Summer of the Wolves (10 page)

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Authors: Polly Carlson-Voiles

BOOK: Summer of the Wolves
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Today after she finished logging pup behavior, Ian called from the kitchen, “Breakfast!”

As they ate, he laid out the day. “Lorna is coming to pup-sit today. I have errands in town, and thought we would take the boys with us. You can spend some time with Randall, get to know the town a little, and take a break. Pup care is pretty demanding.”

“Not Lorna,” Nika said. “I don't mind, really. We can leave him once Pearl comes back.”

Ian shot her a look. “Yeah, I know, but Lorna is eager to help, and Dave would like her to have the experience. We can show her the routine before we go.”

Nika stabbed her fork into the yolk of the over-easy egg and watched it spill onto the white. What could she say? Ian had this thing about needing a team. “Why do I need to get to know the town?” she asked.

He just looked at her and delivered a slice of buttered toast. “Lorna should be here by ten.” He cleared his plate. “Your turn to wash the dishes.”

For a minute she contemplated returning to her bag for a few more minutes of sleep, but then she'd just have to wake up again. She clunked the dishes and pans around loudly in the hot soapy water.

By the time she was finished, Nika could hear Lorna's loud chirpy voice as she was crossing the rock ledge. Then the front door thumped shut, and she heard voices talking, and footfalls in the living room.

“Hiieee,” Lorna said. Nika nodded from where she slumped, her elbows on the kitchen counter.

As Lorna and Ian approached the door to the porch, Nika glanced over her shoulder and called, “You gotta do your shoes!”

“Oh, that's right. I almost forgot. Thanks for reminding me, Nika,” Lorna said, smiling with her perfect white teeth. She stepped quickly to dip her shoes into the bleach solution at the porch door, grinning at Ian the whole time. Was Lorna trying to impress Ian? Nika wondered. After all, he was single. And not bad looking for forty-two.

Lorna listened open-mouthed to Ian's instructions about how to handle the pup. Not that she paid attention. She bent down and leaned into the wooden box to grab the pup.

Wouldn't do that,
Nika thought, but didn't say anything. The pup squealed and growled and snapped, jamming his short legs into reverse.

Ian looked at Nika, who rolled her eyes upward.

Using a patient teacherly tone, Ian said, “So, Lorna, like I said, maybe it's best if you let him come to you. Just sit for a while and when he comes out, find something to attract him. He likes a pine branch or dog toys like the stuffed lobster. Don't play tug or let him bite on you. He should be hungry in a couple of hours. There's formula in the fridge. Warm it in hot water in a pan—just like you would for a baby. Lay him on the stuffed bear to feed him the first time since it's familiar and it's furry. You'll be fine. He'll sleep most of the time.”

“I'll stay, too,” said Nika quietly, appealing to Ian with narrowed eyes.

“Nope, you're coming with me,” he answered, his tone of voice like a closing door.

 

They picked up Thomas and Randall at the Camerons' dock and sped off across Anchor Lake. Randall sat up front next to Ian on one of the large cushioned seats. An awning covered the front part of the boat. Randall had his eyes on Ian and was grinning. It was sunny and windy and cool, and Nika was glad she remembered her anorak this time. It was still May, and while many days had been almost like summer, she had learned the weather could change fast. She tucked her arms inside her life jacket and looked over at Thomas beside her in the stern. When the boat had first picked up speed, their faces got wet from spray. They both laughed and ducked down. The lake ahead opened into a beautiful silver expanse, chiseled by waves. The boat bounced and thumped the waves. When Nika glanced over at Thomas again, he pulled down his wet baseball cap and grinned, showing a mouthful of braces.

When they were partway into town, Ian called loudly over the sound of the engine and the splashing waves, “I'm going to buzz by that eagle's nest I told you about!”

They arrived at the back side of a small island, across a narrow passage of water from the town of Red Pine. Ian cut the engine and pointed up. The eagle's nest was at the top a giant white pine. It was as big as a queen-size bed, made of sticks woven together and balanced on three heavy top branches.

