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Don; The Story Of A Greedy Dog
by
‘You–you won’t want to whip him?’ said Miss Millikin, ‘because, though it’s all his own doing, he really is not well enough for it just now.’
‘No,’ said Daisy, ‘I won’t tell you my plan, auntie, but it’s better than whipping.’
And all this time the unconscious Don was wearing an expression of uncomplaining suffering, and looking meekly sorry for himself, with no suspicion in the world that he had been found out.
Next day he felt much better, and as the morning was bright he thought that, after all, he might manage another steamer trip; his appetite had come back, and his breath was not nearly so short as it had been. He was just making modestly for the gate when Daisy stopped him. ‘Where are you going, sir?’ she inquired.
Don rolled over instantly with all his legs in the air and a feeble apology in his eye.
‘I want you for just one minute first,’ said Daisy politely, and carried him into the morning-room. Was he going to be whipped?–she couldn’t have the heart–an invalid like him! He tried to protest by his whimpering.
But Daisy did nothing of the kind; she merely took something that was flat and broad and white, and fastened it round his neck with a very ornamental bow and ribbon. Then she opened the French windows, and said in rather a chilly voice, ‘Now run away and get on your nasty steamer and beg, and see what you get by it!’
That seemed, as far as he could tell, very sensible advice, and, oddly enough, it was exactly what he had been intending to do. It did not strike him as particularly strange that Daisy should know, because Don was a dog that didn’t go very deeply into matters unless he was obliged.
He trotted off at an easy pace down to the village, getting hungrier every minute, and hoping that the people on the steamer would have brought nice things to-day, when, close to the turning that led to the landing-stage, he met Jock, and was naturally obliged to stop for a few moments’ conversation.
He was not at all pleased to see him notwithstanding, for I am sorry to say that Don’s greediness had so grown upon him of late that he was actually afraid that his humble friend (who was a little slow to find out when he wasn’t wanted) would accompany him on to the steamboat, and then of course the good things would have to be divided.
However, Don was a dog that was always scrupulously polite, even to his fellow-dogs, and he did not like to be rude now.
‘Hullo!’ said Jock (in dogs’ language of course, but I have reason to believe that what follows is as nearly as possible what was actually said). ‘What’s the matter with you this morning?’
Don replied that he was rather out of sorts, and was going down to a certain lane for a dose of dog-grass.
‘A little dog-grass won’t do me any harm,’ said Jock; ‘I’ll come too.’
This was awkward, but Don pretended to be glad, and they went a little way together.
‘But what’s that thing round your neck?’ asked the Dandie Dinmont.
‘Oh,’ said Don, ‘that? It’s a bit of finery they put on me at the cottage. It pleases them, you know. Think it’s becoming?’
‘Um,’ answered Jock; ‘reminds me of a thing a friend of mine used to wear. But he had a blind man tied to him. I don’t see your blind man.’
‘They would have given me a blind man of course if I’d asked for it,’ said Don airily, ‘but what’s the use of a blind man–isn’t he rather a bore?’
‘I didn’t ask; but my friend said he believed the thing round his neck, which was flat and white just like yours (only he had a tin mug underneath his), made people more inclined to give him things–he didn’t know why. Do you find that?’
‘How stupid of Daisy to forget the mug!’ thought Don. ‘I could have brought things home to eat quietly then.–I don’t know,’ he replied to Jock; ‘I haven’t tried.’