ALL THINGS WISE AND WONDERFUL
by
JAMES HERRIOT


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ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL ~
ALL THINGS BRIGHT AND BEAUTIFUL
ALL THINGS WISE AND WONDERFUL

To my dogs,
Hector and Dan
Faithful companions of the daily round.

This low-priced Bantam Book
has been completely reset in a type face
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RL 7, IL 6+

ALL THINGS WISE AND WONDERFUL
A Bantam Book / published by arrangement with
St. Martin's Press

PRINTING HISTORY
St. Martin's edition published September 1977
10 printings-through May 1978
Literary Guild edition published October 1977
Bantam edition / September 1978

Serialized in BOOK DIGEST, COSMOPOLITAN, FAMILY CIRCLE,
and READER'S DIGEST

All rights reserved.
Copyright @ 1976,1977 by James Herriot.
This edition Copyright @ 1977 by St. Martin's Press.
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All things bright and beautiful
All creatures great and small,
All things wise and wonderful,
The Lord God made them all.

Cecil Frances Alexander 1818-1895

chapter 1.

"move!" bawled the drill corporal. "come on, speed it upl" he sprinted
effortlessly to the rear of the gasping, panting column of men and urged
us on from there. i was somewhere in the middle, jog-trotting
laboriously with the rest and wondering how much longer i could keep
going. and as my ribs heaved agonisingly and my leg muscles protested'i
tried to work out just how many miles we had run. i had suspected
nothing when we lined up outside our billets. we weren't clad in pt idt
but in woollen pullovers and regulation slacks and it seemed unlikely
that anything violent was imminent. the corporal, too, a cheerful little
cockney, appeared to regard us as his brothers. he had a kind face.

"awright, lads," he had cried, smiling over the fifty new airmen. "we're
just going to trot round to the park, so follow me. le-eft turril'at the
double, qui-ick marchl left-ight, 'eft-ight, left-ightl" that had been a
long, long time ago and we were still reeling through the london streets
with never a sign of a park anywhere. the thought hammered in my brain
that i had been under the impression that i was fit. a country vet,
especially in the yorkshire dales, never had the chance to get out of
condition; he was always on the move, wrestling with the big animals,
walking for miles between the fell-side barns; he was hard and tough.
that's what i thought. but now other reflections began to creep in. my
few months of married life with helen had been so much lotus eating. she
was too good a cook and i was too faithful a disciple of her art. just
lounging by our bed sitter's fireside was the sweetest of all
occupations. i had tried to ignore the disappearance of my abdominal muscles, the sagging of my pectorals, but it was all coming home to me now.

"it's not far now, lads," the corporal chirped from the rear, but he
struck no responsive chords in the toiling group. he had said it several
times before and we had stopped believing him. but this time it seemed
he really meant it, because as we turned into yet another street i could
see iron railings and trees at the far end. the relief was
inexpressible. i would just about have the strength to make it through
the gates-to the rest and smoke which i badly needed because my legs
were beginning to seize up. we passed under an arch of branches which
still bore a few autumn leaves and stopped as one man, but the corporal
was waving us on.

"come on, lads, round the track!" he shouted and pointed to a broad
earthen path which circled the park. we stared at him. he couldn't be
serious! a storm of protest broke out.

"aw no, corp... i" "have a heart, corp... i" the smile vanished from the
little man's face. "get movin', i saidl faster, faster... one-two,
one-two." as i stumbled forward over the black earth, between borders of
sooty rhododendrons and tired grass, i just couldn't believe it. it was
all too sudden. three days ago i was in darrowby and half of me was
still back there, back with helen. and another part was still looking
out of the rear window of the taxi at the green hills receding behind
the tiled roofs into the morning sunshine; still standing in the
corridor of the train as the flat terrain of southern england slid past
and a great weight built up steadily in my chest. my first introduction
to the raf was at lord's cricket ground. masses of forms to fill,
medicals, then the issue of an enormous pile of kit. i was billeted in a
block of flats in st. john's wood-luxurious before the lush fittings had
been removed. but they couldn't take away the heavy bathroom ware and
one of our blessings was the unlimited hot water gushing at our touch
into the expensive surroundings. after that first crowded day i retired
to one of those green-tiled sanctuaries and lathered myself with a new
bar of a famous toilet soap which helen had put in my bag. i have nevbr
been able to use that soap since. sc~nts are too evocative and the
merest whiff jerks me back to that first night away from my wife, and to
the feeling i had then. it was a dull, empty ache which never really
went away. on the second day we marched endlessly; lectures, meals,
inoculations. i was used to syringes but the very sight of them was too
much for many of my friends. especially when the doctor took the blood
samples; one look at the dark fluid flowing from their veins and the
young men toppled quietly from their chairs, often four or five in a row
while the orderlies, grinning cheerfully, bore them away. we ate in the
london zoo and our meals were made interesting by the chatter of monkeys
and the roar of lions in the background. but in between it was march,
march, march, with our new boots giving us hell. and on this third day
the whole thing was still a blur. we bad been wakened as on my first
morning by the hideous 6 a.m. clattering of dustbin lids; i hadn't
really expected the silvery tones of a bugle but i found this totally
unromantic din intolerable. however, at the moment my only concern was
that we had completed the circuit of the park. the gates were only a few
yards ahead and i staggered up to them and halted among my groaning
comrades.

"round again, lads!" the corporal yelled, and as we stared at him aghast
he smiled affectionately. "you think this is tough? wait till they get
hold of you at itw. i'm just kinda breakin' you in gently. you'll thank
me for this later. right, at the double! one-two, one two!" bitter
thoughts assailed me as i lurched forward once more. another round of
the park would kill me-there was not a shadow of a doubt about that. you
left a loving wife and a happy home to serve king and country and this
was how they treated you. it wasn't fair.

the night before i had dreamed of darrowby. i was back in old mr.
dakin's cow byre. the farmer's patient eyes in the long,
drooping-moustached face looked down at me from his stooping height.

"it looks as though it's over wi' awd blossom, then," he said, and
rested his hand briefly on the old cow's back. it was an enormous,
work-swollen hand. mr. dakin's gaunt frame carried little flesh but the
grossly thickened fingers bore testimony to a life of toil. i dried off
the needle and dropped it into the metal box where i carried my suture
materials, scalpels and blades. "well, it's up to you of course, mr.
dakin, but this is the third time i've had to stitch her teats and i'm
afraid it's going to keep on happening."

"aye, it's just the shape she is." the farmer bent and examined the row
of knots along the four-inch sear. "by gaw, you wouldn't believe it
could mek such a mess-just another cow standin' on it."

"a cow's hoof is sharp," i said. "it's nearly like a knife coming down."
that was the worst of very old cows. their udders dropped and their
teats became larger and more pendulous so that when they lay down in
their stalls the vital milk-producing organ was pushed away to one side
into the path of the neighbouring animals. if it wasn't mabel on the
right standing on it, it was buttercup on the other side. there were
only six cows in the little cobbled byre with its low roof and wooden
partitions and they all had names. you don't find cows with names any
more and there aren't any farmers like mr. dakin, who somehow scratched
a living from a herd of six milkers plus a few calves, pigs and hens.

"aye, well," he said. "ah reckon t'awd lass doesn't owe me anythin'. ah
remember the night she was born, twelve years ago. she was out of awd
daisy and ah carried her out of this very byre on a sack and the snow
was comin' down hard. sin' then ah wouldn't like to count how many
thousand gallons o' milk she's turned outshe's stiff givin' four a day.
naw, she doesn't owe me a thing. as if she knew she was the topic of
conversation blossom turned her head and looked at him. she was the
classical picture of an ancient bovine; as fleshless as her owner, with
jutting pelvic bones, splayed, overgrown feet and, horns with a
multitude of rings along their curving length. beneath her, the udder,
once high and tight, drooped forlornly almost to the floor. she
resembled her owner, too, in her quiet, patient demeanour. i had
infiltrated her teat with a local anaestbetic before stitching but i
don't think she would have moved if i hadn't used any. stitching teats
puts a vet in the ideal position to be kicked, with his head low down in
front of the hind feet, but there was no danger with blossom. she had
never kicked anybody in her life. mr. dakin blew out his cheeks. "well,
there's nowt else for it. she'll have to go. i'll tell jack dodson to
picker up for the fatstock market on thursday. she'll be a bit tough
for eatin' but ah reckon she'll make a few steak pies." he was trying to
joke but he was unable to smile as he looked at the old cow. behind him,
beyond the open door, the green hillside ran down to the river and the
spring sunshine touched the broad sweep of the shallows with a million
dancing lights. a beach of bleached stones gleamed bone-white against
the long stretch of grassy bank which rolled up to the pastures lining
the valley floor. i had often felt that this smallholding would be an
ideal place to live; only a mile outside darrowby, but secluded, and
with this heart-lifting vista of river and fell. i remarked on this once
to mr. dakin and the old man turned to me with a wry smile.

"aye, but the view's not very sustainin'," he said. it happened that i
was called back to the farm on the following thursday to "cleanse" a cow
and was in the byre when dodson the drover called to pick up blossom. he
had collected a group of fat bullocks and cows from other farms and they
stood, watched by one of his men, on the road high above.

"nah then, mr. dakin," he cried as he bustled in. "it's easy to see
which one you want me to tek. it's that awd screw over there." he
pointed at blossom, and in truth the unkind description seemed to fit
the bony creature standing between her sleek neighbours. the farmer did
not reply for a moment, then he went up between the cows and gently
rubbed blossom's forehead. "aye, this is the one, jack." he hesitated,
then undid the chain round her neck. "off ye go, awd lass," he murmured,
and the old animal turned and made her way placidly from the stall.

"aye, come on with ye!" shouted the dealer, poking his stick against the
cow'srump.

"doan't hit 'er!" barked mr. dakin. dodson looked at him in surprise.
"ah never 'it 'em, you know that. just send 'ern on, like."

"ah knaw, ah knaw, jack, but you won't need your stick for this 'un.
she'll go wherever ye want-allus has done." blossom confirmed his words
as she ambled through the door and, at a gesture from the farmer, turned
along the track. the old man and i stood watching as the cow made her
way unhurriedly up the hill, jack dodson in his long khaki smock
sauntering behind her. as the path wound behind a clump of sparse trees
ma nand beast disappeared but mr. dakin stiff gazed after them, listening
to the clipclop of the hooves on the hard ground. when the sound died
away he turned to me quickly. "right, mr. herriot, we'll get on wi' our
job, then. i'll bring your hot watter." the farmer was silent as i
soaped my arm and inserted it into the cow. if there is one thing more
disagreeable than removing the bovine afterbirth it is watching somebody
else doing it, and i always try to maintain a conversation as i grope
around inside. but this time it was hard work. mr. dakin responded to my
sallies on the weather, cricket and the price of milk with a series of
grunts. holding the cows tail he leaned on the hairy back and,
empty-eyed, blew smoke from the pipe which like most farmers at a
cleansing he had prudently lit at the outset. and of course, since the
going was heavy, it just would happen that the job took much longer than
usual. sometimes a placenta simply lifted out but i had to peel this one
away from the cotyledons one by one, returning every few minutes to the
hot water and antiseptic to re-soap my aching arms. but at last it was
finished. i pushed in a couple of pessaries, untied the sack from my
middle and pulled my shirt over my head. the conversation had died and
the silence was almost oppressive as we opened the byre door. mr. dakin
paused, his hand on the latch. "what's that?" he said softly. from
somewhere on the hillside i could hear the clip-clop of a cow's feet.
there were two ways to the farm and the sound came from a narrow track
which joined the main road half a mile beyond the other entrance. as we
listened a cow rounded a rocky outcrop and came towards us. it was
blossom, moving at a brisk trot, great udder swinging, eyes fixed
purposefully on the open door behind us.

"what the hangment... t' mr. dakin burst out, but the old cow brushed
past us and marched without hesitation into the stall which she had
occupied for all those years. she sniffed enquiringly at the empty hay
rack and looked round at her owner. mr. dakin stared back at her. the
eyes in the weathered face were expressionless but the smoke rose from
his pipe in a series of rapid puffs. heavy boots clattered suddenly
outside and jack dodson panted his way through the door.

"oh, you're there, ye awd beggarl" he gasped. "ali thought i'd lost yel"
he turned to the farmer. "by gaw, i'm sorry, mr. dakin. she must 'ave
turned off at vtop of your other path. ah never saw her go." the farmer
shrugged. "it's awright, jack. it's not your fault, ah should've told
ye."

"that's soon mended anyway." the drover grinned and moved towards
blossom.

"come on, lass, let's have ye out o' there again." but he halted as mr.
dakin held an arm in front of him. there was a long silence as dodson
and i looked in surprise at the farmer who continued to gaze fixedly at
the cow. there was a pathetic dignity about the old animal as she stood
there against the mouldering timber of the partition, her eyes patient
and undemanding. it was a dignity which triumphed over the unsightliness
of the long upturned hooves, the fleshless ribs, the broken-down udder
almost brushing the cobbles. then, still without speaking, mr. dakin
moved unhurriedly between the cows and a faint chink of metal sounded as
he fastened the chain around blossom's neck. then he strolled to the end
of the byre and returned with a forkful of hay which he tossed expertly
into the rack. this was what blossom was waiting for, she jerked a
mouthful from between the spars and began to chew with quiet
satisfaction: "what's to do, mr. dakin?" the drover cried in
bewilderment. "they're waiting for me at cmard" the farmer tapped out
his pipe on the half door and began to fill it with black shag from a
battered tin. "ah'm sorry to waste your time, jack, but you'll have to
go without 'er."

"without'er... ? but... t' "aye, yell think i'm daft, but that's how it
is. t"awd lass has come 'ome and she's stoppin' 'ome." he directed a
look of flat finality at the drover. dodson nodded a couple of times
then shuffled from the byre. mr. dakin followed and called after him.

"ah'll pay ye for your time, jack. put it down on ma bill." he returned,
applied a match to his pipe and drew deeply.

"mr. herriot," he said as the srvoke rose around his ears, "do you ever
feel when summat happens that it was meant to happen and that it was for
t'best?"

"yes, i do, mr. dakin. i often feel that."

"aye well, that's how i felt when blossom came down that hill." he
reached out and scratched the root of the cow's tail. "she's allus been
a favourite and by gaw i'm glad she's back."

"but how about those teats? i'm willing to keep stitching them up, but.
. . "

"nay, lad, ah've had an idea. just came to me when you were tekkin' away
that cleansin' and i thowt i was ower late."

"an idea?"

"aye." the old man nodded and tamped down the tobacco with his thumb. "i
can put two or three calves on toer instead of milldn' 'er. the old
stable is empty -she can live in there where there's nobody to stand on
'er awd tits." i laughed. "you're right, mr. dakin. she!d be safe in the
stable and she'd suckle three calves easily. she could pay her way."

"well, as ah said, it's matterless. after all them years she doesn't owe
me a thing." a gentle smile spread over the seamed face. "main thing is,
she's come 'ome."

my eyes were shut most of the time now as i blundered round the park and
when i opened them a red mist swirled. but it is incredible what the
human frame win stand and i blinked in disbelief as the iron gates
appeared once more under their arch of sooty branches. i had survived
the second lap but an ordinary rest would be inadequate now. this time i
would have to lie down. i felt sick.

"good ladsl" the corporal called out, cheerful as ever. "you're doin'
fine. now we're just going to 'ave a little hoppin' on the spot."
incredulous walls rose from our demoralised band but the corporal was
unabashed.

"feet together now. upi upi upi that's no good, come on, get some height
into itl upi upl" this was the final absurdity. my chest was a flaming
cavern of agony. these people were supposed to be making us fit and
instead they were doing irreparable damage to my heart and lungs.

"you'll thank me for this later, lads. take my word for it. get
yourselves off tim ground. upi upi" through my pain i could see the
corporars laughing face. the man was clearly a sadist. it was no good
appealing to him. and as, with the last of my strength, i launched
myself into the air it came to me suddenly why i had dreamed about
blossom last nighl i wanted to go home, too. chapter 2.

the fog swirled over the heads of the marching men; a london fog, thick,
yellow, metallic on the tongue. i couldn't see the heaa of the column,
only the swinging lantern carried by the leader. this 6:30 a.m. walk to
breakfast was just about the worst part of the day, when my morale was
low and thoughts of home rose painfully. we usfd to have fogs in
darrowby, but they were country fogs, different from this. one morning i
drove out on my rounds with the headlights blazing against the grey
curtain ahead, seeing nothing from my tightshut box. but i was heading
up the dale, climbing steadily with the engine pulling against the
rising ground, then quite suddenly the fog thinned to a shimmering
silvery mist and was gone. and there, above the pall, the sun was
dazzling and the long green line of the fells rose before me, thrusting
exultantly into a sky of summer blue. spellbound, i drove upwards into
the bright splendour, staring through the windscreen as though i had
never seen it all before; the bronze of the dead bracken spilling down
the grassy flanks of the hills, the dark smudges of trees, the grey
farmhouses and the endless pattern of walls creeping to the heather
above. i was in a rush as usual but i had to stop. i pulled up in a
gateway, sam jumped out and we went through into a field; and as the
beagle scampered over the glittering turf i stood in the warm sunshine
amid the melting frost and looked back at the dark damp blanket which
blotted out the low country but left this jewelled world above it. and,
gulping the sweet air, i gazed about me grate fully at the clean green
land where i worked and made.my living. i could have stayed there,
wandering round, watching sam exploring with waving tail, nosing into
the shady corners where the sun had not reached and the ground was iron
hard and the rime thick and crisp on the grass. but i had an appointment
to keep, and no ordinary one -it was with a peer of the realm.
reluctantly i got back into the car. i was due to start lord hulton's
tuberculin test at 9:30 a.m. and as i drove round the back of the
elizabethan mansion to the farm buildings nearby i felt a pang of
misgiving; there were no animals in sight. there was only a man in tatte
- red blue dungarees hammering busily at a makeshift crush at the exit
to the fold yard. he turned round when he saw me and waved his hammer.
as i approached i looked wonderingly at the slight figure with the soft
fairish hair falling over his brow, at the holed cardigan and
muck-encrusted wellingtons. you would have expected him to say, "nah,
then, mr. herriot, how ista this mornin'?" but he didn't, he said,
"herriot, my pear chap, i'm most frightfully sorry, but i'm very much
afraid we're not quite ready for you." and he began'to fumble with his
tobacco pouch. william george henry augustus, eleventh marquis of
hulton, always had a pipe in his mouth and he was invariably either
filling it, cleaning it out with a metal reaming tool or trying to light
it. i had never seen him actually smoking it. and at times of stress he
attempted to do everything at once. he was obviously embarrassed at his
lack of preparedness and when he saw me glance involuntarily at my watch
he grew more agitated, pulling his pipe from his mouth and putting it
back in again, tucking the hammer under his arm, rummaging in a large
box of matches. i gazed across to the rising ground beyond the farm
buildings. far off on the horizon i could make out tiny figures:
galloping beasts, scurrying men; and faint sounds came down to me of
barking dogs, irritated bellowings and shrill cries of "haow, haowl"
"gerraway byl" "siddown, dog!" i sighed. it was the old story. even the
yorkshire aristocracy seemed to share this carefree attitude to time.
his lordship clearly sensed my feelings because his discomfort
increased.

"it's too bad for me, old chap," he said, spraying a few matchsticks
around and dropping flakes of tobacco on the stone flags. "i did promise
to be ready for nine thirty but those blasted animals just won't
cooperate." i managed a smile. "oh never mind, lord hulton, they seem to
be getting them down the hill now and i'm not in such a panic this
morning, anyway."

"oh splendid, splendidt" he attempted to ignite a towering mound of dark
flake which spluttered feebly then toppled over the edge of his pipe.
"and come and see thisl i've been rigging up a crush. we'll drive them
in here and we'll really have 'em. remember we had a spot of bother last
time, what?" i nodded. i did remember. lord hulton had only about thirty
suckling cows but it had taken a three-hour rodeo to test them. i looked
doubtfully at the rickety structure of planks and corrugated iron. it
would be interesting to see how it coped with the moorland cattle. i
didn't mean to rub it in, but again i glanced unthinkingly at my watch
and the little man winced as though he had received a blow.

"dammitl" he burst out. "what are they doing over there? tell you what,
i'll go and give them a hand!" distractedly, he began to change hammer,
pouch, pipe and matches from hand to hand, dropping them and picking
them up, before finally deciding to put the hammer down and stuff the
rest into his pockets. he went off at a steady trot and i thought as i
had done so often that there couldn't be many noblemen in england like
him. if i had been a marquis, i felt, i would still have been in bed or
perhaps just parting the curtains and peering out to see what kind of
day it was. but lord hulton worked all the time, just about as hard as
any of his men. one morning i arrived to find him at the supremely
mundane task of "plugging muck," standing on a manure heap, hurling
steaming forkfuls on to a cart. and he always dressed in rags. i suppose
he must have had more orthodox items in his wardrobe but i never saw
them. even his tobacco was the great smoke of the ordinary
farmer-redbreast flake.

my musings were interrupted by the thunder of hooves and wild cries; the
hulton herd was approaching. within minutes the fold yard was filled
with milling creatures, steam rising in rolling clouds from their
bodies. the marquis appeared round the corner of the building at a
gallop.

"right, charliel" he yelled. "let the first one into the crush!" panting
with anticipation he stood by the nailed boards as the men inside opened
the yard gate. he didn't have to wait long. a shaggy red monster
catapulted from the interior, appeared briefly in the narrow passage
then emerged at about fifty miles an hour from the other end with
portions of his lordship's creation dangling from its horns and neck.
the rest of the herd pounded close behind.

"stop theml stop. them]" screamed the little peer, but it was of no
avail. a hairy torrent flooded through the opening and in no time at all
the herd was legging it back to the high land in a wild stampede. the
men followed them and within a few moments lord hulton and i were
standing there just as before watching the tiny figures on the skyline,
listening to the distant "haow, haowl" "gerraway byl"

"i say," he murmured despondently. "it didn't work terribly well, did
it?" but he was made of stem stuff. seizing his hammer he began to bang
away with undiminished enthusiasm and by the time the beasts returned
the crush was rebuilt and a stout iron bar pushed across the front to
prevent further break-outs. it seemed to solve the problem because the
first cow, confronted by the bar, stood quietly and i was able to clip
the hair on her neck through an opening between the planks. lord hulton,
in high good humour, settled down on an upturned oil drum with my
testing book on his knee.

"i'll do the writing for you," he cried. "fire away, old chap i" i
poised my calipers. "eight, eight." he wrote it down and the next cow
came in.

"eight, eight," i said, and he bowed his head again. the third cow
arrived: "eight, eight." and the fourth, '-eight~ eight."

his lordship looked up from the book and passed a weary hand across his
forehead.

"herriot, dear boy, can't you vary it a bit? i'm beginning to lose
interest." all went well until we saw the cow which had originally
smashed the crush. she had sustained a slight scratch on her neck.

"i say, look at thatl" cried the peer. "will it be all right?"

"oh yes, it's nothing. superficial."

"ah, good, but don't you think we should have something to put on it?
some of that. . ." i waited for it. lord hulton was a devotee of may and
baker's propamidine cream and used it for all minor cuts and grazes in
his cattle. he loved the stuff. but unfortunately he couldn't say
"propamidine." in fact no body on the entire establishment could say it
except charlie the farm foreman and he only thought he could say it. he
called it "propopamide" but his lordship had the utmost faith in him.

"charliel" he bawled. "are you there, charlie?" the foreman appeared
from the pack in the yard and touched his cap, "yes, m1ord."

"charlie, that wonderful stuff we get from mr. herriot -you know, for
cut teats and things, pro... pero what the hell do you call it against'
charlie paused. it was one of his big moments. "propopamide, m1ord." the
marquis, intensely gratified, slapped the knee of his dungarees.

"that's it, propopamidel damned if i can get my tongue round it. well
done, charliel" charlie inclined his head modestly. the whole test was a
vast improvement on last time and we were finished within an hour and a
half. there was just one tragedy. about half way through, one of the
cows dropped down dead with an attack of hypomag the-saemia, a condition
which often plagues sucklers. it was a sudden, painless collapse and i
had no chance to do anything. lord hulton looked down at the animal
which had just stopped breathing.

"do you think we could salvage her for meat if we bled her?"

"well, it's typical hypomag. nothing to harm any body you could try. it
would depend on what the meat inspector says." the cow was bled, pulled
into a van and the peer drove off to the abattoir. he came back just as
we were finishing the test.

"how did you get on?" i asked him. "did they accept hert' he hesitated.
"no. . . no, old chap," he said sadly. "i'm afraid they didn't."

"why? did the meat inspector condemn the carcass?"

"well. . . i never got as far as the meat inspector, actually... just
saw one of the slaughtermen."

"and what did he say?"

"just two words, herriot."

"two words... t' "yes. . .'bugger off i" i nodded. "i see." it was easy
to imagine the scene. the tough slaughterman viewing the small,
unimpressive figure and deciding that he wasn't going to be put out of
his routine by some ragged farm man.

"well, never mind, sir," i said. "you can only try."

"true... true, old chap." he dropped a few matches as he fumbled
disconsolately with his smoking equipment. as i was getting into the car
i remembered about the propamidine. "don't forget to call down for that
cream, will you?"

"by jove, yesl i'll come down for it after lunch. i have great faith in
that prom. . . pram. . . charliel damn and blast, what is it?" charlie
drew himself up proudly. "propopamide, m7lord."

"ah yes, propopamidel" the little man laughed, his good humour quite
restored. "good lad, charlie, you're a marvell"

"thank you, m'lord." the foreman wore the smug expression of the expert
as he drove the cattle back into the field.

it's a funny thing, but when you see a client about something you very
often see him soon again about something else. it was only a week later,
with the district still in the iron grip of winter, that my bedside
'phone jangled me from slumber.

after that first palpitation of the heart which i feel does vets no good
at all i reached a sleepy hand from under the sheets.

"yes?" i grunted.

"herriot... i say, herriot. . . is that you, herriot?" the voice was
laden with tension.

"yes, it is, lord hulton."

"oh good. . . good. . . dash it, i do apologise. frightfully bad show,
waking you up like this. . . but i've got something damn peculiar here."
a soft pattering followed which i took to be matches falling around the
receiver.

"really?" i yawned and my eyes closed involuntarily. "in what way,
exactly?"

"well, i've been sitting up with one of my best sows. been farrowing and
produced twelve nice piglets, but there's something very odd."

"how do you mean?"

"difficult to describe, old chap. . . but you know the. er. . . bottom
aperture. . . there's a bloody great long red thing hanging from it." my
eyes snapped open and my mouth gaped in a soundless scream. prolapsed
uterusl hard labour in cows, a pleasant exercise in ewes, impossible in
sows.

"long red. . . i when... ? how... t' i was stammering pointlessly. i
didn't have to ask.

"just popped it out, dear boy. i was waiting for another piglet and
whoops, there it was. gave me a nasty turn."- my toes curled tightly
beneath the blankets. it was no good telling him that i had seen five
prolapsed uteri in pigs in my limited experience and had failed in every
case. i had come to the conclusion that there was no way of putting them
back. but i had to try. "i'll be right out," i muttered. i looked at the
alarm clock it was five thirty. a horrible time, truncating the night's
slumber yet elirninating any chance of a soothing return to bed for an
hour before the day's work. and i hated turning out even more since my
marriage. helen was lovely to come back to, but by the same token it was
a bigger wrench to leave her soft warm presence and venture into the
inhospitable world outside.

and the journey to the hulton farm was not enlivened by my memories of
those five other sows. i had tried everything; full anaesthesia, lifting
them upside down with pulleys, directing a jet from a hose on the
everted organ, and all the time pushing, straining, sweating over the
great mass of flesh which refused to go back through ,that absurdly
small hole. the result in each case had been the conversion of my
patient int6 pork pies and a drastic plummeting of my self-esteem. there
was no moon and the soft glow from the piggery door made the only light
among the black outlines of the buildings. lord hulton was waiting at
the entrance and i thought i had better warn him. ",i have to tell you,
sir, that this is a very serious condition. it's only fair that you
should know that the sow very often has to be slaughtered." the little
man's eyes widened and the comers of his mouth drooped.

"oh, i sayl that's rather a bore. . . one of my best animals. i. . . i'm
rather attached to that pig." he was wearing a polo-necked sweater of
such advanced dilapidation that the hem hung in long woollen fronds
almost to his knees, and as he tremblingly attempted to light his pipe
he looked very vulnerable.

"but i'll do my very best," i added hastily. "there's always a chance."

"oh, good manl" in his relief, he dropped his pouch and as he stooped
the open box of matches spilled around his feet. it was some time before
we retrieved them and went into the piggery. the reality was as bad as
my imaginings. under the single weak electric bulb of the pen an
unbelievable length of very solid-looking red tissue stretched from the
rear end of a massive white sow lying immobile on her side. the twelve
pink piglets fought -and worried along the row of teats; they didn't
seem to be getting much. as i stripped off and dipped my arms into the
steaming bucket i wished with all my heart that the porcine uterus was a
little short thing and not this horrible awkward shape. and it was a
disquieting thought that tonight i had no artificial aids. people used
all sorts of tricks and various types of equipment but here in this
silent building there was just the pig, lord hulton and me. his
lordship, i knew, was willing and eager, but he had helped me at jobs
before and his usefulness was impaired by the fact that his hands were
always filled with his smoking items and he kept dropping things. i got
down on my knees behind the animal with the feeling that i was on my
own. and as soon as i cradled the mass in my arms the conviction flooded
through me that this was going to be the same as all the others. the
very idea of this lot going back whence it came was ridiculous and the
impression was reinforced as i began to push. nothing happened. i had
sedated the sow heavily and she wasn't straining much against me; it was
just that the thing was so huge. by a supreme effort i managed to feed a
few inches back into the vaginal opening but as soon asI relaxed it
popped quietly out again. my strongest instinct was to call the whole
thing off without delay; the end result would be the same and anyway i
wasn't feeling very strong. in fact my whole being was permeated by the
leaden-armed pervading weakness one feels when forced to work in the
small hours. i would try just once more. lying flat, my naked chest
against the cold concrete i fought with the thing till my eyes popped
and my breath gave out, but it had not the slightest effect and it made
my mind up; i had to tell him. rolling over on my back i looked up at
him, panting, waiting till i had the wind to speak. i would say, "lord
hulton, we are really wasting our time here. this is an impossible case.
i am going back home now and i'll ring the slaughterhouse first thing in
the morning." the prospect of escape was beguiling; i might even be able
to crawl in beside helen for an hour. but as my mouth framed the words
the little man looked down at me appealingly as though he knew what i
was going to say'. he tried to smile but darted anxious glances at me,
at the pig and back again. from the other end of the animal a soft
uncomplaining grunt reminded me that i wasn't the only one involved. i
didn't say anything. i turned back on to my chest, braced my feet
against the wall of the pen,and began again. i don't know how long i lay
there, pushing, relaxing, pushing again as i gasped and groaned and the
sweat tan steadily down my back. the peer was silent but i knew he was
following my progress intently because every now and then i had to brush
matches from the surface of the uterus. then for no particular reason
the heap of flesh in my arms felt suddenly smaller. i glared desperately
at the thing. there was no doubt about it, it was only half the size. i
had to take a breather and a hoarse croak escaped me.

"godl i think it's going backl" i must have startled lord hulton in mid
fill because i heard a stifled "what. . . what. . oh i say, how
absolutely splendidl" and a fragrant shower of tobacco cascaded from
above. this was it, then. summoning the last of my energy for one big
effort i blew half an ounce or so of redbreast flake from the uterine
mucosa and heaved forward. and, miraculously, there was little
resistance and i stared in disbelief as the great organ disappeared
gloriously and wonderfully from sight. i was right behind it with my
arm, probing frantically away up to the shoulder as i rotated my wrist
again and again till both uterine cornua were fully involuted. when i
was certain beyond doubt that everything was back in place i lay there
for a few moments, my arm still deep inside the sow, my forehead resting
on the floor. dimly, through the mist of exhaustion i beard lord
hulton's cries.

"stout fellal dash it, how marvelous! oh stout fellal" he was almost
dancing with joy. one last terror assailed me. what if it came out
again? quickly i seized needle and thread and began to insert a few
sutures in the vulva.

"here, hold thisl" i barked, giving him the scissors. stitching with the
help of lord hulton wasn't easy. i kept pushing needle or scissors into
his bands then demanding them back peremptorily, and it caused a certain
amount of panic. twice he passed me his pipe to cut the ends of my
suture and on one occasion i found myself trying in the dim light to
thread the silk through his -reaming tool. his lordship suffered too, in
his turn, because i heard the occasional stifled oath as he impaled a
finger on the needle. but at last it was done. i rose wearily to my feet
and leaned against the wall, my mouth hanging open, sweat trickling into
my eyes. the little man's eyes were fun of concern as they roved over my
limply hanging arms and the caked blood and filth on my chest.

"herriot, my dear old chap, you're all inl and you'll catch pneumonia or
something if you stand around half naked. you need a hot drink. tell you
what-get yourself cleaned up and dressed and i'll run down to the house
for something." he scurried swiftly away. my aching muscles were slow to
obey as i soaped and towelled myself and pulled on my shirt. fastening
my watch round my wrist i saw that it was after seven and i could hear
the farm men clattering in the yard outside as they began their morning
tasks. i was buttoning my jacket when the little peer returned. he bore
a tray with a pint mug of steaming coffee and two thick slices of bread
and honey. he placed it on a bale of straw and pulled up an upturned
bucket as a chair before hopping on to a meal bin where he sat like a
pixie on a toadstool with his arms around his knees, regarding me with
keen anticipation.

"the servants are still abed, old chap," he said. "so i made this little
bite for you myself." i sank on to the bucket and took a long pull at
the coffee. it was black and scalding with a kick like a galloway
bullock and it spread like fire through my tired frame. then i bit into
the first slice of bread; home made, plastered thickly with farm butter
and topped by a lavish layer of heather honey from the long row of hives
i had often seen on the edge of the moor above. i closed my eyes in
reverence as i chewed, then as i reached for the pint pot again i looked
up at the small figure on the bin.

"may i say, sir, that this isn't a bite, it's a feast. it is all
absolutely delicious." his face lit up with impish glee. "well, dash it
. . . do you really think so? i'm so pleased. and you've done nobly,
dear boy. can't tell you how grateful i am." as i continued to eat
ecstatically, feeling the strength ebbing back, he glanceduneasily into
the pen.

"herriot. . . those stitches. don't like the look of them much.. . ."

"oh yes," i said. "they're just a precaution. you can nick them out in a
couple of days."t "splendid! but won't they leave a wound? wed, better
put something on there." i paused in mid chew. here it was again. he
only needed his propamidine to complete his happiness.

"yes, old chap, we must apply some of that prip prom. . . oh hell and
blast, it's no goodl" he threw back his head and bellowed, "charlie i"
the foreman appeared in the entrance, touching his cap. "morning,
m'lord."

"morning, charlie. see that this sow gets some of that wonderful cream
on her. what the blazes d'you call it again?" charlie swallowed and
squared his shoulders. "propopamide, m'lord." the little man threw his
arms high in delight. "of course, of coursel propopamidel i wonder if
i'll ever be able to get that word out?" he looked admiringly at his
foreman. 'vharlie, you never fail-i don't know how you do it." charlie
bowed gravely in acknowledgement. lord hulton turned to me. "you'll let
us have some more propopamide, won't you, herriot?"

"certainly," i replied. "i think i have some in the car." sitting there
on the bucket amid the mixed aromas of pig and barley meal and coffee i
could almost feel the waves of pleasure beating on me. his lordship was
clearly enchanted by the whole business, charlie was wearing the
superior smile which always accompanied his demonstrations of lingual
dexterity, and as for myself i was experiencing a mounting euphoria. i
could see into the pen and the sight was rewarding. the little pigs who
had been sheltered in a large box during the operation were back with
their mother, side by side in a long pink row as their tiny mouths
enclosed the teats. the sow seemed to be letting her milk down, too,
because there was no frantic scramble for position, just a rapt
concentration. she was a fine pedigree pig and instead of lying on the
butcher's slab today she would be starting to bring up her family. as
though reading my thoughts she gave a series of contented grunts and the
old feeling began to bubble in me, the deep sense of fulfillment and
satisfaction that comes from even the smallest triumph and makes our
lives worth while.

and there was something else. a new thought stealing into my
consciousness with a delicious fresh tingle about it. at this moment,
who else in the length and breadth of britain was eating a brealdast
personally prepared and served by a marquis? chapter 3. 3

i am afraid of dentists. i am particularly afraid of strange dentists,
so before i went into the raf i made sure my teeth were in order.
everybody told me they were very strict about the aircrews' teeth and i
didn't want some unknown prodding around in my.mouth. there had to be no
holes anywhere or they would start to ache away up there in the sky, so
they said. so before my call-up i went to old mr. grover in darrowby and
he painstakingly did all that was necessary. he was good at his job and
was always gentle and careful and didn't strike the same terror into me
as other dentists. all i felt when i went to his surgery was a dryness
of the throat and a quivering at the knees, and providing i kept my eyes
tightly shut all the time i managed to get through the visit fairly
easily. my fear of dentists dates back to my earliest experiences in the
twenties. as a child i was taken to the dread hector mcdarroch in
glasgow and he did my dental work right up to my teens. friends of my
youth tell me that he inspired a similar lasting fear in them, too, and
in fact there must be a whole generation of glaswegians who feel the
same. of course you couldn't blame hector entirely. the equipment in
those days was primitive and a visit to any dental practitioner was an
ordeal. but hector, with his booming laugh, was so large and
overpowering that he made it worse. actually he was a very nice man,
cheerful and good-natured, but the other side of him blotted it all out.
the electric drill had not yet been invented or if it had, it hadn't
reached scotland, and hector bored holes in teeth with a fearsome
foot-operated machine. there 23

was a great wheel driven by a leather belt and this powered the drill,
and as you lay in the chair two things dominated the outlook; the wheel
whirring by your ear and hector's huge knee pistoning almost into your
face as he pedalled furiously. he came from the far north and at the
highland games he used to array himself in kilt and sporran and throw
cabers around like matchsticks. he was so big and strong that i always
felt hopelessly trapped in that chair with his bulk over me and the
wheel grinding and the pedal thumping. he didn't exactly put his foot on
my chest but he had me all right. and it didn't worry him when he got
into the sensitive parts with his drill; my strangled cries were of no
avail and he carried on remorselessly to the end. i had the impression
that hector thought it was sissy to feet pain, or maybe he was of the
opinion that suffering was good for the soul. anyway, since those days
i've had a marked preference for small frail soft-spoken dentists like
mr. grover. i like to feel that if it came to a stand-up fight i would
have a good chance of victory and escape. also, mr. grover understood
that people were afraid, and that helped. i remember him chuckling when
he told me about the big farm men who came to have their teeth
extracted. many a time, he said, he had gone across the room for his
instruments and turned back to find the chair empty. i still don't enjoy
going to the dentist but i have to admit that the modern men are
wonderful. i hardly ~ee mine when i go. just a brief glimpse of a white
coat then all is done from behind. fingers come round, things go in and
out of my mouth but even when i venture to open my eyes i see nothing.
hector mcdarroch, on the other hand, seemed to take a pleasure in
showing off his grisly implements, filling the long-needled syringe
right in front of my eyes and squirting the cocaine ceilingwards a few
times before he started on me. and worse, before an extraction he used
to clank about in a tin box, producing a series of hideous forceps and
exan-dning them, whistling softly, till he found the right one. so with
all this in mind, as i sat in a long queue of airmen for the preliminary
examination, i was thankful 1 had been to mr. grover for a complete
check-up. a dentist stood by a chair at the end of the long room and he
examined the young men in blue one by one before calling out his
findings to an orderly at a desk. i derived considerable entertainment
from watching the expressions on the lads' faces when the call went out.
'three fillings, two extractionsl"

"eight fillingsl" most of them looked stunned, some thunderstruck,
others almost tearful. now and again one would try to expostulate with
the man in white but it was no good; nobody was listening. at times i
could have laughed out loud. mind you, i felt a bit mean at being
amused, but after all they had only themselves to blame. if only they
had shown my foresight they would have had nothing to worry about. when
my name was called i strolled across, humming a little tune, and dropped
nonchalantly into the chair. it didn't take the man long. he poked his
way swiftly along my teeth then rapped out, "five fillings and one
extraction!" i sat bolt upright and stared at him in amazement.

"but. . . but... "I began to yammer, "i had a checkupbymyown..."

"next, please," murmured the dentist.

"but mr. grover said..."

"next manl move alongl" bawled the orderly, and as i shuflled away i
gazed appealingly -at the white-coated figure. but he was reciting a
list of my premolars and incisors and showed no interest. i was still
trembling when i was handed the details of my fate.

