THE DOG
by
KERSTIN EKMAN
Translated from Swedish by Linda Schenck and Rochelle Wright
sphere
First published as Ihtuden in Sweden in 1986 by Bonmers
First published in Great Britain in 201)9 by Sphere
Copyright Kerstin Ekman 1986
Published by arrangement with Bonnier Group Agency, Stockholm, Sweden.
The right of Kerstin Ekman to be identified as Proprietor of this Work has been
asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
All characters and events in this publication, other than those
clearly in the public domain, are fictitious and any resemblance
to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
('. Illustrations Henrik Krogh 1986
All rights reserved.
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imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
ISBN 978-1-84744-171-3
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www. hachettelivre.co.uDDINBYCH
Bertrams
When does something begin?
It doesn't begin. There's always something else before it.
It begins the way a stream starts as a rivulet and a rivulet
starts as a trickle of water in the marsh. It's the rain that
makes the marsh water rise.
In winter the spruces have full skirts. The snow is so deep
that it catches in the bottom ring of branches. When storms
pack it down, hollows and dens form under the trees. A fox
can find a hideout there, out of the wind and foul weather.
Grouse hens take cover under the skirts of the spruces too,
but never under the same root as the fox. He huddles there
waiting for night to fall. He waits for the moonlight and for
a crust to form on the snow.
Where does a tale begin?
Under the root of a spruce, perhaps.
Yes, under the root of a spruce tree. A little grey fellow
was lying there, all curled up, his muzzle tucked under his
tail. A dog. But he didn't know that. He was so small he was
able to squeeze in under a root. The root encircled him like
a rough brown arm but it didn't keep him warm.
The only warmth he got was from his own body. Inside
him was emptiness. He couldn't think: warmth, belly, teats,
milk. He didn't remember his mother's belly with its thin,
white coat, or her yellow eyes gleaming when they all suckled.
He
couldn't remember. There was nothing but a great big
hole inside, a gnawing, a hunger for warmth and for the
mild, pungent sweetness that filled his mouth, and for his
mother when she had come in from outside with strange
scents in her fur, nipping at the scruff of his neck and licking
the corner of his mouth.
How had he ended up under that spruce?
He didn't remember and he couldn't have told the tale.
The man headed out on to the frozen lake on his snowmobile.
He was going fishing. The mother dog had seen him
take his green jacket from the hook and figured he was going
hunting. It was the wrong time of year, though; the scent of
the March air told her that. She sat on the front steps, quiet
and attentive. When the snowmobile swung out behind the
woodshed she thought she saw the butt of a rifle, but her
sight wasn't very good. It was the ice drill he had strapped
onto his backpack. He hadn't called her to him. He hadn't
signalled his plans. But the green jacket, the rifle butt. She sat
rigid, ears cocked, until the snowmobile vanished in among
the pine trees by the marsh. Then she bounded off after him
anyway. The hunt!
And behind her, the pup.
It was a wide path, rough from snowmobile tracks. He
could smell petrol and oil and his mother. He ran, barrelling
along on his short legs. Soon she was out of sight, though he
could still hear the engine. Then there was silence and he
was alone on the long, white ribbon leading out on to the
lake.
The man drove across the lake to the boat landing by the
summer pasture, and looped up to the cabin to check that
things were all right. Then back down to the lake. He didn't
see the dog following him until he stopped. By the time she
caught up she was worn out. Her belly sagged under her. You
silly girl, he said. I'll bet you thought I was going hunting!
He started drilling through the new ice over the fishing
holes, and set the lines in place. The air was piercing cold,
the mist so thick he couldn't see the mountain tops. The dog
sat beside him, her yellow eyes squinting. Her sensitive nose caught the scent of her pup, and every now and then she
took a turn round the fishing holes, expecting him to come.
The fish weren't biting and the cold, black water froze in
layers of ice on the fishing lines.
A flurry of snow, a grey swirl, passed over the lake. She
snorted. Her master said, We'd best be heading home. He
took it slowly enough for her to keep up. But he drove back
in a wide arc, not the same way he had come.
When the man returned his wife was on the front steps,
her hands up the sleeves of her sweater. By then there was
driving snow and a hard westerly wind off the mountains in
Norway. She told him one of the pups was missing. The
dark grey one.
They searched all day in the powdery, whirling snow. They tried to get the mother dog to follow his scent but she
couldn't. The snow didn't let up. By evening it had become
a storm. His wife wept, saying they'd never find the pup.
He'll have frozen to death by now, she said.
A storm from the west is like a broom, a grey blast sweeping
across lake and forest. Afterwards there's no trace of ski or
snowmobile tracks, of animal or bird, no wads of snuff
around the fishing holes, no bait, no blood. Everything is
fresh, white and smooth.