“This year two chicks hatched,” he said.

He handed the binoculars back to Nika. Randall slipped in back to sit beside her, eager for his turn to look. Nika could see something brownish moving, maybe a head, just over the edge of the nest. She handed the binoculars to Thomas.

“Looks like a chick, maybe,” Thomas said, as the boat idled in a low rumble, rocking with the waves. It was hard to keep the binoculars steady.

“Guys, look quick! One of the adults!” Ian pointed to a white pine to the right of the nest tree. The bird lifted high into the air, dipped its pure white head, then shot downward, hitting the water with its talons extended. As the eagle pulled from the lake, shedding a curtain of water, a fish more than half the length of its body hung from its grasp. With long swoops of its powerful wings, the bird carried its prize to the nest.

“Dinner for the kids,” Ian said. Two small scruffy heads poked up from the nest.

“Who's feeding them? Is it the mom or the dad?” Nika asked.

“They both feed the chicks. It could be either one.”

As they rounded the end of the island, heading toward the town docks, Nika thought about how amazing it was that a dad eagle actually brought food to his chicks. She never knew that before.

 

Since Thomas lived in Red Pine during the school year, he knew every inch of town and seemed excited to show Randall and Nika around. The three of them set off to find hot dogs and ice cream, agreeing to meet Ian back in front of the hardware store at three-thirty.

They ate lunch in the park next to the ice cream place. Two gray jays perched on the bench beside them, cocking their heads and politely accepting bits of food.

Thomas leaned toward Randall and Nika and said, “You two want to go see the crazy man of Red Pine?”

Nika's mom had taught them never to make fun of people who were different. She and Randall just looked at each other, then back at Thomas without saying anything.

“Yeah, well,” Thomas said, sensing their hesitation, “actually, we wouldn't really talk to him or do anything mean, but he's got lots of wild animals in cages. The authorities are always trying to find a way to take his animals away. I guess he used to run a game farm back in the dark ages.”

Nika remembered what Ian had said about the man who captured wolf pups to sell, who once had foxes. Could this be the man who had taken Khan's siblings, who had killed Khan's mother? “Let's go,” she said, feeling a blaze of anger.

Thomas stood up, and they started to walk, dumping their garbage in a nearby can. “My dad says this guy likes animals better than people. Except his cages are too small and he starves them when he can't feed them.”

“What's his name?” Nika asked as they followed Thomas out of the park.

“Bristo. I never heard him called anything else. Just Bristo. He has a potbelly, and a long beard, and he yells at kids.”

Nika remembered the man in the boat off Big Berry Island. She felt a chill.

“What animals does he have?” asked Randall.

“Some funny-colored foxes, I think. Then the wolf he just got, a big dog, some skunks that don't stink, raccoons, and a mountain lion. I heard sometimes he sells wolf puppies to people for pets. My dad says it's not only illegal but they make bad pets. He says people hardly ever keep them once they're grown.”

Thomas led them up the main street, turning after several blocks onto an unpaved street where the houses got more and more dilapidated as they walked.

Finally they approached a decaying wooden fence that ran along the street, then cut back to connect with a shack made of unfinished gray boards. It was in the last row of houses. Tall trees hung over the bare lot beside the shack. Old machine parts lay about, sunken in tangled grasses. Hand written No Trespassing signs were posted on the wooden fence next to other signs with misspelled words about the government and freedom and taxes. Apparently the same freedom didn't apply to the animals he kept. Through missing slats in the fence, Nika could see pens made with rusty wire or chain link. A strange cough-scream from one of the pens caused them to stop so fast, Nika almost fell.

In a quiet voice Thomas said, “It's better to walk right up to the cages in the open, rather than sneaking. I've heard stories of buckshot tearing through the leaves over kids' heads when they spied from the bushes.” With Thomas going first, they went around the end of the rickety fence, past the shed, and walked slowly across the bare yard.