"report at regent lodge tomorrow morning for the extraction," the waaf
girl said. tomorrow morning! by god, they didn't mess aboutl and what
the heck did it all mean, anyway? my teeth were perfectly sound. there
was only that one with the bit of enamel chipped, off. mr. grover had
pointed it out and said it wouldn't give any trouble. it was the tooth
that held my pipe-surely it couldn't be that one. but there came the
disquieting thought that my opinion didn't matter. when my feeble
protests were ignored back there it hit me for the first time that i
wasn't a civilian any more. next morning the din from the dustbin lids
had hardly subsided when the grim realisation drove into my brain.

i was going to have a tooth out todayl and very soon, too. i passed the
intervening hours in growing apprehension; morning parade, the march
through the darkness to breakfast. the dried egg and fried bread were
less at traptive than ever and the grey day had hardly got under way
before i was approaching theforbidding fa;ade of regent lodge. as i
climbed the steps my palms began to sweat. i didn't like having my teeth
drilled but extractions were infinitely worse. something in me recoiled
from the idea of having a part of myself torn away by force, even if it
didn't hurt. but of course, i told myself as i walked along an echoing
corridor, it never did hurt nowadays. just a little prick, then nothing.
i was nurturing this comforting thought when i turned into a large
assembly room with numbered doors leading from it. about thirty airmen
sat around wearing a variety of expressions from sickly smiles to tough
bravado. a chilling smell of antiseptic hung on the air. i chose a chair
and settled down to wait. i had been in the armed forces long enough to
know that you waited a long time for everything and i saw no reason why
a dental appointment should be any different. as i sat down the man on
my left gave me a brief nod. he was fat, and greasy black hair fell over
his pimpled brow. though engrossed in picking his teeth with a match he
gave me a long appraising stare before addressing me in rich cockney.

"what room you going' in, mate?" i looked at my card. "room four."

"blimey, mate, you've 'ad id" he removed his matchstick and grinned
wolfishly.

"had it... ? what do you meant' "well, kaven't you 'eard? that's the
butcher in there~"

"the... the... butcher?" i quavered.

"yeh, that's what they call the dental officer in there." he gave an
expansive smile. "he's. a right killer, that bloke, i'll tell yer." i
swallowed. "butcher. ? killer. . , ? oh come on. they'll all be the
same, i'm sure."

"don't you believe it, mate. there's good an' there's bad, and that
bloke's pure murder. it shouldn't be allowed."

"how do you know, anyway?" he waved an airy hand. "oh rve been 'ere a
few times and i've heard some bleedin' awful screams comin' out of that
room. spoken to some of the chaps afterwards, too. they allcall'im the
butcher." i rubbed my hands on the rough blue of my trousers. "oh you
hear these tales. i'm sure they're exaggerated.,' "well, you'll find
out, mate." he resumed his tooth picking. "but don't say i didn't tell
you." he went on about various things but i only half heard him. his
name, it seemed, was simkin, and he was not an aircrew cadet like the
rest of us but a regular and a member of the groundstaff; he worked in
the kitchens. he spoke scornfully of us raw recruits and pointed out
that we would have to "get some service in!' before we were fit to
associate with,the real members of the royal air force. i noticed,
however, that despite his own years of allegiance he was still an ac2
like myself. almost an hour passed with my heart thumping every time the
door of number four opened. i had to admit that the young men leaving
that room all looked a bit shattered and one almost reeled out~ holding
his mouth with both hands.

"corl look at that poor buggerl" simkin drawled with ill-concealed
satisfaction. "strike mel he's been through it, poor bleeder. i'm glad
i'm not in your shoes, mate." i could feet the tension mounting in me.
"what room are you going into, anywayr, i asked. he did a bit of deep
exploration with his match. "room two, mate. i've been in there before.
he's a grand bloke, one of the best. never 'urts you."

"well you're lucky, aren't you?"

"not lucky, mate." he paused and stabbed his match at me. "i know my way
around, that's all. there!s ways and means." he allowed one eyelid to
drop briefly. the conversation was abruptly terminated as the dread door
opened and a waaf came out. i'ac2 herriott" she called. i got up on
shaking limbs and took a deep breath. as i set off i had a fleeting glimpse of the leer of pure delight on simkin s face. he was really
enjoying himself. as i passed the portals my feeling of doom increased.
the butcher was, another hector mcdarroch; about six feet two with rugby
forward shoulders bulging his white coat. my flesh crept as he unleashed
a hearty laugh and motioned me towards the chair. as i sat down i
decided to have one last try.

"is this the tooth?" i asked, tapping the only possible suspect.

"it is indeedl" boomed the butcher. "that's the one."

"ah well," i said with a light laugh. "i'm sure i can explain. there's
been some mistake...... "yes... yes. . ." he murmured, filling the
syringe before my eyes and sending a few playful spurts into the air.

"theres just a bit of enamel off it, and mr. grover said. . ." the waaf
suddenly wound the chair back and i found myself in the semi-prone
position with the white bulk looming over me.

"you see," i gasped desperately. "i need that tooth. it's the one that
holds my. . ." a strong finger was on my gum and i felt the needle going
in. i resigned myself to my fate. when he had inserted the local the big
man put the syringe down. "well just give that a minute or two," he
said, and left the room. as soon as the door closed behind him the waaf
tiptoed over to me.

"this feller's loopyl" she whispered. half lying, i stared at her.

"loopy... ? what d'you mean?"

"crackersl round the bendl no idea how to pull teethl"

"but... but... he's a dentist, isn't he... t' she pulled a wry face.
"thinks he isl but he hasn't a cluel" i had no time to explore this
cheering information further because the door opened and the big man
returned. he seized a horrible pair of forceps and i closed my eyes as
he started flexing his muscles. i must admit i felt nothing. i knew he
was twisting and tugging away up there but the local had mercifully done
its job. i was telling myself that it would soon be over when i heard a
sharp crack. i opened my eyes. the butcher was gazing disappointedly at
my broken-off tooth in his forceps. the root was still in my gum. behind
him the waaf gave me a long "i told you so" nod. she was a pretty little
thing, but i fear the libido of the young men she encountered in here
would be at a low ebb.

"ohl" the butcher grunted and began to rummage in a metal box. it took
me right back to the mcdarroch days as he fished out one forceps after
another, opened and shut them a few times then tried them on me. but it
was of no avail, and as the time passed i was the unwilling witness of
the gradual transition from heartiness to silence, then to something
like panic. the man was clearly whacked. he had no idea how to shift
that root. he must have been gouging for half an hour when an idea
seemed to strike him. pushing all the forceps to one side he almost ran
from the room and reappeared shortly with a tray on which reposed a long
chisel and a metal mallet. at a sign from him the waaf wound the chair
back till i was completely horizontal. seemingly familiar with the
routine, she cradled my head in her arms in a practised manner and stood
waiting. this couldn't be true, i thought, as the man inserted the
chisel into my mouth and poised the mallet; but all doubts were erased
as the metal rod thudded against the remnants of my tooth and my head in
turn shot back into the little waaf's bosom. and that was how it went
on. i lost count of time as the butcher banged away and the girl hung on
grimly to my jerking skull. the thought uppermost in my mind was that i
had always wondered how young horses felt when i knocked wolf teeth out
of them. now i knew. when it finally stopped i opened my eyes, and
though by this time i was prepared for anything i still felt slightly
surprised to see the butcher threading a needle with a length of suture
silk. he was sweating and looking just a little desperate as he bent
over me yet again.

"just a couple of stitches," he muttered hoarsely, and i closed my eyes
again. when i left the chair i felt very strange indeed. the assault on
my cranium had made me dizzy and the sensation of the long ends of the
stitches tickling my tongue was distinctly odd. i'm sure that when i
came out of the room i was staggering, and instinctively i pawed at my
mouth. the first man i saw was sinikin. he was where i had left him but
he looked different as he beckoned excitedly to me. i went over and he
caught at my tunic with one hand.

"what d'yer think, mate?" he gasped. "they've changed me round and i've
got to go into room four." he gulped. "you looked bloody awful comin'
out there. what was it re?" i looked at him. maybe there was going to be
a gleam of light this morning. i sank into the chair next to him and
groaned.

"by god, you weren't kiddingl i've never met anybody like that-he's half
killed me. they don't call him the butcher for nothingl"

"why... what... what did le do?"

"nothing much. just knocked my tooth out with a hammer and chisel, thafs
all." '~garnl yoifre'av& me ont" simkin made a ghastly attempt to smile.

"word of honour," i said. "anyway, theres the tray coming out now. look
for yourself." he stared at the waaf carrying the dreadful implements
andturned very pale.

"oh blimeyl what. . . what else did'e do?" i held my jaw for a moment.
"well he did something irve never seen before. he made such a great hole
in my gum that he had to stitch me up afterwards.- simkin shook his head
violently. "naow, i'm not 'avin' that i i don't believe yerl"

"all right" i said. "what do you think of this?" i leaned forward, put
my thumb under my lip and jerked it up to give him a close-up view of
the long gash and the trailing blood-stained ends of the stitches. he
shrank away from me, lips trembling, eyes wide.

"gawdl" he moaned. "oh gawd... i" it was unfortunate that the waaf chose
that particular moment to call out "ac2 simkin" piercingly from the
doorway, because the poor fellow leaped as though a powerful electric
current had passed through him. then, head down, he trailed across the
room. at the door he turned and gave me a last despairing look and i saw
him no more.

this experience deepened my dread of the five fillings which awaited me.
but i needn't have worried; they were trivial things and were
efficiently and painlessly dealt with by raf dentists very different
from the butcher. and yet, many years after the war had ended, the man
from room four stretched out a long arm from the past and touched me on
the shoulder. i began to feel some~ thing sharp coming through the roof
of my mouth and, went to mr. grover, who x-rayed me and showed me a
pretty picture of that fateful root still there despite the hammer and
chisel. he extracted it and the saga was ended. the butcher remained a
vivid memory because, apart from my ordeal, i was constantly reminded of
him by the dangerous wobbling of my pipe at the edge of that needless
gap in my mouth. but i did have a small solace. i finished my visit to
room four with a parting shaft which gave me a little comfort. as i
tottered away i paused and addressed the big man's back as he prepared
for his next victim.

"by the way," i said. "i've knocked out a lot of teeth just like you'
did there." he turned and stared at me. "really? are you a dentist?"

"no," i replied over my shoulder as i left "i'm a vetl" chapter 4. . 4

i like women better than men. mind you, i have nothing against men-after
all, i am one myself-but in the raf there were too many of them.
literally thousands, jostling, shouting, swearing; you couldn't get away
from them. some of them became my friends and have remained so until the
present day, but the sheer earthy mass of them made me realise how my
few months of married life had changed me. women are gentler, softer,
cleaner, altogether nicer things and 1, who always considered myself one
of the boys, had come to the surprising conclusion that the companion i
wanted most was a woman. my impression that i had been hurled into a
coarser world was heightened at the beginning of each day, particularly
one morning when i was on fire picket duty and had the sadistic pleasure
of rattling the dustbin lids and shouting "wakey-wakeyl" along the
corridors. it wasn't the cursing and the obscene remarks which struck
deepest, it was the extraordinary abdominal noises issuing from the dark
rooms. they reminded me of my patient, cedric, and in an instant i was
back in darrowby answering the telephone. the voice at the other end was
oddly hesitant.

"mr. herriot. . . i should be grateful if you would come and see my
dog." it was a woman, obviously upper class.

"certainly. what's the trouble?"

"well... he... er... he seems to suffer from... a certain amount of
flatus."

"i beg your pardon?" there was a long pause. "he has... excessive
flatus."

"in what way, exactly?" 32

"well... i suppose you'd describe it as... windiness." the voice had
begun to tremble. a i thought i could see a gleam of light. "you mean
his stomach. .. t' "no, not his stomach. he passes. . . er... a
considerable quantity of... wind from his... his. a note of desperation
had crept in.

"ah, yesl" all became suddenly clear. "i quite understand. but that
doesn't sound very serious. is he ill?"

"no, he's very fit in other ways."

"well then, do you think it's necessary for me to see him?"

"oh yes, indeed, mr. herriot. i wish you would come as soon as possible.
it has become quite quite a problem."

"all right," i said. "i'll look in this morning. can i have your name
and address, please?"

"it's mrs. rumney, the laurels."

'the laurels was a very nice house on the edge of the town standing back
from the road in a large garden. mrs. rumney herself let me in and i
felt a shock of surprise at my first sight of her. it wasn't just that
she was strikingly beautiful; there was an unworldly air about her. she
would be around forty but had the appearance of a heroine in a victorian
novel-tall, willowy, ethereal. and i could understand immediately her
hesitation on the 'phone. everything about her suggested fastidiousness
and delicacy.

"cedric is in the kitchen," she said. "i'll take you through." i had
another surprise when i saw cedric. an enormous boxer hurled himself on
me in delight,. clawing at my chest with the biggest, homiest feet i had
seen for a long time. i tried to fight him off but he kept at me,
panting ecstatically into my face and wagging his entire rear end.

"sit down, boyl" the lady said sharply, then, as cedric took absolutely
no notice, she turned to me nervously. "he's so friendly." 'yes, i said
breathlessly, "i can see that." i finally managed to push the huge
animal away and backed into a comer for safety. "how often does this. .
. excessive flatus occur?"

as if in reply an almost palpable sulphurous wave arose from the dog and
eddied around me. it appeared that the excitement of seeing me had
activated cedric's weakness. i was up against the wall and unable to
obey my first instinct to run for cover, so i held my hand over my face
for a few moments before speaking.

"is that what you meant?" mrs. rumney waved a lace handkerchief under
her nose and the faintest flush crept into the pallor of her cheeks.

"yes," she replied almost inaudibly. "yes. . . that is it." "oh well," i
said briskly. "there's nothing to worry about. let's go into the other
room and we'll have a word about his diet and a few other things." it
turned out that cedric was getting rather a lot of meat and i drew up a
little chart cutting down the protein and adding extra carbohydrates. i
prescribed a kaolin antacid mixture to be given night and morning and
left the house in a confident frame of mind. it was one of those trivial
things and i had entirely forgotten it when mrs. rumney 'phoned again.

"i'm afraid cedric is no better, mr. herriot."

"oh i'm sorry to hear that. he's stiller . . . still - yes ...
yes . . ." i spent a few moments in thought. i tell you what-i don't
think i can do any more by seeing him at the moment, but i think you
should cut out his meat completely for a week or two. keep him on
biscuits and brown bread rusked in the oven. try him with that and
vegetables and i'll give you some powder to mix in his food. perhaps
you'd call round for it." the powder was a pretty strong absorbent
mixture and i felt sure it would do the trick, but a week later mrs.
rurnney was on the 'phone again.

"there's absolutely no improvement, mr. herriot." the tremble was back
in her voice. "i . . . i do wish you'd come and see him again." i
couldn't see much point in viewing this perfectly healthy animal again
but i promised to call. i had a busy day and it was after six o7clock
before i got round to the laurels. there were several cars in the drive
and when i went into the house i saw that mrs. rumney had a few people
in for drinks; people like herself-upper class and of obvious
refinement. in fact i felt rather a lout in my working clothes among the
elegant gathering. mrs. rumney was about to lead me through to the
kitchen when the door burst open and cedric bounded delightedly into the
midst of the company. within seconds an aesthetic-looking gentleman was
frantically beating off the attack as the great feet ripped down his
waistcoat. he got away at the cost of a couple of buttons and the boxer
turned his attention to one of the ladies. she was in imminent danger of
losing her dress when i pulled the dog off her. pandemonium broke out in
the graceful room. the hostess's plaintive appeals rang out above the
cries of alarm as the big dog charged around, but very soon i realised
that a more insidious element had crept into the situation. the
atmosphere in the room became rapidly charged with an unmistakable
effluvium and it was clear that cedric's unfortunate malady had
reasserted itself. i did my best to shepherd the animal out of the room
but he didn't seem to know the meaning of obedience and i chased him in
vain. and as the embarrassing minutes ticked away i began to realise for
the first time the enormity of the problem which confronted mrs. rumney.
most dogs break wind occasionally but cedric was different; he did it
all the time. and while his silent emanations were perhaps more
treacherous there was no doubt that the audible ones were painfully
distressing in a company like this. cedric made it worse, because at
each rasping expulsion he would look round enquiringly at his back end
then gambol about the room as though the - fugitive zephyr was clearly
visible to him and he was determined to comer it. it seemed a year
before i got him out of there. mrs. rumney held the door wide as i
finally managed to steer him towards it but the big dog wasn't finished
yet. on his way out he cocked a leg swiftly and directed a powerful jet
against an immaculate trouser leg. after that night i threw myself into
the struggle on mrs. rumney's behalf. i felt she desperately needed my
help, and i made frequent visits and tried innumerable remedies. i
consulted my colleague siegfried on the problem and he suggested a diet
of charcoal biscuits.

cedric ate them in vast quantities and with evident enjoyment but they,
like everything else, made not the slightest difference to his
condition. and all the time i pondered upon the enigma of mrs. rumney.
she had fived in darrowby for several years but the townsfolk knew
little about her. it was a matter of debate whether she was a widow or
separated from her husband. but i was not interested in such things; the
biggest mystery to me was how she ever got involved with a dog like
cedric. it was difficult to think of any animal less suited to her
personality. apart from his regrettable affliction he was in every way
the opposite to herself; a great thickheaded rumbustious extrovert
totally out of place in her gracious menage. i -never did find out how
they came together but on my visits i found that cedric had one admirer
at least. he was con fenton, a retired farm worker who did a bit of
jobbing gardening and spent an average of three days a week at the
laurels. the boxer romped down the drive after me as i was leaving an&
the old man looked at him with undisguised admiration.

"by gaw," he said. "lies a fine dog, is thatl"

"yes, he is, con. he's a good chap, really." and i meant it. you
couldn't help liking cedric when you got to know him. he was utterly
amiable and without vice and he gave off a constant aura not merely of
noxious vapours but of bonhomie. when he tore off people's buttons or
sprinkled their trousers he did it in a spirit of the-purest amity.

"just look at them limbs1" breathed con, staring rapturously at the
dog7s muscular thighs. "by heck,'e can jump ower that gate as if it
weren't there. he's what ah call a dogl" as he spoke it struck me that
cedric would be likely to appeal to him because he was very like the
boxer himself; not over-burdened with brains, built like an ox with
powerful shoulders and a big constantly-grinning fac they were two of a
kind.

"aye, ah allus likes it when t'missus lets him out in t'garden," con
went on. he always spoke in a peculiar snuffling manner. "he's grand
company." i looked at him narrowly. no, he wouldn't be likely to notice
cedric's complaint since he always saw him out of doors. on my way back
to the surgery i brooded on the fact that i was achieving absolutely
nothing with my treatment. and though it seemed ridiculous to worry
about a case like this, there was no doubt the thing had begun to prey
on my mind. in fact i began to transmit my anxieties to siegfried. as i
got out of the car he was coming down the steps of skeldale house and he
put a hand on my arm.

"you've been to the laurels, james? tell me," he queried solicitously,
"how is your farting boxer today?"

"still at it, i'm afraid," i replied, and my colleague shook his head in
commi eration. we were both defeated. maybe if chlorophyll tablets had
been available in those days they migkt have helped but as it was i had
tried everything. it seemed certain that nothing would alter the
situation. and it wouldn't have been so bad if the owner had been
anybody else but mrs. runmey; i found that even discussing the thing
with her had become almost unbearable. siegfried's student brother
tristan didn!t help, either. when seeing practice he was very selective
in the cases he wished to observe, but he was immediately attracted to
,cedric's symptoms and insisted on coming with me on one occasion. i
never took him again because as we went in the big dog bounded from his
mistress' side and produced a particularly sonorous blast as if in
greeting. tristan immediately threw out a hand in a dramatic gesture and
declaimed: "speak on, sweet lips that never told a liel" that was his
only visit. i had enough trouble without that. i didn't know it at the
time but a greater blow awaited me. a few days later mrs. rumney was on
the 'phone again.

"mr. herriot, a friend of mine has such a sweet little boxer bitch. she
wants to bring her along to be mated with cedric."

"eh?"

"she wants to mate her bitch with my dog. 99 "with cedric . . . 2" 1
clutched at the edge of the desk. it couldn't be truel "and and are you
agreeable?"

"yes, of course." i shook my head to dispel the feeling of unreality. i
found it incomprehensible that anyone should want to reproduce cedric,
and as i gaped into the receiver a frightening vision floated before me
of eight little cedrics all with his complaint. but of course such a
thing wasn't hereditary. i took a grip of myself and cleared my throat.

"very well, then, mrs. rumney, you'd better go ahead." there was a
pause. "but mr. herriot, i want you to supervise the mating.- "oh
really, i don7t think thats necessary." i dug my nails into my palms.

"i think you'll be all right without me.

"oh but i would be much happier if you were there. please come," she
said appealingly. instead of emitting a long-&awn groan i took a deep
breath.

"right," i said. "i'll be along in the morning." all that evening i was
obsessed by a feeling of dread. another acutely embarrassing session was
in store with this exquisite woman. why was it i always had to share
things like this with her? and i really feared the worst. even the
daftest dog, when confronted with a bitch in heat, knows mistinctively
how to proceed, but with a really ivory-skulled animal like cedric i
wondered.... and next morning all my fears were realised. the bitch,
trudy, was a trim little creature and showed every sign of willingness
to cooperate. cedric, on the other hand, though obviously delighted to
meet her, gave no hint of doing his part. after sniffing her over, he
danced around her a few times, goofy-faced, tongue lolling. then he had
a roll on the lawn before charging at her and coming to a full stop, big
feet outsplayed, head down, ready to play. i sighed. it was as i
thought. the big chump didn't know what to do. this pantomime went on
for some time and, inevitably, the emotional strain brought on a
resurgence of his symptoms. frequently he paused to inspect his tail as
though he had never heard noises like that before. he varied his dancing
routine with occasional headlong gallops round the lawn and it was after
he had done about ten successive laps that he seemed to decide he ought
to do something about the bitch. i held my breath as he approached her
but unfortunately he chose the wrong end to commence operations. trudy
had put up with his nonsense with great patience but when she found him
busily working away in the region of her left ear it was too much. with
a shrill yelp she nipped him in the hind leg and he shot away in alarm.
after that whenever he came near she warned him off with bared teeth.
clearly she was disenchanted with her bridegroom and i couldn't blame
her.

"i think she's had enough, mrs. rumney," i said. i certainly had had
enough and so had the poor lady, judging by her slight breathlessness,
flushed cheeks and waving handkerchief.

"yes . . . yes ... i suppose you're right," she replied. so trudy was
taken home and that was the end of cedric's career as a stud dog. this
last episode decided me. i had to have a talk with mrs. rumney and a few
days later i called in at the laurels.

"maybe you'll think it's none of my business," i said. "but i honestly
don't think cedric is the dog for you. in fact he's so wrong for you
that he is upsetting your life. mrs. rumney's eyes widened. "well ... he
is a problem in some ways . . . but what do you suggest?"

"i think you should get another dog in his place. maybe a poodle or a
corgi-something smaller, something you could control."

"but mr. herriot, i couldn't possibly have cedric put down." her eyes
filled quickly with tears. "i really am fond of him despite his ...
despite everything."

"no, no, of course notl" i said. "i like him too. he has no malice in
him. but i think i have a good idea. why not let con fenton have him?"

"con ... ?"

"yes, he admires cedric tremendously and the big fellow would have a
good life with the old man. he has a couple of fields behind his cottage
and keeps a few beasts. cedric could run to his heart's content out
there and con would be able to bring him along when he does the garden.
you'd still see him three times a week." mrs. rumney looked at me in
silence for a few moments and i saw in her face the dawning of relief
and hope.

"you know, mr. herriot, i think that could work very well. but are you
sure con would take him?"

"i'd like to bet on it. an old bachelor like him must be lonely. there's
only one thing worries me. normally they only meet outside and i wonder
how it would be when they were indoors and cedric started to ... when
the old trouble . . ."

"oh, i thin that would be all right," mrs. rumney broke in quickly.
"when i go on holiday con always takes him for a week. or two and he has
never mentioned any ... anything unusual ... in that way." i got up to
go. "well, that's fine. i should put it to the old man right away." mrs.
rumney rang within a few days. con had jumped at the chance of taking on
cedric and the pair had apparently settled in happily together. she had
also taken my advice and acquired a poodle puppy. i didn't see the new
dog till it was nearly six months old and its mistress asked me to call
to treat it for a slight attack of eczema. as i sat in the graceful room
looking at mrs. rumney, cool, poised, tranquil, with the little white
creature resting on her knee i couldn't help feeling how right and
fitting the whole scene was. the lush carpet, the trailing velvet
curtains, the fragile tables with their load of expensive china and
framed miniatures. it was no place for cedric. con fenton's cottage was
less than half a mile away and an my way back to the surgery, on an
impulse i pulled up at the door. the old man answered my knock and his
big face split into a delighted grin when he saw me.

"come in, young manl" he cried in his strange snuffly voice. "i'm right
glad to see that" i had hardly stepped into the tiny living room when a
hairy form hurled itself upon me. cedric hadn't changed a bit and i had
to battle my way to the broken armchair by the fireside. con settled
down opposite and when the boxer leaped to lick his face he clumped him
companionably on the head with his fist.

"siddown, ye great daft bugger," he murmured with affection. cedric sank
happily on to the tattered hearth rug at his feet and gazed up adoringly
at his new master.

"well., mr. herriot," con went on as he cut up some villainous4looking
plug tobacco and began to stuff it into his pipe. "i'm right grateful to
ye for getting' me this grand dog. by gaw, he's a topper and ah wouldn't
sell 'im for any money. no man could ask for a better friend."

"well, that's great, con," i said. "and i can see that the big chap is
really happy here." the old man ignited his pipe and a cloud of acrid
smoke rose to the low, blackened beams. "aye, he's 'ardly ever inside. a
gurt strong dog like 'im wants to work 'is energy off, like." but just
at that moment cedric was obviously working something else off because
the familiar pungency rose from him even above the billowings from the
pipe. con seemed oblivious of it but in the enclosed space i found it
overpowering.

"ali well," i gasped. "i just looked in for a moment to see how you were
getting on together. i must be on my way." i rose hurriedly and
stumbled, towards the door but the redolence followed me in a wave. as i
passed the table with the remains of the old man's meal i saw what
seemed to be the only form of ornament in the cottage, a cracked vase
holding a magnificent bouquet of carnations. it was a way of escape and
i buried my nose in their fragrance. con watched me approvingly. "aye,
they're lovely flowers, aren't they? tmissus at laurels lets me bring
'ome what i want and i reckon them carnations is me favourite."

"yes, they're a credit to you.- i still kept my nose among the blooms.

"there's only one thing," the old man said pensively. "ah don't get
t'full benefit of 'em."

"how's that, con?" he pulled at his pipe a couple of times. "well, you
can hear ah speak a bit funny, like?"

"no ... no ... not really."

"oh aye, ye know ah do. i've been like it since i were a lad. i 'ad a
operation for adenoids and summat went wrong."

"oh , i'm sorry to hear that," i said. &,well, it's nowt serious, but
it's left me lackin' in one way."

"you mean . . . t' a light was beginning to dawn in my mind, an
elucidation of how man and dog had found each other, of why their
relationship was so perfect, of the certainty of their happy future
together. it seemed like fate.

"aye," the old man went on sadly. "i 'ave no sense of smell." chapter5.
.5

1 think it was when i saw the london policeman wagging a finger at a
scowling urchin that i thought of wesley binks and the time he put the
firework through the surgery letter box. it was what they used to call a
"banger" and it exploded at my feet as i hurried along the dark passage
in answer to the door bell's ring, making me leap into the air in
terror. i threw open the front door and looked into the street. it was
empty, but at the corner where the lamplight was reflected in robson's
shop window i had a brief impression of a fleeing form and a faint echo
of laughter. i couldn't do anything about it but i knew wes was out
there somewhere. wearily i trailed back into the house. why did this lad
persecute me? what could a ten-year-old boy possibly have against me? i
had never done him any harm, yet i seemed to be the object of a
deliberate campaign. or maybe it wasn't personal. it could be that he
felt i represented authority or the establishment in some way, or
perhaps i was just convenient. i was certainly the ideal subject for his
little tricks of ringing the door bell and running away, because i dared
not ignore the summons in case it might be a client, and also the
consulting and operating rooms were such a long way from the front of
the house. sometimes i was dragged down from our bed-sitter under the
tiles. every trip to the door was an expedition and it was acutely
exasperating to arrive there and see only a little figure in the
distance dancing about and grimacing at me. he varied this routine by
pushing rubbish through the letter box, pulling the flowers from the
tiny strip of garden we tried to cultivate between the flagstones and chalking rude
messages on my car. i knew i wasn't the only victim because i had heard
complaints from others; the fruiterer who saw his apples disappear from
the box in front of the - shop, the grocer who unwillingly supplied him
with free biscuits. he was the town naughty boy all right, and it was
incongruous that he should have been named wesley. there was not the
slightest sign in his behaviour of any strict methodist upbringing. in
fact i knew nothing of his family lifo-only that he came from the
poorest part of the town, a row of "yards" containing tumbledown
cottages, some of them evacuated because of their condition. i often saw
him wandering about in the fields and lanes or fishing in quiet reaches
of the river when he should have been in school. when he spotted me on
these occasions he invariably called out some mocking remark and if he
happened to be with some of his cronies they all joined in the laughter
at my expense. it was annoying but i used to tell myself that there was
nothing personal in it. i was an adult and that was enough to make me a
target. wes's greatest triumph was undoubtedly the time he removed the
grating from the coal cellar outside skeldale house. it was on the left
of the front steps and underneath it was a steep ramp down which the
coalmen tipped their bags. i don't know whether it w~s inspired
intuition but he pinched the grating on the day of the darrowby gala.
the festivities started with a parade through the town led by the
houlton silver band and as i looked down from the windows of our
bed-sitter i could see them all gathering in the street below.

"look, helen," i said. "they must be starting the march from trengate.
everybody i know seems to be down there." helen leaned over my shoulder
and gazed at the long lines of boy scouts, girl guides, ex-servicemen,
with half the population of the town packed on the pavements, watching.
"yes, it's quite a sight, isn't it? let's go down and see them move
off." we trotted down the long flights of stairs and i followed her out
through the front door. and as i appeared in the entrance i was suddenly
conscious that i was the centre of attention. the citizens on the
pavements, waiting patiently for the parade to start, had something else
to look at now. the little brownies and wolf cubs waved at me from their
ranks and there were nods and smiles from the people across the road and
on all sides. i could divine their thoughts. "there?s t'young vitnery
coming out of his house. not long married, too. that's his missus next
to him." a feeling of wellbeing rose in me. i don't know whether other
newly married men feel the same, but in those early days i was aware of
a calm satisfaction and fulfillment. and i was proud to be the "vitnery"
and part of the life of the town. there was my plate on the wall beside
me, a symbol of my solid importance. i was a man of substance now. i had
arrived. looking around me, i acknowledged the greeting with a few
dignified little smiles, raising a gracious hand now and then rather
like a royal personage on view. then i noticed that helen hadn't much
room by my side, so i stepped to the left to where the grating should
have been and slid gracefully down into the cellar. it would be a
dramatic touch to say i disappeared from view; in fact i wish i had,
because i would have stayed down there and avoided further
embarrassment. but as it was i travelled only so far down the ramp and
stuck there with my head and -shoulders protruding into the street. my
little exhibition caused a sensation among the spectators. nothing in
the gala parade could compete with this. one or two of the surrounding
faces expressed alarm but loud laughter was the general response. the
adults were almost holding each other up but the little brownies and
wolf cubs made my most appreciative audience, breaking their ranks and
staggering about helplessly in the roadway while their leaders tried to
restore order. i caused chaos, too, in the houlton silver band, who were
hoisting their instruments prior to marching off. if they had any ideas
about bursting into tune they had to abandon them temporarily because i
don't think any of them had breath to blow. it was, in fact, two of the
bandsmen who extricated me by linking their hands under my armpits. my
wife was of no service at all in the crisis and i could only look up at
her reproachfully as she leaned against the doorpost dabbing at her
eyes. it all became clear to me when i reached street level. i was
flicking the coal dust from my trousers and trying to look unconcerned
when i saw wesley binks doubled up with mirth, pointing triumphantly at
me and at the hole over the cellar. he was quite near, jostling among
the spectators, and i had my first close look at the wild-eyed little
goblin who had plagued me. i may have made an unconscious movement
towards him because he gave me a last malevolent grin and disappeared
into the crowd. later i asked helen about him. she could only tell me
that wesley's father had left home when he was about six years old, that
his mother had remarried and the boy now lived with her and his
stepfather. strangely, i had another opportunity to study him quite soon
afterwards. it was about a week later and my feathers were still a
little ruffled after the grating incident when i saw him sitting all
alone in the waiting room. alone, that is, except for a skinny black dog
in his lap. i could hardly believe it. i had often rehearsed the choice
phrases which i would use on this very occasion but the sight of the
animal restrained me; if he had come to consult me professionally i
could hardly start pitching into him right away. maybe later. i pulled
on a white coat and went in.

"well, what can i do for you?" i asked coldly. the boy stood up and his
expression of n-dxed defiance and desperation showed that it had cost
him something to enter this house.

"suminat matter wi' me dog," he muttered.

"right, bring him through." i led the way along the passage to the
consulting room.

"put him on the table, please," i said, and as he lifted the little
animal i decided that i couldn't let this opportunity pass. while i was
carrying out my examination i would quite casually discuss recent
events. nothing nasty, no clever phrases, just a quiet probe into the
situation. i was just about to say something like "what's the idea of
all those tricks you play on me?" when i took my first look at the dog
and everything else fled from my mind. he wasn't much more than a big
puppy and an out-and out mongrel. his shiny black coat could have come
from a labrador and there was a suggestion of terrier in the pointed
nose and pricked ears, but the long string-like tail and the knock-kneed
forelimbs baffled me. for all that he was an attractive little creature
with a sweetly expressive face. but the things that seized my whole
attention were the yellow blobs of pus in the corners of the eyes, the
mucopurulent discharge from the nostrils and the photophobia, which made
the dog blink painfully at the light from the surgery window. classical
canine distemper is so easy to diagnose but there is never any
satisfaction in doing so.

"i didn't know you had a dog," i said. "how long have you had him?"

"a month. feller got 'irn from t'dog and cat home at hartington and
sold'im to me."

"i see." i took the temperature and was not surprised to find it was
104'f.

"how old is he?" 'nine months." i nodded. just about the worst age. i
went ahead and asked all the usual questions but i knew the answers
already. yes, the dog had been slightly off colour for a week or two.
no, he wasn't really ill, but listless and coughing occasionally. and of
course it was not until the eyes and nose began to discharge that the
boy became worried and brought him to see me. that was when we usually
saw these cases-when it was too late. wesley imparted the information
defensively, looking at me under lowered brows as though he expected me
to clip his ear at any moment. but as i studied him any aggressive
feelings i may have harboured evaporated quickly. the imp of hell
appeared on closer examination to be a neglected child. his elbows stuck
out through holes in a filthy jersey, his shorts were similarly ragged,
but what appalled me most was the sour smell of his unwashed little
body. i hadn't thought there were children like this in darrowby.

when he had answered my questions he made an effort and blurted out one
of his own.

"what's matter with 'im?" i hestitated a moment. "he's got distemper,
wes."

"what's that?"

"well, it's a nasty infectious disease. he must have got it from another
sick dog."

"will'e get better?"

"i hope so. i'll do the best i can for him." i couldn't bring myself to
tell a small boy of his age that his pet was probably going to die. i
filled a syringe with a "mixed macterin" which we used at that time
against the secondary invaders of distemper. it never did much good and
even now with all our antibiotics we cannot greatly influence the final
outcome. if you can catch a case in the early viral phase then a shot of
hyperimmune serum is curative, but people rarely bring their dogs in
until that phase is over. as i gave the injection the dog whimpered a
little and the boy stretched out a hand and patted him.

"it's awright, duke," he said.

"that's what you call him, is it-duke?"

"aye." he fondled the ears and the dog turned, whipped his strange long
tail about and- licked the hand quickly. wes smiled and looked up at me
and for a moment the tough mask dropped from the grubby features and in
the dark wild eyes i read sheer delight. i swore under my breath. this
made it worse. i tipped some boracic crystals into a box and handed it
over. "use this dissolved in water to keep his eyes and nose clean. see
how his nostrils are all caked and blocked up--you can make him a lot
more comfortable." he took the box without speaking and almost with the
same movement dropped three and sixpence on the table. it was about our
average charge and resolved my doubts on that score.

"when'll ah bring 'im back?" he asked. i looked at him doubtfully for a
moment. all i could do was repeat the injections, but was it going to
make the slightest difference? the boy misread my hesitation.

"ah can pay!" he burst out. "ah can get t'money!" ".0h i didn't mean
that, wes. i was just wondering

when it would be suitable. how about bringing him in on thursday?" he
nodded eagerly and left with his dog. as i swabbed the table with
disinfectant i had the old feeling of helplessness. the modem veterinary
surgeon does not see nearly as many cases of distemper as we used to,
simply because most people immunise their puppies at the earliest
possible moment. but back in the thirties it was only the few fortunate
dogs who were inoculated. the disease is so easy to prevent but almost
impossible to cure. the next three weeks saw an incredible change in
wesley binks's character. he had built up a reputation as an idle scamp
but now he was transformed into a model of industry, delivering papers
in the mornings, digging people's gardens, helping to drive the beasts
at the auction mart. i was perhaps the only one who knew he was doing it
for duke. he brought the dog in every two or three days and paid on the
nail. i naturally charged him as little as possible but the money he
earned went on other things-fresh meat from the butcher, extra milk and
biscuits.

"duke's looking very smart today," i said on one of the visits. "i see
you've been getting him a new collar and lead." the boy nodded shyly
then looked up at me, dark eyes intent. "is'e any better?"

"well, he's about the same, wes. thafs how it goes--dragging on without
much change."

"when ... will ye know?" i thought for a moment. maybe he would worry
less if he understood the situation. "the thing is this. duke will get
better if he can avoid the nervous complications of distemper."

"wot's them?"

"fits, paralysis and a thing called chorea which makes the muscles
twitch."

"wot if he gets them?"

"it's a bad lookout in that case. but not all dogs develop them." i
tried to smile re ' assuringly. "and there!s one thing in duke's
favour-he's not a pure bred. cross bred dogs have a thing called hybrid
vigour which helps them to fight disease. after all, he's eating fairly
well and he's quite lively, isn't he?"

"aye, not bad."

"well then, we'll. carry on. i'll give him another shot now." the boy
was back in three days and i knew by his face he had momentous news.

"duke~s a lot better-2is eyes and nose 'ave dried up and lies eatin' like
a 'oss!" he was panting with excitement. i lifted the dog on to the
table. there was no doubt he was enormously improved and i did my best
to join in the rejoicing.

"that's great, wes," i said, but a warning bell was tinkling in my mind.
if nervous symptoms were going to supervene, this was the time-just when
the dog was apparently recovering. i forced myself to be optimistic.
"well now, there's no need to come back any more but watch him carefully
and if you see anything unusual bring him in." the ragged little figure
was overjoyed. he almost pranced along the passage with his pet and i
hoped fervently that i would not see them in there again. that was on
the friday evening and by monday i had put the whole thing out of my
head and into the category of satisfying memories when the boy came in
with duke on the lead. i looked up from the desk where i was writing in
the day book. "what is it, wes?" .'he's dotkerin'." i didn't bother
going through to the consulting room but hastened from behind the desk
and crouched on the floor, studying the dog intently. at first i saw
nothing, then as i watched i could just discern a faint nodding of the
head. i placed my hand on the top of the skull and waited. and it was
there; the slight but regular twitching of the temporal muscles whick i
had dreaded.

"i'm afraid he's got chorea, wes," i said.

"what's that?"

"it's o ' the of the things i was telling you about. some- times they
call it st. vitus' dance. i was hoping it wouldn't happen.ti the boy
looked suddenly small and forlorn and he stood there silent, twisting
the new leather lead between his fingers. it was such an effort for him
to speak that he almost closed his eyes.

"will'e die?"

"some dogs do get over it, wes." i didn't tell him that i had seen it
happen only once. "i've got some tablets which might help him. i'll get
you some." i gave him a few of the arsenical tablets i had used in my
only cure. i didn't even know if they had been responsible but i had
nothing more to offer. duke's chorea pursued a text book course over the
next two weeks. all the things which i had feared turned up in a
relentless progression. the twitching spread from his head to his limbs,
then his hindquarters began to sway as he walked.' his young master
brought him in repeatedly and i went through the motions, trying at the
same time to make it clear that it was all hopeless. the boy persisted
doggedly, rushing about meanwhile with his paper deliveries and other
jobs, insisting on paying though i didn't want his money. then one
afternoon he called in.

"ah couldn't bring duke," he muttered. "can't walk now. will you come
and see 'im?" we got into my car. it was a sunday, about three o'clock
and the streets were quiet. he led me up the cobbled yard and opened the
door of one of the houses. the stink of the place hit me as i went in.
country vets aren't easily sickened but i felt my stomach turning. mrs.
binks was very fat and a ffithy dress hung shapelessly on her as she
slumped, cigarette in mouth, over the kitchen table. she was absorbed in
a magazine which lay in a clearing among mounds of dirty dishes and her
curlers nodded as she looked up briefly at us. on a couch under the
window her husband sprawled asleep, open-mouthed, snoring out the reek
of beer. the sink, which held a further supply of greasy dishes, was
covered in a revolting green scum. clothes, newspapers and nameless
rubbish littered the floor and over everything a radio blasted away at
full strength. the only clean new thing was the dog basket in the
corner. i went across and bent over the little animal. duke was now
prostrate and helpless, his body emaciated and jerking uncontrollably.
the sunken eyes had filled up again with pus and gazed apathetically
ahead.

