~chapter one~

She was third born in a litter of five pups that warm May morning in Northern California.  She was big-boned just like her father, Jett.  Jett’s mistress, Mary, loved him dearly.  She often looked out the back door of her home to see him standing in the near woods that bordered her property.  He appeared majestic to her, every bit the North American Timber Wolf in her eyes.  He was a long-haired German Shepherd, purebred, papers going back for generations.  Mary made an arrangement to sire him out.  For her part she would be given pick of the litter.

When the puppies were born, there was no doubt in Mary’s mind as to whom her pick would be.  The size of the puppy’s paws, huge and out of proportion to its body, captured the discerning woman’s attention.  When the litter was weaned Mary took her puppy home to meet Jett.  She was taken aback, a bit surprised, when he refused to accept his daughter at first.  He sniffed her from one end to the other, shook his shaggy head, then returned to the thin woods, his place amongst the trees.

The little girl was terrified.  While Jett was poking and sniffing at her with his nose she put her head down and pressed her body against the wall of Mary’s back porch.  Her bushy tail held low, she watched closely as Jett left the porch and disappeared, stiff-legged, into the trees. 

“Look at you, poor puppy,” Mary said.  She scratched the pup behind its ears, kissed the top of its head.  “You’re beautiful,” she crooned lowly, “Perfect markings, your mask and the top of your ears, tan and black, just perfect.”  Mary gathered the big puppy up in her arms and sat on the porch rocking her back and forth.  “You’re my princess,” she said softly, “I’m going to call you Talah.”

Talah whimpered, sounded almost like a baby crying. “I know, I know,” Mary whispered in her ear.  “You miss your mother and don’t remember your daddy, Jett.  Don’t worry, he’ll come around.”

Mary wasn’t so sure about that.  Jett’s behavior confused her.  She had supposed he would recognize his daughter immediately by scent, at the very least understand that she was one of his kind and needed him.  A proud and solitary animal, he tolerated other creatures, Mary’s son’s dogs and her cat in particular but preferred to be alone.  Mary led the puppy to a corner of the porch where she had constructed a bed out of old towels and what-not.  Talah groaned and laid her head down when Mary went inside.

Jett watched it all from the cover of the trees.  He was conscious of Mary’s every move, her comings and goings.  There was a bed on the porch for him next to the one Mary had made for the pup.  He seldom slept there, preferring to stay in the lair he had made for himself deep in the trees.  He went there now to lie down, his ears keen to Mary’s movements in the house and the pup’s whimpering.  Later, when he was sure they were both asleep, he went through the perimeter fence, deeper into the California woods to hunt.

Early the next day, Mary awoke and busied herself with her morning ritual of toast and coffee.  A bumping sound from the back porch reminded her of the puppy.  She tip-toed across the room and peeked out the window.  She hoped to see Jett and the pup together.  “Oh my,” she gasped.  Her hands fumbled with the lock on the door.

Mary was terrified at what she saw when she stepped onto the porch.  The puppy’s rag bed was torn to shreds.  She was lying in the middle of the mess, her face and head matted with blood.  “Oh no,” Mary sighed, “Jett, you didn’t.” 

The puppy whined and Mary was both relieved and distressed.  It was alive but bloody and crying.  She rushed into the kitchen and returned presently with a bucket of warm water and clean towels from the bathroom.  The puppy was waiting at the door for her, its tail wagging and head cocked to one side.  Her hands full, Mary nudged the door open with a foot.  The puppy walked gingerly to its torn up bed and lay down.  It began gnawing on something amongst the bloody rags.

Mary dipped a towel in the warm water and bent to the task of cleaning the blood from Talah’s face.  She worked slowly at first, careful and gentle, expecting with each wipe to find an open wound.  The pup nuzzled her hand and nipped playfully at her.  It jumped up unexpectedly and knocked over the pail of water.  “Silly girl,” Mary said, a perplexed look on her face. 

“Jett,” Mary said under her breath.  She rummaged through the mess of the puppy’s bed and found an animal bone.  “Here puppy, here Talah,” she crooned in a singing voice, picking up the bone and offering it to the dog.  “Your daddy brought you a present last night, didn’t he?”

Talah accepted the bone.  She sat there with it in her mouth, studying Mary with her intelligent and inquisitive puppy eyes.  She whimpered a bit, set the bone on the floor of the porch, and lay down next to it. 

