string, a family of spool dolls.
Digging around in the treasure box, I uncovered a ball of twine.
âHow about I make you a collar, Sable?â I asked. âThink youâd like that?â
Sable sniffed the twine in my hands, then lay down in the leaves at my feet.
I measured and cut three long strands and started braiding them. Holding the plaited twine against Sableâs neck every now and then, I tested until I had a piece long enough. Sable sat patiently as I tightened the ends around her neck into a square knot.
Next, I pulled out my old hairbrush and plucked the bristles clean. Sable sniffed the honey-colored cloud of my hair. She tried eating it.
âDonât eat that, Sable!â I cried. âItâll make you sick.â
I blew the hair cloud away, into the chilly afternoon. âMaybe some mouse will use it,â I said. âTo make a nest.â
Gently, I dragged my hairbrush through Sableâs matted fur, careful not to pull. I worked at her tangles, the way Pap worked at mine, until Iâd eased them all out.
âYou sure look pretty, Sable,â I said when I finished. Sable wagged her tail in a tired circle. All groomed, with a collar on, she really looked like she belonged to somebody.
In the worst way, I wanted her to belong to me. But where could I keep her? Mam wouldnât let her in the house, not if she was scared of dogs.
And I couldnât leave her outside, what with the nights so cold and Sable so weak and skinny. And what if she ran away?
I decided Iâd build a doghouse. If Pap would let me.
3 / The Bed
âPap?â I called, poking my head inside the shop. Pap stood at his bench, gluing up boards. âPap, can I use some of your wood to build a house for Sable?â
âSorry, Tate,â Pap said, shaking his head. âThis woodâs too good for any doghouse.â
I guess I knew he wouldnât let me. About all Pap ever lets me use are his stickers. Those are the strips he puts between planks when heâs drying wood. Heâs got a lot of stickers, but I couldnât figure how to build a doghouse out of them.
âCome on, girl,â I called to Sable.
We hunted in the shed behind Papâs shop. Dressers, and bed frames, and boxes of canning jars leaned against the rough pine walls. I swiped at spiderwebs. âThere must be something in here we can use for you,â I told Sable.
She turned her head in my direction. I wiped my dusty hands on the seat of my pants and stooped down. Holding Sableâs brown jaw in one hand, I stroked the top of her bony head with the other. She still wouldnât look right at me.
âIâll figure out something for you, girl,â I whispered. âDonât worry.â
Iâd hoped to find a big empty carton I could maybe cut a door into. Or a wooden crate. All I found was a worn-out cardboard box; it didnât even have the flaps that make the top.
âWell, this will have to do,â I said. âItâll make a good bed at least, Sable. Hold on. Iâll clean it up for you.â
I knocked the dried leaves and dead bugs out of the corners. Then I turned the box upside down and banged on the bottom, raising a puff of dust.
Sable sneezed. I sneezed, too.
âWe need something soft to put in here, donât we, girl?â I asked. âItâs not really a bed until itâs soft.â
I thought Papâs sawdust might work as bedding. I led Sable back around to the shop.
Papâs piles of sawdust were stacked up like fine raked leaves. I wished I could jump in those piles, but Papâs broom was always leaning over them, just daring me to try.
âWhat you doing out there in the shed, Tate?â Pap asked.
âJust looking around,â I said.
âDonât be making a mess, girl,â Pap warned.
âNo, sir.â
I stood, staring at Papâs back. His dark hair poked through the hole above the plastic snaps in his