"wes," i said. "you've got to let me put him to sleep." he didn7t
answer, and as i tried to explain, the blaring radio drowned my words. i
looked over at his mother.

"do you mind turning the radio down?" i asked. she jerked her head at
the boy and he went over and turned the knob. in the ensuing silence i
spoke to him again.

"it's the only thing, believe me. you can't let him die by inches like
this." he didn't look at me. all his attention was fixed desperately on
his dog. then he raised a hand and i heard his whisper.

"awright.11 i hurried out to the car for the nembutal.

"i promise you he'll feel no pain," i said as i med the syringe. and
indeed the little creature merely sighed before lying motionless, the
fateful twitching stilled at last. i put the syringe in my pocket. "do
you want me to take him away, wes?" he looked at me bewilderedly and his
mother broke in.

"aye, get 'im. out. ali never wanted t'bloody thing 'ere in t'first
place." she resumed her reading. i quickly lifted the little body and
went out. wes followed me and watched as i opened the boot and laid duke
gently on top of my black working coat. as i closed the lid he screwed
his knuckles into his eyes and his body shook. i put my arm across his
shoulders, and as he leaned against me for a moment and sobbed i
wondered if he had ever been able to cry like this-like a little boy
with somebody to comfort him. but soon he stood back and smeared the
tears across the dirt on his cheeks.

"are you going back into the house, wes?" i asked. he blinked and looked
at me with a return of his tough expression.

"nawl" he said and turned and walked away. he didn't look back and i
watched him cross the road, climb a wall and trail away across the
fields towards the river. and it has always seemed to me that at that
moment wes walked back into his old life. from then on there were no
more odd jobs or useful activities. he never played any more tricks on
me but in other ways he progressed into more serious misdemeanours. he
set barns on fire, was up before the magistrates for theff and by the
time he was thirteen he was stealing cars. finally he was sent to an
approved school and then he disappeared from the district. nobody knew
where he went and most people forgot him. one person who didn!t was the
police sergeant. "That young wesley binks," he said to me ruminatively.
"he was a wrong 'un if ever i saw one. you know, i don't think he ever
cared a damn for anybody or any living thing in his life."

"i know how you feel, sergeant," i replied, "but you're not entirely
right. there was one living thing. . . ." chapter 6. 6

tristan would never have won any prizes as an exponent of the haute
cuisine. we got better food in the raf than most people in wartime
britain but it didn't compare with the darrowby fare. i suppose i had
been spoiled; first by mrs. hall, then by helen. there were only brief
occasions at skeldale house when we did not eat like kings and one of
those was when tristan was installed as temporary cook. it began one
morning at breakfast in the days when i was still a bachelor and tristan
and i were taking our places at the mahogany dining table. siegfried
bustled in, muttered a greeting and began to pour 'his coffee. he was
unusually distrait as he buttered a slice of toast and cut into one of
the rashers on his plate, then after a minute's thoughtful chewing he
brought down his hand on the table with a suddenness that made me jump.

"i've got it!" he exclaimed.

"got what?" i enquired. siegfried put down his knife and fork and wagged
a finger at me. "silly, really, i've been sitting here puzzling about
what to do and it's suddenly clear."

"why, what's the trouble?"

"it's mrs. hall," he said. "she's just told me her sister has been taken
ill and she has to go and look after her. she thinks she'll be away for
a week and i've been wondering who i could get to look after the house."
611 see." ' "then it struck me." he sliced a corner from a fried egg.
"tristan can do it."

"eh?" his brother looked up, startled, from his daily mirror. "me?"

"yes, you! you spend a lot of time on your arse. a bit of useful
activity would be good for you."

54

tristan looked at him warily. "what do you meanuseful activity?"

"well, keeping the place straight," siegfried said. "i wouldn't expect
perfection but you could tidy up each day, and of course prepare the
meals."

"meals?"

"mat's right." siegfried gave him a level stare. "you can cook, can't
you?"

"weller, yes ... i can cook sausage and mash." siegfried waved an
expansive hand. "there you are, you see, no problem. push over those
fried tomatoes, will you, james?" i passed the dish silently. i had only
half heard the conversation because part of my mind was far away. just
before breakfast i had had a phone call from ken billings, one of our
best farmers, and his words were still echoing in my head.

"mr. herriot, that calf you saw yesterday is dead. that's the third 'un
i've lost in a week and i'm flummoxed. i want ye out here this mornin'
to have another look round." i sipped my coffee absently. he wasn't the
only one who was flummoxed. three fine calves had shown symptoms of
acute gastric pain, i had treated them and they had died. that was bad
enough but what made it worse was that i hadn't the faintest idea what
was wrong with them i wiped my lips and got up quickly. "siegfried, i'd
like to go to billings' first. then i've got the rest of the round you
gave me."

"fine, james, by all means." my boss gave me a sweet and encouraging
smile, balanced a mushroom on a piece of fried bread and conveyed it to
his mouth. he wasn't a big eater but he did love his breakfast. on the
way to the farm my mind beat about helplessly. What more could i do
than i had already done? in these obscure cases one was driven to the
conclusion that the animal had eaten something harmful. at times i had
spent hours roaming around pastures looking for poisonous plants but
that was pointless with billings's calves because they had never been
out; they were mere babies of a month old. i had carried out post mortem
examinations of the dead animals but had found only a non-specific
gastroenteriffi. i had sent kidneys to the laboratory for lead
estimation with negative result; like their owner, i was flummoxed. mr.
billings was waiting for me in his yard.

"good job i rang youl" he said breathlessly. "theres another 'un
startin'." i rushed with him into the buildings and found what i
expected and dreaded; a small calf kicking at its stomach, getting up
and down, occasionally rolling on its straw bed. typical abdominal pain.
but why? i went over it as with the others. temperature normal, lungs
clear, only rumenal atony and extreme tenderness as i palpated the
abdomen. as i was putting the thermometer back in its case the calf
suddenly toppled over and went into a frothing convulsion. hastily i
injected sedatives, calcium, magnesium, but with a feeling of doom. i
had done it all before.

"what the hell is it?" the farmer asked, voicing my thoughts. i
shrugged. "it's acute gastritis, mr. billings, but i wish i knew the
cause. i could swear this calf has eaten some irritant or corrosive
poison."

"well, dang it, they've nob but had milk and a few nuts." the farmer
spread his hands. "there's nothing they can get to hurt them." again,
wearily, i went through the old routine; ferreting around in the calf
pen, trying to find some clue. an old paint tin, a burst packet of sheep
dip. it was amazing, the things you came across in the clutter of a farm
building. but not at mr. billings's place. he was meticulously tidy,
particularly with his calves, and the window sills and shelves were free
from rubbish. it was the same with the milk buckets, scoured to spotless
cleanliness after every feed. mr. billings had a thing about his calves.
his two teenage sons were fanatically keen on farming and he encouraged
them in all the agricultural skills; but he fed the calves himself.

"feeding them calves is t'most important job in stock rearing," he used
to say. "get 'em over that first month and you're halfway there." and he
knew what he was talking about. his charges never suffered from the
normal ailments of the young; no scour, no joint ill, no pneumonia. i
had often marvelled at it, but it made the present disaster all the more unbearable.

"all right," i said with false breeziness as i left. "maybe this one
won't be so bad. give me a ring in the morning.11 i did the rest of my
round in a state of gloom and at lunch i was still so preoccupied that i
wondered what had happened when tristan served the meal. i had entirely
forgotten about mrs. hall's absence. however, the sausage and mash
wasn't at all bad and tristan was lavish with his helpings. the three of
us cleaned our plates pretty thoroughly, because morning is the busiest
working time in practice and i was always famished by midday. my mind
was still on mr. billings's problem during the afternoon calls and when
we sat down to supper i was only mildly surprised to find another
offering of sausage and mash.

"same again, eh?" siegfried grunted, but he got through his plateful and
left without further comment. the next day started badly. i came into
the dining room to find the table bare and siegfried stamping around.

"where the hell is our breakfast?" he burst out. "and where the hell is
tristan?" he pounded along the passage and i heard his shouts in the
kitchen, "tristan! tristanl" i knew he was wasting his time. his brother
often slept in and it was just more noticeable this morning. my boss
returned along the passage at a furious gallop and i steeled myself for
some unpleasantness as the young man was rousted from his bed. but
tristan, as usual, was master of the situation. siegfried had just be
gun to take the stairs three at a time when his brother descended - from
the landing, knotting his tie with perfect composure. it was uncanny. he
always got more than his share of sleeping time but was rarely caught
between the sheets.

"sorry, chaps," he murmured. "afraid i overslept."

"yes, that's all rightl" shouted siegfried. "but how about our bloody
breakfast? i gave you a job to do i" tristan was contrite. "i really do
apologise, but i was up late'last night, peeling potatoes." his
brother's face flashed. "i know all about thatl" he barked. "you didn't
start till after closing time at the drovers'l"

"well, that's right." tristan swallowed and his face assumed the
familiar expression of pained dignity. "i did feel a bit dry last night.
think it must have been all the cleaning and dusting i did." siegfried
did not reply. he shot a single exasperated look at the young man then
turned to me. "we'll have to make do with bread and marmalade this
morning, james. come through to the kitchen and we'll . . ." the
jangling telephone cut off his words. i lifted the receiver and listened
and it must have been the expression on my face which stopped him in the
doorway.

"what's the matter, james?" he asked as i came away from the 'phone.
"you look as though you've had a kick in the belly." i nodded. "that's
how i feel. that calf is nearly dead at billings's and there's another
one ill. i wish you'd come out there with me, siegfried."

my boss stood very still as he looked over the side of the pen at the
little animal. it didn't seem to know where to put itself, rising and
lying down, kicking at some inward pain, writhing its hindquarters from
side to side. as he watched it fell on its side and began to thrash
around with all four limbs.

"james," he said quietly. "that calf has been poisoned."

"mat's what i thought, but how?" mr. billings broke in. "it's no good
talkin' like that, mr. farnon. we've been over this place time and time
again and there's nowt for them to get."

"well, we'll go over it again." siegfried stalked around the calf house
as i had done and when he returned his face was expressionless.

"where do you get the nuts from?" he grunted, crumbling one of the cubes
between his fingers. mr. billings threw his arms wide. "from flocal
mill. ryders' best. you can't fault them, surely." siegfried said
nothing. ryders were noted, for their meticulous preparation of cattle
food. he went over the sick calf with stethoscope and thermometer,
digging his fingers into the hairy abdominal wall, staring impassively
at the calf's face to note its reaction. he did the same with my patient
of yesterday whose glazing eyes and cold extremities told their grim
tale. then he gave the calves almost the same treatment as i had and we
left. he was silent for the first half mile, then he beat the wheel
suddenly with one hand. "there's an irritant poison there, janiesl as
sure as god made little apples there is. but i'm damned if i know where
it's coming from." our visit had taken a long time and we returned to
skeldale house for lunch. like myself, his mind was still wrestling with
mr. billings's problem and he hardly winced as tristan placed a steaming
plateful of sausage and mash before him. then, as he prodded the mash
with a fork, he appeared to come to the surface.

"god almightyl" he exclaimed. "have we got this again?" tristan smiled
ingratiatingly. "yes, indeed. mr. johnson told me they were a
particularly fine batch of sausages today. definitely superior, he
said."

"is that so?" his brother gave him a sour glance. "well, they look the
bloody same to me. like supper yesterday-and like lunch." his voice
began to rise, then he subsided.

"oh, what the hell," he muttered, and began to toy listlessly with the
food. clearly those calves had drained him and i knew how he felt. i got
through my share without much difficulty-i've always liked sausage and
mash. but my boss is a resilient character and when we met in the late
afternoon he was bursting with his old spirit.

"that call to billings's shook me, james, i can tell. you," he said.
"but i've revisited a few of my other cases since then and they're all
improving nicely. raises the morale tremendously. here, let me get you a
drink." he reached into the cupboard above the mantelpiece for the gin
bottle and after pouring a couple of measures he looked benignly at his
brother who was tidying the sitting room. tristan was making a big show,
running a carpet sweeper up and down, straightening cushions, flicking a
duster at everything in sight. he sighed and panted with effort as he
bustled around, the very picture of a harassed domestic. he needed only
a mob cap and frilly apron to complete the image. we finished our drinks
and siegfried immersed him-

self in the veterinary record as savoury smells began to issue from the
kitchen. it was about seven o'clock when tristan put his head round the
door.

"supper is on the table," he said. my boss put down the record, rose and
stretched expansively. "good, i'm ready for it, too." i followed him
into the dining room and almost cannoned into his back as he halted
abruptly. he was staring in disbelief at the tureen in the middle of the
table.

"not bloody sausage and mash again!" he bellowed. tristan shuffled his
feet. "weller, yes-it's very nice, really."

"very nice! i'm beginning to dream about the blasted stuff. can't you
cook anything else?"

"well, i told you." tristan looked wounded. "i told you i could cook
sausage and mash."

"yes, you did!" shouted his brother. "but you didn't say you couldn't
cook anything ]but sausage and bloody mashl" tristan made a
non-committal gesture and his brother sank wearily down at the table.

"go on, then," he sighed. "dish it out and heaven help us. he took a
small mouthful from his plate then gripped at his stomach and emitted a
low moan. "this stuff is killing me. i don't think i'll ever be the same
after this week," the following day opened in dramatic fashion. i had
just got out of bed and was reaching for my dressing gown when an
explosion shook the house. it was a great 11 whuff" which rushed like a
mighty wind through passages and rooms, rattling the windows and leaving
an ominous silence in its wake. i dashed out to the landing and ran into
siegfried. who stared wide-eyed at me for a moment before galloping
downstairs. in the kitchen tristan was lying on his back amid a litter
of pans and dishes. several rashers of bacon and a few smashed eggs
nestled on the flags.

"what the hell's going on?" siegfried shouted. his brother looked up at
him with mild interest. "i really don't know. i was lighting the fire
and there was a bang."

"lighting the fire.. .

"yes, i've had a little difficulty these last two mornings. the thing
wouldnt go. i thin the chimney needs sweeping. these old houses. . ."

"yes, yes!" siegfried burst out. "we know, but what the hell happened?"
tristan sat up. even then, among the debris with smuts all over his
face, he still retained his poise. "well, i thought i'd hurry things
along a bit." (his agile mind was forever seeking new methods of
conserving energy.) "i soaked a piece of cotton wool in ether and
chucked that in."

"ether?"

"well yes, it's inflammable, isn't it?"

"inflammable!" his brother was popeyed. "it's bloody well explosive!
it's a wonder you didn't blow the whole place up." tristan rose and
dusted himself off. "ah well, never mind. i'll soon have breakfast
ready."

"you can forget that." siegfried took a long shuddering breath then went
over to the bread tin, extracted a loaf and began to saw at it. "the
breakfast's on the floor, and anyway, by the time you've cleared up this
mess we'll be gone. bread and marmalade all right for you, james?" we
went out together again. my boss had arranged that ken billings should
postpone his calf feeding till we got there so that we could witness the
process. it wasn't a happy arrival. both the calves had died and the
farmer's eyes held a look of desperation. siegfried's jaw clenched tight
for a moment than he motioned with his hand. "please carry on, mr.
billings. i want to see you feed them." the nuts were always available
for the ettle animals but we watched intently as the farmer poured the
milk into the buckets and the calves started to drink. the poor man had
obviously given up hope and i could tell by his apathetic manner that he
hamt much faith in this latest ploy. neither had 1, but siegfried
prowled up and down like a caged panther as though willing something to
happen. the calves raised white-slobbered muzzles enquiringly as he hung
over them but they could offer no more explanation of the mystery than i
could myself. i looked across the long row of pens. there were still
more than thirty calves left in the building and the terrible thought
arose that the disease might spread through all of them. my mind was
recoiling when siegfried stabbed a finger at one of the buckets.

"what's that?" he snapped. the farmer and i went over and gazed down at
a circular black object about half an inch across floating on the
surface of the milk.

"bit o' muck got in somehow," mr. billings mumbled. "i'll 'ave it out."
he put his hand into the bucket.

"no, let me!" siegfried carefully lifted the thing, shook the milk from
his fingers and studied it with interest.

"this isn't muck," he murmured. "look, it's concave -like a little cup."
he rubbed a comer between thumb and forefinger. "i'll tell you what it
is, it's a scab. where the heck has it come from?" he began to examine
the neck and head of the calf, then became very still as he handled,one
of the little horn buds. "there's a raw surface here. you can see where
the scab belongs." he placed the dark cup over the bud and it fitted
perfectly. the farmer shrugged. "aye, well, i can understand that. i
disbudded all the calves about a fortnight sin'."

"what did you use, mr. billings?" my colleague's voice was soft.

"oh, some new stuff. feller came found sellin' it. you just paint it
on-it's a lot easier than t'awd caustic stick."

"have you got the bottle?"

"aye, it's in t'house. i'll get it." when the farmer returned siegfried
read the label and handed the bottle to me.

"butter of antimony, jim. now we know."

"but . . . what are you on about?" asked the farmer bewilderedly.
siegfried looked at him sympathetically. "antimony is a deadly poison,
mr. billings. oh, it'll burn your horn buds off, all right, but if it
gets in among the food, that's it." the farmer's eyes widened. "yes,
dang it, and when they put their heads down to drink that's just when
the scabs would fall off!"

"exactly," siegfried said. "or they maybe knocked the horn buds on the
sides of the bucket. anyway, let's make sure the others are safe." we
went round all the calves, removing the lethal crusts and scrubbing the
buds clean, and when we finally drove away we knew that the brief but
painful episode of the billings calves was over. in the car, my
colleague put his elbows on the wheel and drove with his chin cupped in
his hands. he often did this when in contemplative mood and it never
failed to unnerve me.

"james," he said, "i've never seen anything like that before. it really
is one for the book." his words were prophetic, for as i write about it
now i realise that it has never been repeated in the thirty-five years
that have passed since then. at skeldale house we parted to go our
different ways. tristan, no doubt anxious to redeem himself after the
morning's explosive beginning, was plying mop and bucket and swabbing
the passage with the zeal of one of nelson's sailors. but when siegfried
drove away, the activity stopped abruptly and as i was leaving with my
pockets stuffed with the equipment for my round i glanced into the
sitting room and saw the young man stretched in his favourite chair. i
went in and looked with some surprise at a pan of sausages balanced on
the coals.

"what's this?" i asked. tristan lit a woodbine, shook out his daily
mirror and put his feet up.

"just prepared lunch, old lad."

"in here?"

"yes, jim, i've had enough of that hot stove-there's no comfort through
there. and anyway, the kitchen's such a bloody long way away." i gazed
down at the reclining form. "no need to ask what's on the menu?"

"none at all, old son." tristan looked up from his paper with a seraphic
smile. i was about to leave when a thought struck me. "where are the
potatoes?"

"in the fire."

"in the firel"

"yes, i just popped them in there to roast for a while. they're
delicious that way."

"are you sure?"

"absolutely, jim. i'll tell you-you'll fall in love with my cooking all
over again."

i didn't get back till nearly one o'clock. tristan was not in the
sitting room but a haze of smoke hung on the air and a reek like a
garden bonfire prickled in my nostrils. i found the young man in the
kitchen. his savoir faire had vanished and he was prodding desperately
at a pile of coal black spheres. i stared at him. "what are those?"

"the bloody potatoes, jim! i fell asleep for a bit and this happened!"
he gingerly sawed through one of the objects. in the centre of the
carbonaceous ball i could discern a small whitish marble which seemed to
be all that remained of the original vegetable.

"hell's bells, triss! what are you going to do?" he gave me a stricken
glance. "hack out the centres and mash 'em up together. it's all i can
do." this was something i couldn't bear to watch. i went upstairs, had a
wash then took my place at the dining table. siegfried was already
seated and i could see that the little triumph of the morning had
cheered him. he greeted me jovially.

"james, wasn't that the damndest thing at ken billings'? it's so
satisfying to get it cleared up." but his smile froze as tristan
appeared and set down the tureens before him. from one peeped the
inevitable sausages and the other contained an amorphous dark grey mass
liberally speckled with black foreign bodies of varying size.

"what in the name of god," he enquired with ominous quiet, "is this?"
his brother swallowed. "sausage and mash," he said lightly. siegfried
gave him a cold look. "i am referring to this." he poked warily at the
dark mound.

"weller, it's the potatoes." tristan cleared his throat "got a little
burnt, i'm afraid." my boss made no comment. with dangerous calm he
spooned some of the material on to his plate, raised a forkful and began
to chew slowly. once or twice he winced as a particularly tough fragment
of carbon cracked between his molars, then he closed his eyes and
swallowed. for a moment he was still, then he grasped his midriff with
both hands, groaned and jumped to his feel "no, that's enoughl" he
cried. "i don't mind investigating poisonings on the farms but i object
to being poisoned myself in my own homel" he strode away from the table
and paused at the door. "i'm going over to the drovers for lunch." as he
left another spasm seized him. he clutched his stomach again and looked
back.

"now i know just how those poor bloody calves feld" chapter 7. 7

1 suppose it was a little thoughtless of me to allow my scalpel to flash
and flicker quite so close to rory o'hagan's fly buttons. the incident
came back to me as i sat in my room in st. john's wood reading black's
veterinary dictionary. it was a bulky volume to carry around and my raf
friends used to rib me about my "vest pocket edition," but i had
resolved to keep reading it in spare moments to remind me of my real
life. i had reached the letter "c" and as the word "castration" looked
up at me from the page i was jerked back to rory. i was castrating pigs.
there were several litters to do and i was in a hurry and failed to
notice the irish farm worker's mounting apprehension. his young boss was
catching the little animals and handing them to rory who held them
upside down, gripped between his thighs with their legs apart, and as i
quickly incised the scrotums and drew out the testicles my blade almost
touched the rough material of his trouser crutch.

"for god's sake, have a care, mr. herriotl" he gasped at last. i looked
tip from my work. "what's wrong, rory?"

"watch what you're doin' with that bloody knife! you're whippin' it
round between me legs like a bloody red indian. you'll do me a mischief
afore you've finished!"

"aye, be careful, mr. herriot," the young farmer cried. "don't geld rory
instead of the pig. his missus ud never forgive ye." he burst into a
loud peal of laughter, the jrishman grinned sheepishly and i giggled.
that was my undoing because the momentary inattention sent the blade
slicing across my left forefinger. the 66

razor-sharp edge went deep and in an instant the entire neighborhood
seemed flooded with my blood. i thought i would never staunch the flow.
the red ooze continued, despite a long session of self-doctoring from
the car boot, and when i finally drove away my finger was swathed in the
biggest, clumsiest dressing i had ever seen. i had finally been forced
to apply a large pad of cotton wool held in place with an enormous
length of three-inch bandage. it was dark when i left the farm. about
five o'clock on a late december day, the light gone early and the stars
beginning to show in a frosty sky. i drove slowly, the enormous finger
jutting upwards from the wheel, pointing the way between the headlights
like a guiding beacon. i was within half a mile of darrowby with the
lights of the little town beginning to wink between the bare roadside
branches when a car approached, went past, then i heard a squeal of
brakes as it stopped and began to double back. it passed me again, drew
into the side and i saw a frantically waving arm. i pulled up and a
young man jumped from the driving seat and ran towards me. he pushed his
head in at the window. "are you the vet?" his voice was breathless,
panic-stricken.

"yes, i am."

"oh thank god! we're passing through on the way to manchester and we've
been to your surgery ... they said you were out this way . described
your car. please help us!"

"what's the trouble?"

"it's our dog . . . in the back of the car. he's got a ball stuck in his
throat. i ... i think he might be dead." i was out of my seat and
running along the road before he had finished. it was a big white saloon
and in the darkness of the back seat a wailing chorus issued from
several little heads silhouetted against the glass. i tore open the
door,and the wailing took on words.

"oh benny, benny, benny. .. !" i dimly discerned a large dog spread over
the knees of four small children. "oh daddy, he's dead, he's dead!"

"let's have him out," i gasped, and as the young man pulled on the
forelegs i supported the body, which slid and toppled on to the tarmac
with a horrible limpness. i pawed at the hairy form. "i can't see a
bloody thingl help me pull him round."

we dragged the unresisting bulk into the headlights' glare and i could
see it all. a huge, beautiful collie in his luxuriant prime, mouth
gaping, tongue lolling, eyes staring lifelessly at nothing. he wasn't
breathing. the young father took one look then gripped his head with
both hands. "oh god, oh god. . . ." from within the car i heard the
quiet sobbing of his wife and the piercing cries from the back. "benny .
. . benny ...... i grabbed the man's shoulder and shouted at him. "what
did you say about a ball?"

"it's in his throat . . . i've had my fingers in his mouth for ages but
i couldn't move it." the words came mumbling up from beneath the bent
head. i pushed my hand into the mouth and i could feel it all right. a
sphere of hard solid rubber not much bigger than a golf ball and jarnmed
like a cork in the pharynx, effectively blocking the trachea. i
scrabbled feverishly at the wet smoothness but there was nothing to get
hold of. it took me about three seconds to realise that no human agency
would ever get the ball out that way and without thinking i withdrew my
hands, braced both thumbs behind the angle of the lower jaw and pushed.
the ball shot forth, bounced on the frosty road and rolled sadly on to
the grass verge. i touched the corneal surface of the eye. no reflex. i
slumped to my knees, burdened by the hopeless regret that i hadn't had
the chance to do this just a bit sooner. the only function i could
perform now was to take the body back to skeldale house for disposal. i
couldn't allow the family to drive to manchester with a dead dog. but i
wished fervently that i had been able to do more, and as i passed my
hand along the richly coloured coat over the ribs the vast bandaged
finger stood out like a symbol of my helplessness. it was when i was
gazing dully at the finger, the heel of my hand resting in an
intercostal space, that i felt the faintest flutter from below. i jerked
upright with a hoarse cry. "his heart's still beating! he's not gone
yet!" i began to work on the dog with all i had. and out there in the
darkness of that lonely country road it wasn't much. no stimulant injections, no oxygen cylinders or intratracheal tubes. but i depressed his
chest with my palms every three seconds in the old-fashioned way,
willing the dog to breathe as the eyes still stared at nothing. every
now and then i blew desperately down the throat or probed between the
ribs for that almost imperceptible beat. i don't know which i noticed
first, the slight twitch of an eyelid or the small lift of the ribs
which pulled the icy yorkshire air into his lungs. maybe they both
happened at once but from that moment everything was dreamlike and
wonderful. i lost count of time as i sat there while the breathing
became deep and regular and the animal began to be aware of his
surroundings; and by the time he started to look around him and twitch
his tail tentatively i realised suddenly that i was stiff-jointed and
almost frozen to the spot. with some difficulty i got up and watched in
disbelief as the collie staggered to his feet. the young father ushered
him round to the back where he was received with screams of delight. the
man seemed stunned. throughout the recovery he had kept muttering, "you
just flicked that ball out . . . just flicked it out. why didn't i think
of that ... t' and when he turned to me before leaving he appeared to be
still in a state of shock.

"i don't . . . i don't know bow to thank you," he said huskily. "it's a
miracle." he leaned against the car for a second. "and now what is your
fee? how much do i owe yout, 1 rubbed my chin. i bad used no drugs. the
only expenditure had been time.

"five bob," i said. "and never let him play with such a little ball
again." he handed the money over, shook my hand and drove away. his
wife, who had never left her place, waved as she left, but my greatest
reward was in the last shadowy glimpse of the back seat where little
arms twined around the dog, hugging him ecstatically, and in the cries,
thankful and joyous, fading into the night.

"benny ... benny ... benny. . .

vets often wonder after a patient's recovery just how much credit they
might take. maybe it would have got better without treatment-it happened
sometimes; it was difficult to be sure. but when you know without a
shadow of a doubt that, even without doing anything clever, you have
pulled an animal back from the brink of death into the living, breathing
world, it is a satisfaction which lingers, flowing like balm over the
discomforts and frustrations of veterinary practice, making everything
right. yet, in the case of benny the whole thing had an unreal quality.
i never even glimpsed the faces of those kappy children nor that of
their mother huddled in the front seat i had a vague impression of their
father but he had spent most of the time with his head in his hands. i
wouldn!t have known him if i met him in the street. even the dog, in the
unnatural glare of the headlights, was a blurred memory. it seemed the
family had the same feeling because a week later i had a pleasant letter
from the mother. she apologised for skulking out of the way so
shamelessly, she thanked me for saving the life of their beloved dog who
was now prancing around with the children as though nothing had
happened, and she finished with the regret that she hadn't even asked me
my name. yes, it had been a strange episode, and not only were those
people unaware of my name but i'd like to bet they would fail to
recognise me if they saw me again. in fact, looking back at the affair,
the only thing which stood out unequivocal and substantial was my great
white-bound digit which had hovered constantly over the scene, almost
taking on a personality and significance of its own. i am sure that is
what the family remembered best about me because of the way the mother's
letter began.

"dear vet with the bandaged finger chapter 8. 8

my stint in london was nearing its end. our breaking-in weeks were
nearly over and we waited for news of posting to initial training wing.
the air was thick with rumours. we were going to aberystwyth in wales;
too far away for me, i wanted the north. then we were going to ncwquay
in cornwall; worse still. i was aware that the impending, birth of ac2
herriot's child did not influence the general war strategy but i still
wanted to be as near to helen as possible at the time. the whole london
phase is blurred in my memory. possibly because everything was so new
and different that the impressions could not be fully absorbed, and also
perhaps because i was tired most of the time. i think we were all tired.
few of us were used to being jerked from slumber at 6 a.m. every morning
and spending the day in continual physical activity. if we weren't being
drilled we were being marched to meals, to classes, to talks. i had
lived in a motor car for a few years and the rediscovery of my legs was
painful. there were times, too, when i wondered what it was all about.
like all the other young men i had imagined that after a few brisk
preliminaries i would be sitting in an aeroplane, learning to fly, but
it turned out that this was so far in the future that it was hardly
mentioned. at the itw we would spend months learning navigation,
principles of flight, morse and many other things. i was thankful for
one blessing. i had passed the mathematics exam. i have always counted
on my fingers and still do and i had been so nervous about this that i
went to classes with the ate in darrowby before my callup, dredging from
my schooldays horrific calculations about trains passing each other at
different speeds and 71

water running in and out of bath tubs. but i had managed to scrape
through and felt ready to face anything. there were some unexpected
shocks in london. i didn't anticipate spending days mucking out some of
the dirtiest piggeries i had ever seen. somebody must have had the idea
of converting all the raf waste food into pork and bacon and of course
there was plenty of labour at hand. i had a strong feeling of unreality
as, with other aspiring pilots, i threw muck and swill around hour after
hour. my disenchantment was happily blotted from my mind the day we
received news of the posting. it seemed too good to be true--i was going
to scarborough. i had been there and i knew it was a beautiful seaside
resort, but that wasn't why i was so delighted. it was because it was in
yorkshire.

as we marched out of the station into the streets of scarborough i could
hardly believe i was back in my home county. but if there had been any
doubt in my mind it would have been immediately resolved by my first
breath of the crisp, tangy air. even in winter there had been no "feel"
to the soft london air and i half closed my eyes as i followed the
tingle all the way down to my lungs. mind you, it was cold. yorkshire is
a cold place and i could remember the sensation almost of shock at the
start of my first winter in darrowby. it was after the first snow and i
followed the clanging ploughs up the dale, bumping along between high
white mounds till i reached old mr. stokill's gate. with my fingers on
the handle i looked through the glass at the new world beneath me. the
white blanket rolled down the hillside and lapped over the roofs of the
dwelling and outbuildings of the little farm. beyond, it smoothed out
and concealed the familiar features, the stone walls bordering the
fields, the stream on the valley floor, turning the whole scene into
something unknown and exciting. but the thrill i felt at the strange
beauty was swept away as i got out and the wind struck me. it was an
arctic blast screaming from the east, picking up extra degrees of cold
as it drove over the frozen white surface. i was wearing a heavy
overcoat and woollen gloves but the gust whipped its way right into my
bones. i gasped and leaned my back against the car while i buttoned the
coat up under my chin, then i struggled forward to where the gate shook
and rattled. i fought it open and my feet crunched as i went through.
coming round the comer of the byre i found mr. stokill forking muck on
to a heap, making a churned brown trail across the whiteness.

"now then," he muttered along the side of a halfsmoked cigarette. he was
over seventy but still ran the small holding single-handed. he told me
once that he had worked as a farm hand for six shillings a day for
thirty years, yet still managed to save enough to buy his own little
place. maybe that was why he didn't want to share it.

"how are you, mr. stokill?" i said, but just then the wind tore through
the yard, clutching icily at my face, snatching my breath away so that i
turned involuntarily to one side with an explosive "aaabh!" the old
farmer looked at me in surprise, then glanced around as though he had
just noticed the weather.

"aye, blows a bit thin this mornin', ]ad." sparks flew from the end of
his cigarette as he leaned for a moment on the fork he didn;t seem to
have much protection against the cold. a light khaki smock fluttered
over a ragged navy waistcoat, clearly once part of his best suit, and
his shirt bore neither collar nor stud. the white stubble on his
fieshless jaw was a reproach to my twenty-four years and suddenly i felt
an inadequate city-bred softie. the old man dug his fork into the manure
pile and turned towards the buildings. "ah've got a nice few cases for
ye to see today. Just 'un's in 'ere." he opened a door and i staggered
gratefully into a sweet bovine warmth where a few shaggy little bullocks
stood hock deep in straw.

"that's the youth we want." he pointed to a dark roan standing with one
hind foot knuckled over. "he's been on three legs for a couple o' days.
ab reckon he's got foul." i walked up to the little animal but he took
off at a speed which made light of his infirmity.

"we'll have to run him into the passage, mr. stokill," i said. "just
open the gate, will you?" with the rough timbers pushed wide i got
behind the bullock and sent him on to the opening. it seemed as though
he was going straight through but at the entrance he stopped, peeped
into the passage and broke away. i gal1oped a few times round the yard
after him, then had another go. the result was the same. after half a
dozen tries i wasn't cold any more. i'll back chasing young cattle
against anything else for working up a sweat, and i had already
forgotten the uncharitable world outside. and i could see i was going to
get warmer still because the bullock was beginning to enjoy the game,
kicking up his heels and frisking around after each attempt. i put my
hands on my hips, waited till i got my breath back then turned to the
farmer.

"t'his is hopeless. he'll never go in there," i said. "we'd maybe better
try to get a rope on him."

"nay, lad, there's no need for that. we'll get him through t'gate right
enough." the old man ambled to one end of the yard and returned with an
armful of clean straw. he sprinkled it freely in the gate opening and
beyond in the passage, then turned to me. "now send 'im on.19 i poked
a finger into the animal's rump and he trotted forward, proceeded
unhesitatingly between the posts and into the passage. mr. stokill must
have noticed my look of bewilderment.

"aye,'e just didn't like vlook of them cobbles. once they was covered
over he was awright."

"yes ... yes . i see." i followed the bullock slowly through. he was
indeed suffering from foul of the foot, the mediaeval term given because
of the stink of the necrotic tissue between the cleats, and i didn't
have any antibiotics or sulphonamides to treat it. it is so nice and
easy these days to give an injection, knowing that the beast will be
sound in a day or two. but all i could do was wrestle with the lunging
hind foot, dressing the infected cleft with a crude mixture of copper
sulphate and stockholm tar and finishing with a pad of cotton wool held
by a tight bandage. when i had finished i took off my coat and hung it
on a nail. i didn't need it any more. mr. stokill looked approvingly at
the finished job. "capital, capital," he murmured. "now there's some
little pigs in this pen got a bit o' scour. i want you give 'em a jab
wi' your needle." we had various e coli vaccines which sometimes did a
bit of good in these cases and i entered the pen hopefully. but i left
in a hurry because the piglets' mother didn't approve of a stranger
wandering among her brood and she came at me open-mouthed, barking
explosively. she looked as big as a donkey and when the cavernous jaws
with the great yellowed teeth brushed my thigh i knew it was time to go.
i hopped rapidly into the yard and crashed the door behind me. i peered
back* ruminatively into the pen. "we'll have to get her out of there
before i can do anything, mr. stokill."

"aye, you're right, young man, ah'll shifter." he began to shuffle
away. i held up a hand. "no, it's all right, i'll do it." i couldn't let
this frail old man go in there and maybe get knocked down and savaged,
and i looked around for a means of protection. there was a battered
shovel standing against a wall and i seized it.

"open the door, please," i said. "i'll soon have her out." once more
inside the pen i held the shovel in front of me and tried to usher the
huge sow towards the door. but my efforts at poking her rear end were
fruitless; she faced me all the time, wide-mouthed and growling as i
circled. when she got the blade of the shovel between her teeth and
began to worry it i called a halt. as i left the pen i saw mr. stokill
dragging a large object over the cobbles.

"what's that?" i asked.

"dustbin," the old man grunted in reply.

"dustbinl what on earth ... t' - he gave no further explanation but
entered the pen. as the sow came at him he allowed her to run her head
into the bin then, bent double, he began to back her towards the open
door. the animal was clearly baffled. suddenly finding herself in this
strange dark place she naturally tried to retreat from it and all the
farmer did was guide her. before she knew what was happening she was out
in the yard. the old man calmly removed the bin and beckoned to me.
"right you are, mr. herriot, you can get on now." it had taken about
twenty seconds. well, that was a relief, and anyway i knew what to do
next. lifting a sheet of corrugated iron which the farmer had ready i
rushed in among the little pigs. i would pen them in a corner and the
job would be over in no time. but their mother's irritation had been
communicated to the family. it was a big litter and there were sixteen
of them hurtling around like little pink racehorses. i spent a long time
diving frantically after them, jamming the sheet at a bunch only to see
half of them streaking out the other end, and i might have gone on
indefinitely had i not felt a gentle touch on my arm.

"hand on, young man, haud on." the old farmer looked at me kindly. "if
you'll nob but stop runnin' after 'ern they'll settle down. just bide a
minute." slightly breathless, i stood by his side and listened as he
addressed the little creatures.

"giss-giss, giss-giss," murmured mr. stokill without moving. "giss-giss,
giss-giss." the piglets slowed their headlong gallop to a trot, then, as
though controlled by telepathy, they all stopped at once and stood in a
pink group in one corner.

"giss-giss," said mr. stokill approvingly, advancing almost
imperceptibly with the sheet. "giss-giss." he unhurriedly placed the
length of metal across the corner and jammed his foot against the
bottom.

"now then, put the toe of your wellington against vother end and we 'ave
'em," he said quietly. after that the injection of the litter was a
matter of a few minutes. mr. stokill didn't say, "well, i'm teaching you
a thing or two today, am i not?" thbre was no hint of triumph or
self-congratulation in the calm old eyes. all he said was, "i'm keepin'
you busy this mornin', young man. i want you to look at a cow now. she's
got a pea in her tit."

"peas" and other obstructions in the teats were very common in the days
of hand milking. some of them were floating milk calculi, others tiny
pedunculated tumours, injuries to the teat lining, all sorts of things.
it was a whole diverting little field in itself and i approached the cow
with interest. but i didn't get very near before mr. stokill put his
hand on my shoulder.

"just a minute, mr. herriot, don't toucher tit yet or she'll clout ye.
she's an awd bitch. wait a minute till ah rope 'er."

"oh right," i said. "but i'll do it." he hesitated. "ab reckon i ought
to . .

"no, no, mr. stokill, that's quite unnecessary, i know how to stop a cow
kicking," i said primly. "kindly hand me that rope."

"but . . . she's a bugger kicks like a 'oss. she's a right good milker
but . . ."

"don't worry," i said, smiling. "i'll stop her little games." i began to
unwind the rope. it was good to be able to demonstrate that i did know
something about handling animals even though i had been qualified for
only a few months. and it made a change to be told before and not after
the job that a cow was a kicker. a cow once kicked me nearly to the
other end of the byre and as i picked myself up the farmer said
unemotionally, "aye, she's allus had a habit o' that." yes, it was nice
to be warned, and i passed the rope round the animal's body in front of
the udder and pulled it tight in a slipknot. just like they taught us
at college. she was a scrawny red shorthorn with a woolly poll and she
regarded me with a contemplative eye as i bent down.

"all right, lass," i said soothingly, reaching under her and gently
grasping the teat. i squirted a few jets of milk then something blocked
the end. ah yes, there it was, quite large and unattached. i felt sure i
could work it through the orifice without cutting the sphincter. i took
a firmer grip, squeezed tightly and immediately a cloven foot shot out
like a whip lash and smacked me solidly on the knee. it is a
particularly painful spot to be kicked and i spent some time hopping
round the byre and cursing in a fervent whisper. the farmer- followed me
anxiously. "ee, ah'm sorry, mr. herriot, she's a right awd bugger.
better let me . . ." i held up a hand, "no, mr. stokill. i already have
her roped. i just didn't tie it tight enough, that's all." i hobbled
back to the animal, loosened the knot then retied it, pulling till my
eyes popped. when i had finished, her abdomen was lifted high and nipped
in like a wasp-wasted victorian lady of fashion.

"that'll fix you," i grunted, and bent to my work again. a few spurts of
milk then the thing was at the teat end again, a pinkish-white object
peeping through the orifice. a little extra pressure and i would be able
to fish it out with the hypodermic needle i had poised ready. i took a
breath and gripped hard. this time the hoof caught me half way up the
shin bone. she hadn't been able to get so much height into it but it was
just as painful. i sat down on a milk stool, rolled up my trouser leg
and examined the roll of skin which hung like a diploma at the end of a
long graze where the sharp hoof had dragged along.

