~We are currently working on a CLOSE READ called Stray by Cynthia Rylant. Pay close attention to how father changes from the beginning of the text to the end. How does he show his transformation? Think about what the message is that the author is trying to send to us.......
“Stray”
From
Every Living Thing
by Cynthia Rylant.
In January, a puppy
wandered onto the property of Mr. Amos Lacey and his wife, Mamie, and their
daughter, Doris. Icicles hung three feet or more from the eaves of houses,
snowdrifts swallowed up automobiles and the birds were so fluffed up they
looked comic.
The puppy had been
abandoned, and it made its way down the road toward the Laceys’ small house,
its ears tucked, its tail between its legs, shivering.
Doris, whose school had
been called off because of the snow, was out shoveling the cinderblock front
steps when she spotted the pup on the road. She set down the shovel.
“Hey! Come on!” she
called.
The puppy stopped in the
road, wagging its tail timidly, trembling with shyness and cold.
Doris trudged through the
yard, went up the shoveled drive and met the dog.
“Come on, Pooch.”
“Where did that come
from?” Mrs. Lacey asked as soon as Doris put the dog down in the kitchen.
Mr. Lacey was at the
table, cleaning his fingernails with his pocketknife. The snow was keeping him
home from his job at the warehouse.
“I don’t know where it
came from,” he said mildly, “but I know for sure where it’s going.”
Doris hugged the puppy
hard against her. She said nothing.
Because the roads would be
too bad for travel for many days, Mr. Lacey couldn’t get out to take the puppy
to the pound in the city right away. He agreed to let it sleep in the basement
while Mrs. Lacey grudgingly let Doris feed it table scraps. The woman was
sensitive about throwing out food.
By the looks of it, Doris
figured the puppy was about six months old, and on its way to being a big dog.
She thought it might have some shepherd in it.
Four days passed and the
puppy did not complain. It never cried in the night or howled at the wind. It
didn’t tear up everything in the basement. It wouldn’t even follow Doris up the
basement steps unless it was invited.
It was a good dog.
Several times Doris had
opened the door in the kitchen that led to the basement and the puppy had been
there, all stretched out, on the top step. Doris knew it had wanted some
company and that it had lain against the door, listening to the talk in the
kitchen, smelling the food, being a part of things. It always wagged its tail,
eyes all sleepy, when she found it there.
Even after a week had gone
by, Doris didn’t name the dog. She knew her parents wouldn’t let her keep it,
that her father made so little money any pets were out of the question, and that
the pup would definitely go to the pound when the weather cleared.
Still, she tried talking
to them about the dog at dinner one night.
“She’s a good dog, isn’t
she?” Doris said, hoping one of them would agree with her.
Her parents glanced at
each other and went on eating.
“She’s not much trouble,”
Doris added. “I like her.” She smiled at them, but they continued to ignore
her.
“I figure she’s real
smart,” Doris said to her mother. “I could teach her things.”
Mrs. Lacey just shook her
head and stuffed a forkful of sweet potato in her mouth. Doris fell silent,
praying the weather would never clear.
But on Saturday, nine days
after the dog had arrived, the sun was shining and the roads were plowed. Mr.
Lacey opened up the trunk of his car and came into the house.
Doris was sitting alone in
the living room, hugging a pillow and rocking back and forth on the edge of a
chair. She was trying not to cry but she was not strong enough. Her face was
wet and red, her eyes full of distress.
Mrs. Lacey looked into the
room from the doorway.
“Mama,” Doris said in a
small voice. “Please.”
Mrs. Lacey shook her head,
“You know we can’t afford a dog, Doris. You try to act more grown-up about
this.”
Doris pressed her face
into the pillow.
Outside, she heard the
trunk of the car slam shut, one of the doors open and close. The old engine
cough and choke and finally start up.
“Daddy,” she whispered.
“Please.”
She heard the car travel
down the road, and, though it was early afternoon, she could do nothing but go
to her bed. She cried herself to sleep, and her dreams were full of searching
and searching for things lost.
It was nearly night when
she finally woke up. Lying there, like stone, still exhausted, she wondered if
she would ever in her life have anything. She stared at the wall for a while.
But she started feeling
hungry, and she knew she’d have to make herself get out of bed and eat some
dinner. She wanted not to go into the kitchen, past the basement door. She
wanted not to face her parents.
But she rose up heavily.
Her parents were sitting
at the table, dinner over, drinking coffee. They looked at her when she came
in, but she kept her head down. No one spoke.
Doris made herself a glass
of powdered milk and drank it all down. Then she picked up a cold biscuit and
started out of the room.
“You’d better feed that
mutt before it dies of starvation,” Mr. Lacey said.
Doris turned around.
“What?”
“I said, you’d better feed
your dog. I figure it’s looking for you.”
Doris put her hand to her
mouth.
“You didn’t take her?” she
asked.
“Oh, I took her all
right.” her father answered. “Worst looking place I’ve ever seen. Ten dogs to a
cage. Smell was enough to knock you down. And they give an animal six days to
live. Then they kill it with some kind of a shot.”
Doris stared at her
father.
“l wouldn’t leave an ant
in that place,” he said. “So I brought the dog back.”
Mrs. Lacey was smiling at
him and shaking her head as if she would never, ever, understand him.
Mr. Lacey sipped his
coffee.
“Well,” he said, “are you
going to feed it or not?”