wilkin nodded. “Aye, that’s it, it’s always like that.”

  I looked down at the helpless convulsions of the big dog lying at my feet; at the staring eyes, the wildly pedalling limbs. The farmer had told me about the periodic attacks which had begun to affect his sheep dog, Gyp, but it was coincidence that one should occur when I was on the farm for another reason.

  “And he’s all right afterwards, you say?”

  “Right as a bobbin. Seems a bit dazed, maybe, for about an hour then he’s back to normal.” The farmer shrugged. “I’ve had lots o’ dogs through my hands as you know and I’ve seen plenty of dogs with fits. I thought I knew all the causes—worms, wrong feeding, distemper—but this has me beat. I’ve tried everything.”

  “Well you can stop trying, Mr. Wilkin,” I said. “You won’t be able to do much for Gyp. He’s got epilepsy.”

  “Epilepsy? But he’s a grand, normal dog most of t’time.”

  “Yes, I know. That’s how it goes. There’s nothing actually wrong with his brain—it’s a mysterious condition. The cause is unknown but it’s almost certainly hereditary.”

  Mr. Wilkin raised his eyebrows. “Well that’s a rum ’un. If it’s hereditary why hasn’t it shown up before now? He’s nearly two years old and he didn’t start this till a few weeks ago.”

  “That’s typical,” I replied “Eighteen months to two years is about the time it usually appears.”

  Gyp interrupted us by getting up and staggering towards his master, wagging his tail. He seemed untroubled by his experience. In fact the whole thing had lasted less than two minutes.

  Mr. Wilkin bent and stroked the rough head briefly. His craggy features were set in a thoughtful cast. He was a big powerful man in his forties and now as the eyes narrowed in that face which rarely smiled he looked almost menacing. I had heard more than one man say he wouldn’t like to get on the wrong side of Sep Wilkin and I could see what they meant. But he had always treated me right and since he farmed nearly a thousand acres I saw quite a lot of him.

  His passion was sheep dogs. A lot of farmers liked to run dogs at the trials but Mr. Wilkin was one of the top men. He bred and trained dogs which regularly won at the local events and occasionally at the national trials. And what was troubling me was that Gyp was his main hope.

  He had picked out the two best pups from a litter—Gyp and Sweep—and had trained them with the dedication that had made him a winner. I don’t think I have ever seen two dogs enjoy each other quite as much; whenever I was on the farm I would see them together, sometimes peeping nose by nose over the half door of the loose box where they slept, occasionally slinking devotedly round the feet of their master but usually just playing together. They must have spent hours rolling about in ecstatic wrestling matches, growling and panting, gnawing gently at each other’s limbs.

  A few months ago George Crossley, one of Mr. Wilkin’s oldest friends and a keen trial man, had lost his best dog with nephritis and Mr. Wilkin had let him have Sweep. I was surprised at the time because Sweep was shaping better than Gyp in his training and looked like turning out a real champion. But it was Gyp who remained. He must have missed his friend but there were other dogs on the farm and if they didn’t quite make up for Sweep he was never really lonely.

  As I watched, I could see the dog recovering rapidly. It was extraordinary how soon normality was restored after that frightening convulsion. And I waited with some apprehension to hear what his master would say.

  The cold, logical decision for him to make would be to have Gyp put down. And, looking at the friendly, tail-wagging animal I didn’t like the idea at all. There was something very attractive about him. The big-boned, well-marked body was handsome but his most distinctive feature was his head where one ear somehow contrived to stick up while the other lay flat, giving him a lop-sided, comic appeal. Gyp, in fact, looked a bit of a clown. But a clown who radiated goodwill and camaraderie.

  Mr. Wilkin spoke at last. “Will he get any better as he grows older?”

  “Almost certainly not,” I replied.

  “Then he’ll always ’ave these fits?”

  “I’m afraid so. You say he has them every two or three weeks—well it will probably carry on more or less like that with occasional variations.”

  “But he could have one any time?”

  “Yes.”