"now then, you've'ad enough, young man." mr. stokill removed my rope and
gazed at me with commiseration. "ordinary methods don't work with this
'un. i 'ave to milk her twice a day and ah knaw." he fetched a soiled
length of plough cord which had obviously seen much service and fastened
it round the cow's hock. the other end had a hook which he fitted into a
ring on the byre wall. it was just the right length to stretch taut,
pulling the leg slightly back. the old man nodded. "now try." with a
feeling of fatalism i grasped the teat again. and it was as if the cow
knew she was beaten. she never moved as i nipped hard and winkled out
the offending obstruction-a milk calculus. she couldn't do a thing about
it.

"ah, thank ye" lad," the farmer said. "that's champion. been bothering
me a bit, has that. didn't know what it was." he held up a finger. "one
last job for ye. a young heifer with a bit o' stomach trouble, ah think.
saw her last night and she was a bit blown. she's in an outside
buildin'." i put on my coat and we went out to where the wind welcomed
us- with savage glee. as the knife-like blast hit me, whistling up my
nose and making my eyes water, i cowered in the lee of the stable.

"where is this heifer?" i gasped. mr. stokill did not reply immediately.
he was lighting another cigarette, apparently oblivious of the elements.
he clamped the lid on an ancient brass lighter and jerked his thumb.

"across the road. up there." i followed his gesture over the buried
walls, across the narrow roadway between the ploughed-out snow dunes to
where the fell rose steeply in a sweep of unbroken white to join the
leaden sky. unbroken, that is, except for a tiny barn, a grey stone
speck just visible on the last airy swell hundreds of feet up where the
hillside joined the moorland above.

"sorry," i said, still crouching against the wall. "i can't see
anything." the old man, lounging in the teeth of the wind,

looked at me in surprise. "you can't? why, vbarn's good enough to see,
isif t it2"

"the barnt' i pointed a shaking finger at the heights. "you mean that
building? the heifer's surely not in therel"

"aye, she is. ah keep a lot o' me young beasts in them spots."

"but ... but. . ." i was gabbling now. "we'll never get up therel that
snow's three feet deepl" he blew smoke pleasurably from his nostrils.
"we will, don't that worry. just hang on a second." he disappeared into
the stable and after a few moments i peeped inside. hevas saddling a fat
brown cob and i stared as he led the little animal out, climbed stiffly
on to a box and mounted. looking down at me be waved cheerfully. "well,
let's be gofif . have you got your stuff?" bewilderedly i filled my
pockets. a bottle of bloat mixture, a trochar and cannula, a packet of
gentian and mix vomica. i did it in the dull knowledge that there was no
way i could get up that hill. on the other side of the road an opening
had been dug and mr. stokill rode tkrough. i slithered in his wake,
looking up hopelessly at the great smooth wilderness rearing above
us. mr. stokill turned in the saddle. "get haud on vtail," he said.

"i beg your pardon?"

"get a baud of 'is tail." as in a dream i seized the bristly hairs.

"no, both 'ands," the farmer said patiently- "like thist' "that's grand,
lad. now 'ang on." he clicked his tongue, the cob plodded resolutely
forward and so did 1. and it was easyl the whole world fell away beneatk
us as we soared upwards, and leaning back and enjoying it i watched the
little valley unfold along its twisting length until i could see away
into the main dale with the great bills billowing round and white into
the dark clouds. at the barn the farmer dismounted. "all right, young
man?"

"all right, mr. stokill." as i followed him into the little building i
smiled to myself. this old man had once told me that he left school when
he was twelve, whereas i had spent most of the twenty-four years of my
life in study. yet when i looked back on the last hour or so i could
come to only one conclusion. i'd had more of books, but he had more of
learning. chapter 9.

i had plenty of company for christmas that year. we were billeted in the
grand hotel, the massive victorian pile which dominated scarborough in
turreted splendour from its eminence above the sea, and the big dining
room was packed with several hundred shouting airmen. the iron
discipline was relaxed for a few hours to let the yuletide spirit run
free. it was so different from other christmases i had known that it
ought to have remained like a beacon in my mind, but i know that my
strongest memory of christmas will always be bound up with a certain
little cat. i first saw her one autumn day when i was called to see one
of mrs. ainsworth's dogs, and i looked in some surprise at the furry
black creature sitting before the fire.

"i didn't know you had a cat," i said. the lady smiled. "we haven't,
this is debbie."

"debbie?"

"yes, at least that's what we call her. she's a stray. comes here two or
three times a week and we give her some food. i don't know where she
lives but i believe she spends a lot of her time around one of the farms
along the road."

"do you ever get the feeling that she wants to stay with you?"

"no." mrs. ainsworth shook her head. "she's a timid little thing. just
creeps in, has some food then flits away. there's something so appealing
about her but she doesn't seem to want to let me or anybody into her
life." i looked again at the little cat. "but she isn't just having food
today."

"that's right. it's a funny thing but every now and again she slips
through here into the lounge and sits by the 81

fire for a few minutes. it's as though she was giving herself a treat."

"yes . . . i see what you mean." there was no doubt there was something
unusual in the attitude of the little animal. she was sitting bolt
upright on the thick rug which jay before the fireplace in which the
coals glowed and flamed. she made no effort to curl up or wash herself
or do anything other than gaze quietly ahead. and there was something in
the dusty black of her coat, the half-wild scrawny look of her, that
gave me a clue. this was a special event in her life, a rare and
wonderful thing; she was lapping up a comfort undreamed of in her daily
existence. as i watched she turned, crept soundlessly from the room and
was gone.

"that's always the way with debbie," mrs. ainsworth laughed. "she never
stays more than ten minutes or so, then she's off." mrs. ainsworth was a
plumpish, pleasant-faced woman in her forties and the kind of client
veterinary surgeons dream of; well off, generous, and the owner of three
cosseted basset hounds. and it only needed the habitually mournful
expression of one of the dogs to deepen a little and i was round there
post haste. today one of the bassets had raised its paw and scratched
its ear a couple of times and that was enough to send its mistress
scurrying to the 'phone in great alarm. so my visits to the ainsworth
home were frequent but undemanding, and i had ample opportunity to look
out for the little cat that had intrigued me. on one occasion i spotted
her nibbling daintily from a saucer at the kitchen door. as i watched
she turned and almost floated on light footsteps into the hall then
through the lounge door. the three bassets were already in residence,
draped snoring on the fireside rug, but they seemed to be used to debbie
because two of them sniffed her in a bored manner and the third merely
cocked a sleepy eye at her before flopping back on the rich pile. debbie
sat among them in her usual posture; upright, intent, gazing absorbedly
into the glowing coals. this time i tried to make friends with her. i
approached her carefully but she leaned away as i stretched out my hand.
however, by patient wheedling and soft talk i managed to touch her and
gently stroked her cheek with one finger.

tlaere was a moment when she responded by putting her head on one side
and rubbing back against my band but soon she was ready to leave. once
outside the house she 'darted quickly along the road then through a gap
in a hedge and the last i saw was the little black figure flitting over
the rain-swept grass of a field.

"i wonder where she goes," i murmured half to myself. mrs. ainsworth
appeared at my elbow. "that's something we've never been able to find
out."

it must have been nearly three months before i heard from mrs.
ainsworth, and in fact i had begun to wonder at the bassets' long
symptomless run when she came on the 'phone. it was christmas morning
and she was apologetic. "mr. herriot, i'm so sorry to bother you today
of all days. i should think you want a rest at christmas like anybody
else." but her natural politeness could not hide the distress in her
voice.

"please don't worry about that," i said. "which one is it this time?"

"it's not one of the dogs. it's ... debbie."

"debbie? she's at your house now?"

"yes . . . but there's something wrong. please come quickly." driving
through the market place i thought again that darrowby on christmas day
was like dickens come to life; the empty square with the snow thick on
the cobbles and hanging from the eaves of the fretted lines of roofs;
the shops closed and the coloured lights of the christmas trees winking
at the windows of the clustering houses, warmly inviting against the
cold white bulk of the fells behind. mrs. ainsworth's home was lavishly
decorated with tinsel and holly, rows of drinks stood on the sideboard
and the rich aroma of turkey and sage and onion stuffing wafted from the
kitchen. but her eyes were full of pain as she led me through to the
lounge. debbie was there all right, but this time everything was
different. she wasn't sitting upright in her usual position; she was
stretched quite motionless on her side, and huddled close to her lay a
tiny black kitten. i looked down in bewilderment. "what's happened
here?"

"it's the strangest thing," mrs. ainsworth replied. "i haven't seen her
for several weeks then she came in about two hours ago-sort of staggered
into the kitchen, and she was carrying the kitten in her mouth. she took
it through to the lounge and laid it on the rug and at first i was
amused. but i could see all was not well because she sat as she usually
does, but for a long time-over an hour -then she lay down like this and
she hasn't moved." i knelt on the rug and passed my hand over debbie's
neck and ribs. she was thinner than ever, her fur dirty and mudeaked.
she did not resist as i gently opened her mouth. the tongue and mucous
membranes were abnormally pale and the lips ice-cold against my
fingers. when i pulled down her eyelid and saw the dead white
conjunctiva a knell sounded in my mind. i palpated the abdomen with a
grim certainty as to what i would find and there was no surprise, only a
dull sadness as my fingers closed around a hard lobulated mass deep
among the viscera. massive lymphosarcoma. terminal and hopeless. i put
my stethoscope on her heart and listened to the increasingly faint,
rapid beat then i straightened up and sat on the rug looking sightlessly
into the fireplace, feeling the warmth of the flames on my face. mrs.
ainsworth's- voice seemed to come from afar. "is she ill, mr. herriot?"
i hesitated. "yes ... yes, i'm afraid so. she has a malignant growth." i
stood up. "there's absolutely nothing i can do. i'm sorry."

"oh!" her hand went to her mouth and she looked at me wide-eyed. when at
last she spoke her voice trembled. "well, you must put her to sleep
immediately. it's the only thing to do. we can't let her suffer."

"mrs. ainsworth," i said. "there's no need. she's dying now-in a coma
far beyond suffering." she turned quickly away from me and was very
still as she fought with her emotions. then she gave up the struggle and
dropped on her knees beside debbie.

"oh, poor little thingl" she sobbed and stroked the cat's head again and
again as the tears fell unchecked on the matted fur. "what she must have
come through. i feel i ought to have done more for her." for a few
moments i was silent, feeling her sorrow, so discordant among the bright
seasonal colours of this festive room. then i spoke gently.

"nobody could have done more than you," i said. "nobody could have been
kinder."

"but i'd have kept her here-in comfort. it must have been terrible out
there in the cold when she was so desperately ill-i daren't think about
it. and having kittens, too-i ... i wonder how many she did have?" i
shrugged. "i don't suppose we'll ever know. maybe just this one. it
happens sometimes. and she brought it to you, didn't she?"

"yes . . . that's right ... she did. . . she did." mrs. ainsworth
reached out and lifted the bedraggled black morsel. she smoothed her
finger along the muddy fur and the tiny mouth opened in a soundless
miaow. "isn't it strange? she was dying and she brought her kitten here.
and on christmas day." i bent and put my hand on debbie's heart. there
was no beat. i looked up. "i'm afraid she's gone." i lifted the small
body, almost feather light, wrapped it in the sheet which had been
spread on the rug and took it out to the car. when i came back mrs.
ainsworth was still stroking the kitten. the tears had dried on her
cheeks and she was brighteyed as she looked at me.

"i've never had a cat before," she said. i smiled. "well it looks as
though you've got one now."

and she certainly had. that kitten grew rapidly into a sleek handsome
cat with a boisterous nature which earned him the name of buster. in
every way he was the opposite to his timid little mother. not for him
the privations of the secret outdoor life; he stalked the rich carpets
of the ainsworth home like a king and the ornate collar he always wore
added something more to his presence. on my visits i watched his
development with delight but the occasion which stays in my mind was the
following christmas day, a year from his arrival. i was out on my rounds
as usual. i can't remember when i haven't had to work on christmas day
because the animals have never got round to recognising it as a holiday;
but with the passage of the years the vague resentment i used to feel
has been replaced by philosophical acceptance. after all, as i tramped
around the hillside barns in the frosty air i was working up a better
appetite for my turkey than all the millions lying in bed or slumped by
the fire; and this was aided by the innumerable aperitifs i received
from the hospitable farmers. i was on my way home, bathed in a rosy
glow. i had consumed several whiskies--the kind the inexpert
yorkshiremen pour as though it was ginger ale-and i had finished with a
glass of old mrs. earnshaw's rhubarb wine which had seared its way
straight to my toenails. i heard the cry as i was passing mrs.
ainsworth's house.

"merry christmas, mr. herriotl" she was letting a visitor out of the
front door and she waved at me gaily. "come in and have a drink to warm
you up." i didn't need warming up but i pulled in to the kerb without
hesitation. in the house there was all the festive cheer of last year
and the same glorious whiff of sage and onion which set my gastric
juices surging. but there was not the sorrow; there was buster. he was
darting up to each of the dogs in turn, ears pricked, eyes blazing with
devilment, dabbing a paw at them then streaking away. mrs. ainsworth
laughed. "you know, he plagues the life out of them. gives them no
peace." she was right. to the bassets, buster's arrival was rather like
the intrusion of an irreverent outsider into an exclusive london club.
for a long time they had led a life of measured grace; regular sedate
walks with their mistress, superb food in ample quantities and long
snoring sessions on the rugs and armchairs. their days followed one upon
another in unruffled calm. and then came buster. he was dancing up to
the youngest dog again, sideways this time, head on one side, goading
him. when he started boxing with both paws it was too much even for the
basset. he dropped his dignity and rolled over with the cat in a brief
wrestling match.

"i want to skow you something." mrs. ainsworth lifted a hard rubber ball
from the sideboard and went out to the garden, followed by buster. she
threw the ball across the lawn and the cat bounded after it over the
frosted grass, the muscles rippling under the black sheen of his coat.
he seized the ball in his teeth, brought it back to his mistress,
dropped it at her feet and waited expectantly. she threw it and he
brought it back again. i gasped incredulously. a feline retrieverl the
bassets looked on disdainfully. nothing would ever have induced them to
chase a ball, but buster did it again and again as though he would never
tire of it. mrs. ainsworth turned to me. "have you ever seen anything
like that?"

"no," i replied. "i never have. he is a most remarkable cat." she
snatched buster from his play and we went back into the house where she
held him close to her face, laughing as the big cat purred and arched
himself ecstatically against her check. looking at him, a picture of
health and contentment, my mind went back to his mother. was it too much
to think that that dying little creature with the last of her strength
had carried her kitten to the only haven of comfort and warmth she had
ever known in the hope that it would be cared for there? maybe it was.
but it seemed i wasn't the only one with such fancies. mrs. ainsworth
turned to me and though she was smiling her eyes were wistful.

"debbie would be pleased," she said. i nodded. "yes, she would.... it
was just a year ago today she brought him, wasn't it?"

"that's right." she hugged buster to her again. "the best christmas
present i ever had." chapter 10. 10

i stared in disbelief at the dial of the weighing machine. nine stone
seven pounds! i had lost two stones since joining the raf. i was
cowering in my usual corner in boots' chemist's shop in scarborough,
where i had developed the habit of a weekly weigh-in to keep a morbid
eye on my progressive emaciation. it was incredible and it wasn't all
due to the tough training. on our arrival in scarborough we had a talk
from our flight commander, flt. lieut. barnes. he looked us over with a
contemplative eye and said, "you won't know yourselves when you leave
here." that man knew what he was talking about. we were never at rest.
it was pt and drill, pt and drill, over and over. hours of bending and
stretching and twisting down on the prom in singlets and shorts while
the wind whipped over us from the wintry sea. hours of marching under
the bellowings of our sergeant; quick march, slow march, about turn. we
even marched to our navigation classes, bustling along at the raf quick
time, arms swinging shoulder high. they marched us regularly to the top
of castle hill where we fired off every conceivable type of weapon;
twelve bores, .22 riflcs, revolvers, browning machine guns. we even
stabbed at dummies with bayonets. in between they had us swimming,
playing football or rugby or running for n-dles along the beach and on
the cliff tops towards filey. at first i was too busy to see any change
in myself, but one morning after a few weeks our flight was coming to
the end of a five-mile run. we dropped down from the spa to a long
stretch of empty beach and the sergeant shouted, "right, sprint to those
rocks! let's see who gets there first!" we all took off on the last
hundred yards' dash and i 88

was mildly surprised to find that the first man past the post was
myself-and i wasn't really out of breath. that was when the realisation
hit me. mr. barnes had been right. i didn't know myself. when i left
helen i was a cosseted young husband with a little double chin and the
beginnings of a spare tyre, and now i was a lithe, tireless greyhound. i
was certainly fit, but there was something wrong. i shouldn't have been
as thin as this. another factor was at work. in yorkshire when a man
goes into a decline during his wife's pregnancy they giggle behind their
hands and say he is "carrying" the baby. i never laugh at these remarks
because i am convinced i "carried" my son. i base this conclusion on a
variety of symptoms. it would be an exaggeration to say i suffered from
morning sickness, but my suspicions were certainly aroused when i began
to feel a little queasy in the early part of the day. this was followed
by a growing uneasiness as helen's time drew near and a sensation,
despite my physical condition, of being drained and miserable. with the
onset in the later stages of unmistakable labour pains in my lower
abdomen all doubts were resolved and i knew i had to do something about
it. i had to see helen. after all, she was just over that hill which i
could see from the top windows of the grand. maybe that wasn't strictly
true, but at least i was in yorkshire and a bus would take me to her in
three hours. the snag was that there was no leave from itw. they left us
in no doubt about that. they said the discipline was as tough as a
guards regiment and the restrictions just as rigid. i would get
compassionate leave when the baby was born, but i couldn't wait till
then. the grim knowledge that any attempt to dodge off unofficially
would be like a minor desertion and would be followed by serious
consequences, even prison, didn't weigh with me. as one of my comrades
put it: "one bloke tried it and finished up in the glasshouse. it isn't
worth it, mate." but it was no good. i am normally a law-abiding citizen
but i had not a single scruple. i had to see helen. a surreptitious
study of the timetables revealed that there was a bus at 2 p.m. which
got to darrowby at five o'clock, and another leaving darrowby at six
which arrived in scarborough at nine. six hours travelling to have one
hour with helen. it was worth it.

at first i couldn't see a way of getting to the bus station at two
o'clock in the afternoon because we were never free at that time, but my
chance came quite unexpectedly. one friday lunchtime we learned that
there were no more classes that day but we were confined to the grand
till evening. most of my friends collapsed thankfully on to their beds,
but i slunk down the long flights of stone stairs and took up a position
in the foyer where i could watch the front door. there was a
glass-fronted office on one side of the entrance where the sps sat and
kept an eye on all departures. there was only one on duty today and i
waited till he turned and moved to the back of the room then i walked
quietly past him and out into the square. that part had been almost too
easy, but i felt naked and exposed as i crossed the deserted space
between the grand and the hotels on the opposite side. it was better
once i had rounded the comer and i set off at a brisk pace for the west.
all i needed was a little bit of luck and as i pressed, dry-mouthed,
along the empty street it seemed i had found it. the shock when i saw
the two burly sps strolling towards me was like a blow but was
immediately followed by a strange calm. they would ask me for the pass i
didn't have, then they would want to know what i was doing there. it
wouldn't be much good telling them i had just popped out for a breath of
air-this street led to both the bus and railway stations and it wouldn't
need a genius to rumble my little game. anyway, there was no cover here,
no escape, and i wondered idly if there had ever been a veterinary
surgeon in the glasshouse. maybe i was about to set up some kind of a
record. then behind me i heard the rhythmic tramp of marching feet and
the shrill " 'eft 'ight, 'eft 'ight," that usually went with it. i
turned and saw a long blue column approaching with a corporal in charge.
as they swung past me i looked again at the sps and my heart gave a
thud. they were laughing into each other's faces at some private joke;
they hadn't seen me. without thinking i tagged on to the end of the
marching men and within a few seconds was past the sps unnoticed. with
my mind working with the speed of desperation, it seemed i would be
safest where i was till i could break away in the direction of the bus
station. for a while i had a glorious feeling of anonymity then the
corporal, still shouting, glanced back. he faced to the front again then
turned back more slowly for another look. he appeared to find something
interesting because he shortened his stride till he was marching
opposite me. as he looked me up and down i examined him in turn from the
corner of my eye. he was a shrivelled, runtish creature with fierce
little eyes glinting from a pallid, skulllike face. it was some time
before he spoke.

"who the-hell are you?" he enquired conversationally. it was the number
one awkward question but i discerned the faintest gleam of hope; he had
spoken in the unmistakable harsh, glottal accent of my home town.

"herriot, corporal. two flight, four squadron," i replied in my broadest
glasgow.

"two flight, four ... i this is one flight, three squadron. what
the-hell are ye daein' here?" arms swinging high, staring rigidly ahead,
i took a deep breath. concealment was futile now.

"tryin' to get tae see ma wife, corp. she's kavin' a baby soon." i
glanced quickly at him. his was not the kind of face to reveal weakness
by showing surprise but his eyes widened fractionally. "get tae see yer
wife? are ye---daft or whit?"

"it's no' far, corp. she lives in darrowby. three hours in the bus. ah
wid be back tonight."

"back tonightl ye want yer-heid examinin'l"

"i've got tae go i"

"eyes frontl" he screamed suddenly at the men before us. "'eft 'ight,
'eft 'ight!" then he turned and studied me as though i were an
unbelievable phenomenon. he was interesting to me, too, as a typical
product of the bad times in glasgow between the wars. stunted,
undernourished, but as tough and belligerent as a ferret.

"d'ye no' ken," he said at length, "that ye get-leave when yer wife has
the wean?"

"aye, but a canna' wait that long. ginune a break, corp.$$ "give ye
a-breakl d'ye want tae get me---shot?"

"no, corp, just want tae get to the bus station."

"jesusl is that 0" he gave me a final incredulous look before quickening
his steps to the head of the column. when he rehuwd he surveyed me "whit
part o' glesca are ye frae?"

"scotstounhill," i replied. "how about you?"

"govan." i turned my head slightly towards him. "ranger supporter, eh?"
he did not change expression, but an eyebrow flickered and i knew i had
him.

"whit a team!" i murmured reverently. "many's the time i've stood on the
terraces at ibrox." he said nothing and i began to recite the names of
the great rangers team of the thirties. "dawson, gray, mcdonald,
meiklejohn, simpson, brown." his eyes took on a dreamy expression and by
the time i had intoned "archibald, marshall, english, mcphail and
morton," there was something near to a wistful smile on his lips. then
he appeared to shake himself back to normality. "'eft 'ight, 'eft
'ight!" he bawled. "c'mon, c'mon, pick it up!" then he muttered to me
from the corner of his mouth. "there's the-bus station. when we march
past it run like-!" he took off again, shouting to the head of the
flight, i saw the buses and the windows of the waiting room on my left
and dived across the road and through the door. i snatched off my cap
and sat trembling among a group of elderly farmers and their wives.
through the glass i could see the long lines of blue moving away down
the street and i could still hear the shouts of the corporal. but he
didn't turn round and i saw only his receding back, the narrow shoulders
squared, the bent legs stepping it out in time with his men. i never saw
him again but to this day i wish i could take him to ibrox and watch the
rangers with him and maybe buy him a half and half pint at one of the
govan pubs. it wouldn't have mattered if he had turned out to be a
celtic supporter at that decisive moment because i had the celtic team
on my tongue all ready to trot out, starting with kennaway, cook,
mcgonigle. it is not the only time my profound knowledge of football has
stood me in good stead. sitting on the bus, still with my cap on my lap
to avoid attracting attention, it struck me that the whole world changed
within a mile or two as we left the town. back there the war was
everywhere, filling people's minds and eyes and thoughts; the teeming
thousands of uniformed men, the raf and army vehicles, the almost
palpable atmosphere of anticipation and suspense. and suddenly it all
just stopped. it vanished as the wide sweep of grey-blue sea fell
beneath the rising ground behind the town, and as the bus trundled
westward i looked out on a landscape of untroubled peace. the long moist
furrows of the new-turned soil glittered under the pale february sun,
contrasting with the gold stubble fields and the grassy pastures where
sheep clustered around their feeding troughs. there was no wind and the
smoke rose straight from the farm chimneys and the bare branches of the
roadside trees were still as they stretched across the cold sky. there
were many things that pulled at me. a man in breeches and leggings
carrying on his shoulder a bale of hay to some outlying cattle; a group
of farm men burning hedge clippings and the fragrance of the wood smoke
finding its way into the bus. the pull was stronger as the hours passed
and the beginnings of my own familiar countryside began to appear beyond
the windows. maybe it was a good thing i didn't see darrowby; helen's
home was near the bus route and i dropped off well short of the town.
she was alone in the house and she turned her head as i walked into the
kitchen. the delight on her face was mixed with astonishment; in fact i
know we were both astonished, she because i was so skinny and i because
she was so fat. helen, with the baby only two weeks away, was very large
indeed, but not too large for me to get my arms around her, and we stood
there in the middle of the flagged floor clasped together for a long
time with neither of us saying much. when i released her she looked at
me, wide-eyed. "i hardly knew you when you walked in then."

"i felt the same way about you."

"i'm not surprised." she laughed and rested her hand on her bulging
abdomen. "he's kicking like mad now. i'm sure it's going to be a boy." a
fleeting concern showed in her eyes and she reached out a hand and
touched my fieshless cheeks. "don't they feed you properly?"

"oh, the food's very good," i replied. "but unfortunately they run it
all off again."

"anyway, i'll get you a good meal now." she gazed at me thoughtfully.
"pity we've finished our meat ration, but how about some egg and chips?"

"marvelous." she cooked me egg and chips and sat by me while i ate. we
carried on a rather halting conversation and it came to me with a bump
that my mind had been forced on to different tracks since i had left
her. in those few months my brain had become saturated with the things
of my new life-even my mouth was full of raf slang and jargon. in our
bed-sitter we used to talk about my cases, the funny things that
happened on my rounds, but now, i thought helplessly, there wasn't much
point in telling her that ac2 phillips was on jankers again, that vector
triangles were the very devil, that don mcgregor thought he had
discovered the secret of sergeant hynd's phenomenally shiny boots. but
it really didn't matter. my worries melted as i looked at her. i had
been wondering if she was well and there she was, bouncing with energy,
shining-eyed, rosycheeked and beautiful. there was only one jarring note
and it was a strange one. helen was wearing a "maternity dress" which
expanded with the passage of time by means of an opening down one side.
anyway, i hated it. it was blue with a high red collar and i thought it
cheap-looking and ugly. i was aware that austerity had taken over in
england and that a lot of things were shoddy, but i desperately wished
my wife had something better to wear. in all my life there have been
very few occasions when i badly wanted more money and that was one of
them, because on my wage of three shillings a day as an ac2 i was unable
to drape her with expensive clothes. the hour winged past and it seemed
no time at all before i was back on the top road waiting in the
gathering darkness for the scarborough bus. the journey back was a bit
dreary as the black-out vehicle bumped and rattled its way through the
darkened villages and over the long stretches of anonymous countryside.
it was cold, too, but i sat there happily with the memory of helen
wrapped around me like a warm quilt. the whole day had been a triumph. i
had got away by a lucky stroke and there would be no problem getting
back into the grand because one of my pals would be on sentry duty and
it would be a case of "pass friend." closing my eyes in the gloom i
could still feel helen in my arms and i smiled to myself at the memory
of her bounding healthiness. what a tremendous relief to see her looking
so wonderful, and though the simple repast of egg and chips had seem6d
like a banquet i realised that my greatest nourishment had been feasting
my eyes on helen. tkat dress still niggled at me as it has, for some
reason, right down the years, but compared with the other elements of
that magic hour it was a little thing. chapter 11. 11

"hey you i where the 'ell d'you think you're going't' coming from the raf
special police it was a typical mode of address and the man who barked
it out wore the usual truculent expression.

"extra navigation class, corporal," i replied.

"lemme see your pass!" he snatched it from my hand, read it and returned
it without looking at me. i slunk out into the street feeling like a
prisoner on parole. not all the sps were like that but i found most of
them lacking in charm. and it brought home to me with a rush something
which had been slowly dawning on me ever since i joined the air force;
that i had been spoiled for quite a long time now. spoiled by the fact
that i had always been treated with respect because i was a veterinary
surgeon, a member of an honourable profession. and i had taken it
entirely for granted. now i was an ac2, the lowest form of life in the
raf, and the "hey you!" was a reflection of my status. the yorkshire
farmers don't rush out and kiss you, but their careful friendliness and
politeness is something which i have valued even more since my service
days. because that was when i stopped taking it for granted. mind you,
you have to put up with a certain amount of cheek in most jobs, and
veterinary practice is no exception. even now i can recall the glowering
face of ralph beamish, the racehorse trainer, as he watched me getting
out of my car.

"where's mr. farnon?" he grunted. my toes curled. i had heard that often
enough, especially among the horse fraternity around darrowby.

"i'm sorry, mr. beamish, but he'll be away all day and ? 96

1 thought i'd better come along rather than leave it till tomorrow." he
made no attempt to hide his disgust. he blew out his fat, purpled
cheeks, dug his hands deep in his breeches pockets and looked at the sky
with a martyred air.

"well come on, then." he turned and stumped away on his short, thick
legs towards one of the boxes which bordered the yard. i sighed inwardly
as i followed him. being an unhorsey vet in yorkshire was a penance at
times, especially in a racing stable like this which was an equine
shrine. siegfried, apart altogether from his intuitive skill, was able
to talk the horse language. he could discuss effortlessly and at length
the breeding and points of his patients; he rode, he hunted, he even
looked the part with his long aristocratic face, clipped moustache and
lean frame. the trainers loved him and some, like beamish, took it as a
mortal insult when he failed to come in person to minister to their
valuable charges. he called to one of the lads who opened a box door.

"he's in there," he muttered. "came in lame from exercise this morning."
the lad led out a bay gelding and there was no need to trot the animal
to diagnose the affected leg; he nodded down on his near fore in an
unmistakable way.

"i think he's lame in the shoulder," beamish said. i went round the
other side of the horse and picked up the off fore. i cleaned out the
frog and sold with a hoof knife; there was no sign of bruising and no
sensitivity when i tapped the handle of the knife against the horn. i
felt my way up over the coronet to the fetlock and after some palpation
i located a spot near the distal end of the metacarpus which was painful
on pressure. i looked up from my crouching position. "this seems to be
the trouble, mr. beamish. i think he must have struck into himself with
his hind foot just there."

"where?" the trainer leaned over me and peered down at the leg. "i can't
see anything."

"no, the skin isn't broken, but he ffinches if you press here." beamish
prodded the place with a stubby forefinger.

"well, he does," he grunted. "but he'd ffinch anywhere if you squeeze
him like you're doing."

my hackles began to rise at his tone but i kept my voice calm. "i'm sure
that's what it is. i should apply a hot antiphlogistine poultice just
above the fetlock and alternate with a cold hose on it twice a day."

"well, i'm just as sure you're wrong. it's not down there at all. the
way that horse carries his leg he's hurt his shoulder." he gestured to
the lad.

"harry, see that he gets some heat on that shoulder right away." if the
man had struck me i couldn't have felt worse. i opened my mouth to argue
but he was walking away. "rhere's another horse i want you to look at,"
he said. he led the way into a nearby box and pointed to a big brown
animal with obvious signs of blistering on the tendons of afore limb.

"mr. farnon put a red blister on that leg six months ago. he's been
resting in here ever since. he's going sound now---d'you think he's
ready to go out?" i went over and ran my fingers over the length of the
flexor tendons, feeling for signs of thickening. there was none. then i
lifted the foot and as i explored further i found a tender area in the
superficial flexor. i straightened up. "he's still a bit sore," i said.
"i think it would be safer to keep him in for a bit longer."

"can't agree with you," beamish snapped. he turned to the lad. "turn him
out, harry." i stared at him. was this a deliberate campaign to make me
feel small? was he trying to rub in the fact that he didn't think much
of me? anyway, he was beginning to get under my skin and i hoped my
burning face wasn't too obvious.

"one thing more," beamish said. "there's a horse -through here been
coughing. have a look at him before you go. 11 we went through a narrow
passage into a smaller yard and harry entered a box and got bold of a
horse's head collar. i followed him, fishing out my thermometer. as i
approached the animal's rear end he laid back his pars, whickered and
began to caper around. i hesitated, then nodded to the lad.

"lift his fore leg while i take his temperature, will you?" i said. ,the
lad bent down and seized the foot but beamish broke in. "don't bother,
harry, there's no need for that. he's quiet as a sheep." i paused for a
moment. i felt i was right but my stock was low on this establishment. i
shrugged, lifted the tail and pushed the thermometer into the rectum.
the two hind 6et hit me almost simultaneously but as i sailed backwards
through the door i remember thinking quite clearly that the one on the
chest had made contact fractionally before the one on the abdomen. but
my thoughts were rapidly clouded by the fact that the lower hoof had
landed full on my solar plexus. stretched on the concrete of the yard i
gasped and groaned in a frantic search for breath. there was a moment
when i was convinced i was going to die but at last a long wailing
respiration came to my aid and i struggled painfully into a sitting
position. through the open door i could see harry hanging on to the
horse's head and staring at me with frightened eyes. mr. beamish, on the
other hand, showed no interest in my plight; he was anxiously examining
the horse's hind feet one after the other. obviously he was worried lest
they may have sustained some damage by coming into contact with my nasty
hard ribs. slowly i got up and drew some long breaths. i was shaken but
not really hurt. and i suppose it was instinct that had made me hang on
to my thermometer; the delicate tube was still in my hand. my only
emotion as i went back into the box was cold rage.

"lift that bloody foot like i told you!" i shouted at the unfortunate
harry.

"right, sir! sorry, sir!" he bent, lifted the foot and held it cupped
firmly in his hands. i turned to beamish to see if he had any
observation to make, but the trainer was silent, gazing at the big
animal expressionlessly. this time i took the temperature without
incident. it was 101'f. i moved to the head and opened the nostril with
finger and thumb, revealing a slight muco-purulent discharge.
submaxillary and post-pharyngeal glands were normal.

"he's got a bit of cold," i said. "i'll give him an injection and leave
you some sulphonamide-that's what mr. farnon uses in these cases." if
my. final sentence reassured him in any way be gave no sign, watching
dead- faced as i injected 10 cc of prontosil. before i left i took a
half-pound packet of sulpho-namide from the car boot. "give him three
ounces of this immedi-

lately in a pint of water, then follow it with one and a half ounces
night and morning and let us know if he isn't a lot better in two days."
mr. beamish received the medicine unsmilingly and as i opened the car
door i felt a gush of relief that the uncomfortable visit was at an end.
it seemed to.have lasted a long time and there had been no glory for me
in it. i was starting the engine when one of the little apprentices
panted up to the trainer.

"it's almira, sir. i think she's chokin'l"

"choking!" beamish stared at the boy then whipped round to me. "almira's
the best filly i have. you'd better comel" it wasn't over yet, then.
with a feeling of doom i hurried after the squat figure back into the
yard where another lad stood by the side of a beautiful chestnut filly.
and as i saw her a cold hand closed around my heart. i had been dealing
with trivia but this was different. she stood immobile, staring ahead
with a peculiar intensity. the rise and fall of her ribs was accompanied
by a rasping, bubbling wheeze and at each intake her nostrils flared
wildly. i had never seen a horse breathe like this. and there were other
things; saliva drooled from her lips and every few seconds she gave a
retching cough. i turned to the apprentice. "when did this start?"

"not long ago, sir. i saw her an hour since and she were as right as a
bobbin."

"are you sure?"

"aye, i was givin' 'er some hay. there was nowt ailin' her then."

"what the devil's wrong with her?" beamish exclaimed. well, it was a
good question and i didn't have a clue to the answer. as i walked
bemusedly round the animal, taking in the trembling limbs and terrified
eyes, a jumble of thoughts crowded my brain. i had seen "choking" horses
-the dry choke when the gullet becomes impacted with food-but they
didn't look like this. i felt my way along the course of the oesophagus
and it was perfectly clear. and anyway the respiration was quite
different. this filly looked as though she had some obstruction in her
airflow. but what ... ? and how ... ? could there be a foreign body in
there? just possible, but that was something else i had never seen.

"well, damn it, i'm asking you! what is it? what d'you make of her?" mr.
beamish was becoming impatient and i couldn't blame him. i was aware
that i was slightly breathless. "just a moment while i listen to her
lungs."

"just a moment!" the trainer burst out. "good god, man, we haven't got
many moments! this horse could die!" he didn't have to tell me. i had
seen that ominous trembling of the limbs before and now the filly was
beginning to sway a little. time was running out. dry mouthed, i
ausculated the chest. i knew there was nothing wrong with her lungs-the
trouble seemed to be in the throat area-but it gave me a little more
time to think. even with the stethoscope in my ears i could still hear
beamish's voice.

"it would have to be this one! sir eric horrocks gave five thousand
pounds for her last year. she's the most valuable animal in my stables.
why did this have to happen?" groping my way over the ribs, my heart
thudding, i heartily agreed with him. why in heaven's name did i have to
walk into this nightmare? and with a man like beamish who had no faith
in me. he stepped forward and clutched my arm. "are you sure mr. farnon
isn't available?"

"i'm sorry," i replied huskily. "he's over thirty miles away." the
trainer seemed to shrivel within himself. "that's it then. we're
finished. she's dying." and he was right. the filly had begun to reel
about, the breathing louder and more stertorous than ever, and i had
difficulty in keeping the stethoscope on her chest wall. it was when i
was resting my hand on her flank to steady her that i noticed the little
swelling under the skin. it was a circular plaque, like a penny pushed
under the tissue. i glanced sharply at it. yes, it was clearly visible.
and there was another one higher up on the back . . . and another and
another. my heart gave a quick double thump ... so that was it.

"what am i going to tell sir eric?" the trainer groaned. "that his filly
is dead and the vet didn't know what was wrong with her?" he glared
desperately around him as though in the faint hope that siegfried might
magically appear from nowhere.

i called over my shoulder as i trotted towards the car. "i never said i
didn't know. i do know. she's got urticaria." he came shambling after
me. "urti . . . what the blazes is that?"

"nettlerash," i replied, fumbling among my bottles for the adrenalin.

"nettlerash!" his eyes widened. "but that couldn't cause all this!" i
drew 5 cc of the adrenalin into the syringe and started back. "it's
nothing to do with nettles. it's an allergic condition, usually pretty
harmless, but in a very few cases it causes oedema of the larynx-that's
what we've got here." it was difficult to raise the vein as the filly
staggered around, but she came to rest for a few seconds and i dug my
thumb into the jugular furrow. as the big vessel came up tense and
turgid i thrust in the needle and injected the adrenalin. then i stepped
back and stood by the trainer's side. neither of us said anything. the
spectacle of the toiling animal and the harrowing sound of the breathing
absorbed us utterly. the grim knowledge that she was on the verge of
suffocation appalled me and when she stumbled and almost fell the hand
in my pocket gripped more tightly on the scalpel which i had taken from
my car along with the adrenalin. i knew only too well that tracheotomy
was indicated here but i didn't have a tube with me. if the filly did go
off her legs i should have to start cutting into her windpipe, but i put
the thought away from me. for the moment i had to depend on the
adrenalin. beamish stretched out a hand in a helpless gesture. "it's
hopeless, isn't it?" he whispered. i shrugged. "there's a small chance.
if the injection can ,reduce the fluid in the larynx in time ... we'll
just have to wait." he nodded and i could read more than one emotion in
his face; not just the dread of breaking the news to the famous owner
but the distress of a horse-lover as he witnessed the plight of the
beautiful animal. at first i thought it was imagination, but it seemed
that the breathing was becoming less stertorous. then as i hovered in an
agony of uncertainty i noticed that the salivation was diminishing; she
was able to swallow.

from that moment events moved with unbelievable rapidity. the symptoms
of allergies appear with dramatic suddenness but mercifully they often
disappear as quickly following treatment. within fifteen minutes the
filly looked almost normaj. there was still a slight wheeze in her respirations but she was looking around her, quite free from distress.
beamish, who had been watching like a man in a daze, pulled a handful of
hay from a bale and held it out to her. she snatched it eagerly from his
hand and began to eat with great relish.

"i can't believe it," the trainer muttered almost to himself. "i've
never seen anything work as fast as that injection." i felt as though i
was riding on a pink cloud with all the tension and misery flowing from
me in a joyful torrent. thank god there were moments like this among the
traumas of veterinary work; the sudden transition from despair to
triumph, from shame to pride. i almost floated to the car and as i
settled in my seat beamish put his face to the open window.

"mr. herriot . . ." he was not a man to whom gracious speech came easily
and his cheeks, roughened and weathered by years of riding on the open
moor, twitched as he sought for words. "mr. herriot, i've been thinking
... you don't have to be a horsey man to cure horses, do you?" there was
something like an appeal in his eyes as we gazed at each other. i
laughed suddenly and his expression relaxed. it was an indescribable
satisfaction for me to hear voiced the conviction i had always held.