“Well, sweety, you sure gave me a fright,” Mary said as she sat down next to Talah and worked at washing the blood away.  She was startled by the sound of the screen door opening behind her.

“Ma, what happened?  What’s all that blood?  Are you okay?”  Her twenty-year-old son, Jimmy, stood there, concern and worry evident on his face and in the tone of his voice.”

“I picked the puppy up at the breeder yesterday,” Mary explained.  “Looks like Jett dragged something home last night.  That’s where all the blood seems to have come from, thank goodness!”

Jimmy knelt down and examined the pup.  “She’s the spitting image of Jett when he was a puppy.”

“Look at the size of those legs and feet,” Mary said, pointing a finger at Talah.  “And her markings, they’re perfect.  She’ll be a whole lot prettier than her daddy.”  She paused a moment, glanced inquisitively at her son.  “I didn’t hear you drive in.  Shouldn’t you be at work?”

Jimmy scratched Talah behind the ears.  “I got laid off, Ma, haven’t worked for a couple of weeks.  I’m about to lose my apartment.”

“Help me get some food and water for this little girl,” Mary sighed, “Then we’ll go in and talk over coffee while I get ready for work.

http://wordwulf.com
WordWulf
Inquiries: tracy@traceliteraryagency.com & wordwulf@wordwulf.com
© artwork & words conceived by & property of
Tom (WordWulf) Sterner ©

 
 
I’d like to thank my wife’s mother who I never met in this life for teaching her daughter the appropriate action to take when dealing with nuisances, remedies and recipes for destroying destroyers, as in sprinkling salt on meandering hordes of slugs leech-ass clinging to the cat food dish.

And my own mother, in fact; while ranching with her in Wyoming she taught me many things, not the least of which was taking action against flocks of summer moths.  She poured water into a small saucepan, mixed in dishwashing soap, tossed a dish towel over her shoulder, and advised me to watch closely.  She stood on a kitchen chair, held soapy water under the ceiling light, swooped at the moths with her dish towel.  They fell down, drowned in layers.

I went over one morning to have coffee with Momma and my stepdad.  She was sitting at the table weeping.  He was out riding fence.  Momma lifted my four-year-old son into her lap, held him near to her breast, when he asked her where Lady and Snoopy were.  They were pets brought from the city when my stepdad purchased the ranch.

Snoopy was a loveable Siberian Husky with a hair lip, one blue eye and one brown.  Lady was a red Alaskan Malamute.  Snoopy followed her everywhere.  She was a year older and half again his size.  Lady took care of my boy.  Many a time I was busy with chores, turned around to say something to that little guy and he wasn’t there.  He did that things kids do, disappeared into thin air.

There were wells and holes and rattlesnakes, a thirty foot high slab pile full of black widow spiders outside a dilapidated sawmill/barn.  I went near crazy looking for that boy at times.  Out there in the endless fields one day, hay and alfalfa, lavender yellow, I followed those curled Husky’s tails meandering through the rows.  I found Lady herding my boy back to the house, keeping him safe, bringing him home, Snoopy close on her heels.

There was a lot for a father to worry about on that red dirt, dry-assed Wyoming ranch, cows out, broken fences, sixteen hour work days seven days a week, the never-ending demands of the hard-boss, my stepfather.  Lady gave me peace and assurance that whatever hole I fell into my boy was safe with her.

Momma was weeping.  “Give me a minute,” she sobbed.  Momma wasn’t a crier.  I watched her closely, Momma’s hand on that coffee cup, as I poured myself a cup and took a seat at the table, her arms around my boy.  She took a sip, set her cup down slow and easy.  “Remember when the dogs were chasing the cows?”  She looked across the table at me, her eyes chocolate brown, deep and moist, bottomless.

“A couple of weeks ago,” I replied, “What?”

“Do you remember what he said?”

“He said they can’t do that.  It distresses the cows.  They’re ready to calve.”

She nodded sadly.  “Yes, and the lead poisoning.”

I ran my fingers through my beard.  “Hell Momma, he says some weird-assed shit.  That lead poisoning dogs and cows business didn’t make a connection with me but I didn’t want to hear any more about it so what the hell…”

“That porcupine the dogs kept chasing,” she mused, “It died of lead poisoning.”