  “In the middle of a trial, like.” The farmer sunk his head on his chest and his voice rumbled deep. “That’s it, then.”

  In the long silence which followed, the fateful words became more and more inevitable. Sep Wilkin wasn’t the man to hesitate in a matter which concerned his ruling passion. Ruthless culling of any animal which didn’t come up to standard would be his policy. When he finally cleared his throat I had a sinking premonition of what he was going to say.

  But I was wrong.

  “If I kept him, could you do anything for him?” he asked.

  “Well I could give you some pills for him. They might decrease the frequency of the fits.” I tried to keep the eagerness out of my voice.

  “Right…right…I’ll come into t’surgery and get some,” he muttered.

  “Fine. But…er…you won’t ever breed from him, will you?” I said.

  “Naw, naw, naw,” the farmer grunted with a touch of irritability as though he didn’t want to pursue the matter further.

  And I held my peace because I felt intuitively that he did not want to be detected in a weakness; that he was prepared to keep the dog simply as a pet. It was funny how events began to slot into place and suddenly make sense. That was why he had let Sweep, the superior trial dog, go. He just liked Gyp. In fact Sep Wilkin, hard man though he may be, had succumbed to that off-beat charm.

  So I shifted to some light chatter about the weather as I walked back to the car, but when I was about to drive off the farmer returned to the main subject

  “There’s one thing about Gyp I never mentioned,” he said bending to the window. “I don’t know whether it has owt to do with the job or not. He has never barked in his life.”

  I looked at him in surprise. “You mean never, ever?”

  “That’s right. Not a single bark. T’other dogs made a noise when strangers come on the farm but I’ve never heard Gyp utter a sound since he was born.”

  “Well that’s very strange,” I said. “But I can’t see that it is connected with his condition in any way.”

  And as I switched on the engine I noticed for the first time that while a bitch and two half grown pups gave tongue to see me on my way Gyp merely regarded me in his comradely way, mouth open, tongue lolling, but made no noise. A silent dog.

  The thing intrigued me. So much so that whenever I was on the farm over the next few months I made a point of watching the big sheep dog at whatever he was doing. But there was never any change. Between the convulsions which had settled down to around three weeks intervals he was a normal active happy animal. But soundless.

  I saw him, too, in Darrowby when his master came in to market. Gyp was often seated comfortably in
the back of the car, but if I happened to speak to Mr. Wilkin on these occasions I kept off the subject because, as I said, I had the feeling that he more than most farmers would hate to be exposed in keeping a dog for other than working purposes.

  And yet I have always entertained a suspicion that most farm dogs were more or less pets. The dogs on sheep farms were of course indispensable working animals and on other establishments they no doubt performed a function in helping to bring in the cows. But watching them on my daily rounds I often wondered. I saw them rocking along on carts at hay-time, chasing rats among the stooks at harvest, pottering around the buildings or roaming the fields at the side of the farmer; and I wondered…what did they really do?

  My suspicions were strengthened at other times—as when I was trying to round up some cattle into a corner and the dog tried to get into the act by nipping at a hop or tail. There was invariably a hoarse yell of “Siddown, dog!” or “Gerrout, dog!”

  So right up to the present day I still stick to my theory; most farm dogs are pets and they are there mainly because the farmer just likes to have them around. You would have to put a farmer on the rack to get him to admit it but I think I am right. And in the process those dogs have a wonderful time. They don’t have to beg for walks, they are out all day long, and in the company of their masters. If I want to find a man on a farm I look for his dog, knowing the man won’t be far away. I try to give my own dogs a good life but it cannot compare with the life of the average farm dog.

  There was a long spell when Sep Wilkin’s stock stayed healthy and I didn’t see either him or Gyp, then I came across them both by accident at a sheep dog trial. It was a local event run in conjunction with the Mellerton Agricultural Show and since I was in the district I decided to steal an hour off.

  I took Helen with me, too, because these trials have always fascinated us. The wonderful control of the owners over their animals, the intense involvement of the dogs themselves, the sheer skill of the whole operation always held us spellbound.