"i'm glad to hear somebody say that at last," i said, and drove away.
chapter 12. 12

1 was on guard outside the grand. it was after midnight, with a biting
wind swirling across the empty square, and i was so cold and bored that
it was a relief even to slap the butt of my rifle in salute as a
solitary officer went by. wryly i wondered how, after my romantic ideas
of training to be a pilot, i came to be defending the grand hotel at
scarborough against all comers. in a baleful way it seemed comic, and as
i tramped frigidly round my short guard route, i kept telling myself,
right, keep your sense of humour about it. on my right was a wall almost
as tall as i was, and as i passed it continually, grimly trying to focus
on how funny this all was, the wall reminded me of mr. bailes' dog shep.
now there was a creature with a sense of humour. i should think on him
for a bit. mr. bailes' little place was situated about half way along
highburn village and to get into the farmyard you had to walk twenty
yards or so between five-foot walls. on the left was the neighbouring
kouse, on the right the front garden of the farm. in this garden shep
lurked for most of the day. he was a huge dog, much larger than the
average collie. in fact i am convinced he was part alsatian because
though he had a luxuriant black and white coat there was something
significant in the massive limbs and in the noble brown-shaded head with
its upstanding ears. he was quite different from the stringy little
animals i saw on my daily round. as i walked between the walls my mind
was already in the byre, just visible at the far end of the yard.
because one of the bailes' cows, rose by name, had the kind of obscure
digestive ailment which interferes with veterinary surgeons' steep. they
are so dimcult to diagnose. this animal had begun to grunt and go off
her milk two days ago 104

and when i had seen her yesterday i had flitted from one possibility to
the other. could be a wire. but the fourth stomach was contracting well
and there were plenty of rumenal sounds. also she was eating a little
hay in a halfhearted way. could it be impaction ... ? or a partial
torsion of the gut ... ? there was abdominal pain without a doubt and
that nagging temperature of 102.5*-that was damn like a wire. of course
i could settle the whole thing by opening the cow up, but mr. bailes was
an old-fashioned type and didn't like the idea of my diving into his
animal unless i was certain of my diagnosis. and i wasn't-there was no
getting away from that. anyway, i had built her up at the front end so
that she was standing with her fore feet on a half door and had given
her a strong oily purgative.

"keep the bowels open and trust in god," an elderly colleague had once
told me. there was a lot in that. i was half way down the alley between
the walls with the hope bright before me that my patient would be
improved when from nowhere an appalling explosion of sound blasted into
my right ear. it was shep again. the wall was just the right height for
the dog to make a leap and bark into the ear of the passerby. it was a
favourite gambit of his and i had been caught before; but never so
successfully as now. my attention had been so far away and the dog had
timed his jump to a split second so that his bark came at the highest
point, his teeth only inches from my face. and his voice befitted his
size, a great bull bellow surging from the depths of his powerful chest
and booming from his gaping jaws. i rose several inches into the air and
when i descended, heart thumping, head singing, i glared over the wall.
but as usual all i saw was the hairy form bounding away out of sight
round the corner of the house. that was what puzzled me. why did he do
it? was he a savage -creature with evil designs on me or was it his idea
of a joke? i never got near enough to him to find out. i wasn't in the
best of shape to receive bad news and that was what awaited me in the
byre. i had only to look at the farmer's face to know that the cow was
worse.

"ah reckon she's got a stoppage," mr. bailes muttered gloomily. i
gritted my teeth. the entire spectrum of abdominal disorders were lumped as "stoppages" by the older race of farmers. "the oil
hasn't worked, then?"

"nay, she's nob but passin' little hard bits. it's a proper stoppage, ah
tell you."

"right, mr. bailes," i said with a twisted smile. "we'll have to try
something stronger." i brought in from my car the gastric lavage outfit
i loved so well and which has so sadly disappeared from my life. the
long rubber stomach tube, the wooden gag with its leather straps to
buckle behind the horns. as i pumped in the two gallons of warm water
rich in formalin and sodium chloride i felt like napoleon sending in the
old guard at waterloo. if this didn't work nothing would. and yet i
didn't feel my usual confidence. there was something different here. but
i had to try. i had to do something to start this cow's insides
functioning because i did not like the look of her today. the soft grunt
was still there and her eyes had begun to retreat into her head -the
worst sign of all in bovines. and she had stopped eating altogether.
next morning i was driving down the single village street when i saw
mrs. bailes coming out of the shop. i drew up and pushed my head out of
the window.

"how's rose this morning, mrs. bailes?" she rested her basket on the
ground and looked down at me gravely. "oh, she's bad, mr. herriot. me
husband thinks she's going' down fast. if you want to find him you'll
have to go across the field there. he's mendin' the door in that little
barn." a sudden misery enveloped me as i drove over to the gate leading
into the field. i left the car in the road and lifted the latch.

"damn! damnl damnl" i muttered as i trailed across the green. i had a
nasty feeling that a little tragedy was building up here. if this animal
died it would be a sickening blow to a small farmer with ten cows and a
few pigs. i should be able to do something about it and it was a depressing thought that i was getting nowhere. and yet, despite it all, i
felt peace stealing into my soul. it was a large field and i could see
the barn at the far end as i walked with the tall grass brushing my
knees. it was a meadow ready for cutting and suddenly i realised that
'it was high summer, the sun was hot and that every step brought the
fragrance of clover and warin grass nsing about me into the crystal
freshness of the air. somewhere nearby a field of broad beans was in
full flower and as the exotic scent drifted across i found myself
inhaling with half-closed eyes as though straining to discern the
ingredients of the glorious melange. and then there was the silence; it
was the most soothing thing of all. that and the feeling of being alone.
i looked drowsily around at the empty green miles sleeping under the
sunshine. nothing stirred, there was no sound. then without warning the
ground at my feet erupted in an incredible blast of noise. for a
dreadful moment the blue sky was obscured by an enormous hairy form and
a red mouth went 'vaaahhi" in my face. almost screaming, i staggered
back and as i glared wildly i saw shep disappearing at top speed towards
the gate. concealed in the deep herbage right in the middle of the field
he had waited till he saw the whites of my eyes before making his
assault. whether he had been there by accident or whether he had spotted
me arriving and slunk into position i shall never know, but from his
point of view the result must have been eminently satisfactory because
it was certainly the worst fright i have ever had. i live a life which
is well larded with scares and alarms, but this great dog rising
bellowing from that empty landscape was something on its own. i have
heard of cases where sudden terror and stress has caused involuntary
evacuation of the bowels and i know without question that this was the
occasion when i came nearest to suffering that unhappy fate. i was still
trembling when i reached the barn and hardly said a word as mr. bailes,
led me back across the road to the farm. and it was like rubbing it in
when i saw my patient. the flesh had melted from her and she stared at
the wall apathetically from sunken eyes. the doom-laden grunt was
louder.

"she must have a wirel" i muttered. "let her loose for a minute, will
you?" mr. bailes undid the chain and rose walked along the byre. at the
end she turned and almost trotted back to her stall, jumping quite
freely over the gutter. my bible in those days was udall's practice of
veterinary medicine 'and the great man stated therein that if a cow
moved freely she was uaftely to have a foreign body in her reficulwn.

,i pinched her withers and she didn't complain ... it had to be
something else.

"it's worst stoppage ah've seen for a bit," said mr. bailes. "ah gave
her a dose of some right powerful stuff this mornin' but it's done no
good." i passed a weary hand over my brow. "what was that, mr. bailes?"
it was always a bad sign when the client started using his own medicine.
the farmer reached to the cluttered windowsill and handed me a bottle.

"doctor hornibrook's stomach elixir. a sovereign remedy for all diseases
of cattle." the doctor, in top hat and frock coat, looked confidently
out at me from the label as i pulled out the cork and took a sniff. i
blinked and staggered back with watering eyes. it smelt like pure
ammonia but i was in no position to be superior about it.

"that dang grunt!" the farmer hunched his shoulders. "what's cause of
it?" it was no good my saying it sounded like a circumscribed area of
peritonitis because i didn't know what was behindit. i decided to have
one last go with the lavage. it was still the strongest weapon in my
armoury but this time i added two pounds of black treacle to the
mixture. nearly every farmer had a barrel of the stuff in his cow house
in those days and i had only to go into the corner and turn the tap. i
often mourn the passing of the treacle barrel because molasses was a
good medicine for cattle, but i had no great hopes this time. the
clinical instincf i was beginning to develop told me that something
inside this animal was fundamentally awry. it was not till the following
afternoon that i drove into highburn. i left the car outside the farm
and was about to walk between the walls when i paused and stared at a
cow in the field on the other side of the road. it was a pasture next to
the hayfield of yesterday and that cow was rose. there could be no
mistake-she was a fine deep red with a distinctive white mark like a
football on her left flank. i opened the gate and within seconds my
cares dropped from me. she was wonderfully, miraculously improved, in
fact she looked like a normal animal. i walked up to her and scratched
the root of her tail. she was a docile creature and merely looked round at me as she cropped the grass; and her
eyes were no longer sunken but bright and fun. she seemed to take a
fancy to a green patch further into the field and began to amble slowly
towards it. i followed, entranced, as she moved along, shaking her head
impatiently against the flies, eager for more of the delicious herbage.
the grunt had disappeared and her udder hung heavy and turgid between
her legs. the difference since yesterday was incredible. as the wave of
relief flooded through me i saw mr. bailes climbing over the wall from
the next field. he would still be mending that barn door. as he
approached i felt a pang of commiseration. i had to guard against any
display of triumph. he must be feeling just a bit silly at the moment
after showing his lack of faith in me yesterday with his home remedies
and his general attitude. but after all the poor chap had been worried
-1 couldnt blame him. no, it wouldn't do to preen myself unduly.

"ah, good morning to you, mr. bailes," i said expansively. "rose looks
fine today, doesn't she?" the farmer took off his cap and wiped his
brow. "aye, she's a different cow, all right."

"i don't think she needs any more treatment," i said. i hesitated.
perhaps one little dig would do no harm. "but it's a good thing i gave
her that extra lavage yesterday."

"yon pumpin' job?" mr. bailes raised his eyebrows. "oh that had nowt to
do with it."

"what ... what do you mean? it cured her, surely."

"nay, lad, nay, jim oakley cured her."

"jim ... what on earth ... t' "aye, jim was round 'ere last night. he
often comes in of an evenin' and he took one look at the cow and told me
what to do. ah'll tell you she was like dyin'-that pumpin' job hadn't
done no good at all. he told me to give her a bloody good gallop round
ffield."

"iftat!"

"aye, that's what he said. he'd seen 'em like that afore and a good
gallop put 'em right. so we got rose out here :and did as he said and by
gaw it did the trick. she looked better right away." i drew myself up.
"and who," i asked frigidly, "is jim oakley?"

"he's t'postman, of course."

"the postman!"

"aye, but he used to keep a few beasts years ago. he's a very clever man
wi' stock, is jim."

"no doubt, but i assure you, mr. b ailes . the farmer raised a hand.
"say no more, lad. jim put ler right and there7s no denyin' it. i wish
you'd seen 'im chasin' 'er round. he's as awd as me, but by gaw'e did
go. he can run like 'ell, can jim." he chuckled reminiscently. i had had
about enough. during the farmer's eulogy i had been distractedly
scratching the cow's tail and had soiled my hand in the process.
mustering the remains of my dignity i nodded to mr. bailes. ,"well, i
must be on my way. do you mind if i go into the house to wash my hands?"

"you go right in," he replied. "t'n-tissus will get you some hot water."
walking back down the field the cruel injustice of the thing bore down
on me increasingly. i wandered as in a dream through the gate and across
the road. before entering the alley between the walls i glanced into the
garden. it was empty. shuffling beside the rough stones i sank deeper
into my misery. there was no doubt i had emerged from that episode as a
complete charlie. no matter where i looked i couldn't see a gleam of
light it seemed to take a long time to reach the end of the wall and i
was about to turn right towards the door of the farm kitchen when from
my left i heard the sudden rattle of a chain then a roaring creature
launched itself at me bayed once, mightily, into my face and was gone.
this time i thought my heart would stop. with my defences at their
lowest i was in no state to withstand shep. i had quite forgotten that
mrs. bailes occasionally tethered him in the kennel at the entrance to
discourage unwelcome visitors, and as i half lay against the wall, the
blood thundering in my ears, i looked dully at the long coil of chain on
the cobbles. i have no time for people who lose their temper with
animals but something snapped in my mind then. all my frustration burst
from me in a torrent of incoherent shouts and i grabbed the chain and
began to pull on it frenziedly. that dog which had tortured me was there
in that kennel. for oncei knew where to get at him and this all things
wise and wonderful 111

time i was going to have the matter out with him. the kennel would be
about ten feet away and at first i saw nothing. there was only the dead
weight an the end of the chain. then as i hauled inexorably a nose
appeared, then a head, then all of the big animal hanging limply by his
collar. he showed no desire to get up and greet me but i was merciless
and dragged him inch by inch over the cobbles till he was lying at my
feet. beside myself with rage, i crouched, shook my fist under his nose
and yelled at him from a few inches' range. "you big buggerl if you do
that to me again i'll knock your bloody head off i do you hear me, i'll
knock your bloody head clean off!" shep rolled frightened eyes at me and
his tail flickered apologetically between his legs. when i continued to
scream at him he bared his upper teeth in an ingratiating grin and
finally rolled on his back where he lay inert with half-closed eyes. so
now i knew. he was a softie. all his ferocious attacks were just a game.
i began to calm down but for all that i wanted him to get the message.
"right, mate," i said in a menacing whisper. "remember what i've said!"
i let go the chain and gave a final shout. "now get back in there!"
shep, almost on his knees, tail tucked well in, shot back into his
kennel and i turned toward the farmhouse to wash my hands.

the memory of my discomfiture fermented in the back of my mind for some
time. i had no doubt then that i had been unfairly judged, but i am
older and wiser now and in retrospect i think i was wrong. the symptoms
displayed by mr. bailes' cow were typical of displacement of the
abomasurn (when the fourth stomach slips round from the right to the
left side) and it was a condition that was just not recognised in those
early days. at the present time we correct the condition by
surgery-pushing the displaced organ back to the right side and tacking
it there with sutures. but sometimes a similar result can be obtained by
casting the cow and rolling her over, so why not by making her run ... ?
i freely admit that i have many times adopted jim oakley's precept of a
"bloody good gallop," often with spectacular results. to this day i
frequently learn things from farmers, but that was one time when i
learned from a postman. i was surprised when, about a month later, i
received another call to one of mr. bailes' cows. i felt that after my
performance with rose he would have called on the services of jim oakley
for any further trouble. but no, his voice on the 'phone was as polite
and friendly as ever, with not a hint that he had lost faith. it was
strange. . . . leaving my car outside the farm i looked warily into the
front garden before venturing between the walls. a faint tinkle of metal
told me that shep was lurking there in his kennel and i slowed my steps;
i wasn't going to be caught again. at the end of the alley i paused,
waiting, but all i saw was the end of a nose which quietly withdrew as i
stood there. so my outburst had got through to the big dog-he knew i
wasn't going to stand any more nonsense from him. and yet, as i drove
away after the visit i didn't feel good about it. a victory over an
animal is a hollow one and i had the uncomfortable feeling that i had
deprived him of his chief pleasure. after all, every creature is
entitled to some form of recreation and though shep's hobby could result
in the occasional heart failure it was, after all, his thing and part of
him. the thought that i had crushed something out of his life was a
disquieting one. i wasn't proud. so that when, later that summer, i was
driving through higbburn i paused in anticipation outside the bailes
farm. the village street, white and dusty, slumbered under the afternoon
sun. in the blanketing silence nothing moved- except for one small man
strolling towards the opening between the walls. he was fat and very
dark--one of the tinkers from a camp outside the village-and he carried
an armful of pots and pans. from my vantage point i could see through
the railings into the front garden where shep was slinking noiselessly
into position beneath the stones. fascinated, i watched as the man
turned unhurriedly into the opening and the dog followed the course of
the disembodied head along the top of the wall. as i expected it all
happened half way along. the perfectly timed leap, the momentary pause
at the summit then the tremendous "woof!" into the unsuspecting ear.

it had its usual effect. i had a brief view of flailing arms and flying
pans followed by a prolonged metallic clatter, then the little man
reappeared like a projectile, turned right and sped away from me up the
street. considering his almost round physique he showed an astonishing
turn of speed, his little legs pistoning, and he did not pause till he
disappeared into the shop at the far end of the village. i don't know
why he went in there because he wouldn7t find any stronger restorative
than ginger pop. shep, apparently well satisfied, wandered back over the
grass and collapsed in a cool patch where an apple tree threw its shade
over the grass; head on paws he waited in comfort for his next victim. i
smiled to myself as i let in the clutch and moved off. i would stop at
the shop and tell the little man that he could collect his pans without
the slightest fear of being torn limb from limb, but my overriding
emotion ~vas one of relief that i had not cut the sparkle out of the big
dog's life.

all this passed through my mind as i stood on the frozen ground outside
the grand hotel at two o'clock in the morning. i looked up at that
venerable edifice, my eyes glittering fiendishly, half from the cold and
half from the deranged spark of my recovered humour. i felt my rigid
lips creak apart, and my head tilt back to aim at what i took to be flt.
lieut. barnes's window. "woof!" i roared into the night. "woof! woof i"
chapter 13. 13

1 suppose once you embark on a life of crime it gets easier all the
time. making a start is the only hard bit. at any rate, that is how it
seemed to me as i sat in the bus, playing hookey again. there had been
absolutely no trouble about dodging out of the grand, the streets of
scarborough had been empty of sps and nobody had given me a second
look as i strolled casually into the bus station. it was saturday, 13
february. helen was expecting our baby this week-end, it could happen
any time and i just didn't see how i could sit here these few mues away
and do nothing. i had no classes today or tomorrow so i would miss
nothing and nobody would miss me. it was, i told myself, a mere
technical offence, and anyway i had no option. like the first time, i
just had to see helen. and it wouldn't be long now, i thought, as i
hurried up to the familiar doorway of her home. i went inside and gazed
disappointedly at the empty kitchen-somehow i had been sure she would be
standing there waiting for me with her arms wide. i shouted her name but
nothing stirred in the house. i was still there, listening, when her
father came through from an inner room. "you've got a son," he said. i
put my hand on the back of a chair. "what. . . "you've got a son." he
was so calm. "when ... t, "few minutes ago. nurse brown's just been on
the 'phone. funny you should walk in." as i leaned on the chair he gave
me a keen look. "would you like a drop of whisky?" "whisky? no-why?"
"well you've gone a bit white, lad, that's all. anyway, you'd better
have something to eat."

114

"no, no, no thanks, i've got to get out there." he smiled. "there's no
hurry, lad. anyway, they won't want anybody there too soon. better eat
something." "sorry, i couldn't. would you-would you mind if i borrowed
your car?" i was still trembling a little as i drove away. if only mr.
alderson had led up to it gradually-he might have said, "i've got some
news for you," or something like that, but his direct approach had
shattered me. when i pulled up outside nurse brown's it still hadn't got
through to me that i was a father. greenside nursing home sounded
impressive, but it-was ,in fact nurse brown's dwelling house. she was
state registered and usually had two or three of the local women in at a
time to have their babies. she opened the door herself and threw up her
hands. "mr. herriot! it hasn't taken you long! where did you spring
from?" she was a cheerfully dynamic little woman with mischievous eyes.
i smiled sheepishly. "well, i just happened to drop in on mr. alderson
and got the news." "you might have given us time to get the little
fellow property washed," she said. "but never mind, come up and see him.
he's a fine baby-nine pounds." still in a dreamlike state i followed her
up the stairs of the little house into a small bedroom. helen was there,
in the bed, looking flushed. "hello," she said. i went over and kissed
her. "what was it like?" i enquired nervously. "awful," helen replied
without enthusiasm. then she nodded towards the cot beside her. i took
my first look at my son. little jimmy was brick red in colour and his
face had a bloated, dissipated look. as i hung over him be twisted his
tiny fists under his chin and appeared to be undergoing some mighty
internal struggle. his face swelled and darkened as he contorted his
features then from deep among the puffy flesh his eyes fixed me with a
baleful glare and he stuck his tongue out of the corner of his mouth.
"my god!" i exclaimed. the nurse looked at me, startled. "what's the
matter?" "well, he's a funny-looking little thing isn't he?"

"what!" she stared at me furiously. "mr. herriot, how can you say such a
thing? he's a beautiful baby!" i peered into the cot again. jimmy
greeted me with a lopsided leer, turned purple and blew a few bubbles.
"are you sure he's all right?" i said. there was a tired giggle from the
bed but nurse brown was not amused. "all right! what exactly do you
mean?" she drew herself up stiffly. i shuffled my feet. "weller-is
there anything wrong with him?" i thought she was going to strike me.
"anything how dare you! whatever are you talking about? i've never heard
such nonsense!" she turned appealing towards the bed, but helen, a weary
smile on her face, had closed her eyes. i drew the enraged little woman
to one side. "look, nurse, have you by chance got any others on the
premises?" "any other what?" she asked icily. "babies-new babies. i want
to compare jimmy with another one." her eyes widened. "compare him! mr.
herriot, i'm not going to listen to you any longer-i've lost patience
with you!" "i'm asking you, nurse," i repeated. "have you any more
around?" there was a long pause as she looked at me as though i was
something new and incredible. "well-there's mrs. dewburn in the next
room. little sidney was born about the same time as jimmy." "can i have
a look at him?" i gazed at her appealingly. she hesitated then a pitying
smile crept over her face. "oh you ... you ... just a minute, then." she
went into the other room and i heard a mumble of voices. she reappeared
and beckoned to me. mrs. dewburn was the butcher's wife and i knew her
well. the face on the pillow was hot and tired like helen's. "eee, mr.
herriot, i didn't expect to see you. i thought you were in the army."
"raf, actually, mrs. dewburn. i'm on-er-leave at the moment." i looked
in the cot. sidney was dark red and bloated, too, and he, also, seemed
to be wrestling with himself.

the inner battle showed in a series of grotesque facial contortions
culminating in a toothless snarl. i stepped back involuntarily. "what a
beautiful child," i said. "yes, isn't he lovely," said his mother
fondly. "he is indeed gorgeous." i took another disbelieving glance into
the cot. "well, thank you very much, mrs. dewburn. it was kind of you to
let me see him." "not at all, mr. herriot, it's nice of you to take an
interest." outside the door i took a long breath and wiped my brow. the
relief was tremendous. sidney was even funnier than jimmy. when i
returned to helen's room nurse brown was sitting on the bed and the two
women were clearly laughing at me. and of course, looking back, i must
have appeared silly. sidney dewburn and my son are now two big, strong,
remarkably good-looking young men, so my fears were groundless. the
little nurse looked at me quizzically. i think she had forgiven me. "i
suppose you think all your calves and foals are beautiful right from the
moment they are born?" "well yes," i replied. "i have to admit it-1
think they are." as i have said before, ideas do not come readily to me,
but on the bus journey back to scarborough a devilish scheme began to
hatch in my brain. i was due for compassionate leave, but why should i
take it now? helen would be in the nursing home for a fortnight and
there didn't seem any sense in my mooning round darrowby on my own. the
thing to do would be to send myself a telegram a fortnight from now
announcing the birth, and we would be able to spend my leave together.
it was interesting how my moral scruples dissolved in the face of this
attraction, but anyway, i told myself, where was the harm? i wasn't
scrounging anything extra, i was just altering the time. the raf or the
war effort in general would suffer no mortal blow. long before the
darkened vehicle had rolled into the town i had made up my mind and on
the following day i wrote to a friend in darrowby and arranged about the
telegram but i wasn't such a hardened criminal as i thought, because as
the days passed doubts began to creep in. the rules at itw were rigidly
strict. i would be in trouble if i was found out. but the prospect of a
holiday with helen blotted out all other considerations. when the
fateful day arrived my room mates and i were stretched on our beds after
lunch when a great voice boomed along the corridor. "ac2 herriotl come
on, let's have you, herriot!" my stomach lurched. somehow i hadn't
reckoned on flight sergeant blackett coming into this. i had thought
maybe an lac or a corporal, even one of the sergeants might have handled
it, not the great man himself. flight sergeant blackett was an unsmiling
martinet of immense natural presence which a gaunt six feet two inch
frame, wide bony shoulders and a craggy countenance did nothing to
diminish. it was usually the junior ncos who dealt with our
misdemeanours, but if flight sergeant blackett ever took a hand it was a
withering experience. i heard it again. the same bull bellow which
echoed over oui heads on the square every morning. "herriotl let's be
having you, herriot!" i was on my way at a brisk trot out of the room
and along the polished surface of the corridor. i came to a halt stiffly
in front of the tall figure. "yes, flight sergeant." "you herriot?"
"yes, flight sergeant." the telegram between his fingers scuffed softly
against the blue serge of his trousers as he swung his hand to and fro.
my pulse rate accelerated painfully as i waited. "well now, lad, i'm
pleased to tell you that your wife has had her baby safely." he raised
the telegram to his eyes. "it says 'ere, 'a boy, both well. nurse
brown.' let me be the first to congratulate you." he held out his hand
and as i took it he smiled. suddenly he looked very like gary cooper.
"now you'll want to get off right away and see them both, eh?" i nodded
dumbly. he must have thought i was', an unemotional character. he put a
hand on my shoulder and guided me into the orderly room.

"come on, you lot, get movin'!" the organ tones rolled over the heads of
the airmen seated at the tables. "this is important. got a brand new
father 'ere. leave pass, railway warrant, pay, double quick!" "right,
flight. very good, flight." the typewriters began to tap. the big man
went over to a railway timetable on the wall. "you haven't far to go,
anyway. let's see-darrowby, darrowby . . . yes, there's a train out of
here for york at three twenty." he looked at his watch. "you ought to
make that if you get your skates on." a deepening sense of shame
threatened to engulf me when he spoke again. "double back to your room
and get packed. we'll have your documents ready." i changed into my best
blue, filled my kit bag and threw it over my shoulder, then hurried back
to the orderly room. the flight sergeant was waiting. he handed me a
long envelope. "it's all there, son, and you've got plenty of time." he
looked me up and down, walked round me and straightened the white flash
in my cap. "yes, very smart. we've got to have you lookin' right for
your n-dssus, haven't we?" he gave me the gary cooper smile again. he
was a handsome, kind-eyed man and i'd never noticed it. he strolled with
me along the corridor. "this'll be your first 'un, of course?" "yes,
flight." he nodded. "well, it's a great day for you. i've got three of
'em, meself. getting big now but i miss 'em like hell with this ruddy
war. i really envy you, walking in that door tonight and seeing your son
for the very first time." guilt drove through me in a searing flood and
as we halted at the top of the stairs i was convinced my shifty eyes and
furtive glances would betray me. but he wasn't really looking at me.
"you know, ]ad," he said softly, gazing somewhere over my head. "this is
the best time of your life coming up." we weren't allowed to use the
main stairways and as i clattered down the narrow stone service stairs i
heard the big voice again. "give my regards to them both."

i had a wonderful time with helen, walking for miles, discovering the
delights of pram. pushing, with little jimmy miraculously improved in
appearance. everything was so much better than if i had taken my leave
at the official time and there is no doubt my plan was a success. but i
was unable to gloat about it. the triumph was dimmed and to this day i
have reservations about the whole thing. looking back i know flus was
one of the happiest little interludes in my entire life and i suppose it
was silly to allow the niceness of flight sergeant blackett to throw a
tiny shadow over it. chapter 14. 14

"you must have to be a bit of an idiot to be a country vet." the young
airman was laughing as he said it, but i felt there was some truth in
his words. he had been telling me about his job in civil life and when i
described my own working hours and conditions he had been incredulous.
there was one time i would have agreed with him wholeheartedly. it was
nine o'clock on a filthy wet night and i was still at work. i gripped
the steering wheel more tightly and shifted in my seat, groaning softly
as my tired muscles complained. why had i entered this profession? i
could have gone in for something easier and gentler-like coalmining or
lumberjacking. i had started feeling sorry for myself three hours ago,
driving across darrowby market place on the way to a calving. the shops
were shut and even through the wintry drizzle there was a suggestion of
repose, of work done, of firesides and books and drifting tobacco smoke.
i had all those things, plus helen, back there in our bed-sitter. i
think the iron really entered when i saw the carload of young people
setting off from the front of the drovers; three girls and three young
fellows, all dressed up and laughing and obviously on their way to a
dance or party. everybody was set for comfort and a good time; everybody
except herriot, rattling towards the cold wet hills and the certain
prospect of toil. and the case did nothing to raise my spirits. a skinny
little heifer stretched on her side in a ramshackle open fronted shed
littered with old tin cans, half bricks and other junk; it was
difficult to see what i was stumbling over since the only light came
from a rusty oil lamp whose flame flickered and dipped in the - wind.
121

i was two hours in that shed, easing out the calf inch by inch. it
wasn't a malpresentation, just a tight fit, but the heifer never rose to
her feet and i spent the whole time on the floor, rolling among the
bricks and tins, getting up only to shiver my way to the water bucket
while the rain hurled itself icily against the shrinking flesh of my
chest and back. and now here i was, driving home frozen-faced with my
skin chafing under my clothes and feeling as though a group of strong
men had been kicking me enthusiastically from head to foot for most of
the evening. i was almost drowning in self-pity when i turned into the
tiny village of copton. in the warm days of summer it was idyllic,
reminding me always of a comer of perthshire, with its single street
hugging the lower slopes of a green hillside and a dark drift of trees
spreading to the heathery uplands high above. but tonight it was a dead
black place with the rain sweeping across the headlights against the
tight-shut houses; except for a faint glow right in the middle where the
light from the village pub fell softly on the streaming roadway. i
stopped the car under the swinging sign of the fox and hounds and on an
impulse opened the door. a beer would do me good. a pleasant warmth met
me as i went into the pub. there was no bar counter, only high-backed
settles and oak tables arranged under the whitewashed walls of what was
simply a converted farm kitchen. at one end a wood fire crackled in an
old black cooking range and above it the tick of a wall clock sounded
above the murmur of voices. it wasn't as lively as the modem places but
it was peaceful. "now then, mr. herriot, you've been workin'," my
neighbour said as i sank into the settle. "yes, ted, how did you know?"
the man glanced over my soiled mackintosh and the wellingtons which i
hadn7t bothered to change on the farm. 'well, that's not your sunday
suit, there's blood on your nose end and cow shit on your ear." ted
dobson was a burly cowman in his thirties and his white teeth showed
suddenly in a wide grin. i smiled too and plied my handkerchief. "it's
funny how you always want to scratch your nose at times like that." i
looked around the room. there were about a dozen men drinking from pint
glasses, some of them playing dominoes. they were all farm workers, the
people i saw when i was called from my bed in the darkness before dawn;
hunched figures they were then, shapeless in old greatcoats, cycling out
to the farms, heads down against the wind and rain, accepting the facts
of their hard existence. i often thought at those times that this
happened to me only occasionally, but they did it every morning. and
they did it for thirty shillings a week; just seeing them here made me
feel a little ashamed. mr. waters, the landlord, whose name let him in
for a certain amount of ribbing, filled my glass, holding his tall jug
high to produce the professional froth. "there y'are, mr. herriot,
that'll be sixpence. cheap at 'alf the price." every drop of beer was
brought up in that jug from the wooden barrels in the cellar. it would
have been totally impracticable in a busy establishment, but the fox and
hounds was seldom bustling and mr. waters would never get rich as a
publican. but he had four cows in the little byre adjoining this room,
fifty hens pecked around in his long back garden and he reared a few
litters of pigs every year from his two sows. "thank you, mr. waters." i
took a deep pull at the glass. i had lost some sweat despite the cold
and my thirst welcomed the flow of rich nutty ale. i had been in here a
few times before and the faces were all familiar. especially old albert
close, a retired shepherd who sat in the -same place every night at the
end of the settle hard against the fire. he sat as always, his hands and
chin resting on the tall crook which he had carried through his working
days, his eyes blank. stretched half under the seat, half under the
table lay his dog, mick, old and retired like his master. the animal was
clearly in the middle of a vivid dream; his paws pedalled the air
spasmodically, his lips and ears twitched and now and then he emitted a
stifled bark. ted dobson nudged me and laughed. "ah reckon awd mick's
still rounding up them sheep." i nodded. there was little doubt the dog
was reliving the great days, crouching and darting, speeding in a wide
arc round the perimeter of the field at his master's whistle. and albert
himself. what lay behind those empty eyes? i could imagine him in his
youth, striding the windy up-

lands, covering endless miles over moor and rock and beck, digging that
same crook into the turf at every step. there were no fitter men than
the dales shepherds, living in the open in all weathers, throwing a sack
over their shoulders in snow and rain. and there was albert now, a
broken, arthritic old man gazing apathetically from beneath the ragged
peak of an ancient tweed cap. i noticed he had just drained his glass
and i walked across the room. "good evening, mr. close," i said. he
cupped an ear with his hand and blinked up at me. "eh?" i raised my
voice to a shout. "how are you, mr. close?" "can't complain, young man,"
he murmured. "can't complain." "will you have a drink?" "aye, thank ye."
he directed a trembling finger at his glass. "you can put a drop pthere,
young man." i knew a drop meant a pint and beckoned to the landlord who
plied his jug expertly. the old shepherd lifted the recharged glass and
looked up at me. "good 'ealth," he grunted. "all the best," i said and
was about to return to my seat when the old dog sat up. my shouts at his
master must have wakened him from his dream because he stretched
sleepily, shook his head a couple of times and looked around him. and as
he turned and faced me i felt a sudden sense of shock. his eyes were
terrible. in fact i could hardly see them as they winked painfully at me
through a sodden fringe of pus-caked lashes. rivulets of discharge
showed dark and ugly against the white hair on either side of the nose.
i stretched my hand out to him and the dog wagged his tail briefly
before closing his eyes and keeping them closed. it seemed he felt
better that way. i put my hand on albert's sboulder. "mr. close, how
long has he been like this?" "eh?" i increased my volume. "mick's eyes.
they're in a bad state." "oh aye." the old man nodded in comprehension.
"he's got a bit o' caud in 'em. he's allus been subjeck to it ever
since'e were a pup." "no, it's more than cold, it's his eyelids." i took
a deep breath and let go at the top of my voice. "he~s got turned-in
eyelids. it's rather a serious thing." the old man nodded again. "aye,'e
lies a lot wi' his head at foot of t'door. ivs draughty there." "no, mr.
clo,sel" i bawled. "ifs got nothing to do with that. it's a thing called
entropion and it needs an operation to put it right." "that's right,
young man." he took a sip at his beer. "just a bit o' caud. ever since
he were a pup he's been subjeck. .." i turned away wearily and returned
to my seat. ted dobson looked at me enquiringly. "what was that about?"
"well, it's a nasty thing, ted. entropion is when the eyelids are turned
in and the lashes rub against the eyeball. causes a lot of pain,
sometimes ulceration or even blindness. even a mild case is damned
uncomfortable for a dog." "i see," ted said ruminatively. "ah've noticed
awd mick's had mucky eyes for a long time but they've got worse lately."
"yes, sometimes it happens like that, but often it's congenital. i
should think mick has had a touch of it all his life but for some reason
it's suddenly developed to this horrible state." i turned again towards
the old dog, sitting patiently under the table, eyes still tight shut
"he's sufferin' then?" i shrugged my shoulders. "well, you know what
it's like if you have a speck of dust in your eyes or even one lash
turned in. i should say he feels pretty miserable." "poor awd beggar. ah
never knew it was owl like that." he drew on his cigarette. "and could
an operation cure it?" "yes, ted, it's one of the most satisfying jobs a
vet can do. i always feel i've done a dog a good turn when i've
finished." "aye, ah bet you do. it must be a nice feelin. but it'll be a
costly job, ah reckon?" i smiled wryly. "it depends how you look at it.
it's a fiddly business and takes time. we usually charge about a pound
for it." a human surgeon would laugh at a sum like that, but it would
still be too much for old albert. for a few moments we were both silent,
looking across the room at the old man, at the threadbare coat, the long
taller of trouser bottoms falling over the broken boots. a pound was two
weeks of the old age pension. it was a f4irtune. ted got up suddenly.
"any road, somebody ought to tell 'im. ah'll explain it to 'im. " he
crossed the room. "are ye ready for another, albert?" the old shepherd
glanced at him absently then indicated his glass, empty again. "aye, ye
can put a drop p there, ted." the cowman waved to mr. waters then bent
down. "did ye understand what mr. herriot was tellin' ye, albert?" be
shouted. "aye ... aye ... mick's got a bit o' caud in 'is eyes." "nay,'e
hasn'tl it's nowt of t'soart! it's a en ... a en. . summat different."
"keeps getting' caud in 'em." albert muinbled, nose in glass. ted yelled
in exasperation. "ye daft awd divil! listen to what ah'm sayin'-ye've
got to take care of 'irn and . . ." but the old man was far away. "ever
sin'e were a pup ... allus been subjeck to it ...... though mick took my
mind off my own troubles at the time, the memory of those eyes haunted
me for days. i yearned to get my hands on them. i knew an hour's work
would transport the old dog into a world he perhaps had not known for
years, and every instinct told me to rush back to copton, throw him in
the car and bear him back to darrowby for surgery. i wasn't worried
about the money but you just can't run a practice that way. i regularly
saw lame dogs on farms, skinny cats on the streets and it would have
been lovely to descend on each and every one and minister to them out of
my knowledge. in fact i had tried a bit of it and it didn't work. it was
ted dobson who put me out of my pain. he bad come in to the town to see
his sister for the evening and he stood leaning on his bicycle in the
surgery doorway, his cheerful, scrubbed face gleaming as if it would
light up the street. he came straight to the point. "wm ye do that
operation on awd mick, mr. herriot?"

"yes, of course, but ... how about ... t' "oh that'll be right. t'lads
at'fox and hounds are seein' to it. we're takin' it out of the club
money." "club money?" "aye, we put in a bit every week for an outin' in
t'summer. trip to t'seaside or summat like." "well, it's e3aremely kind
of you, ted, but are you quite sure? won't any of them mind?" ted
laughed. "nay, it's nowt, we won't miss a quid. we drink ower much on
them do's anyway." he paused. "all flads want this job done-it's been
getting' on our bloody nerves watchin' t'awd dog ever since you told as
about'im." "well, that's great," i said. "how will you get him down?"
"me boss is lendin' me 'is van. wednesday night be all right?" "fine." i
watched him ride away then turned back along the passage. it may seem to
modem eyes that a lot of fuss had been made over a pound but in those
days it was a very substantial sum, and some idea may be gained from the
fact that four pounds a week was my commencing salary as a veterinary
surgeon.

when wednesday night arrived it was clear that micks operation had
become something of a gala occasion. the little van was crammed with
regulars from the fox and hounds and others rolle(f up on their
bicycles. the old dog slunk fearfully down the passage to the operating
room, nostrils twitching at the unfamiliar odours, of ether and
antiseptic. behind him trooped the noisy throng of farm men, their heavy
boots clattering on the tiles. tristan, who was doing the anaesthesia,
hoisted the dog on the table and i looked around at the unusual
spectacle of rows of faces regarding me with keen anticipation. normally
i am not in favour of lay people witnessing operations but since these
men were sponsoring the whole thing they would have to stay. under the
lamp i got my first good look at mick. he was a handsome, well-marked
animal except for those dreadful eyes. as he sat there he opened them a
fraction and peered at me for a painful moment before closing them
against the bright light; that, i felt, was how he spent his life,
squinting carefully and briefly at his surroundings. giving him the
intravenous barbiturate was like doing him a favour, ridding him of his
torment for a while. and when he was stretched unconscious on his side i
was able to carry out my first examination. i parted the lids, wincing
at the matted lashes, awash with tears and discharge; there was a long
standing keratitis and conjunctivitis but with a gush of relief i found
that the cornea was not ulcerated. "you know," i said. "this is a mess,
but i don't think there's any permanent damage." the farm men didn't
exactly break -into a cheer but they were enormously pleased. the
carnival air was heightened as they chattered and laughed and when i
poised my scalpel it struck me that i had never operated in such a noisy
environment. but i felt almost gleeful as i made the first incision-, i
had been looking forward so much to this moment. starting with the left
eye i cut along the full length parallel to the margin of the lid then
made a semicircular sweep of the knife to include half an inch of the
tissue above the eye. seizing the skin with forceps i stripped it away,
and as i drew the lips of the bleeding wound together with stitches i
noticed with intense gratification how the lashes were pulled high and
away from the corneal surface theyhad irritated, perhaps for years. i
cut away less skin from the lower lid-you never need to take so much
there-then started on the right eye. i was slicing away happily when i
realised that the noise had subsided; there were a few mutterings, but
the chaff and laughter had died. i glanced up and saw big ken appleton,
the horseman from laurel grove; it was natural that he should catch my
eye, because he was six feet four and built like the shires he cared
for. "by gaw, it's 'of in 'ere," he whispered, and i could see he meant
it because sweat was streaming down his face. i was engrossed in my work
or i would have noticed that he wasn't only sweating but deadly pate. i
was stripping the skin from the eyelid when i heard tristan's yell.
"catch him!" the big man's surrounding friends supported him as he slid
gently to the floor and be- stayed there, sleeping peacefully, till i
had inserted the last stitch. then as tris-

tan and i cleaned up and put the instruments away he began to look
around him and his companions helped him to his feet. now that the
cutting was over the life had returned to the party and ken came in for
some leg-pulling; but his was not the only white face. "i think you
could do with a drop of whisky, ken," tristan said. he left the room and
returned with a bottle which, with typical hospitality, he dispensed to
all. beakers, measuring glasses and test tubes were pressed into service
and soon there was a boisterous throng around the sleeping dog. when the
van finally roared off into the night the last thing i heard was the
sound of singing from the packed interior. they brought mick back in ten
days for removal of the stitches. the wounds had healed well but the
keratitis had still not cleared and the old dog was still blinking
painfully. i didn't see the final result of my work for another month.
it was when i was again driving home through copton from an evening call
that the lighted doorway of the fox and hounds recalled me to the little
operation which had been almost forgotten in the rush of new work. i
went in and sat down among the familiar faces. things were uncannily
like before. old albert close in his usyal place, mick stretched under
the table, his twitching feet testifying to another vivid dream. i
watched him closely until i could stand it no longer. as, if 41rawn by a
magnet i crossed the room and crouched by him: "mick!" i said. "hey,
wake up, boy!" the quivering limbs stiffed and there was a long moment
when i held my breath as the shaggy head turned towards me. then with a
kind of blissful disbelief i found myself gazing into the wide, clear,
bright eyes of a young dog. warm wine flowed richly through my veins as
he faced me, mouth open in a panting grin, tail swishing along the stone
flags. there was no inflammation, no discharge, and the lashes, clean
and dry, grew in a soft arc well clear of the corneal surface which they
had chafed and rasped for so long. i stroked his head and as he began to
look around him eagerly i felt a thrill of utter delight at the sight of
the old animal exulting in his freedom, savouring the new world which
had opened to him. i could see ted dobson and the other men smiling
conspiratorially as i stood up.