Now, the morning after the storm, no one could see the
tracks from the man on the snowmobile. The weather had
cleared. The sun hadn't yet risen and the sky shifted towards
green as the day grew light. The sliver of moon above the
hill faded. It looked tenuous and tattered.
A black grouse flew up. The snow whirled around his
wings when he burst out from his hollow under the spruce.
He settled high up in a birch and soon there came another
and yet another. They clung there like dark fruit in the
crown of the birch, so heavy the branches sagged under
them. They began eating leaf buds.
The pup had slept under his spruce. He was stiff and
thirsty when he crawled out and lifted his nose above the
newly fallen snow. The light, what little there was, blinded
him. He saw the grouse in the birch tree but didn't know
what they were or whether they were dangerous. They
were alive. In the whiteness their black heads were the only
thing moving. He crept backwards into the hole and ate
snow. It triggered his hunger, and his stomach began to
ache. He whined but no one came. He whimpered, listening.
No paws crossing the linoleum, no boot steps, no
voice.
He slept a little but the bellyache was still there and made
him whine. The next time he awakened he thought he
picked up a smell that wasn't like snow or cold or air, and he
started digging. He kicked up pine needles and soil and then
finally found what he'd smelled. He kept at it for a long time
and when the sun came up and gleamed in the icy windows
of the pasture cabin he had eaten two fox turds and a few
lingonberries.
When he next woke up the grouse were gone. Sunlight
glared off the snow and he squinted with pain. He shut his
eyes and ate some snow; it melted quickly in his mouth.
Water from the thawing snow ran into the hole. Now he was
really freezing because his fur, still a puppy coat, was soaked
through.
A magpie flashed across Ins field of vision and settled not
far away; he could hear her chatter and peck.
He recognised the sound. Magpie chatter was followed by
the mother dog's growling when the bright bird grew bold
and came too close to their food. Insistent, penetrating
sounds were also what he longed for: his mother and the
food bowl. He wanted to get back. But when he started off
through the damp snow he sank, floundering. Soon everything
was just wet and grey and he was exhausted. He lay
deep in the snow for a long time, without hearing the
magpie. Then the memory faded. When he really started to
freeze, with his bare belly against the wet snow, he managed,
even though his legs hurt, to turn around and make his way
back to the hole under the spruce.
He slept, and even when the sun was at its highest in the
sky it never penetrated the root of the spruce where he was
lying. This was on a northern slope, on a wooded rise
behind the summer pasture. Faint with hunger, he lay with
his muzzle tucked under his own backside to draw warmth
from his body, from his own wet, matted coat and the cavity
in which his heart fluttered like the wing of a bird in the
cold and damp. It beat eagerly and wildly, throbbing, hungry
for life, for warmth and kind voices, for milk, sunshine,
tongues, fur, paws, belly and legs.
He wasn't alone in the pasture. A squirrel scurried,
hooked claws clattering on the bark of the spruce tree. The
black grouse settled in the treetop again when the snow
turned blue. They sat in the dusk, filling their gullets with
birch buds to ward off hunger and the night and the cold
that crept up from the shadows. He had heard the cheeping
and twittering of a great tit all afternoon in the sunlight, and
the drip of the melting snow. Now that it was colder, the
bird was silent and had crept in under the eaves of the cabin.
A little flock of them spent the night there, keeping each
other warm.
It was a cold night. They slept under the eaves with pattering
hearts, their blood coursing and throbbing. In crevices
and nests, in dens and under roots they slept. The pup sank
more deeply into the lethargy of cold.
THE DOG
The magpie's sharp, piercing laughter. Time after time her
impudent chatter from the top of a birch. The woods near
the pasture are full of other magpies and they need to know
she's here, that she's claimed this treetop and everything visible
from it. The others hear her but do not reply. And all
the way down under the branches of the spruce tree, heavy
with the weight of the frozen, wet snow, the pup hears the
magpie. Eventually he comes completely awake, surfacing
from a sleep that has long been dangerously deep, thanks to
the cheeky, insistent jabbering.
He moves around because he's thirsty and manages to eat
a bit of snow. But it isn't the same. It's hard. The magpie goes
on chattering; from his hole the pup can see the flash of her
white breast and the way her blue and black tail feathers
shimmer with every outburst. She woke him up. The snow
he ate has triggered the hunger inside him. Now he crawls
out. The magpie's finished and she flies off, disappearing into
the woods in a gleaming black arc.
This is a different kind of morning. Very cold, very few
scents in the air. The birch branches have long, stiff icicles
from snow that melted the previous day. A light breeze from
the lake sets them in motion and they ring like chimes. The
sharp crust of the snow cuts the pads of his paws when he
pulls himself up into his old tracks. Finally he's standing on
top of the snow, a frozen floor. He walks clumsily on big