‘He can’t call it that!’ said Kathie later. ‘Don’t worry,’ Tom said. ‘It’ll soon shorten, I’ll see to that,’ and, right from the start, he spoke of and to the puppy as ‘Sis’, and Spider soon followed suit.
The summer of 1941 was, for Spider, the happiest time of his life so far. Not that he knew what year it was, nor would the number have meant anything. When on his fifteenth birthday, his father held up the fingers and thumb of one hand three times, and said ‘That’s how old you are now,’ he doubted if the boy could understand.
Spider’s happiness was almost wholly due to Sis. Most people have to work, sometimes very hard, at training their dogs, but from an early age Sis seemed to sense what it was that Spider wanted from her.
He had of course watched his father working old Molly, and then, later, Moss, and he had picked up the basic commands like ‘Sit’ and ‘Down’ and ‘Stay’ and ‘Come’, nice short words for him to say, all of whose meanings Sis learned very quickly. She would come to the whistle too, the big silver whistle he used to scare the ‘croaks’, but there was seldom need for this, since she generally stuck to him like a limpet. Before she was much older (and once Kathie was satisfied about house-training), Sis slept on an old rug at the foot of Spider’s bed, and whatever jobs Percy found for him during the week, she would be sitting or lying near, her eyes always on him.
‘Nothing’s never going to surprise me about young Spider,’ said Billy to his nephews, ‘after what he done with they bleddy horses. Thik dog’ll be walking on its hindlegs afore long, I dessay, and next thing after that, he’ll be teaching she to talk. Not many words, mind you, because the poor little bagger don’t say much hisself, but enough to say “Hullo, Billy” when I do come in stables of a morning.’
‘Oh, I don’t think she’d say that, Uncle,’ said Frank. ‘She’m a polite sort of dog.’
‘Frank’s right,’ said Phil. ‘More likely she’ll say “Good morning, Mr Butt”.’
‘Ar, you’m right,’ said Billy.‘T’would be more respectful-like.’
When the spring corn was drilled, Sis was still very young, and merely followed the crowstarver up and down the fields as he banged and yelled and shouted at the black thieves.
But by the time of the autumn drilling the bitch had changed out of all recognition. Strictly, Mister had been wrong in describing her as a lurcher, for lurchers should have greyhound blood, but nonetheless she looked like one, long-legged, long-bodied, deep-chested, hard-muscled, and with no hint of superfluous flesh. She looked in short like a dog born to run, and run she did as the crowstarver patrolled the winter wheat.
Once she realized – which she very quickly did – that Spider wanted her to chase those flocks of black birds, she extended his range enormously. For a second year both Maggs’ Corner and Slimer’s were down to wheat, but now the ‘croaks’ could not escape harassment by simply flying from the first to the second, for while slow Spider marched in one, speedy Sis was racing round the other.
The thought that she might catch and kill a bird did not occur to Spider, though it would certainly have worried him if it had. For, as Tom had told him at the very beginning of his crowstarving, he was not expected to hurt the ‘croaks’, but just to shout and bang at them.
In fact, despite her speed, there was no chance of her pulling down a crow, a rook or a jackdaw, for their ultimate safety lay in flight. Other creatures however might flee but could not fly, and one day something happened that caused Spider great confusion and distress.
Crossing from one field to the other, boy and dog came out of the spinney – where Spider’s house still stood, though now somewhat weather-beaten – to see a host of ‘croaks’ hard at work. Sis looked up at Spider – she would not go until told – and he said ‘Good dog!’ and pointed at the birds, and away she dashed. Spider walked out towards the opposite end of the field and stood, watching her. Suddenly he saw, not far in front of him, a low brown shape. The hare lay motionless in its form, long ears flat. Big barrit! said Spider to himself, and then he saw Sis, her job done, racing back towards him.
A puff of wind brought the boy’s scent sharply to the hare, and it rose and began to lope away. Because of the set of their eyes, hares have poor forward vision, and for a moment this one, looking back, saw the human but not the fast approaching dog. When it did, it was too late.
It jinked, but before it could gather itself for the highspeed run that the dog could not have matched, Sis swerved and took it across the back. The hare screamed like a child in agony.
‘No, Sis, no!’ yelled Spider, and he ran towards them in his awkward way, but by the time he reached the hare, it was dead. That afternoon Spider did no more crowstarving. He sat in his house, the body of the hare in his lap, his dog at his feet, whining now and then for she sensed that something was wrong though she knew not what.