"mr. close," i shouted. "will you have a drink?" "aye, you can put a
drop i' there, young man." "mick's eyes are a lot better." the old man
raised his glass. "good 'ealth. aye, it were nob but a bit o' caud." "but
mr. close ... !" "nasty thing, is caud in veyes. tawd feller keeps lyin'
in that door'ole and ah-, reckon he'll get it again. ever since 'e were
a pup vs been subjeck . . ." chapter 15. 15

as i bent over the wash basin in the "ablutions" and went into another
violent paroxysm of coughing i had a growing and uncomfortable
conviction that 1 was a mere pawn. the big difference between my present
existence and my old life as a vet was that i used to make up my own
mind as to how i would do things, whereas in the raf all the decisions
which affected me were made by other people. i didn't much like being a
pawn because the lives of us lowly airmen were ruled by a lot of notions
and ideas dreamed up by individuals so exalted that we never knew them.
and so many of these ideas seemed crazy to me. for instance, who decided
that all our bedroom windows should be nailed open throughout a
yorkshire winter so that the healthy mist could swirl straight from the
black ocean and settle icily on our beds as we slept? the result was an
almost one hundred percent incidence of bronchitis in our flight, and
in the mornings the grand hotel sounded like a chest sanatorium with a
harrowing chorus of barks and wheezes. the cough seized me again,
racking my body, threatening to dislodge my eyeballs. it was a
temptation to report sick but i hadn't done it yet. most of the lads
stuck it out till they had roaring fevers before going sick and by now,
at the end of february, nearly all of them had spent a few days in
hospital. i was one of the few who hadn't. maybe there was a bit of
bravado in my stand-because most of them were eighteen- or
nineteen-year-olds and i was a comparatively old man in my twenties-but
there were two other reasons. firstly, it was very often after i had got
dressed and been unable to eat breakfast that i 131

felt really m. but by then it was too late. you had to report sick
before seven o'clock or suffer till next day. another reason was that i
didn't like the look of the sick parade. as i went out to the corridor
with my towel round my shoulders a sergeant was reading a list and
inflating his lungs at the same time. "get.on parade, the sickl" he
shouted. "c'mon, c'mon, let's be 'avin'youl" from various doors an
unhappy group of invalids began to appear, shuffling over the linoleum,
each draped with his "small kit," haversack containing pyjamas, canvas
shoes, knife, fork, spoon, etc. the sergeant unleashed another bellow.
"get into line, therel come on, you lot, hurry it up, look livelyl" i
looked at the young men huddled there, white-faced and trembling. most
of them were coughing and spluttering and one of them clutched his
abdomen as though he had a ruptured appendix. "paradel" bawled the
sergeant. "parade, aften-shunl parade stan'-at easel atten-shunl le-eft
tuml qui-ick marchl 'eft-ight,'eft-ight, left-light, 'eft-lightill the
hapless band trailed wearily off. they had a march of nearly a mile
througk the rain to the sick quarters in another hotel above the spa,
and as i turned into my room it was with a renewed resolve to hang on as
long as possible. another thing that frightened us all for a spell was
the suggestion, drifting down from somewhere on high, that it wasn't
enough to go jogging around scarborough on our training runs; we ought
to stop every now and then and do a bit of shadow boxing like fighters.
this idea seemed too outrageous to be true but we had it from the
sergeant himself, who came with us on our runs. some vip had passed it
down, claiming that it would instil belligerence in us. we were
thoroughly alarmed for a while, including the sergeant, who hadino
desire to be seen in charge of a bunch of apparent lunatics dancing
around punching at the air. mercifully, somebody had the strength to
resist this one and the whole thing fell through. but of all these
brilliant schemes the one i remember best was the one that decided we
had to scream at the end of our physical training session. apart from
running miles all over the place, we had long periods of pt down on the
rain-swept prom with the wind cutting in from the sea on i our
goose-pimpled limbs. we became so good at these exercises that it was
decided to put on a show for a visiting air marshal. not only our flight
but several squadrons all performing in unison in front of the grand. we
trained for months for the big day, doing the same movements over and
over again till we were perfect. at first the barrel-chested pt sergeant
shouted instructions at us all the time, then as we got better all he
did was call out "exercise three, commence." and finally it all became
so much a part of our being that he merely sounded a tiny peep on his
whistle at the beginning of each exercise. by spring we were really
impressive. hundreds of men in shorts and singlets swinging away as one
out there on the square, with the pt sergeant up on the balcony above
the doorway where he would stand with the air marshal on the day. the
thing that made it so dramatic was the utter silence; the forest of
waving limbs and swaying bodies with not a sound but the peep of the
whistle. everything was lovely till somebody had the idea of the
screaming. up till then we had marched silently from the square at the
end of the session, but that was apparently not good enough. what we had
to do now was count up to five at the end of the last exercise, then
leap into the air, scream at the top of our voices and run off the
square at top speed. and i had to adn-dt that it seemed quite a
brain wave. we tried it a few times, then we began to put our hearts into
it, jumping high, yelling like dervishes then scuttling away into the
various openings among the hotels around the square. it must have looked
marvelous from the balcony. the great mass of white-clad men going
through the long routine in a cathedral hush, a few seconds of complete
immobility at the end then the whole concourse erupting with a wild yell
and disappearing, leaving the empty square echoing. and this last touch
had another desirable aspect; it was further proof of our latent
savagery. the enemy would have quaked at that chilling sound. the
sergeant had a little trouble with a lad in my flight, a tall gangling
red-haired youth called cromarty who stood in the line in front of me a
few feet to my right. cromarty seemed unable to enter into the spirit of
the thing.

"come on, lad," the sergeant said one day. "put a bit of devil into it!
you got to sound like a killer. you're floating up and down there like a
ruddy fairy godmother." cromarty did try, but the thing seemed to
embarrass him. he gave a little hop, an apologetic jerk of his arms and
a feeble cry. the sergeant ran his hand through his hair. "no, no, ladl
you've got to let yourself gol" he looked around him. "here, devlin,
come out and show'im how it's done." devlin, a grinning irishman,
stepped forward. the scream was the high point of his day. he stood
relaxed for a moment then without warning catapulted himself high in the
air, legs and arms splayed, head back, while a dreadful animal cry burst
from his gaping mouth. the sergeant took an involuntary step backwards.
"thanks, devlin, that's fine," he said a little shakily, then he turned
to cromarty. "now you see how i want it, boy, just like that. so work at
it." cromarty nodded. he had a long, serious face and you could see he
wanted to oblige. after that i watched him each day and there was no
doubt he was improving. his inhibitions were gradually being worn down.
it seemed that nature was smiling on our efforts because the great day
dawned with blue skies and warm sunshine. every man among the hundreds
who marched out into the square had been individually prepared. newly
bathed, fresh haircut, spotless white shorts and singlet. we waited in
our motionless, lines before the newly painted door of the grand while,
on the balcony above, gold braid glinted on the air marshal's cap. he
stood among a knot of the top raf brass of scarborough, while in one
corner i could see our sergeant, erect in long white flannels, his great
chest sticking out further than ever. beneath us the sea shimmered and
the golden bay curved away to the filey cliffs. the sergeant raised his
hand. "peep" went the whistle and we were off. there was something
exhilarating about being part of this smooth machine. i had a wonderful
sense of oneness with the arms and legs which moved with mine all
around. it was effortless. we had ten exercises to do and at the end of
the first we stood rigid for ten seconds, then the whistle piped and we
started again. the time passed too quickly as i revelled in our perfection. at the er~d of exercise nine i came to attention, waiting for the
whistle, counting under my breath. nothing stirred, the silence was
profound. then, from the motionless ranks, as unexpected as an exploding
bomb, cromarty in front of me launched himself upwards in a tangle of
flailing limbs and red hair and unleashed a long bubbling howl. he had
put so much into his leap that he seemed to take a long time to come
down and even after his descent the shattering sound echoed on. cromarty
had made it at last. as fierce and warlike a scream, as high a jump as
ever the sergeant could desire. the only snag was that he was too soon.
when the whistle went for the last exercise a lot of people didn't hear
it because of the noise and many others were in a state of shock and
came in late. anyway, it was a shambles and the final yell and scuttle a
sad anticlimax. i myself, though managing to get a few inches off the
ground, was unable to make any sound at all.

had cromarty not been serving in the armed'forces of a benign democracy
he would probably have been taken quietly away and shot. as it was,
there was really nothing anybody could do to him. ncos weren't even
allowed to swear at the men. i felt for the pt sergeant. there must have
been a. lot he wanted to say but he was grievously restricted. i saw him
with cromarty later. he put his face close to the young man's. "you . .
. you his features worked as he fought for words. "you tmng you!" he
turned and walked away with bowed shoulders. at that moment i'm sure he
felt like a pawn too. chapter 16. 16

there is no doubt that when i looked back at my life in darrowby i was
inclined to bathe the whole thing in a rosy glow, but occasionally the
unhappy things came to mind. that man, distraught and gasping on the
surgery steps. "i's no good, i can't bring him in. he's stiff as a board
i" my stomach lurched. it was another one. "jasper, you mean?" "yes,
he's in the back of my car, right here." i ran across the pavement and
opened the car door. it was as i feared; a handsome dalmatian stretched
in a dreadful tetanic spasm, spine arched, head craning desperately
backward, legs like four wooden rods groping at nothing. i didn't wait
to talk but dashed back into the house for syringe and drugs. i leaned
into the car, tucked some papers under the dog's head, injected the
apomorphine and waited. the man looked at me with anxious eyes. "what is
it?" "strychnine poisoning, mr. battle. i've just given an emetic to
make him vomit." as i spoke the animal brought up the contents of his
stomach on to the paper. "will that put him right?" "it depends on how
much of the poison has been absorbed." i didn't feel like telling him
that it was almost invariably fatal, that in fact i had treated six dogs
in the last week with the same condition and they had all died. "we'll
just have to hope." he watched me as i filled another syringe with
barbiturate. "what are you doing now?" "anaesthetising him." i slipped
the needle into the radial vein and as i slowly trickled the fluid into
the dog's bloodstream the taut muscles relaxed and he sank into a deep
slumber. 136

"he looks better already," mr. battle said. "yes, but the trouble is
when the injection wears off he may go back into a spasm. as i say, it
all depends on how much of the strychnine has got into his system. keep
him in a quiet place with as little noise as possible. any sound can
bring on a spasm. when he shows signs of coming out of it give me a
ring." i went back into the house. seven cases in a week! it was tragic
and scarcely believable, but there was no doubt left in my mind now.
this was malicious. some psychopath in our little town was deliberately
putting down poison to kill dogs. strychnine poisoning was something
that cropped up occasionally. gamekeepers and other people used the
deadly drug to kill vermin, but usually it was handled with great care
and placed out of reach of domestic pets. trouble started when a
burrowing dog came across the poison by accident. but this was
different. i had to warn pet owners somehow. i lifted the 'phone and
spoke to one of the reporters on the darrowby and houlton times. he
promised to put the story in the next edition, along with advice to keep
dogs on their leads and otherwise supervise pets more carefully. then i
rang the police. the sergeant listened to my account. "right, mr.
herriot, i agree with you that there's some crackpot going around and
we'll certainly investigate this matter. if you'll just give me the
names of the dog owners involved . . . thank you . . . thank you. we'll
see these people and check round the local chemists to see if anybody
has been buying strychnine lately. and of course we'll keep our eyes
open for anybody acting suspiciously." i came away from the 'phone
feeling that i might have done something to halt the depressing series
of events, but i couldn't rid myself of a gloomy apprehension that more
trouble was round the corner. but my mood lightened when i saw Johnny
clifford in the waiting room. Johnny always made me feel better because
he was invariably optimistic and wore a cheerful grin which never
altered, even though he was blind. he was about my own age and he sat
there in his habitual pose, one hand on the head of his guide dog,
fergus. "is it inspection time again already,, Johnny?" i asked. "aye,
it is that, mr. herriot, it's come round again. it's been a quick six
months." he laughed and held out his card.

i squatted and looked into the face of the big alsatian sitting
motionless and dignified by his master's side. "well, and how's fergus
these days?" "oh he's in grand fettle. eatin' well and full of life."
the hand on the head moved round to the ears and at the other end the
tail did a bit of sweeping along the waiting room floor. as i looked at
the young man, his face alight with pride and affection, i realised
afresh what this dog meant to him. he had told me that when his failing
sight progressed to total blindness in his early twenties he was filled
with a despair which did not lessen until he was sent to train with a
guide dog and met fergus; because he found something more than another
living creature to act as his eyes, he found a friend and companion to
share every moment of his days. . "well, we'd better get started," i
said. "stand up a minute, old lad, while i take your temperature." that
was normal and i went over the big animal's chest with a stethoscope,
listening to the reassuringly steady thud of the heart. as i parted the
hair along the neck and back to examine the skin i laughed. "i'm wasting
my time here, Johnny. you've got his coat in perfect condition." "aye,
never a day goes by but he gets a good groomin,.,, i had seen him at it,
brushing and combing tirelessly to bring extra lustre to the sleek
swathes of hair. the nicest thing anybody could say to Johnny was,
"that's a beautiful dog you've got." his pride in that beauty was
boundless even though he had never seen it himself. treating guide dogs
for the blind has always seemed to me to be one of a veterinary
surgeon's most rewarding tasks. to be in a position to help and care for
these magnificent animals is a privilege, not just because they are
highly trained and valuable but because they represent in the ultimate
way something which has always lain near the core and centre of my life:
the mutually depending, trusting and loving association between man and
animal. meeting these blind people was a humbling experience which sent
me about my work with a new appreciation of my blessings. i opened the
dog's mouth and peered at the huge gleaming teeth. it was dicing with
danger to do this with some alsatians, but with fergus you could haul
the great jaws apart and nearly put your head in and he would only lick
your ear. in fact he was at it now. my cheek was nicely within range and
he gave it a quick wipe with his large wet tongue. "hey, just a minute,
fergust" i withdrew and plied my handkerchief. "i've had a wash this
morning. aild anyway, only little dogs lick-not big tough alsatians-"
Johnny threw back his head and gave a great peal of laughter. "there's
nowt tough about him, he's the softest dog you could ever meet." "well,
that's the way i like them," i said. i reached for a tooth scaler.
"there's just a bit of tartar on one of his back teeth. i'll scrape it
off right now." when i had finished i looked in the ears with an
auroscope. there was no canker but i cleaned out a little wax. then i
went round the feet, examining paws and claws. they always fascinated
me, these feet; wide, enormous, with great spreading toes. they had to
be that size to support the big body and the massive bones of the limbs.
"all correct except that one funny claw, Johnny." "aye, you allus have
to trim that 'un, don't you? i could feel it was growin' long again."
"yes, that toe seems to be slightly crooked or it would wear down eke
the others with all the walking he does. you have a great time going on
walks all day, don't you, fergus?" i dodged another attempted lick and
closed my clippers around the claw. i had to squeeze till my eyes popped
before the overgrown piece shot away with a loud crack. "by gosh, we'd
go through some clippers if all dogs had claws like that," i gasped. "it
just about does them in every time he calls." Johnny laughed again and
dropped his hand on the great head with that gesture which said so much.
i took the card and entered my report on the dog's health along with the
things i had done. then i dated it and handed it back. "that's it for
this time, Johnny. he's in excellent order and there's nothing more i
need do to him.." "thank you, mr. herriot. see you next time round,
then." the young man took hold of the harness and i followed the two of
them along the passage and out of the front door. i watched as fergus
halted by the kerb and waited till a car had passed before crossing the
road. they hadn't gone very far along the road when a woman with a
shopping bag stopped them. she began to chatter animatedly, looking down
repeatedly at the big dog. she was talking about fergus and Johnny
rested his hand on the noble head and nodded and smiled. fergus was his
favourite topic.

shortly after midday mr. battle rang to say jasper showed signs of
returning spasms and before sitting down to lunch i rushed round to his
house and repeated the barbiturate injection. mr. battle owned one of
the local mills, producing cattle food for the district. he was a very
bright man indeed. "mr. herriot," he said. "please don't misunderstand
me. i have every faith in you, but isn't there anything else you can do?
i am so very fond of this dog." i shrugged helplessly. "i'm sorry, but i
can't do any more." "but is there no antidote to this poison?" "no, i'm
afraid there isn't." "well. . . ." he looked down with drawn face at the
unconscious animal. "what's going on? what's happening to jasper when he
goes stiff like he did? i'm only a layman but i like to understand
things." "i'll try to explain it," i said. "strychnine is absorbed into
the nervous system and it increases the conductivity of the spinal
cord." "what does that mean?" "it means that the muscles become more
sensitive to outside stimuli so that the slightest touch or sound throws
them into violent contractions." "but why does a dog stretch out like
that?" "because the extensor muscles are stronger than the flexors,
causing the back to be arched and the legs extended." he nodded. "i see,
but . . . i believe it is usually fatal. what is it that. . . kills
them?" "they die of asphyxia due to paralysis of the respiratory centre
or contraction of the diaphragm." maybe he wanted to ask more, but it
was painful for him and he stayed silent. "there's one thing i'd like
you to know, mr. battle," i said. "it is almost certainly not a painful
condition."

"thank you." he bent and briefly stroked the sleeping dog. "so nothing
more can be done?" ishook my head. "the barbiturate keeps the spasms in
abeyance and we'll go on hoping he hasn't absorbed too much strychnine.
i'll call back later, or you can ring me if he gets worse. i can be here
in a few minutes." driving away, i pondered on the irony that made
darrowby a paradise for dog killers as well as dog lovers. there were
grassy tracks everywhere; wandering by the river's edge, climbing the
fell-sides and coiling green and tempting among the heather on the high
tops. i often felt sympathy for pet owners in the big cities, trying to
find places to walk their dogs. here in darrowby we could take our pick.
but so could the poisoner. he could drop his deadly bait unobserved in a
hundred different places. i was finishing the afternoon surgery when the
'phone rang. it was mr. battle. "has he started the spasms again?" i
asked. there was a pause. "no, i'm afraid jasper is dead. he never
regained consciousness." "oh . . . i'm very sorry." i felt a dull
despair. that was the seventh death in a week. "well, thank you for your
treatment, mr. herriot. i'm sure nothing could have saved him." i hung
up the 'phone wearily. he was right. nothing or nobody could have done
any good in this case, but it didn't help. if you finish up with a dead
animal there is always the feeling of defeat. next day i was walking on
to a farm when the farmer's wife called to me. "i have a message for you
to ring back to the surgery." i heard helen's voice at the other end.
"jack brimham has just come in with his dog. i think it's another
strychnine case." i excused myself and drove back to darrowby at top
speed. jack brimham was a builder. he ran a one-man business and
whatever job he was on-repairing roofs or walls or chinineys-his little
white rough-haired terrier went with him, and you could usually see the
little animal nosing among the piles of bricks, exploring in the
surrounding fields. jack was a friend, too. i often had a beer with him
at the drovers' arms and i recognised his van outside the surgery. i
trotted along the passage and found him leaning over the table in the
consulting room. his dog was stretched there in that attitude which i
dreaded. "he's gone, jim," he muttered. i looked at the shaggy little
body. there was no movement, the eyes stared silently. the legs, even in
death, strained across the smooth surface of the table. it was
pointless, but i slipped my hand inside the thigh and felt for the
femoral artery. there was no pulse. "i'm sorry, jack," i said. he didn't
answer for a moment. "i've been readin' about this in the paper, jim,
but i never thought it would happen to me. it's a bugger, isn't it?" i
nodded. he was a craggy-faced man, a tough yorkshireman with a humour
and integrity which i liked and a soft place inside which his dog had
occupied. i did not know what to say to him. "who's doin' this?" he
said, half to himself. "i don't know, jack. nobody knows." "well i wish
i could have five minutes with him, that's all." he gathered the rigid
little form into his arms and went out. my troubles were not over for
that day. it was about 11 p.m. and i had just got into bed when helen
nudged me. "i think there's somebody knocking at the front door, jim." i
opened the window and looked out. old boardman, the lame veteran of the
first war who did odd jobs for us, was standing on the steps. "mr.
herriot," he called up to me. "i'm sorry to bother you at this hour, but
patch is ill." i leaned further out. "what's he doing?" "he's like a bit
o' wood-stiff like, and laid on 'is side." i didn't bother to dress,
just pulled my working corduroys over my pyjamas and went down the
stairs two at a time. i grabbed what i needed from the dispensary and
opened the front door. the old man, in shirt sleeves, caught at my arm.
"come quickly, mr. herriot!" he limped ahead of me to his little house
about twenty yards away in the lane round the corner. patch was like all
the others. the fat spaniel i had seen so often waddling round the top
yard with his master was in that nightmare position on the kitchen
floor, but he had vomited, which gave me hope. i administered the
intravenous injection but as i withdrew the needle the breathing
stopped. mrs. boardman, in nightgown and slippers, dropped on her knees
and stretched a trembling hand towards the motionless animal. "patch
.... 11 she turned and stared at me, wide-eyed. "he's dead!" i put my
hand on the old woman's shoulder and said some sympathetic words. i
thought grimly that i wa~ getting good at it. as i left i looked back at
the two old people. boardman was kneeling now by his wife and even after
i had closed the door i could hear their voices: "patch ... oh patch." i
almost reeled over the few steps to skeldale house and before going in i
stood in the empty street breathing the cool air and trying to calm my
racing thoughts. with patch gone, this thing was getting very near home.
i saw that dog every day. in fact all the dogs that had died were old
friends-in a little town like darrowby you came to know your patients
personally. where was it going to end? i didn't sleep much that night
and over the next few days i'was obsessed with apprehension. i expected
another poisoning with every 'phone call and took care never to let my
own dog, sam, out of the car in the region of the town. thank& to my job
i was able to exercise him miles away on the summits of the fells, but
even there i kept him close to me. by the fourth day i was beginning to
feel more re~ laxed. maybe the nightmare was over. i was driving home in
the late afternoon past the row of grey cottages at the end of the
houlton road when a woman ran waving into the road. "oh, mr. herriot,"
she cried when i stopped. "i was just going' to t'phone box when i saw
you." i pulled up by the kerb. "it's mrs. clifford, isn't it?" "yes,
Johnny's just come in and fergus 'as gone queer. collapsed and laid on
t'floor." "oh nol" an icy chill drove through me and for a moment i
stared at her, unable to move. then i threw open the car door and
hurried after Johnny's mother into the end cottage. i halted abruptly in
the little room and stared down in horror. the very sight of the
splendid dignified animal scrabbling helplessly on the linoleum was a
desecration, but strychnine is no respecter of such things. "oh god!" i
breathed. "has he vomited, Johnny?" "aye, me mum said he was sick in
t'back garden when we came in." the young man was sitting very upright
in a chair by the side of his dog. even now there was a half smile on
his face, but he looked strained as he put out his hand in the old
gesture and failed to find the head that should have been there. the
bottle of barbiturate wobbled in my shaking hand as i filled the
syringe. i tried to put away the thought that i was doing what i had
done to all the others-all the dead ones. at my feet fergus panted
desperately, then as i bent over him he suddenly became still and went
into the horrible distinctive spasm, the great limbs i knew so well
straining frantically into space, the head pulled back grotesquely over
the spine. this was when they died, when the muscles were at full
contraction. as the barbiturate flowed into the vein i waited for signs
of relaxation but saw none. fergus was about twice as heavy as any of
the other victims i had treated and the plunger went to the end of the
syringe without result. quickly i drew in another dose and began to
inject it, my tension building as i saw how much i was administering.
the recommended dose was 1 cc per 5 lb. body weight and beyond that you
could kill the animal. i watched the gradations on the glass barrel of
the syringe and my mouth went dry when the dose crept far beyond the
safety limit. but i knew i had to relieve this spasm and continued to
depress the plunger relentlessly. i did it in the grim knowledge that if
he died now i would never know whether to blame the strychnine or myself
for his death_. the big dog had received more than a lethal amount
before peace began to return to the taut body and even then i sat back
on my heels, almost afraid to look in case i had brought about his end.
there was a long agonising moment when he lay still and apparently
lifeless then the rib cage began to move almost imperceptibly as the
breathing recommenced. even then i was in suspense. the anaesthesia was
so deep that he was only just alive, yet i knew that the only hope was
to keep him that way. i sent mrs. clifford out to 'phone siegfried that
i would be tied up here for a while, then i pulled up a chair and
settled down to wait. the hours passed as Johnny and i sat there, the
dog stretched between us.- the young man discussed the case calmly and
without self-pity. there was no suggestion that this was anything more
than a pet animal lying at his feet -except for the tell-tale reaching
for the head that was no longer there. several times fergus showed signs
of going into another spasm and each time i sent him back into his deep,
deep insensibility, pushing him repeatedly to the brink with a fateful
certainty that it was the only way. ifwas well after midnight when i
came sleepily out into the darkness. i felt drained. watching the life
of the friendly, clever, face-licking animal flicker as he lay inert and
unheeding had been a tremendous strain, but i had left him
sleeping-still anaesthetised but breathing deeply and regularly. would
he wake up and start the dread sequence again? i didn't know and i
couldn't stay any longer. there was a practice with other animals to
attend to. but my anxiety jerked me into early wakefulness next morning.
i tossed around till seven thirty telling myself this wasn't the way to
be a veterinary surgeon, that. you couldn't live like this. but my worry
was stronger than the voice of reason and i slipped out before breakfast
to the roadside cottage. my nerves were like a bowstring as i knocked on
the door. mrs. clifford answered and i was about to blurt out my
enquiries when fergus trotted from the inner room. he was still a little
groggy from the vast dosage of barbiturate but he was'relaxed and happy,
the symptoms had gone, he was himself again. with a gush of pure joy i
knelt and took the great head between my hands. he slobbered at me
playfully with his wet tongue and i had to fight him off. he followed me
into the living room where Johnny was seated at the table, drinking tea.
he took up his usual position, sitting upright and proud by his master's
side. , "you'll have a cup, mr. herriot?" mrs. clifford asked, poising
the teapot. "thanks, i'd love one, mrs. clifford," i replied.

no tea ever tasted better and as i sipped i watched the young man's
smiling face. "what a relief, mr. herriot! i sat up with him all night,
listenin' to the chimes of the church clock. it was just after four when
i knew we'd won because i heard 'im get to his feet and sort o' stagger
about. i stopped worryin' then, just listened to 'is feet patterin' on
the linoleum. it was lovely!" he turned his bead to me and i looked at
the slightly upturned eyes in the cheerful face. "i'd have been lost
without fergus," he said softly. "i don't know how to thank you." but as
he unthinkingly rested his hand on the head of the big dog who was his
pride and delight i felt that the gesture alone was all the thanks i
wanted.

that was the end of the strychnine poisoning outbreak in darrowby. the
older people still talk about it, but nobody ever had the slightest clue
to the identity of the kifler and it is a mystery to this day. i feel
that the vigilance of the police and the publicity in the press
frightened this twisted person off, but anyway it just stopped and the
only cases since then have been accidental ones. to me it is a sad
memory of failure and frustration. fergus was my only cure and i'm not
sure why he recovered. maybe the fact that i pushed the injection to
dangerous levels because i was desperate had something to do with it, or
maybe he just didn't pick up as much poison as the others. i'll never
know. but over the years when i saw the big dog striding majestically in
his harness, leading his master unerringly around the streets of
darrowby,* i always had the same feeling. if there had to be just one
saved, i'm glad it was him. chapter 17. 17

a tender nerve twinged as the old lady passed me the cup of tea. she
looked just like mrs. beck. one of the local churches was having a
social evening to entertain us lonely airmen and as i accepted the cup
and sat down i could hardly withdraw my eyes from the lady's face. mrs.
beck! i could see her now standing by the surgery window. "oooh, i never
thought you were such a 'eartless man, mr. herriot." her chin trembled
and she looked up at me reproachfully. "but mrs. beck," i said. "i
assure you i am not being in the least heartless. i just cannot carry
out a major operation on your cat for ten shillings." "well, i thought
you would've done it for a poor widder woman like me." i regarded her
thoughtfully, taking in the small compact figure, the healthy cheeks,
the neat helmet of grey kair pulled tightly into a bun. was she mally a
poor widow? there was cause for doubt. her next-door neighbour in rayton
village was a confirmed sceptic. "it's all a tale, mr. herriot," he had
said. "she tries it on wi' everybody, but i'll tell you this-she's got a
long stockin'. owns property all over t'place." i took a deep breath.
"mrs. beck. we often do work at redu rates for people who can't afford
to pay, but this is whlue call a luxury operation." i "luxury!" the lady
was aghast. "eec, ah've been tellin' you how georgina keeps havin' them
kittens. she's at it all the time and it's getting' me down. ah can't
sleep for worryin' when vnext lot's comin'." she dabbed her eyes. "i
understand and i'm sorry. i can only tell you again 147

that the only way to prevent this trouble is to spay your cat and the
charge is one pound." "nay, i cant afford that muchl" i spread my hands.
"but you are asking me to do it for half the price. that's ridiculous.
this operation involves the removal of the uterus and ovaries under a
general anaesthetic. you just caif t do a job like that for ten
shillings." "oh, you are cruell" she turned and looked out of the window
and her shoulders began to shake. "you won7t even take pity on a poor
widder." this had been going on for ten minutes and it began to dawn on
me that i was in the presence of a stronger character than myself. i
glanced at my watch-i should have been on my round by now and it was
becoming increasingly obvious that i wasn't going to win this
argument. i sighed. maybe she really was a poor widow. "all right, mrs.
beck, i'll do it for ten shillings, just this once. will tuesday
afternoon be all right for you?" she swung round from the window, her
face crinkling magically into a smile. "that'll suit me grandl eee,
that's right kind of you." she tripped past me and i followed her along
the passage. "just one thing," i said as i held the front door open for
her. "don't give georgina any food,from midday on monday. she must have
an empty stomach when you bring her in." "bringer in?" she was a
picture of bewilderment. "but i 'aven't got no car. i thought you'd be
collectin' her." "collectingl but rayton's five miles away!" "yes, and
bringer back afterwards, too. i 'ave no transport." "collect ...
operate on her ... take her back! all for ten shillingsl" she was still
smiling but a touch of steel glinted in her eyes. "well, that's what you
agreed to charge-ten shillings." "but ... but. . ." "oh now you're
startin' again." the smile faded and she put her head on one side. "amd
i'm only a poor . "okay, okay," i said hastily. "i'll call on tuesday."
and when tuesday afternoon came round i cursed my softness. if that cat
had been been brought in i could have operated on her at two o'clock and
been out on the road doing my farm calls by two thirty. i didn't mind
working at a loss for half an hour, but how long was this business going
to take? on my way out i glanced through the open door of the sitting
room. tristan was supposed to be studying but was sleeping soundly in
his favourite chair. i went in and looked down at him, marvelling at the
utter relaxation, seen only in a dedicated sleeper. his face was as
smooth and untroubled as a baby's, the daily mirror, open at the comic
strips, had fallen across his chest and a burnt-out woodbine hung from
one dangling hand. i shook him gently. "like to come with me, triss?
i've got to pick up a cat." he came round slowly, stretching and
grimacing, but his fundamental good nature soon reasserted itself.
"certainly, jim," he said with a final yawn. "it will be a pleasure."
mrs. beck lived half way down the left side of rayton village. i read
"jasmine cottage" on the brightly painted gate, and as we went up the
garden path the door opened and the little woman waved gaily. "good
afternoon, gentlemen, i'm right glad to see you both." she ushered us
into the living-room among good, solid-looking furniture which showed no
sign of poverty. the open cupboard of a mahogany sideboard gave me a
glimpse of glasses and bottles. i managed to identify scotch, cherry
brandy and sherry before she nudged the door shut with her knee. i
pointed to a cardboard box loosely tied with string. "ah, good, you've
got her in there, have you?" "nay, bless you, she's in t'garden. she
allus has a bit of play out there of an afternoon." "in the garden, eh?"
i said nervously. "well, please get her in, we're in rather a hurry." we
went through a tiled kitchen to the back door. most of these cottages
had a surprising amount of land behind them and mrs. beck's patch was in
very nice order. flower beds bordered a smooth stretch of lawn and the
sunshine drew glittering colours from the apples and pears among the
branches of the trees. "georgina," carolled mrs. beck. "where are you,
my pet?" no cat appeared and she turned to me with a roguish smile. "i
think the little imps playin' a game with* us. she does that, you
know." "really?" i said without enthusiasm. "well, i wish she'd show
herself. i really don't have much . . ." at that moment a very fat tabby
darted from a patch of chrysanthemums and flitted across the grass into
a clump of rhododendrons with tristan in close pursuit. the young man
dived among the greenery and the cat emerged from the other end at top
speed, did a couple of laps of the lawn then shot up a gnarled tree.
tristan, eyes gleaming in anticipation, lifted a couple of windfall
apples from the turf. "i'll soon shift the'bugger from there, jim," he
whispered and took aim. i grabbed his arm. "for heaven's sake, trissl" i
hissed. "you can't do that. put those things down." "oh . . . all
right." he dropped the apples and made for the tree. "i'll get hold of
her for you, anyway." "wait a minute." i seized his coat as he passed.
"i'll do it. you stay down here and try to catch her if she jumps."
tristan looked disappointed but i gave him a warning look. the way the
cat had moved, it struck me that it only needed a bit of my colleague's
ebullience to send the animal winging into the next county. i began to
climb the tree. i like cats, i've always liked them, and since i feel
that animals recognise this in a person i have usually been able to
approach and handle the most difficult types. it is not too much to say
that i prided myself on my cat technique; i didn't foresee any trouble
here. puffing slightly, i reached the top branch and extended a hand to
the crouching animal. "pooss-pooss," i cooed, using my irresistible cat
tone, georgina eyed me coldly and gave no answering sign other than a
higher arching of the back. i leaned further along the branch.
"pooss-pooss, poosspooss." my voice was like molten honey, my finger
near her face. i would rub her cheek ever so gently and she would be
mine. it never failed. "pahl" replied georgina warningly but i took no
heed and touched the fur under her chin. "pah-pah!" georgina spat and
followed with a lightning left hook which opened a bloody track across
the back of my hand.

muttering fervently, i retreated and nursed my wounds. from below mrs.
beck gave a tinkling laugh. "oh, isn't she a little monkeyl she's that
playful, bless her." i snorted and began to ease my way along the branch
again. this time, i thought grimly, i would dispense with finesse. the
quick grab was indicated here. as though reading my thoughts the little
creature tripped to the end of the branch and as it bent low under her
weight she dropped lightly to the grass. tristan was on her in a flash,
throwing himself full length and seizing her by the hind leg. georgina
whipped round and unhesitatingly sank her teeth into his thumb but
tristan's core of resilience showed. after a single howl of agony he
changed his grip at lightning speed to the scruff of the neck. a moment
later he was standing upright holding a dangling fighting fury high in
the air. "right, jim," he called happily. "i have her." "good lad! hang
on!" i said breathlessly and slithered down the tree as quickly as i
could. too quickly, in fact, as an ominous ripping sound announced the
removal of a triangular piece of my jacket elbow. but i couldn't bother
with trifles. ushering tristan at a gallop into the house i opened the
cardboard box. there were no sophisticated cat containers in those days
and it was a tricky job to enclose georgina, who was lashing out in all
directions and complaining bitterly in a bad-term- pered wail. it took a
panting ten minutes to imprison the cat but even with several yards of
rough twine round the floppy cardboard i still didn't feel very secure
as i bore it to the car. mrs. beck raised a finger as we were about to
drive away. i carefully explored my lacerated hand and tristan sucked
his thumb as we waited for her to speak. "mr. herriot, i 'ope you'll be
gentle wither," she said anxiously. "she's very timid, you know." we
bad covered barely half a mile before sounds of strife arose from the
back. "get back! get in there. get back, you bugger!" i glanced behind
me. tristan was having trouble. georgina clearly didn't care for the
motion of the car and from the slits in the box clawed feet issued
repeatedly; on one occasion an enraged spitting face got free as far as
the neck. tristan kept pushing everything back with great resolution but
i could tell from the rising desperation of his cries that he was
fighting a losing battle. i heard the final shout with a feeling of
inevitability. "she's out, jim! the bugger's outt" well this was great.
anybody who has driven a car with a hysterical cat hurtling around the
interior will appreciate my situation. i crouched low over the wheel as
the furry creature streaked round the sides or leaped clawing at the
roof or windscreen with tristan lunging vainly after her. but cruel fate
had not finished with us yet. my colleague's gasps and grunts from the
rear ceased for a moment to be replaced by a horrified shriek. "the
bloody thing's shitting, jiml she's shitting everywhere!" the cat was
obviously using every weapon at her disposal and he didn't have to~ tell
me. my nose was way ahead of him, and i frantically wound down the
window. but i closed it just as quickly at the rising image of georgina
escaping and disappearing into the unknown. i don't like to think of the
rest of that journey. i tried to breathe through my mouth and tristan
puffed out dense clouds of woodbine smoke but it was still pretty
terrible. just outside darrowby i stopped the car and we made a
concerted onslaught on the animal; at the cost of a few more wounds,
including a particularly painful scratch on my nose, we cornered her and
fastened her once more in the box. even on the operating table georgina
had a few tricks left. we were using ether and oxygen as anaesthetic and
she was particularly adept at holding her breath while the mask was on
her face then returning suddenly to violent life when we thought she was
asleep. we were both sweating when she finally went under. i suppose it
was inevitable, too, that she should be a difficult case.
ovaro-hysterectomy in the cat is a fairly straightforward procedure and
nowadays we do innumerable cases uneventfully, but in the thirties,
particularly in country practice, it was infrequently done and consequently a much larger undertaking. i personally had my own preferences
and aversions in this field. for instance, i found thin cats easy to do
and fat cats difficult. georgina was extremely fat. when i opened her
abdomen an ocean of fat welled up at me, obscuring everything, and i
spent a long nerve racking period lifting out portions of bowel or
omenturn with my forceps, surveying them gloomily and stuffing them back
in again. a great weariness had begun to creep over me by the time i at
last managed to grip the pink ovary between the metallic jaws and drew
forth the slender string of uterus. after that it was routine, but i
still felt a strange sense of exhaustion as i inserted the last stitch.
il i put the sleeping cat into the box and beckoned to tristan. "come
on, let's get her home before she comes round." i was starting along the
passage when he put his hand on my arm. "jim," he said gravely. "you
know i'm your friend." "yes, triss, of course." "i'd do anything for
you, jim," "i'm sure you would." he took a deep breath. "except one
thing. i'm not going back in that bloody car." i nodded dully. i really
couldn't blame him. "that's all right," i said. "i'll be off then."
before leaving i sprinkled the interior with pine-smelling disinfectant
but it didn't make much difference. in any case my main emotion was the
hope that georgina wouldn't wake up before i got to rayton, and that was
shattered before i had crossed darrowby market place. the hair prickled
on the back of my neck as an ominous droning issued from the box on the
rear seat. it was like the sound of a distant swarm of bees but i knew
what it meant; the anaesthetic was wearing off. once clear of the town i
put my foot on the boards. this was something i rarely did because
whenever i pushed my vehicle above forty miles an hour there was such a
clamour of protest from engine and body that i always feared the thing
would disintegrate around me. but at this moment i didn't care. teeth
clenched, eyes staring. i hurtled forward, but i didn't see the lonely
strip of tarmac or the stone walls flitting past; all my attention was
focused behind me, where the swarm of bees was getting nearer and the
tone angrier.