I nodded my head.  “That was something.  Never occurred to me a creature could get so many quills in its face.  They whimpered and cried like little babies while I sat on ‘em and he pulled ‘em out with pliers.  Seven days in a row, they’d go find that damned thing and go after it again..”

“He shot that porcupine dead,” Momma said.

“Hell of a shot,” I agreed.  “A hundred yards away, that porcupine dropped dead off that telephone pole before we heard the report of the rifle.  Can’t say I felt sorry for it, all the work it put us through.”

Momma hugged my boy tight, buried her face in his hair. 

“The dogs chased his calves last night,” she whispered, “lead poisoning.”

http://wordwulf.com
WordWulf
Inquiries: tracy@traceliteraryagency.com & wordwulf@wordwulf.com
© artwork & words conceived by & property
of Tom {WordWulf}  Sterner ©

 
 
Picture
~Violent thunder & hail~
~camper shaking & leaking~
~in half a dozen places~
~dog scared out of her wits, wrapped around my feet~
~instantaneous gutter river freeze~
~better get used to it, my California friends~
~Colorado springtime singing to my blood~
 
 
~campering~
~listening to trains~
~watching the dog’s legs~
~twitch while she sleeps~
~raiding a ghost train~
~to join her there~
 
 
~mean night-
~a man & his son~
~levis & leather~
~whiskey & rum~
~good dog~
~a big dog~
~something~
 ~they can get ahold of~
 
 
Picture
a compilation of lies,useless information, bad jokes&little poems

For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism.


It costs about 3 cents to make a $1 bill.

intent of counterpoint
duelists in the dawn
portrait silhouette
baby is crying

A 6-year-old boy opened the family bible. He was fascinated as he fingered through the thin pages. Suddenly, something fell out of the bible. He picked the object up and looked at it. It was an old leaf that had been pressed in between the pages. “Mom, look what I found,” he called out.  “What have you got there?” she asked.  
In an awe-struck voice, he answered, “I think it's Adam's underwear.”


Spiders never spin webs in or on
structures made of chestnut wood. That’s why so many tall European buildings were built with chestnut beams.  Spider webs
on a 50-foot beamed ceiling are a pain to remove.


a city on the move
weeping of mountain
witless romantic
the emperor sighs

A 6-year-old girl had just finished her
first week of school.  “I'm just wasting
my time Mom,” she said.  “I can't read,
I can't write and they won't let me talk!”


The first Band-Aid Brand Adhesive Bandages were 3 inches wide and 18 inches long. You made your own bandage by cutting off as much as you needed.

legends of God-speak

thin binding flesh
Momma’s smoking a cigarette
laughter from the whiskey bar
 
 
Picture
a compilation of lies, useless information, bad jokes & little poems

If you think nobody cares about you, try missing a couple of car payments.


Ten thousand insects are required to feed a single toad during the course of a typical summer.

left and right crosses
requirements of requiem
asleep in the choir
voice deeper than stone

Drugs may lead to nowhere, but at least it's the scenic route.

A sneeze travels at a speed of over 100 m.p.h.

let us taste his beans
the door of opportunity
three winds in a vacuum
outside waiting four more

Bills make it through the mail at twice
the speed of checks.


Quaaludes, the sex drug of choice during the disco era, were first developed to
fight malaria.


we were passed by Dilbert
a tin-can tuna melt
tryin’ to live in the hills
a writer of camp songs

A fool and his money are soon partying.

The world's largest amphibian is the giant salamander. It can grow up to 5 ft. long.

she has fish eyes
ducks swimming ‘cross the sky
each drawer wears a masque
alone in the room

A clear conscience is usually the sign
of a bad memory.


Mosquitoes are attracted to the color
blue twice as much as to any other color.  


life is a cross ties
footstep on the moon
sadder than spilt water
funnel of mercy

To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism.  To steal from many
is known as research.


Ants stretch when they wake up. They
also appear to yawn like humans before taking up the tasks of the day.


she listens to voices
owls sleep in the afternoon
for a slice of white bread
dreams of the kill
 
 
Picture
a compilation of lies, useless information, bad jokes & little poems

I plan to be spontaneous tomorrow.