Spider’s thoughts were in a whirl. He had seen death in the animal world before, of course; dead lambs, dead chickens, hedgehogs squashed on the road, naked baby birds fallen from the nest. He knew that Molly had died, though he did not understand how. But this creature, this beautiful ‘big barrit’, had been killed by his own dog, and its screams still rang in his ears. He did not know what to think.
At last, at dusk, he got up and began to make his way home, carrying the hare, the dog at heel.
Kathie was in her kitchen when Spider came in. He laid the body of the hare upon the kitchen table. Then he sat down in a chair, rested his arms on the table, leaned his head upon them, and began to weep. Apart from the time when he was a small baby and reacted as small babies do, Kathie had never seen Spider cry. He might be feeling ill, or be disappointed over something, or have hurt himself in some way, but he never cried.
Tom came in. He looked at the body on the table. He looked at the weeping boy. He looked at the dog lying at the boy’s feet, whining softly.
‘What’s up?’ he said to Kathie.
‘I don’t know. He just came in and put that hare on the table.’
‘Dog must have killed it,’ said Tom. He bent and fondled the bitch’s ears.‘Oh dear, Sis,’ he said. ‘Anyone else would have been ever so pleased with you.’
He put a hand on Spider’s shaking shoulders. ‘It’s all right, son,’ he said. ‘It’s all right. You don’t want to blame yourself, nor Sis, she only done what’s natural to a dog,’ but Spider continued gently to sob.
‘You’d best get that thing out of here, Tom,’ said Kathie. ‘I want to lay up for your tea.’
‘Wass want me to do with it?’ said Tom.
‘Oh just get rid of it, bury it, so’s he can’t see it no more.’
Tom took the hare away, and Kathie fetched Spider’s new book that they had given him for his fifteenth birthday. It was another picture book of animals, but this time of exotic ones, lions, tigers, camels, elephants and so forth, to help him if he should want to try carving some creature that he could not set eyes on in the flesh, and indeed he had made a model of a giraffe.
Now she opened it and put it in front of him. ‘Have a look at this, Spider love,’ she said, ‘while I get your tea.’
She wiped his nose and his eyes, and Spider looked up and saw that the table was empty, and his sobs subsided.
‘Where big barrit?’ he asked, sniffing.
‘Dada’s gone to bury it,’ said Kathie.
Gradually, now that he could no longer see the dead animal, Spider began to look less miserable, and the dog, sensing this somehow, put her head on his lap and he stroked it.
Later he ate his tea – in silence, but that was usual – and then, as his mother was clearing away the plates, he said to his father, ‘Sis killed big barrit, Dada.’
‘I know,’ said Tom. ‘T’wasn’t your fault, t’wasn’t her fault. Next time she goes after one, you blow your whistle and she’ll come back.’
After Spider was in bed, Sis on her rug at its foot, Kathie said ‘What did you do with it?’
‘With what?’
‘That hare. Did you bury it?’
‘Some of it,’ said Tom.
‘What d’you mean?’
‘Oh look, Kath, that was a good big hare, that was. I skinned him and I paunched him, and I buried his skin and his guts and the rest of him’s in the larder. Tisn’t as though we can afford all that much fresh meat on my wages. You cook him, he’ll go down a treat.’
‘Oh Tom, but what if Spider should ask what we’re eating?’
‘He never does, you know that. He just puts down whatever’s set in front of him. Apart from his precious liquorice allsorts, I don’t reckon he ever knows what he’s eating.’
‘But suppose he does ask?’
‘Tell him it’s chicken.’
Tom was right. To Spider food was simply food, and thoughts of the morality of people killing animals in order to eat them had never crossed his mind.
Kathie was right too. Had Spider been told that what in due course was set before him was the ‘big barrit’ that Sis had killed, he might well have been terribly upset.
But he didn’t ask, he simply cleared his plateful.
Because of that bout of bitter weeping, Tom and Kathie worried that the whole incident might somehow have thrown out of balance the even – if odd – tenor of Spider’s ways.
But a couple of days later, he came home and told them, in his own limited language and by gesture, of something that had obviously made him feel very much happier.
Sis had put up another hare and set off in hot pursuit of it, they gathered, and Spider had blown his whistle, and the dog had broken off the chase immediately and come back to him.
‘Good Sis!’ he had said, and now he said it again, while his dog looked up at him in adoration.