when it developed into a bad-tempered yowling and was accompanied by the
sound of strong claws tearing at cardboard i began to tremble. as i
thundered into rayton village 1. glanced behind me. georgina was half
out of the box. i reached back and grasped her scruff and when i stopped
at the gate of jasmine cottage i pulled on the brake with one hand and
lifted her on to my lap with the other. i sagged in the seat, my breath
escaping in a great explosion- of relief; and my stiff features almost
bent into a smile as i saw mrs. beck pottering in her garden. she took
georgina from me with a cry of joy but gasped in horror when she saw the
shaven area and the two stitches on the cat's flank. "oooh, my darling'l
what 'ave those nasty men been doin' to you?" she hugged the animal to
her and glared at me. "she's all right, mrs. beck, she's fine," i said.
"you can give her a little milk tonight and some solid food tomorrow.
there's nothing to worry about." she pouted. "oh, very well. and now. .
she gave me a sidelong glance. "i suppose you'll want your money?"
"weller . . ." "wait there, then. i'll get it." she turned and went
into the house. standing there, leaning against the reeking car, feeling
the sting of the scratches on my hands and nose and examining the long
tear on my jacket elbow i felt physically and emotionally spent. all i
had done this afternoon was spay a cat but i had nothing more to offer.
apathetically i watched the lady coming down the path. she was carrying
a purse. at the gate she stopped and faced me. "ten shillin's, wasn't
it?" "mat's right." she rummaged in the purse for some time before
pulling out a ten-shilling note which was regarded sadly. "oh georgina,
georgina, you are an expensive pussy," she soliloquised. tentatively i
began to extend my hand but she pulled the note away. "just a minute,
i'm forgettin'. you 'ave to take the stitches out, don't you?" "yes, in
ten days."

she set her lips firmly. "well there!s plenty of time to pay ye
then-ye'll be here again." "here again ... ? but you can't expect. . "i
allus think it's unlucky to pay afore a job's finished," she said.
"summat terrible might happen to georgina." "but. . . but ... 11 "nay,
ah've made up me mind," she said. she replaced the money and snapped the
purse shut with an air of finality before turning towards the house.
halfway up the path she looked over her shoulder and smiled. "aye,
that'll be the best way. ye can collect your full fee on your final
visit." chapter 18. is i we were ready to march away from scarborough.
and it was ironical that we were leaving just when the place was
beginning to smile on us. in the may sunshine we stood on parade outside
the grand at 7 a.m. as we had done throughout the yorkshire winter,
mostly in darkness, often with the icy rain blowing in our faces. but
now i felt a pang of regret as i looked over the heads at the wide
beautiful bay stretching beneath its cliffs to the far headland, the
sand cleanwashed and inviting, the great blue expanse of sea shimmering
and glittering and over everything the delicious sea-smell of salt and
seaweed, raising memories of holidays and happy things lost in the war.
"atten-slaun!" flight sergeant blackett's bellow rolled over us as we
stiffened in our ranks, every man carrying full kit, our packs braced
with sheets of cardboard to give the sharp, rectangular look, hair cut
short, boots gleaming, buttons shining like gold. without our knowing,
no. ten itw had moulded us into a smart, disciplined unit, very
different from the shambling, half-baked crew of six months ago. we had
all passed our exams and were no longer ac2s but leading aircraftsmen,
and as lac herriot my wage had rocketed from three shillings to a
dizzying seven and threepence a day. "right turn!" again the roar. "by
the left qui-ick march!" arms high, moving as one, we swung past the
front of the grand for the last time. i shot a parting glance at the
great building-like a dignified victorian lady stripped of her
finery-and i made a resolve. i would come back some day, when the war
was over, and see the grand hotel as it should be. and i did, too. years
later, helen and- i sat in deep 156

armchairs in the lounge where the sps had barked. waiters padded over
the thick carpets with tea and muffins while a string orchestra played
selections from rose marie. and in the evening we dined in the elegant
room with its long unbroken line of window looking down on the sea. this
room had been the cold open terrace where i learned to read the aldis
lamp flickering from the lighthouse, but now we sat in luxurious warmth
eating grilled sole and watching the lights of the harbour and town
beginning to wink in the gathering dusk. but that was very much in the
future as the tramping feet echoed along huntriss row on the way to the
station and the long lines of blue left the emptying square. we didn't
know where we were going, everything was uncertain. black's veterinary
dictionary dug into my back through the layer of cardboard. it was an
unwieldy article but- it reminded me of good days and gave me hope of
more to come. chapter 19. 19

"it's the same the whole world over, it's the poor wot gets the blame.
it's the rich wot gets the pleasure . . ." we were on a "toughening
course," living under canvas in the depths of shropshire, and this was
one of the occasions when we were all gathered t6gether-hundreds of
sunburned men-in a %uge marquee waiting to "be addressed by a visiting
air commodore. before the great man arrived the platform was occupied by
a lascivious sergeant who was whittling away the time by leading us in a
succession of bawdy ditties accompanied by gestures. "it's the rich wot
gets the . . . " but instead of "pleasure" he made a series of violent
pumping movements with his forearm. i was intrigued by the reaction of
the airman on my right. he was a slim, pink-faced lad of about nineteen
and his lank fair hair fell over his face as he jumped up and down. he
was really throwing himself into it, bawling out the indelicate words,
duplicating the sergeant's gesticulations with maniacal glee. he was, i
had recently learned, the son of a bishop. we had been joined on this
course by the oxford university air squadron. they were a group of
superior and delicately nurtured young men and since i had spent three
full days peeling potatoes with them i had come to know most of them
very well. "spud bashing" is an unequalled method of becoming familiar
with one's fellow men and as, hour after hour, we filled countless bins
with our produce, the barriers crumbled steadily until at the end of
three days we didn't have many secrets from each other. the bishop's son
had found something hilarious in the idea of a qualified veterinary
surgeon leaving his practice to succour his country by removing the
skins from thousands of tubers. and 1, on the other hand, derived some
158

reward from watching his antics. he was a charming and likeable lad but
he seized avidly on anything with the faintest salacious slant. they say
parsons' sons are a bit wild when let off the leash, and i suppose an
escapee from a bishop's palace is even more susceptible to the
blandishments of the big world. i looked at him again. all around him
men were yelling their heads off, but his voice, mouthing the
four-letter words with relish, rang above the rest and he followed the
actions of the conducting sergeant like a devoted acolyte. it was all so
different from darrowby. my early days in the raf with all the swearing
and uninhibited conversation made me realise, perhaps for the first
time, what kind of community i had left behind me. because i often think
that one of the least permissive societies in the history of mankind was
the agricultural community of rural yorkshire in the thirties. among the
farmers anything to do with sex or the natural functions was
unmentionable. it made my work more difficult because if the animal's
ailment had the slightest sexual connotation its owner would refuse to
go into details if helen or our secretary miss harbottle answered the
'phone. "i want the vet to come and see a cow," was as far as they would
go. today's case was typical and i looked at mr. hopps with some
irritation. "why didn't you say your cow wasn't coming into season?
there's a new injection for that now but i haven't got it with me. i
can't carry everything in my car, you know." the farmer studied his
feet. "well, it was a lady on t'phone and i didn't like to teller that
snowdrop wasn't bullin'." he looked up-at me sheepishly. "can't you do
owl about it, then?" i sighed. "maybe i can. bring me a bucket of hot
water and some soap." as i lathered my arm i felt a twinge of
disappointment. i'd have liked to try that new prolan injection. but on
the other hand there was a certain interest in these rectal
examinations. "hold her tail, please," i said, an& began to work my hand
carefully past the anal ring. we were doing a lot of this lately. the
profession had awakened quite suddenly to the fact that bovine
infertility was no longer an impenetrable mystery. we were carrying out
more and more of these examinations, and as i say, they had a strange
fascination. siegfried put it with his usual succinctness one morning.
"james," he said. "there is more to be learned up a cow's arse than in
many an encyclopedia." and, groping my way into this animal, i could see
what he meant. through the rectal wall i gripped the uterine cervix,
then i worked along the right horn. it felt perfectly normal, as did the
fallopian tube when i reached it. in another moment the ovary rested
between my fingers like a walnut; but it was a walnut with a significant
bulge and i smiled to myself. that swelling was the corpus luteum, the
"yellow body" which was exerting its influence on the ovary and
preventing the initiation of the normal oestral cycle. i squeezed gently
on the base of the bulge and felt it part from the ovary and swim off
into space. that was lovely-just what was required-and i looked happily
-along the cow's back at the farmer. "i think i've put things right, mr.
hopps. she should come on within the next day or two and you can get her
served right away." i withdrew my arm, smeared with filth almost to the
shoulder, and began to swill it with the warm water. this was the moment
when young people with dewy-eyed ambitions to be veterinary surgeons
usually decided to be lawyers or nurses instead. a lot of teenagers came
round with me to see practice and it seemed to me that the sooner they
witnessed the realities of the job the better it would be for them. a
morning's pregnancy diagnoses or something similar had a salutary effect
in sorting out the sheep from the goats. as i left the farm i had the
satisfied feeling that i had really done something, and a sensation of
relief that mr. hopps' delicacy hadn't resulted in an abortive visit.

and when little mr. gilby crashed moaning on the cobbles of his byre
floor, my first thought was that it was unfair that it should happen to
him of all people. because the natural delicacy and reticence of the
times were embodied in him to an extreme degree. even his physical
make-up had something ethereal about it; nine stones of tiny bones, taut
skin with no fat and a gentle, innocent face, almost child-like despite
his fifty years. nobody had ever heard mr. gilby swear or use a vulgar
expression; in fact he was the only farmer i have ever known who talked
about cow's "manure." besides, as a strict methodist he didn't drink or
indulge in worldly pleasures and had never been known to tell a lie.
altogether he was so good that i would have regarded him with deep
suspicion if he had been anybody else. but i had come to know mr. gilby.
he was a nice little man, he was as honest as the day. i would have
trusted him with my life. that was why i was so sad to see him lying
there. it had happened so quickly. we had only just come into the byre
and he had pointed to a black angus cross cow almost opposite the door.
"that's 'er. got a touch o'cold, i think." he knew i would want to take
the temperature and grasped the tail before putting one foot across the
channel so that he could slide between the cow and her neighbour. that
was when it happened; when his legs were wide apart in the worst
possible position. in a way i wasn't surprised because that tail had
been swishing bad-temperedly as we came in, and i am always a bit wary
of black cows anyway. she didn't'seem to like our sudden entry and
lashed out with her right hind foot with the speed of light, catching
him with her flinty hoof full in the crutch as his legs were splayed. he
was wearing only frayed, much-washed overall trousers and the protection
was nil. i winced as the foot went home with an appalling thud, but mr.
gilby showed no emotion at all. he dropped as though on the receiving
end of a firing squad and lay motionless on the hard stones, his hands
clutched between his legs. it was only after several seconds that he
began to moan softly. as i hurried to his aid i felt it was wrong that i
should be witnessing this disintegration of his modest facade. the
little farmer, i was sure, would rather have died than be caught in this
inelegant position, grovelling on the floor gripping frantically at an
unmentionable area. i kneeled on the cobbles and patted his shoulder
while he fought his inner battle with his agony. after a while he felt
well enough to sit up and i put my arm around him and supported him
while perspiration bedewed the greenish pallor of his face. that was
when the embarrassment began to creep in, because though he had removed
his hands from their compromising position he was clearly deeply ashamed
at being caught in a coarse attitude. i felt strangely helpless. the
little man couldn't relieve his feelings in the usual way by cursing the
animal and fate in general, nor could i help him to laugh the thing off
with a few earthy remarks. this sort of thing happens now and then in
the present day and usually gives rise to a certain amount of ripe
comment, often embracing the possible effect on the victim's future sex
life. it all helps. but here in mr. gilby's byre there was only an
uncomfortable silence. after a time the colour began to return to his
cheeks and the little man struggled slowly to his feet. he took a couple
of deep breaths then looked at me unhappily. obviously he thought he
owed me some explapation, even apology, for his tasteless behaviour. as
the minutes passed the tension rose. mr. gilby's mouth twitched once or
twice as though he were about to speak but he seemed unable to find the
words. at length he appeared to come to a decision. he cleared his
throat, looked around him carefully then put his lips close to my ear.
he clarified the whole situation by one hoarsely whispered, deeply
confidential sentence. "right in the privates, mr. herriot." chapter 20.
20

little pictures kept floating up into my mind. memories from the very
early days at skeldale house. before the raf, before helen.... siegfried
and i were at breakfast in the big dining room. my colleague looked up
from a letter he was reading. "james, do you remember stewie brannan?" i
smiled. "i could hardly forget. that was quite a day at brawton races."
i would always carry a vivid recollection of she.-fried's amiable
college chum with me. "yes . . . yes, it was." siegfried nodded briefly.
"well i've got a letter from him here. he's got six kids now, and though
he doesn't complain, i don't think life is exactly a picnic working in a
dump like hensficid. especially when he knocks a bare living out of it."
he pulled thoughtfully at the lobe of his ear. "you know, james, it
would be rather nice if he could have a break. would you be willing to
go through there and run his practice for a couple of weeks so that he
could take his family on holiday?" "certainly. glad to. but you'll be a
bit pushed here on your own, won't you?" siegfried waved a hand. "it'fl
do me good. anyway it's the quiet time for us. i'll write back today."
stewie grasped the opportunity eagerly and within a few days i was on
the road to hensfield. yorkshire is the biggest county in england and it
must be the most varied. i could hardly believe it when, less than two
hours after leaving the clean grassy fells and crystal air of darrowby,
i saw the forest of factory chimneys sprouting from the brown pall of
grime. this was the industrial west riding and i drove past mills as
dark and satanic as any i had dreamed of, past 163

long rows of dreary featureless houses where the workers lived.
everything was black; houses, mills, walls, trees, even the surrounding
hillsides, smeared and soiled from the smoke which drifted across the
town from a hundred belching stacks. stewie's surgery was right in the
heart of it, a gloomy edifice in a terrace of sooty stone. as i rang the
bell i read the painted board: "stewart brannan mrcvs, veterinary
surgeon and canine specialist." i was wondering what the royal college
would think about the last part when the door opened and my colleague
stood before me. he seemed to fill the entrance. if anything he was
fatter than before, but that was the only difference. since it was
august i couldn't expect him to be wearing his navy nap overcoat, but
otherwise he was as i remembered him in darrowby; the big, meaty,
good-natured face, the greasy black hair slicked across the brow which
always seemed to carry a gentle dew of perspiration. he reached out,
grabbed my hand and pulled me delightedly through the doorway. "jiml
great to see youl" he put an arm round my shoulders as we crossed a dark
hallway. "it's good of you to help me out like this. the family are
thrilledthey're all in the town shopping for the holiday. we've got
fixed up in a flat at blackpool." his permanent smile widened. we went
into a room at the back where a rickety kitchen-type table'stood on
brown linoleum. i saw a sink in one corner, a few shelves with bottles
and a white-painted cupboard. the atmosphere held a faint redolence of
carbolie and cat's urine. "this is where i see the animals," stewie said
contentedly. he looked at his watch. "twenty past five i have a surgery
at five thirty. i'll show you round fill then." it didn't take long
because there wasn't much to see. i knew there was a more fashionable
veterinary firm in hensfield and that stewie made his living from the
poor people of the town; the whole set-up was an illustration of
practice on a shoestring. there didn't seem to be more than one of
anything-one straight suture needle, one curved needle, one pair of
scissors, one syringe. there was a sparse selection of drugs and an
extraordinary array of dispensing bottles and jars. these bottles were
of many strange shapes-weird things which i had never seen in a
dispensary before. stewie seemed to read my thoughts. "it's nothing
great, jim. i haven't a smart practice and i don't make a lot, but we
manage to clear the housekeeping and that's the main thing." the phrase
was familiar. "clear the housekeeping" -that was how he had put it when
i first met him at brawton races. it seemed to be the lodestar of his
life. the end of the room was cut off by a curtain which my colleague
drew to one side. "this is what you might call the waiting room." he
smiled as i looked in some surprise at half a dozen wooden chairs
arranged round the three walls. "no high-powered stuff, jim, no queues
into the streets, but we get by." some of stewie's clients were already
filing in; two little girls with a black dog, a cloth-capped old man
with a terrier on a string, a teenage boy carrying a rabbit in a basket.
"right," the big man said. "we'll get started." he pulled on a white
coat, opened the curtain and said, "first, please." the little girls put
their dog on the table. he was a long-tailed mixture of breeds and he
stood trembling with fear, rolling his eyes apprehensively at the white
coat. "all right, lad," stewie murmured. "i'm not going to hurt you." he
stroked and patted the quivering head before turning to the girls.
"what's the trouble, then?" "it's 'is leg, vs lame," one of them
replied. as if in confirmation the little dog raised afore leg and held
it up with a pitiful expression. stewie engulfed the limb with his great
hand and palpated it with the utmost care. and it struck me
immediately-the gentleness of this shambling bear of a man. "there's
nothing broken," he said. "he's just sprained his shoulder. try to rest
it for a few days and rub this in night and morning." he poured some
whitish liniment from a winchester bottle into one of the odd-shaped
bottles and handed it over. one of the little girls held out her hand
and unclasped her fingers to reveal a shilling in her palm. "thanks,"
said stewie without surprise. "goodbye." he saw several other cases,
then as he was on his way to the curtain two grubby urchins appeared
through the door at the other end of the room. they carried a clothes
basket containing a widely varied assortment of glassware. stewie bent
over the basket, lifting out lip sauce bottles, pickle jars, ketchup
containers and examining them with the air of a connoisseur. at length
he appeared to come to a decision. "threepence," he said. "sixpence,"
said the urchins in unison. "fourpence," grunted stewie. "sixpence,"
chorused the urchins. "fivepence," my colleague muttered doggedly.
"sixpence!" there was a hint of triumph in the cry. stewie sighed. "go
on then." he passed over the coin and began to stack the bottles under
the sink. "i just scrape off the labels and give them a good boil up,
jim." "i see." "it's a big saving." "yes, of course." the mystery of the
strangely shaped dispensing bottles was suddenly resolved. it was six
thirty when the last client came through the curtain. i had watched
stewie examining each animal carefully, taking his time and treating
their conditions ably within the confines of his limited resources. his
charges were all around a shilling or two shillings and it was easy to
see why he only just cleared the housekeeping. one other thing i
noticed; the pcople all seemed to like him. he had no "front" but he was
kind and concerned. i felt there was a lesson there. the last arrival
was a stout lady with a prim manner and a very correct manner of speech.
"my dog was bit last week," she announced, "and i'm afraid the wound is
going' antiseptic." "ali yes." stewie nodded gravely. the banana fingers
explored the tumefied area on the animal's neck with a gossamer touch.
"it's quite nasty, really. he could have an abscess there if we're not
careful." he took a long time over clipping the hair away, swabbing out
the deep puncture with peroxide of hydrogen. then he puffed in some
dusting powder, applied a pad of cotton wool and secured it with a
bandage. he followed with an antistaphylococcal injection and finally
handed over a sauce bottle filled to the rim with acriflavine solution.
"use as directed on the label," he said, then stood back as the lady
opened her purse expectantly. a long inward struggle showed in the
occasional twitches of his cheeks and flickerings of his eyelids but
finally be squared his shoulders. "that," he said resolutely, "will be
three and sixpence." it was a vast fee by stewie's standards, but
probably the minimum in other veterinary establishments, anq i couldn't
see how he could make any profit from the transaction. as the lady left,
a sudden uproar broke out within the house. stewic gave me a seraphic
smile. "that'll be meg and the kids. come and meet them." we went out to
the hall and into an incredible hubbub. children shouted, screamed and
laughed, spades and pails clattered, a large ball thumped from wall to
wall and above it all a baby bawled relentlessly. stewie moved into the
mob and extracted a small woman. i "this," he murmured with quiet pride,
"is my wife." he gazed at her like a small boy admiring a film star.
"how do you do," i said. meg brannan took my hand and smiled. any
glamour about her existed only in her husband's eye. a ravaged
prettiness still remained but her face bore the traces of some tough
years. i could imagine her life of mother, housewife, cook, secretary,
receptionist and animal nurse. "oh, mr. herriot, it is good of you and
mr. farnon to help us out like this. we're so looking forward to going
away." her eyes held a faintly desperate gleam but they were kind. i
shrugged. "oh it's a pleasure, mrs. brannan. i'm sure i'll enjoy it and
i hope you all have a marvelous holiday." i really meant it-she looked
as though she needed one. i was introduced to the children but i never
really got them sorted out. apart from the baby, who yelled
indefatigably from leather lungs, i think there were three little boys
and two little girls, but i couldn't be sure-they moved around too
quickly. the only time they were silent was for a brief period at supper
when meg fed them and us from a kind of cauldron in which floated chunks
of mutton, potatoes and carrots. it was very good, too, and was followed
by a vast blancmange with jam on top. the tumult broke out again very
soon as the youngsters raced through their meal and began to play in the
room. one thing i found disconcerting was that the two biggest boys kept
throwing a large, new, painted ball from one to the other across the
table as we ate. the parents said nothing about it-meg, i felt, because
she had stopped caring, and stewie because he never had cared. only once
when the ball whizzed past my nose and almost carried away a poised
spoonful of blancmange did their father remonstrate. "now then, now
then," he murmured absently, and the throwing was re-sited more towards
the middle of the table. next morning i saw the family off. stewie had
changed his dilapidated austin seven for a large rust-encrusted ford v
eight. seated at the wheel he waved and beamed through the cracked side
windows with serene contentment. meg~ by his side, managed a harassed
smile and at the other windows an assortment of dogs and children fought
for a vantage point. as the car moved away a pram, several suitcases and
a cot swayed perilously on the roof, the children yelled, the dogs
barked, the baby bawled, then they were gone. as i re-entered the house
the unaccustomed silence settled around me, and with the silence came a
faint unease. i had to look after this practice for two weeks and the
memory of the thinly furnished surgery was not reassuring. i just
didn't have the tools to tackle any major problem. but it was easy to
comfort myself. from what i had seen this wasn't the sort of place where
dramatic things happened. stewie had once said he made most of his
living by castrating tom cats and i supp6sed if you threw in a few ear
cankers and minor ailments that would be about it. the morning surgery
seemed to confirm this impression; a few humble folk led in nondescript
pets with mild conditions and i happily dispensed a series of bovril
bottles and meat paste jars containing stewie's limited drug store.

i had only one difficulty and that was with the table, which kept
collapsing when i lifted the animals on to it. for some obscure reason
it had folding legs held by metal struts underneath and these were apt
to disengage at crucial moments, causing the patient to slide abruptly
to the floor. after a while i got the hang of the thing and kept one leg
jammed against the struts throughout the examination. it was about 10.30
a.m. when i finally parted the curtains and found the waiting room empty
and only the distinctive cat-dog smell lingering on the air. as i locked
the door it struck me that i had very little to do till the afternoon
surgery. at darrowby i would have been dashing out to start the long
day's driving round the countryside, but here almost all the work was
done at the practice house. i was wondering how i would put the time in
after the single outside visit on the book when the door bell rang. then
it rang again followed by a frantic pounding on the wood. i hurried
through the curtain and turned the handle. a well dressed young couple
stood on the step. the man held a golden labrador in his arms and behind
them a caravan drawn by a large gleaming car stood by the kerb. "are you
the vet?" the girl gasped. she was in her twenties, auburn haired,
extremely attractive, but her eyes were terrified : i nodded. 'yes-yes,
i am. what's the trouble?" "it's our dog." the young man's voice was
hoarse, his face deathly pale. "a car hit him." i glanced over the
motionless yellow form. "is he badly hurt?" there were a few moments of
silence then the girl spoke almost in a whisper. "look at his hind leg."
i stepped forward and as i peered into the crook of the man's arm a
freezing wave drove through me. the limb was banging off at the hock.
not fractured but snapped through the joint and dangling from what
looked like a mere shred of skin. in the bright morning sunshine the
white ends of naked bones glittered with a sickening lustre. it seemed a
long time before i came out of my first shock and found myself staring
stupidly at the animal. and when i spoke the voice didn't sound like my
own.

"bring him in," i muttered, and as i led the way back through the
odorous waiting room the realisation burst on me that i had been wrong
when i thought that nothing ever happened here. chapter 21. 21

1 held the curtains apart as the young man staggered in and placed his
burden on the table. now i could see the whole thing; the typical signs
of a road accident; the dirt driven savagely into the glossy gold of the
coat, the multiple abrasions. but that mangled leg wasn't typical. i had
never seen anything like it before. i dragged my eyes round to the girl.
"how did it happen?" "oh, just in a flash." the tears welled in her
eyes. "we are on a caravanning holiday. we had no intention of staying
in hensfield"-(i could understand that)-"but we stopped for a newspaper,
kim jumped out of the car and that was it." i looked at the big dog
stretched motionless on the table. i reached out a hand and gently ran
my fingers over the noble outlines of the head. "poor old lad," i
murmured and for an instant the beautiful hazel eyes turned to me and
the tail thumped briefly against the wood. "where have you come from?" i
asked. "surrey," the young man replied. he looked rather like the
prosperous young stockbroker that the name conjured up. i rubbed my
chin. "i see. a way of escape shone for a moment in the tunnel. "perhaps
if i patch him up you could get him back to your own vet there." he
looked at his wife for a moment then back at me. "and what would they do
there? amputate his leg?" i was silent. if an animal in this condition
arrived in one of those high-powered southern practices with plenty of
skilled assistance and full surgical equipment that's what they probably
would do. it would be the only sensible thing. 171

the girl broke in on my thoughts. "anyway, if it's at all possible to
save his leg something has to be done right now. isn't that so?" she
gazed at me appealingly. "yes," i said huskily. "that's right." i began
to examine the dog. the abrasions on the skin were trivial. he was
shocked but his mucous membranes were pink enough to suggest that there
was no internal haemorrhage. he had escaped serious injury except for
that terrible leg. i stared at it intently, appalled by the smooth
glistening articular surfaces of the tibio-tarsal joint. there was
something obscene in its exposure in a living animal. it was as though
the hock had been broken open by brutal inquisitive hands. i began a
feverish search of the premises, pulling open drawers, cupboards,
opening tins and boxes. my heart leaped at each little find; a jar of
catgut in spirit, a packet of lint, a sprinkler tin of iodoform,
and-treasure trove indeed-a bottle of barbiturate anaesthetic. most of
all i needed antibiotics, but it was pointless looking for those because
they hadn't been discovered yet. but i did hope fervently for just an
ounce or two of sulphanilamide, and there i was disappointed, because
stewie's menage didn't stretch to that. it was when i came upon the box
of plaster of paris bandages that something seemed to click. at that
time in the late thirties the spanish civil war was vivid in people's
minds. in the chaos of the later stages there had been no proper
medicaments to treat the terrible wounds. they had often been encased in
plaster and left, in the grim phrase, to "stew in their own juice."
sometimes the results were surprisingly good. i grabbed the bandages. i
knew what i was going to do. gripped by a fierce determination i
inserted the needle into the radial vein and slowly injected the
anaestbetic kim blinked, yawned lazily and went to sleep. i quickly'
laid out my meagre armoury then began to shift the dog into a better
position. but i had forgotten about the table and as i lifted the hind
quarters the whole thing gave way and the dog slithered helplessly
towards the floor. "catch him!" at my frantic shout the man grabbed the
inert form, then i reinserted the slots in their holes and got the
wooden surface back on the level. "put your leg under there," i gasped,
then turned to the girl. "and would you please do the same at the other
end. this table mustn't fall over once i get started." silently they
complied and as i looked at them, each with a leg jammed against the
underside, i felt a deep sense of shame. what sort of place did they
think this was? but for a long time after i forgot everything. first i
put the joint back in place, slipping the ridges of the tibialtarsal
trochlea into the grooves at the distal end of the tibia as i had done
so often in the anatomy lab at college. and i noticed with a flicker of
hope that some of the ligaments were still intact and, most important,
that a few good blood vessels still ran down to the lower part of the
limb. i never said a word as i cleaned and disinfected the area, puffed
iodoform into every crevice and began to stitch. i stitched
interminably, pulling together shattered tendons, torn joint capsule and
fascia. it was a warm morning and as the sun beat on the surgery window
the sweat broke out on my forehead. by the time i had sutured the skin a
little river was flowing down my nose and dripping from the tip. next,
more iodoform, then the lint and finally two of the plaster bandages,
making a firm cast above the hock down over the foot. i straightened up
and faced the young couple. they had never moved from their
uncomfortable postures as they held the table upright but i gazed at
them as though seeing them for the first time. i mopped my brow and drew
a long breath. "well, that's it. i'd be inclined to leave it as it is
for a week, then wherever you are let a vet have a look at it." they
were silent for a moment then the girl spoke. "i would rather you saw it
yourself." her husband nodded agreement. "really?" i was amazed. i had
thought they would never want to see me, my smelly waiting room or my
collapsible table again. "yes, of course we would," the man said. "you
have taken such pains over him. whatever happens we are deeply grateful
to you, mr. brannan." "oh, rm not mr. brannan, he's on holiday. i'm his
locum, my name is herriot." he held out his hand. "well thank you again,
mr. herriot. i am peter gillard and this is my wife, marjorie."

we shook hands and he took the dog in his arms and went out to the car.
for the next few days i couldn't keep kim's leg out of my mind, at times
i felt i was crazy trying to salvage a limb that was joined to the dog
only by a strip of skin. i had never met anything remotely like it
before and in unoccupied moments the hock joint with all its
imponderables would float across my vision. there were plenty of these
moments because stewie's was a restful practice. apart from the three
daily surgeries there was little activity, and in particular the
uncomfortable pre-breakfast call so common in darrowby was unknown here.
the brannans had left the house and me in the care of mrs. holroyd, an
elderly widow of raddled appearance who slouched around in a flowered
overall down which ash cascaded from a permanently dangling cigarette.
she wasn't a good riser but she soon had me trained, because after a few
mornings when i couldn't find her i began to prepare my own breakfast
and that was how it stayed. however, at other times she looked after me
very well. she was what you might call a good rough cook and pushed
large tasty meals at me regularly with a "there y'are, luv," watching me
impassively till i started to cat. the only thing that disturbed me was
the long trembling finger of ash which always hung over my food from the
cigarette that was part of her. mrs. holroyd also took telephone
messages when i wasn't around. there weren't many outside visits but two
have stuck in my memory. the first was when i looked on the pad and
read, "go to mr. pimmarov to see bulldog," in mrs. holroyd's careful
backsloped script. "pimmarov?" i asked her. "was he a russian
gentleman?" "dunno, luv, never asked 'im." "well-did he sound foreign? i
mean did he speak broken english?" "nay, i uv, yo rkshi re as me,'e
were. "ah well, never mind, mrs. holroyd. what's his address?" she gave
me a surprised look. "how should ah know? he never said."

"but ... but mrs. holroyd. how can i visit him when i don't know where
he lives?" "well you'll know best about that, luv." i was baffled. "but
he must have told you." "now then, young man, pimmarov was all'e told
me. said you would know." she stuck out her chin, her cigarette quivered
and she regarded me stonily. maybe she had had similar sessions with
stewie, but she left me in no doubt that the interview was over. during
the day i tried not to think about it but the knowledge that somewhere
in the neighbourhood there was an ailing bulldog that i could not
succour was worrying. i just hoped it was nothing fatal. a phone call at
7 p.m. resolved my fears. "is that t'vet?" the voice was gruff and
grumpy. "yes ... speaking." "well, ah've been waitin' all day for that.
when are you comin' to see ma. flippin' bulldog?" a light glimmered. but
still . . . that accent ... no suggestion of the kremlin. . . not a hint
of the steppes. "oh, i'm terribly sorry," i gabbled. "i'm afraid there's
been a little misunderstanding. i'm doing mr. brannan's work and i don't
know the district. i do hope your dog isn't seriously ill." "nay, nay,
nob but a bit o' cough, but ah want 'im seein' to." "certainly,
certainly, i'll be right out, mr. . . . er "pym's ma name and ah live
next to tpost office in roff village." "roff?" "aye, two miles outside
hensfield." i sighed with relief. "very good, mr. pym, i'm on my way."
"thank ye." the voice sounded mollified. "well, that knows me now, don't
that-pym o' roff ." the light was blinding. "pym o' roff!" such a simple
explanation. a lot of mrs. holroyd's messages were eccentric but i could
usually interpret them after some thought. however one bizarre entry
jolted me later in the week. it read simply: "johnson, 12, back lane,
smiling harry syphilis." i wrestled with this for a long time before
making a diffident approach to mrs. holroyd.

she was kneading dough for scones and didn't look up as i entered the
kitchen. "ah, mrs. holroyd." i rubbed my hands nervously. "i see you
have written down that i have to go to mr. johnson's." "that's right,
luv." "weller . . . fine, but i don't quite understand the other
part-the smiling harry syphilis." she shot a sidelong glance at me.
"well that's 'ow you spell the word, isn't it? ah looked it up once in a
doctor's book in our 'ouse," she said defensively. "oh yes, of course,
yes, you've spelled it correctly. it's just the smiling ... and the
harry." her eyes glinted dangerously and she blew a puff of smoke at me.
"well, that's what t'feller said. repeated it three times. couldn't make
no mistake." "i see. but did he mention any particular animal?" "naw,'e
didn't. that was what'e said. that and no more." a grey spicule of ash
toppled into the basin and was immediately incorporated in the scones.
"ah do ma best, that knows!" "of course you do, mrs. holroyd," i said
hastily. "i'll just pop round to back lane now." and mr. johnson put
everything right within seconds as he led me to a shed on his allotment.
"it's me pig, guvnor. covered wi' big red spots. reckon it's swine
erysipelas." only he pronounced it arrysipelas and he did have a
slurring mode of speech. i really couldn't blame mrs. holroyd. little
things like that enlivened the week but the tension still mounted as i
awaited the return of kim. and even when the seventh day came round i
was still in suspense because the gillards did not appear at the morning
surgery. when they failed to show up at the afternoon session i began to
conclude that they had had the good sense to return south to a more
sophisticated establishment. but at five thirty they were there. i knew
it even before i pulled the curtains apart. the smell of doom was
everywhere, filling the premises, and when i went through the curtains
it hit me; the sickening stink of putrefaction. gangrene. it was the
fear which had haunted me all week and now it was realised.

there were about half a dozen other people in the waiting room, all
keeping as far away as possible from the young couple who looked up at
me with strained smiles. kim tried to rise when he saw me but i had eyes
only for the dangling useless hind limb where my once stone-hard plaster
hung in sodden folds. of course it had to happen that the gillards were
last in and i was forced to see all the other animals first. i examined
them and prescribed treatment in a stupor of misery and shame. what had
i done to that beautiful dog out there? i had been crazy to try that
experiment. a gangrenous leg meant that even amputation might be too
late to save his life. death from septicaernia was likely now and what
the bell could i do for him in this ramshackle surgery? nften at last it
was their turn the gillards came in with kim limping between them, and
it was an extra stab to realise afresh what a handsome animal he was. i
bent over the great golden head and for a moment the friendly eyes
looked into mine and the tail waved. "right," i said to peter gillard,
putting my arms under the chest. "you take the back end and we'll lift
him up." as we hoisted the heavy dog on to the table the flimsy
structure disintegrated immediately, but this time the young people were
ready for it and thrust their legs under the struts like a well-trained
team till the surface was level again. with kim stretched on his side i
fmgered the bandage. it usually took time and patience with a special
saw to remove a plaster but this was just a stinking pulp. my hands
shook as i cut the bandage lengthways with scissors and removed it. i
had steeled myself against the sight of the cold dead limb with its
green flesh but though there was pus and serous fluid everywhere the
exposed flesh was a surprising, healthy pink. i took the foot in my hand
and my heart gave a great bound. it was warm and so was the leg, right
up to the hock. there was no gangrene. feeling suddenly weak i leaned
against the table. "i'm sorry about the terrible smell. all the pus and
discharge have been decomposing under the bandage for a week but despite
the mess it's not as bad as i feared." "do you . . . do you think you
can save his leg?" marjorie gillard's voice trembled.

"i don't know. i honestly don't know, so much has to happen. but i'd say
it was a case of so far so good." i cleaned the area thoroughly with
spirit, gave a dusting of iodoform and applied fresh lint and two more
plaster bandages. "you'll feel a lot more comfortable now, kim," i said,
and the big dog flapped his tail against the wood at the sound of his
name. i turned to his owners. "i want him to have another week in
plaster, so what would you like to do?" "oh, we'll stay around
hensfield," peter gillard replied. "we've found a place for our caravan
by the river-it's not too bad." "very well, till next saturday, then." i
watched kim hobble out, holding his new white cast high, and as i went
back into the house relief flowed over me in a warm wave. but at the
back of my mind the voice of caution sounded. there was still a long way
to go.... chapter 22.

22

the second week went by without incident. i had a mildly indecent
postcard from stewie and a view of blackpool tower from his wife. the
weather was scorching and they were having the best holiday of their
lives. i tried to pieture them enjoying themselves but i had to wait a
few weeks for the evidence-a snap taken by a beach photographer. the
whole family were standing in the sea, grinning delightedly into the
camera as the wavelets lapped round their ankles. the children
brandished buckets and spades, the baby dangled bandy legs towards the
water, but it was stewie who fascinated me. a smile of blissful
contentment beamed from beneath a knotted handkerchief, sturdy braces
supported baggy flannel trousers rolled decorously calf high. he was the
archetype of the british father on holiday. the last event of my stay in
hensfield was a visit to the local greyhound track. stewie had an
appointment there every other friday to inspect the dogs. the hensfield
stadium was not prepossessing from the outside. it had been built in a
natural hollow in the sooty hills and was surrounded by ramshackle
hoardings. it was a cool night and as i drove down to the entrance i
could bear the tinny blaring from the loudspeakers. it was george formby
singing "when i'm cleaning windows" and strumming on his famous ukelele.
there are all kinds of greyhound tracks. my own experience had been as a
student, accompanying vets who officiated under the auspices of the
national greyhound racing club, but this was an unlicensed or "flapping"
track, and vastly different. i know there are many highly reputable
flapping tracks but this one had a seedy air. it was, i thought wryly,
just the sort of place that would be under the care of stewie.

179

first i had to go to the manager's office. mr. coker was a hard-eyed man
in a shiny pin-striped suit and he nodded briefly before giving me a
calculating stare. "your duties here are just a formality," he said,
twisting his features into a smile. "there'll be nothing to trouble
you." i had the impression that he was assessing me with quiet
satisfaction, looking me up and down, taking in my rumpled jacket and
slacks, savouring; my obvious youth and inexperience. he kept the smile
going as he stubbed out his cigar. "well, i hope you'll have a pleasant
evening." "thank you," i replied, and left. i met the judge, timekeeper
and other officials then went down to a long glass-fronted bar
overlooking the track. quite suddenly i felt i was in an alien
environinent. the place was rapidly filling xip and the faces around me
were out of a different mould from the wholesome rural countenan~es of
darrowby. there seemed to be a large proportion of fat men in camel
coats with brassy blondes in tow. shifty-looking characters studied race
cards and glared intently at the flickering numbers on the tote board. i
looked at my watch. it was time to, inspect the dogs for the first race.
"when i'm cleanin' winders i" bawled george formby as i made my way
round the edge of the track to the paddock, a paved enclosure with a
wire-netting surround. five dogs were being led round the perimeter and
i stood in the centre and watch8d them for a minute or two. then i
halted them and went from one to the other, looking at their eyes,
examining their mouths for salivation and finally palpating their
abdomens. they all appeared bright and normal except number four which
seemed rather full in the stomach region. a greyhound should only have a
light meal on the morning of a race and nothing thereafter and i turned
to the man who was holding the animal. "has this dog been fed within the
last hour or two?" i asked. "no," he replied. "he's had nothing since
breakfast." as i passed my fingers over the abdomen again i had the
feeling that several of the onlookers were watching me with unusual
intentness. but i dismissed it as imagination and passed on to the next
animal. number four was second favourite but from the moment it left its
trap it was flagging. it finished last and from the darkness on the far
side of the track a storm of booing broke out. i was able to make out
some of the remarks which came across on the night air. "open your
bloody eyes, vet!" was one of them. and here, in the long, brightly lit
bar i could see people nudging each other and looking at me. i felt a
thrill of anger. maybe some of those gentlemen down there thought they
could cash in on stewie's absence. i probably looked a soft touch to
them. my next visit to the paddock was greeted with friendly nods and
grins from all sides. in fact there was a strong atmosphere of
joviality. when i went round the dogs all was well until i came to
number five and this time i couldn't be mistaken. under my probing
fingers the stomach bulged tensely and the animal gave a soft grunt as i
squeezed. "you'll have to take this dog out of the race," i said. "he's
got a full stomach." the owner was standing by the kennel lad. "can't
'ave!" he burst out. "he's had nowt!" i straightened up and looked him
full in the face but his eyes were reluctant to meet mine. i knew some
of the tricks; a couple of pounds of steak before the race; a bowlful of
bread crumbs and two pints of milk-the crumbs swelled beautifully within
a short time. . "would you like me to vomit him?" i began to move away.
"i've got some washing soda in my car-we'11 soon find out." the man held
up a hand. "naw, naw, i don't want you messin' about with me dog." he
gave me a malevolent glare and trailed sulkily away. i had only just got
back to the bar when i heard the announcement over the loudspeakers.
"will the vet please report to the manager's office." mr. coker looked
up from his desk and glared at me through a haze of cigar smoke. "you've
taken a dog out of the race!" "that's right. i'm sorry, but his stomach
was full." "but damn it . . . !" he stabbed a finger at me then subsided
and forced a tortured smile across his face. "now, mr. herriot, we have
to be reasonable in these matters. i've no doubt you know your job, but
don't you think there's just a chance you could be wrong?" he waved his
cigar expansively. "after all, anybody can make a mistake, so perhaps
you would be kind enough to reconsider." he stretched his smile wider.
"no, i'm sorry, mr. coker, but that would be impossible." there was a
long pause. "that's your last word, then?" 4111 is." the smile vanished
and he gave me a threatening stare. "now look," he said. "you've mucked
up that race and it's a serious matter. i don't want any repetition, do
you understand?" he ground his cigar out savagely and his jaw jutted.
"so i hope we won't have any more trouble like this." "i hope so, too,
mr. coker," i said as i went out. it seemed a long way down to the
paddock on my next visit. it was very dark now and i was conscious of
the hum of the crowd, the shouts of the bookies and george and his
ukelele still going full blast. "oh, don't the wind blow cold!" he
roared. this time it was dog number two. i could feel the tension as i
examined him and found the same turgid belly. "this one's out," i said,
and apart from a few black looks there was no argument. they say bad
news travels fast and i had hardly started my return journey when george
was switched off and the loudspeaker asked me to report to the manager's
office. mr. coker was no longer at his desk. he was pacing up and down
agitatedly and when he saw me he did another length of the room before
coming to a halt. his expression was venomous and it was clear he had
decided that the tough approach was best "what the bloody hell do you
think you're playing att' he barked. "are you trying to ruin this
meeting?" "no," i replied. "i've just taken out another dog which was
unfit to run. that's my job. that's what i'm here for." his face flushed
deep red. "i don't think you know what you're here for. mr. brannan goes
off on holiday and leaves us at the mercy of a young clever clogs like
you, throwing your weight about and spoiling peoples pleasure. wait till
i see him!" "mr. brannan would have done just the same as i have. any
veterinary surgeon would." "rubbishl don't tell me what it's all
about-you're still wet behind the ears." he advanced slowly towards me.