They didn't see anyone, so they kept going toward the pens. The first pen was the size of a small bedroom. A crooked wooden lean-to huddled in one corner under the shade of a scrubby pine. On the roof of the lean-to was a cougar. He must have made the cough-scream noise they'd heard. Nika let herself breathe again when she saw the heavy wire fencing that went over the top of his cage as well as along the sides.

They stood away from the wire and watched the cougar's tail make question marks in the air. After a while the tail relaxed and just twitched at the tip. The animal never moved. His sand-colored eyes looked straight past them, through them. He was skinny and worn like an old fur coat.

“Kinda creepy,” said Randall. “He just stares. Maybe he's sleeping with his eyes open.” He moved behind Nika.

Past the cougar cage was a smaller cage with foxes in it. One of them was almost black. They were splotchy and skinny, not like storybook foxes. They paced constantly back and forth with a smooth gliding motion, wheeling around when they got to the corner. Thomas squatted down to talk to them. Instead of stopping, they ducked away, their gaze sharply focused on something in the distance. Nika followed their gaze. Nothing was there except a rocky field and some dead grass.
Maybe they were looking at freedom,
she thought.

They could see other pens behind the first two. In one was a flash of black and white. In another, four raccoons were pressed together in a small cage. They lowered their heads, staring from the shadows.

When one of the raccoons hissed, Nika said, “Let's leave.”

“You kids get outta here,” a voice growled from behind the cougar's pen, making all three jump. They hadn't heard any footsteps. They turned and froze, as a man walked slowly toward them. He had a shaved head, a long untrimmed beard, and a dirty shirt that puckered between too-tight buttons.

It was the swearing man she'd seen off Big Berry Island. As in a bad dream, Nika wanted to run, but her muscles turned to rubber. She lowered her head, hoping the man wouldn't recognize her. Randall grabbed Nika's arm, and Thomas bravely stepped forward with a cautious smile.

“We just came to see the animals. It's a nice cougar.” Clearly Thomas had learned the value of a little conversation at the right moment.

The man put his head back and laughed, a rusty barking sound. “Nice, you think? Yeah? I bet he'd like to
eat
one of you. That's if his teeth were still good.” His laughter turned into deep coughs. He turned around and spat on the ground.

Thomas was slowly stepping backward and bumped into Nika and Randall.

“What about that wolf you had, the tan one?” Thomas asked.

The whites of the man's eyes showed as his stare drilled into Thomas. He snapped a glance at Nika. A question flicked across his face.

“Too much trouble. I thought she'd make pups. With him.” He pointed to a large black dog lying alone in a cage beyond the foxes.

Nika noticed one cage with its gate open.

“Good money for pups like that. But that tan bitch, she dug out, the worthless bag of bones.” He swore a long string of words. When he finished, he had a confused, faraway look on his face. Then he seemed to get angry again, his eyes on the empty cage.

“You kids deaf? Now get!” His eyes darted around almost as though he were seeing something. Then he turned and walked to the windowless shed, going in and slamming the door behind him.

They turned and ran, hearing the cough-scream one more time, just before they hit the road at edge of his property.

Only when they were back on Roosevelt Street did they talk again. Thomas tried to laugh, but his voice sounded wobbly “What a nutcase!” he said, breathing hard.

Nika slowed to catch her breath. But she was still scared. Was this the man who stole Khan's brothers and sisters? Why was he keeping animals like that? It didn't make sense.

Walking beside her, Randall's eyes were so big and his skin so white that she put her arm around him. With a shift of his thin shoulders, he slipped from her arm and moved closer to Thomas, where he matched his steps to the longer steps of the bigger boy. Was he mad at her? She really didn't understand Randall lately.

For a minute she stopped on the sidewalk and let them get ahead of her. Then she turned around and glared back toward Bristo's. She wanted to shout at him. He had no right to cage wild animals. It certainly seemed like the authorities weren't doing much. But maybe there was something she could do. She looked at Thomas striding ahead, remembering that he could drive a boat.

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