Captain Kangaroo, Bob Keeshan, was star of the first TV network kids’ show in the United States. CBS launched it in 1954.

decision to wear my motor
a free and separate passion
dizzying rain
dithery doo

The conscience is what hurts when all other parts feel good.

The human heart rests between beats. In the average lifetime of 70 years, the total resting time is estimated to be about 40 years.

unclear as stark light
a bug on the windscreen
this dream sequence
leggy bits of goo

42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot.

It takes roughly 63,000 trees to make the newsprint for the average Sunday edition of The New York Times.

the cueing of partners
frazzle of thread bits
bananas on a plate
speaking of winter

99 percent of lawyers give the rest a bad name.

A crocodile can go through 2,000 to 3,000 teeth in a lifetime.

four times a dollar
quarters of century
ill spent years
praying for mother

Half the people you know are below average.

Each year, there are more than 40,000 toilet related injuries in the United States.

who will hold us up
robbers upon closing
death is a whip
nine bells down

Borrow money from pessimists. 
They don't expect it back.


No president of the United States
was an only child.


prisoners of light
moth conspiracy
war men fan the flames
sense of dignity
 
 
Picture
While conducting a routine vandalism report at an elementary school, the policeman was interrupted by a 7-year-old girl. Staring at his uniform, she asked,
“Are you a cop?”   “Yes,”  he replied and continued writing his report. “My mother told me if I ever need help I should ask the police.  Is that right?”  “Yes,” he answered. “Okay then,” she said, extending her foot toward him, “Would
you please tie my shoe?”


The longest one syllable word in the English language is screeched.

fellow witnesses
all hail
bride of satan
to wings aspire

The guy was sitting in his living room having a beer when he heard a tiny
sound, tick, tick-tick.  He got up and
went to the door, opened it up and
didn't see anything.  The man returned
to his chair.  No sooner had he gotten comfortable, he heard that aggravating sound again, tick, tick-tick.  He got up
and opened the door again.  This time
he looked more carefully and there at
his feet was a snail.  He drew back
and kicked it as hard as he could.


 Six months later the man was sitting in his living room having a beer, taking it easy.  Tick, tick-tick.  He jumped up and threw the door open.  Sure enough, there was the snail.  The snail said, "Why'd you do that?"

Singer Aretha Franklin is afraid of flying. She won’t travel on airplanes for concerts no matter where they are.

shallow aurora
shadow of eos
no time like now
some thing fishy swim

If everything seems to be going well, you’ve overlooked something.

Coprastasophobia is the fear of constipation.

I don’t understand you
thank you
your applause
might unearth me

When everything’s coming your way,
you're in the wrong lane.


Buttermilk does not contain any butter.

respite of tyrants
from mouths of babes
epithet
lullaby

Hard work pays off in the future.
Laziness pays off now.

A man’s brain is only 2 percent of his body weight, while a woman’s brain makes up 2.5 percent of her body weight, a full 25 percent more.

a mother to strangers
orphans of choice
voice of descent
six cubed down
 
 
Picture
a compilation of lies,useless information, bad jokes&little poems

Why are hemorrhoids called "hemorrhoids" instead of asteroids"?


September is National Chicken Month.

above it all drifting
through droppings with
the dignity of a pigeon
& egg shell minded


Why do they have a tourist season if we can't shoot at them?

Mary had a Little Lamb was published Sept. 1st, 1830.

when I was a crow
I stole meals
from the talons of eagles
then flew away with dignity


Why is there an expiration date on sour cream?

The first volume of the Oxford English Dictionary was published in 1884.

crazier ‘n hell
the bolts are worked out
he can’t get rid of
the nuts are all he is

If you spin an oriental man in a circle three times does he become disoriental?

A ‘diglot’ is something or someone that uses two languages, or is bilingual.

youthful & engaging
wide-eyed she wonders
is spirituality part physical love

Can an atheist get insurance against acts of God?

The National Population Council estimates that 74 billion human beings have been born and died in the past 500,000 years.

sticks stones & ice
dark children are making
snow devils out there hiding in the yard

Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.

Cockroaches sample food before it enters their mouths and learn not to eat foul-tasting poisons. They will eat wallpaper or TV cords and become cannibals if food is scarce.

there’s a white woman in the room
shampoo
you can’t judge speed from a distance
come on down
 

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