walloped me with it.
âYou keep quiet when youâre told,â he said.
He really was the shyest man I had ever met. It seemed to hurt him to be spoken to. However, he was the boss, and I had to humour him, so I didnât say any more.
We went down to the country that night, just as the man had told the policeman we would. I was all worked up, for I had heard so much about the country from Fred that I had always wanted to go there. Fred used to go off on a motor-bicycle sometimes to spend the night with his father in Kent, and once he brought back a squirrel with him, which I thought was for me to eat, but mother said no. âThe first thing a dog has to learn,â mother used often to say, âis that the whole world wasnât created for him to eat.â
It was quite dark when we got to the country, but the man seemed to know where to go. He pulled at my rope, and we began to walk along a road with no people in it at all. We walked on and on, but it was all so new to me that I forgot how tired I was. I could feel my mind broadening with every step I took.
Every now and then we would pass a very big house, which looked as if it was empty, but I knew that there was a caretaker inside, because of Fredâs father. These big houses belong to very rich people, but they donât want to live in them till the summer, so they put in caretakers, and the caretakers have a dog to keep off burglars. I wondered if that was what I had been brought here for.
âAre you going to be a caretaker?â I asked the man.
âShut up,â he said.
So I shut up.
After we had been walking a long time, we came to a cottage. A man came out. My man seemed to know him, for he called him Bill. I was quite surprised to see the man was not at all shy with Bill. They seemed very friendly.
âIs that him?â said Bill, looking at me.
âBought him this afternoon,â said the man.
âWell,â said Bill, âheâs ugly enough. He looks fierce. If you want a dog, heâs the sort of dog you want. But what do you want one for? It seems to me itâs a lot of trouble to take, when thereâs no need of any trouble at all. Why not do what Iâve always wanted to do? Whatâs wrong with just fixing the dog, same as itâs always done, and walking in and helping yourself?â
âIâll tell you whatâs wrong,â said the man. âTo start with, you canât get at the dog to fix him except by day, when they let him out. At night heâs shut up inside the house. And suppose you do fix him during the day what happens then? Either the bloke gets another before night, or else he sits up all night with a gun. It isnât like as if these blokes was ordinary blokes. Theyâre down here to look after the house. Thatâs their job, and they donât take any chances.â
It was the longest speech I had ever heard the man make, and it seemed to impress Bill. He was quite humble.
âI didnât think of that,â he said. âWeâd best start in to train this tyke at once.â
Mother often used to say, when I went on about wanting to go out into the world and see life, âYouâll be sorry when you do. The world isnât all bones and liver.â And I hadnât been living with the man and Bill in their cottage long before I found out how right she was.
It was the manâs shyness that made all the trouble. It seemed as if he hated to be taken notice of.
It started on my very first night at the cottage. I had fallen asleep in the kitchen, tired out after all the excitement of the day and the long walks I had had, when something woke me with a start. It was somebody scratching at the window, trying to get in.
Well, I ask you, I ask any dog, what would you have done in my place? Ever since I was old enough to listen, mother had told me over and over again what I must do in a case like this. It is the ABC of a dogâs