"but i'll tell you this, i've had enough! so get it straight, once and
for all-no more of this nonsense. cut it out!" i felt my heart thudding
as i went down to see the dogs for the next race. as i examined the five
animals the owners and kennel lads fixed me with a hypnotic stare as
though 1-were some strange freak. my pulse began to slow down when i
found there were no full stomachs this time and i glanced back in relief
along the line. i was about to walk away when i noticed that number one
looked a little unusual. i went back and bent over him, trying to decide
what it was about him that bad caught my attention. then i realised what
it was-be looked sleepy. the head was hanging slightly and he had an air
of apathy. i lifted his chin and looked into his eyes. the pupils were
dilated and every now and then there was a faint twitch of nystagmus.
there was absolutely no doubt about it-he had received some kind of
sedative. he had been doped. the men in the paddock were very still as i
stood upright. for a few moments i gazed through the wire netting at the
brightly fit green oval, feeling the night air cold on my cheeks. george
was still at it on the loudspeakers. "oh mr. wu," he trilled. "what can
i do?" well i knew what i had to do, anyway. i tapped the dog ou the
back. "this one's out," i said. i didn't wait for the announcement and
was half way up the steps to the manager's office before i heard the
request for my presence blared across the stadium. when i opened the
door i half expected mr. coker to rush at me and attack me and i was
surprised when i found him sitting at his desk, his head buried in his
hands. i stood there on the car-pet for some time before he raised a
ghastly countenance to me. "is it true?" he whispered despairingly.
"have you done it again?" i nodded. "afraid so." his lips trembled but
he didn't say anything, and after a brief, disbelieving scrutiny he sank
his head in his hands again. i waited for a minute or two but when he
stayed like that, quite motionless, i realised that the audience was at
an end and took my leave.

i found no fault with the dogs for the next race and as i left the
paddock an unaccustomed peace settled around me. i couldn't understand
it when i heard the loudspeaker again-"will the vet please report . . ."
but this time it was to the paddock and i wondered if a dog had been in-
jured. anyway, it would be a relief to do a bit of real vetting for a
change. but when i arrived there were no animals to be seen;. only two
men cradling a fat companion in their arms. "what's this?" i asked one
of them. "ambrose 'ere fell down the steps in the stand and skinned 'is
knee." i stared at him. "but i'm a vet, not a doctor." "ain't no doctor
on the track," the man mumbled. "we reckoned you could patch 'im. up."
ah well, it was a funny night. "put him over on that bench," i said. i
rolled up the trouser to reveal a rather revolting fat dimpled knee.
ambrose emitted a hollow groan as i touched a very minor abrasion on the
patella. "it's nothing much," i said. "you've just knocked a bit of skin
off." ambrose looked at me tremblingly. "aye, but it could go t'wrong
way, couldn't it? i don't want no blood poisonin'." "all right, i'll put
something on it." i looked inside stewie's medical bag. the selection
was limited but i found some tincture of iodine and i poured a little on
a pad of cotton wool and dabbed the wound. ambrose gave a shrill yelp.
"bloody 'ell, that 'urtsl what are you doin' to me?" i-es foot jerked up
and rapped me sharply on the elbow. even my human patients kicked me, it
seemed. i smiled reassuringly. "don't worry, it won't sting for long.
i'll put a bandage on now." i bound up the knee, rolled down the trouser
and patted the fat man's shoulder. "there you are-good as new." he got
off the bench, nodded, then grimacing painfully, prepared to, leave. but
an afterthought appeared to strike him and he pulled a handful of change
from his pocket. he rummaged among it with a forefinger before selecting
a coin which he pressed into my palm. "there y'are," he said. i looked
at the coin. it was a sixpence, the fee for my only piece of doctoring
of my own species. i stared stupidly at it for a long time and when i
finally looked up with the half-formed idea of throwing ambrose's
bonorarium back at his head the man was limping into the crowd and was
soon lost to sight. back in the bar i was gazing apathetically through
the glass at the dogs parading round the track when i felt a hand on my
arm. i turned and recognised a man i had spotted earlier in the evening.
he was one of a group of three men and three women, the men dark,
tight-suited, the women loud and overdressed. there was something
sinister about them and i remembered thinking that in different clothes
the men could have passed without question as a group of bandits. the
man put his face close to mine and i had a brief impression of black,
darting eyes and a predatory smile. "is number three fit?" he whispered.
i couldn't understand the question. he seemed to know i was the vet and
surely it was obvious that if i had passed the dog i considered him fit.
"yes," i replied. "yes, he is." the man nodded vigorously and gave me a
knowing glance from hooded eyes. he returned and held a short, intimate
conversation with his friends, then they all turned and looked over at
me approvingly. i was bewildered, then it struck me that they may have
thought i was giving them an inside tip. to this day i am not really
sure but i think that was it because when number three finished nowhere
in the race their attitude changed dramatically and they flashed me some
black glares which made them look more like bandits than ever. anyway i
had no more trouble down at the paddock for the rest of the evening. no
more dogs_ to take out, which was just as well, because i had made
enough enemies for one night. after the last race i looked around the
long bar. most of the tables were occupied by people having a final
drink, but i noticed an empty one and sank wearily into a chair. stewie
had asked me to stay for half an. hour after the finish to make sure all
the dogs got away safely and i would stick to my bargain even though
what i wanted most in the world was to get away from here and never come
back. george was still in splendid voice on the loudspeakers.

"i always get to bed by half past nine," he warbled, and i felt strongly
that he had a point there. along the bar counter were assembled most of
the people with whom i had clashed; mr. coker and other officials and
dog owners. there was a lot,of nudging and whispering and i didn't have
to be told the subject of their discussion. the bandits, too, were doing
their bit with fierce side glances and i could almost feel the waves of
antagonism beating against me. my gloomy thoughts were interrupted by
the arrival of a bookie and his clerk. the bookie dropped into a chair
opposite me and tipped out a huge leather bag on to the table. i had
never seen so much money in my life. i peered at the man over a mountain
of fivers and pounds and ten-sbilling notes while little streams and
tributaries of coins ran down its flanks. the two of them began a
methodical stacking and counting of the loot while i watched
hypnotically. they 'had eroded the mountain to about half its height
when the bookie caught my eye. maybe he thought i looked envious or
poverty-stricken or just miserable because he put his finger behind a
stray half crown and flicked it expertly across the smooth surface in my
direction. "get yourself a drink, son," he said. it was the second time
i had been offered money during the last hour and i was almost as much
taken aback as the first time. the bookie looked at me expressionlessly
for a moment then he grinned. he had an attractively ugly, good-natured
face that i liked instinctively and suddenly i felt grateful to him, not
for the money but for the sight of a friendly face. it was the only one
i had seen all evening. i smiled back. "thanks," i said. i lifted the
half crown and went over to the bar.

i awoke next morning with the knowledge that it was my last day at
hensfield. stewie was due back at lunch time. when i parted the now
familiar curtains at the morning surgery i still felt a vague
depression, a hangover from my unhappy night at the dog track. but when
i looked into the waiting room my mood lightened immediately. there was
only one animal among the odd assortment of chairs but that animal was
kim, massive, golden and beautiful, sitting between his owners,

and when he,saw me he sprang up with swishing tail and laughing mouth.
there was none of the smell which had horrified me before but as i
looked at the dog i could sniff something else-the sweet, sweet scent of
success. because he was touching the ground with that leg; not putting
any weight on it but definitely dotting it down as he capered. around
me. in an instant i was back in my world again and mr. coker and the
events of last night were but the dissolving mists of a bad dream. i
could hardly wait to get started. "get him on the table," i cried, then
began to laugh as the gillards automatically pushed their legs against
the collapsible struts. they knew the drill now. i had to restrain
myself from doing a dance of joy when i got the plaster off. there was a
bit of discharge but when i cleaned it away i found healthy granulation
tissue everywhere. pink new flesh binding the shattered joint together,
smoothing over and hiding the original mutilation. "is his leg safe
now?" marjorie gillard asked softly. i looked at her and smiled. "yes,
it is. there's no doubt about it now." i rubbed my hand under the big
dog's chin and the tail beat ecstatically on the wood. "he'll probably
have a stiff joint but that won't matter, will it?" i applied the last
of stewie's bandages then we hoisted kim off the table. "well, that's
it," i said. "take him to your own vet in another fortnight. after that
i don't think he'll need a bandage at all." the gillards left on their
journey back to the south and a couple of hours later stewie and his
family returned. the children were very brown; even the baby, still
bawling resolutely, had a fine tan. the skin had peeled off meg's nose
but she looked wonderfully relaxed. stewie, in open necked shirt and
with a face like a boiled lobster, seemed to have put on weight. "that
holiday saved our lives, jim," he said. "i can't thank you enough, and
please tell siegfried how grateful we are." he looked fondly at his
turbulent brood flooling through the house, then as an afterthought he
turned to me. "is everything all right in the practice?"

"yes, stewie, it is. i had my ups and downs of course." he laughed.
"don't we all." "we certainly do, but everything's fine now." and
everything did seem fine as i drove away from the smoke. i watched the
houses thin and fall away behind me till the whole world opened out
clean and free and i saw the green line of the fells rising over
darrowby. i suppose we all tend to remember the good things but as it
turned out i bad no option. the following christmas i had a letter from
the gillards with a packet of snapshots showing a big golden dog
clearing a gate, leaping high for a ball, strutting proudly with a stick
in his mouth. there was hardly any stiffness in the leg, they,said; he
was perfectly sound. so even now when i think of hensfield the thing i
remember best is kim. chapter 23.

23

there was a lot of shouting -in the raf. the ncos always seemed to be
shouting at me or at somebody else and a lot of them had impressively
powerful voices. but for sheer volume i don't think any of them could
beat len hampson. i was on the way to len's farm and on an impulse i
pulled up the car and leaned for a moment on the wheel. it was a hot
still day in late summer and this was one of the softer corners of the
dales, sheltered by the enclosing fells from the harsh winds which
shrivelled all but the heather and the tough moorland grass. here, great
trees, oak, elm and sycamore in full rich leaf, stood in gentle majesty
in the green dips and hollows, their branches quite still in the
windless air. in all the grassy miles around me i could see no movement,
nor could i hear anything except the fleeting hum of a bee and the
distant bleating of a sheep. through the open window drifted the scents
of summer; warm grass, clover and the sweetness of hidden flowers. but
in the car they had to compete with the allpervading smell of cow. i had
spent the last hour injecting fifty wild cattle and i sat there in
soiled breeches and sweat-soaked shirt looking out sleepily at the
tranquil landscape, i opened the door and sam jumped out and trotted
into a nearby wood. i followed him into the cool shade, into the damp
secret fragrance of pine needles and fallen leaves which came from the
dark heart of the crowding boles. from somewhere in the branches high
above i could hear that most soothing of sounds, the cooing of a
woodpigeon. then, although the farm was two fields away, i heard len
hampson's voice. he wasn't calling the cattle home 189

or anything like that. he was just conversing with his family as he
always did in a long tireless shout. i drove on to the farm and he
opened the gate to let me into the yard. "good morning, mr. hampson," i
said. 11 now then, mr. herriot," he bawled. "it's a grand mornin'." the
blast of sound drove me back a step but his three sons smiled
contentedly. no doubt they were used to it. i stayed at a safe distance.
"you want me to see a pig. 11 11 aye, a good bacon pig. gone right off.
it hasn't ate nowt for two days." we went into the pig pen and it was
easy to pick out my patient. most of the big white occupants careered
around at the sight of a stranger, but one of them stood quietly in a
corner. it isn't often a pig will stand unresisting as you take its
temperature but this one never stirred as i slipped the thermometer into
its rectum. there was only a slight fever but the animal had the look of
doom about it; back slightly arched, unwilling to move, eyes withdrawn
and anxious. i looked lip at len hampson's red-faced bulk leaning over
the wall of the pen. "did this start suddenly or gradually?" i asked. 11
right sudden!" in the confined space the full throated yell was
deafening. "he were as right as ninepence on monday night and like this
on tuesday mornin'. , i felt my way over the pig's abdomen. the
musculature was tense and boardlike and the abdominal contents were
difficult to palpate because of this, but the whole area was tender to
the touch. "i've seen them like this before," i said. "this pig has a
ruptured bowel. they do it when they are fighting or jostling each
other, especially when they are full after a meal." .1 what's gotn' to
'appen then?" "well, the food material has leaked into the abdomen,
causing peritonitis, i've opened up pigs like this and they are a mass
of adhesions-the abdominal organs all growing together. i'm afraid the
chances of recovery are very small." he took off his cap, scratched his
bald head and re-

placed the tattered headgear. "that's a bugger. good pig an' all. is it
'opeless?" he still gave tongue at the top of his voice despite his
disappointment. "yes, i'm afraid it's pretty hopeless. they usually eat
very little and just waste away. it would really be best to slaughter
him." 11 nay, ah don't like that much! ah allus like to 'ave a go. isn't
there summat we can do? where there's life therevope, that knaws." i
smiled. "i suppose there's always some hope, mr. hampson." "well then,
let's get on. let's try!" "all right." i shrugged. "he's not really in
acute pain -more discomfort-so i suppose there's no harm in treating
him. i'll leave you a course of powders." as i pushed my way from the
pen i couldn't help noticing the superb sleek condition of the other
pigs. "my word," i said. "these pigs are in grand fettle. i've never
seen a better lot. you must feed them well." it was a mistake.
enthusiasm added many decibels to his volume. "aye!" he bellowed.
"you've got to give stock a bit 0' good stuff to mek 'em do right!" my
head was still ringing when i reached the car and opened the boot. i
handed over a packet of my faithful sulphonamide powders. they had done
great things for me but i didn't expect much here.

it was strange that i should go straight from the chief shouter of the
practice to the chief whisperer. elijah wentworth made all his
communications sotto voce. i found mr. wentworth hosing down his cow
byre and he turned and looked at me with his habitual serious
expression. he was a tall thin man, very precise in his speech and ways,
and though he was a hard-working farmer he didn't look like one. this
impression was heightened by his clothes which were more suited to
office work than his rough trade. a fairly new trilby hat sat straight
on his head as he came over to me.' i was able, to examine it thoroughly
because he came so close that we were almost touching noses. he took a
quick look around him. "mr. herriot," he whispered, "i've got a real bad
case." he spoke always as though every pronouncement was of the utmost
gravity and secrecy. "oh i'm sorry to hear that. what's the trouble?"
"fine big bullock, mr. herriot. going' down fast." he, moved in closer
till he could murmur directly into my ear. "i suspect the." he backed
away, face drawn. "that doesn't sound so good," i said. "where is he?"
the farmer crooked a finger and i followed him into a loose box. the
bullock was a hereford cross and should have weighed about ten
hundredweight, but was gaunt and emaciated. i could understand mr.
wentworth's fears, but i was beginning to develop a clinical sense and
it didn't look like the to me. "is he coughing?" i asked. "no, never
coughs, but he's a bit skittered." i went over the animal carefully and
there were a few things-the submaxillary oedema, the pot-bellied
appearance, the pallor of the mucous membranes-which made diagnosis
straightforward. "i think he's got liver fluke, mr. wentworth. i'll take
a dung sample and have it examined for fluke eggs but i want to treat
him right away." "liver fluke? where would he pick that up?" "usually
from a wet pasture. where has he been running lately?" the farmer
pointed through the door. "over yonder. i'll show you." i walked with
him a few hundred yards and through a couple of gates into a wide flat
field lying at the base of the fell. the squelchy feel of the turf and
the scattered tufts of bog grass told the whole story. "this is just the
place for it," i said. "as you know, it's a parasite which infests the
liver, but during its life cycle it has to pass through a snail and that
snail can only live where there is water." he nodded slowly and solemnly
several times then began to look around him and i knew he was going to
say something. again he came very close then scanned the horizon
anxiously. in all directions the grassland stretched empty and bare for
miles but he still seemed worried he might be overheard. we were almost
cheek to cheek as he breathed the words into my ear. "ah know who's to
blame for this."- "really? who is that?"

he made another swift check to ensure that nobody had sprung up through
the ground then i felt his hot breath again. "it's me landlord." "how do
you mean?" "won't do anything for me." he brought his face round and
looked at me wide-eyed before taking up his old position by my ear.
"been going' to drain this field for years but done nowt." i moved back.
"ah well, i can't help that, mr. wentworth. in any case there's other
things you can do. you can kill the snails with copper sulphate-i'll
tell you about that iater-but in the meantime i want to dose your
bullock." i had some hexachlorethane with me in the car and i mixed it
in a bottle of water and administered it toahe animal. despite his bulk
he offered no resistance as i held his lower jaw and poured the medicine
down his throat. "he's very weak, isn't he?" i said. the farmer gave me
a haggard look. "he is that. i doubt be's a goner." "oh don't give up
hope, mr. wentworth. i know he looks terrible but if it is fluke then
the treatment will do a lot for him. let me know how he goes on."

it was about a month later, on a market day, and i was strolling among
the stalls which packed the cobbles. in front of the entrance to the
drovers' arms the usual press of farmers stood chatting among
themselves, talking business with cattle dealers and corn merchants,
while the shouts of the stallholders sounded over everything. i was
particularly fascinated by the man in charge of the sweet stall. he held
up a paper bag and stuffed into it handfuls of assorted sweetmeats while
he kept up a nonstop brazen-voiced commentary. "lovely peppermint drops!
delicious liquorice allsorts! how about some sugar candies! a couple o'
bars o' chocolate! let's 'ave some butterscotch an' all! chuck in a
beautiful slab o' turkish delight!" then holding the bulging bag aloft
in triumph "'ere! 'erel who'll give me a tanner for the lot?" amazing, i
thought as i moved on. how did he do it? i was passing the door of the
drovers' when a familiar voice hailed me. .1 heyi mr. hfrriot!" there
was no mistaking len hampson. he hove in front of me, red-faced and
cheerful. "remember that pig ye doctored for met' he had clearly
consumed a few market-day beers and his voice was louder than ever. the
packed mass of farmers pricked up their ears. there is nothing so
intriguing as the ailments of another farmer's livestock. "yes, of
course, mr. hampson," i replied. .1 well 'e never did no good i" bawled
len. i could see the farmers' faces lighting up. it is more interesting
still when things go wrong. "really? well i'm sorry." 4. naw 'e didn't.
ah'v.e never seen a pig go down as fast!" "is that so?" 11 aye, flesh
just melted off 'im!" "oh, what a pity. but if you recall i rather
expected . . ." 11 went down to skin and done 'e did!" the great bellow
rolled over the market place, drowning the puny cries of the
stallholders. in fact the man with the sweets had suspended operations
and was listening with as much interest as the others. i looked around
me uneasily. "well, mr. hampson, i did warn you at the tim e . . ." 11
like a walkin' skeleton 'e were! never seen such a objeck!" i realised
len wasn't in the least complaining. he was just telling me, but for all
that i wished he would stop. "well, thank you for letting me know," i
said. "now i really must be off . . ." 11 ah don't know what them
powders were you gave'im." i cleared my throat. "actually they were. .
they did 'im no bloody good any road!" "i see. well as i say, i have to
run . . "ah got mallock to knock 'im on vhead last week." "oh dear.. 91
finished up as dog meat, poor bugger!" "quite ... quite. . ." 61 well,
good day to ye, mr. herriot." he turned and walked away, leaving a
quivering silence behind him.

with an uncomfortable feeling that i was the centre of attention i was
about to retreat hastily when i felt a gentle hand on my arm. i turned
and saw elijah wentworth. "mr. herriot," he whispered. "about that
bullock." i stared at him, struck by the coincidence. the farmers
stared, too, but expectantly. "yes, mr. wentworth?" "well now, i'll tell
you." he came very near and breathed into my car. "it was like a
miracle. he began to pick up straight away after you treated him." i
stepped back. "oh marvelous! but speak up, will you, i can't quite hear
you." i looked around hopefully. he came after me again and put his chin
on my shoulder. "yes, i don't know what you gave 'im. but it was
wonderful stuff. i could hardly believe it. every day i looked at 'im be
had put on a bit more." "great! but do speak a little louder," i said
eagerly. "he's as fat as butter now," the almost inaudible murmur wafted
on my cheek. "ah'm sure he'll get top grade at the auction mart." i
backed away again. "yes . . . yeswhat was that you said?" "i was sure he
was dyin', mr. herriot, but you saved him by your skill," he said, but
every word was pianissimo, sighed against my face. the farmers had heard
nothing and, their interest evaporating, they began to talk among
themselves. then as the man with the sweets started to fill his bags and
shout again mr. wentworth moved in and confided softly and secretly into
my private ear. "that was the most brilliant and marvelous cure i have
ever seen." chapter 24.

24

it must be unusual to feel senile in one's twenties, but it was
happening to me. there were a few men of my own age among my raf friends
but for the most part i was surrounded by eighteen- and
nineteen-year-olds. it seemed that the selection boards thought this the
optimum age for training pilots, navigators and air gunners and i often
wondered how we elderly gentlemen had managed to creep in. these boys
used to pull my leg. the fact that i was not merely married but a father
put me in the dotage class, and the saddest part was that i really did
feel old in their company. they were all having the most marvelous
time; chasing the local girls, drinking, going to dances and parties,
carried along on the frothy insouciance which a war engenders. and i
often thought that if it had all happened a few years earlier i would
have been doing the same. but it was no good now. most of me was still
back in darrowby. during the day there was enough pressure to keep my
mind occupied; in the evenings when i was off the leash all i wanted to
do were the simple things i had done with helen; the long games of
bezique by the fireside in our bed-sitter, tense battles on the
push-ha'penny board; we even used to throw rings at hooks on a board on
the wall. kids' games after a hard slog round the practice, but even now
as i look down the years i know i have never found a better way of
living. it was when we were lying in bed one night that helen brought up
the subject of granville bennett. "jim," she murmured sleepily. "mr.
bennett 'phoned again today. and his wife rang last week. they keep
asking us to have a meal with them." 196

"yes . . . yes . . ." i didn't want to talk about anything at that
moment. this was always a good time. the dying flames sent lights and
shadows dancing across the ceiling. oscar rabin's band was playing deep
purple on the bedside radio ewan ross gave us for a wedding present and
i had just puffed off an unexpected victory at pushha'penny. helen was a
dab hand at that game, urging the coins expertly up the board with the
ball of her thumb, her lips pushed forward in a pout of concentration.
of course she had a lifetime of experience behind her while i was just
learning, and it was inevitable that i seldom won. but i had done it
tonight and i felt good. my wife nudged me with her knee. "jim, i can't
understand you. you never seem to do anything about il and yet you say
you like him." "oh, i do, be's a grand chap, one of the best." everybody
liked granville, but at the same time there were many strong men who
dived down alleys at the sight of him. i didn't like to tell helen that
every time i came into contact with him i got my wings singed. i fully
realised that he meant well, that the whole thing was a natural
extension of his extreme generosity. but it didn't help. "and you said
his wife was very nice, too." "zoe? oh yes, she's lovely." and she was,
too, but thanks to her husband she had never seen me in any other role
than a drunken hulk. my toes curled under the blankets. zoe was
beautiful, kind and intelligent-just the kind of woman you wanted to
observe you staggering and hiccuping all over the place. in the darkness
i could feel the hot blush of shame on my cheeks. "well then," helen
continued, with the persistence that is part of even the sweetest women.
"why don't we accept their invitation? i'd rather like to meet them-and
it's a bit embarrassing when they keep 'pboning." i turned on my side.
"okay, we'll go one of these days, i promise." but if it hadn't been for
the little papilloma on sam's lip i don't think we would ever have got
there. i noticed the thing-a growth smaller than a pea-near the left
commissure when i was giving our beagle an illicit chocolate biscuit. it
was a typical benign tumour and on anybody else's dog i should have
administered a quick local and whipped it off in a minute. but since it
was sam i turned pale and phoned granville. i have always been as soppy
as any old lady over my pets and i suspect many of my colleagues are the
same. i listened apprehensively to the buzz-buzz at the far end, then
the big voice came on the line. "bennett here." "hello, granville, it's.
. "jim!" the boom of delight was flattering. "where have you been hiding
yourself, laddie?" he didn't know how near he was to the truth. i told
him about sam. "doesn't sound much, old son, but i'll have a look at him
with pleasure. tell you what. we've been trying to get you over here for
a meal-why not bring the little chap with yout' "well . . ." a whole
evening in granville's hands-it was a daunting prospect. "now don't mess
about, jim. you know, there's a wonderful indian restaurant in
newcastle. zoe and i would love to take you both out there. it's about
time we met your wife, isn't it?" "yes ... of course it is.... indian
restaurant, eh?" "yes, laddie. superb curries-mild, medium or blast your
bloody head off. onion bhajis, bhuna lamb, gorgeous nan bread." my mind
was working fast. "sounds marvelous, granville." it did seem fairly
secure. he was most dangerous on his own territory and it would take
forty-five minutes' driving each way to newcastle. then maybe an hour
and a half in the restaurant. i should be reasonably safe for most of
the evening. there was just the bit at his house before we left-that was
the only worry. it was uncanny how he seemed to read my thoughts.
"before we leave, jim, we'll have a little session in my garden." "your
garden?" it sounded strange in november. "that's right, old lad." ah
well, maybe he was proud of his late chrysanthemums, and i couldn't see
myself coming to much harm there. "well, fine, granville. maybe
wednesday night?" "lovely, lovely, lovely-can't wait to meet helen."
wednesday was one of those bright frosty late autumn days which turn
misty in the afternoon and by six o'clock the countryside was blanketed
by one of the thickest fogs i had ever seen in yorkshire. creeping along
in our little car, my nose almost on the windscreen, i muttered against
the glass. "god's truth, helen, we'll never get to newcastle tonight! i
know granville's some driver but you can't see ten yards out there."
almost at walking pace we covered the twenty miles to the bennett
residence and it was with a feeling of relief that i saw the brightly
lit doorway rising out of the mirk. granville, as vast and impressive as
ever, was there in the hall with arms outspread. bashfulness had never
been one of his problems and he folded my wife in a bear-like embrace.
"helen, my pet," he said and kissed her fondly and lingeringly. he
stopped to take a breath, regarded her for a moment with deep
appreciation then kissed her again. i shook bands decorously with zoe
and the two girls were introduced. they made quite a picture standing
there. an attractive woman is a gift from heaven and it was a rare bonus
to see two of them in close proximity. helen very dark and blue-eyed,
zoe brown-haired with eyes of greyish-green, but both of them warm and
smiling. zoe had her usual effect on me. that old feeling was welling
up; the desire to look my best, in fact better than my best. i cast a
furtive glance at the hall mirror. immaculately suited, clean shirted,
freshly shaven, i was sure i projected the desired image of the
clean-limbed young veterinary surgeon, the newly married man of high
principles and impeccable behaviour. i breathed a silent prayer of
thanks that at last she was seeing me stone cold sober and normal.
tonight i would expunge all her squalid memories of me from her mind.
"zoe, my sweet," carolled granville. "take helen into the garden while i
see jim's dog." i blinked. the garden in this fog. i just didn't get it,
but i was too anxious about sam to give the thing much thought. i opened
the car door and the beagle trotted into the house. my colleague greeted
him with delight. "come inside, my little man." then he hollered at the
top. of his voice.

"phoebles! victoria! yoo-hoo! come and meet cousin sam!" the obese
staffordshire bull terrier waddled in, closely followed by the yorkie,
who bared her teeth in an ingratiating smile at all present. after the
dogs had met and exchanged pleasantries granville lifted sam into his
arms. "is that what you mean, jim? is that what you're worried about?" i
nodded dumbly. "good god, i could take a deep breath and blow the damn
thing off!" he looked at me incredulously and smiled. "jim, old lad, why
are you so daft about your dog?" "why do you call phoebe phoebles?" i
countered swiftly. "oh well . . ." he cleared his throat. "i'll get my
equipment. hang on a minute." he disappeared and came back with a
syringe and scissors. about half a cc was enough to numb the part, then
he snipped off the papilloma, applied some styptic and put the beagle on
the floor. the operation took about two minutes but even in that brief
spell his unique dexterity was manifest. "that'll be ten guineas, mr.
herriot,". he murmured, then gave a shout of laughter. "come on, let's
get into the garden. sam will be quite happy with my dogs." he led me
out of the back door and we stumbled through the fog by a rockery and
rose bushes. i was just wondering how on earth he expected to show me
anything in this weather when we came up against a stone outhouse. he
threw open the door and i stepped into a brightly lit, sparkling
aladdin's cave. it was quite simply a fully fitted bar. at the far end a
polished counter with beer handles and, behind, a long row of bottles of
every imaginable liquor. a fire crackled in the hearth and hunting
prints, cartoons and bright posters looked down from the walls. it was
completely authentic. granville saw my astonished face and laughed. "all
right, eh. jim? i thought it would be a nice idea to have my own little
pub in the garden. rather cosy, isn't it?" "yes ... yes indeed . . .
charming." "good, good." my colleague slipped behind the counter. "now
what are you going to have?"

helen and zoe took sherry and i made a quick decision to stick to one
fairly harmless drink. "gin and tonic, please, granville." the girls
received a normal measure of sherry but when the big man took my glass
over to the gin bottle banging on the wall his hand seemed to be
overcome by an uncontrollable trembling. the bottle was upended with one
of those little optic attachments you push up with the rim of the glass
to give a single measure. but as i say, as granville inserted the neck
of the bottle into the glass his whole arm jerked repeatedly as though
he were going into a convulsion. it was obvious that the result would be
about six gins instead of one and i was about to remonstrate when he
took the glass away and topped it up quickly with tonic, ice and sliced
lemon. i looked at it apprehensively. "rather a big one, isn't it?" "not
at all, laddie, nearly all tonic. well, cheers, so nice to see you
both." and it certainly was. they were generous, warm people and
veterinary folk like ourselves. i felt a gush of gratitude for the
friendliness they had always shown me and as i sipped my drink, which
was chokingly strong, i felt as i had often done that these contacts
were one of the brightest rewards of my job. granville held out his
band. "have another, laddie." "well, hadn't we better be getting on our
way? it's a terrible night-in fact i don't see us ever getting to
newcastle in this fog." "nonsense, old son." he took my glass, reached
up to the gin bottle and again was seized with a series of violent
tremors of the forearm. "no problem, jim. straight along the north
road-half an hour or so-know it like the back of my hand." the four of
us stood around the fire. the girls clearly had a lot to say to each
other and granville and 1, like all vets, talked shop. it is wonderful
how easy veterinary practice is in a warm room with good company and a
dollop of alcohol in the stomach. "one for the road, jim," my colleague
said. "no really, granville, i've had enough," i replied firmly. "let's
be off." "jim, jim." the familiar hurt look was creeping over his face.
"there's no rush. look, we'll just have this last one while i tell you
about this gorgeous restaurant." once more he approached the gin bottle
and this time the rigor lasted so long i wondered if he had some history
of malaria. glass in hand he expounded. "it's not just the curry, the
cooking in general is exquisite." he put his fingers to his lips and
blew a reverent kiss into space. "the flavours are unbelievable. all the
spices of the orient, jim." he went on at length and i wished he would
stop because he was making me hungry. i had had a hard day round the
farms and had eaten very little with the evening's feast in view, and as
my colleague waved his hand around and drew word pictures of how they
blended the rare herbs with the meat and fish, then served it on a bed
of saffron rice, i was almost drooling. i was relieved when i got
through the third massive drink and granville squeezed round to the
front of the bar as if ready to go. we were on our way out when a man's
bulk loomed in the doorway. "raymond!" cried granville in delight. "come
in, i've been wanting you to meet jim herriot. jim, this is one of my
neighbours-likes a bit of gardening, don't you raymond?", the man
replied with a fat chuckle. "right, old boy! splendid garden, this!"
granville seemed to know a lot of large, red-faced hearty men and this
was one more. my friend was behind the counter again. "we must just have
one with raymond." i felt trapped as he again pressed my glass against
the bottle and went into another paroxysm, but the girls didn't seem to
mind. they were still deep in conversation and seemed unaware of the
passage of time or the ravages of hunger. raymond was just leaving when
tubby pinder dropped in. he was another enthusiastic horticulturist and
i wasn't surprised to see that he was large, red-faced and hearty. we
had to have one with tubby and i noticed with some alarm that after
another palsied replenishment of my glass he had to replace the empty
gin bottle with a fresh one. if the first one had been full then i had
consumed nearly all of it. i could hardly believe it when at last we
were in the hall putting on our coats. granville was almost purring with
contentment. "you two are going to love this place. it will be a joy to
lead you through the menu." outside the fog was thicker than ever. my
colleague backed his enormous bentley from the garage and began to usher
us inside with great ceremony. he installed helen and zoe in the back,
clucking solicitously over them, then he helped me into the passenger
seat in front as though i were a disabled old man, tucking my coat in,
adjusting the angle of the seat for maximum comfort, showing me how the
cigar lighter worked, lighting up the glove compartment, enquiring which
radio programme i desired. at last he himself was in residence behind
the wheel, massive and composed. beyond the windscreen the fog parted
for a second to show a steep, almost vertical grassy bank opposite the
house, then it closed down like a dirty yellow curtain cutting off
everything. "granville," i said. "we'll never get to newcastle in this.
it's over thirty miles." he turned and gave me a gentle smile.
"absolutely no problem, laddie. we'll be there in half an hour, sampling
that wonderful food. tandoori chicken, all the spices of the orient, old
son. don't worry about a thing-i really know these roads. no chance of
losing my way." he started the engine and drove confidently off, but
unfortunately instead of taking the orthodox route along the road he
proceeded straight up the grassy bank. he didn't seem to notice as the
nose of the great car rose steadily higher, but when we had achieved an
angle of forty-five degrees zoe broke in gently from the back.
"granville, dear, you're on the grass." my colleague looked round in
some surprise. "not at all, my love. the road slopes a little here if
you remember." he kept his foot on the throttle. - i said nothing as my
feet rose and my head went back. there was a point when the bentley was
almost perpendicular and i thought we were going over backwards, then i
heard zoe again. "granville, darling." there was a hint of urgency in
her tone. "you're going up the bank." this time it seemed her husband
was prepared to concede a little.

"yes ... yes, my pet," he murmured as we hung there, all four of us
gazing up at the fog-shrouded sky. "possibly i have strayed a little on
to the verge." he took his foot off the brake and the car shot backwards
at frightening speed into the darkness. we were brought up by a grinding
crunch from the rear. zoe again: "you've hit mrs. thompson's wall,
dear." "have 1, sweetheart? ah, one moment. we'll soon be on our way.
with undiminished aplomb he let in his clutch and we surged forward
powerfully. but only for two seconds. from the gloom ahead there sounded
a dull crash followed by a tinkling of glass and metal. "darling," zoe
piped. "that was the thirty miles an hour sign." "was it really, my
angel?" granville rubbed his hand on the window. "you know, jim, the
visibility isn't too good." he paused for a moment. "perhaps it would be
a good idea if we postponed. our visit till another time." he manoeuvred
the big car back into the garage and we got out. we had covered, i
should think, about five yards on our journey to newcastle. back in the
garden bar, granville was soon in full cry again. and i was,all for it
because my earlier trepidation had vanished entirely. i was floating in
a happy haze and i offered no resistance as my colleague jerked and
twitched more samples from the gin bottle. suddenly- he held up a hand.
"i'm sure we're all starving. let's have some hot dogsl" "hot dogs?" i
cried. "splendid idea!" it was a long call from all the spices of the
orient but i was ready for anything. "zoe, sweet," he said. "we can use
the big can of saveloy sausages if you would just heat it up." his wife
left for the kitchen and helen touched my arm. "jim," she said.
"saveloys . . . t' i knew what she meant. i have a pretty good digestion
but there are certain things i can't eat. a single saveloy was enough to
bring my entire metabolism to a halt, but at that moment it seemed a
pettifogging detail. "oh don't worry, helen," i whispered, putting my
arm round her. "they won't hurt me." when zoe came back with the food
granville was in his element, slicing the juicy smoked sausages
lengthways, slapping mustard on them and enclosing them in rolls. as i
bit into the first one i thought i had never tasted anything so
delicious. chewing happily i found it difficult to comprehend my
previous ridiculous prejudice. "ready for another, old son?" granville
held up a loaded roll. "sure! these are absolutely marvelous. best hot
dogs i've ever tasted!" i munched it down quickly and reached for a
third. i think it was when i had downed five of them that my friend
prodded me in the ribs. "jim, lad," he said between chews. "we want a
drop of beer to wash these down, don't you agree?" i waved my arm
extravagantly. "of course we dol bloody gin's no good for this jobl"
granville pulled two pints of draught. powerful delicious ale which
flowed in a cooling wave over my inflamed mucous membranes, making me
feel i had been waiting for it all my life. we each had three pints and
another hot dog or two while waves of euphoria billowed around me. the
occasional anxious glance from helen didn't worry me in the least. she
was making signs that it was time to go home, but the very idea was
unthinkable. i was having the time of my life, the world was a wonderful
place and this little private pub was the finest comer of it. granville
put down a half-eaten roll. "zoe, my precious, it would be nice to have
something sweet to top this off. why don't you bring out some of those
little gooey things you made yesterday?" she produced a plateful of very
rich-looking cakelets. i do not have a sweet tooth and normally skip
this part of the meal but i bit into one of zoe's creations with relish.
it was beautifully made and i could detect chocolate, marzipan, caramel
and other things. it was when i was eating the third that matters began
to deteriorate. i found that my merry chatter had died and it was
granville doing all the talking, and as i listened to him owlishly i was
surprised to see his face becoming two faces which floated apart and
came together repeatedly. it was an astonishing phenomenon and it was
happening with everything else in the room.

and i wasn't feeling so healthy now. that boundless vigour was no longer
surging through my veins and i felt only a great weariness and a rising
nausea. i lost count of time around then. no doubt the conversation went
on among the four of us but i can't remember any of it and my next
recollection was of the party breaking up. granville was helping helen
on with her coat and there was a general air of cheerful departure.
"ready, jim?" my friend said briskly. i nodded and got slowly to my feet
and as i swayed be put his arm round me and assisted me to the door.
outside, the fog had cleared and a bright pattern of stars overhung the
village, but the clean cold air only made me feel worse and i stumbled
through the darkness like a sleepwalker. when i reached the car a long
griping spasm drove through me, reminding me horribly of the sausages,
the gin and the rest. i groaned and leaned on the roof. "maybe you'd
better drive, helen," my colleague said. he was about to open the door
when, with a dreadful feeling of helplessness, i began to slide along
the metal. granville caught my shoulders. "he'd be better in the back,"
he gasped and began to lug me on to the seat. "zoe, sweetheart, helen,
love, grab a leg each, will you? fine, now i'll get round the other side
and pull him in." he trotted round to the far side, opened the door and
hauled at my shoulders. "down a bit your side, helen, dear. now to me a
little. up a trifle your side, zoe, pet. now back to you a bit. lovely,
lovely." clearly he was happy at his work. he sounded like an expert
furniture remover and through the mists i wondered bitterly how many
inert forms he had stuffed into their cars after an evening with him.
finally they got me in, half lying across the back seat. my face was
pressed against the side window and from the outside it must have been a
grotesque sight with the .nose squashed sideways and a solitary
dead-mackerel eye staring sightlessly into the night. with an effort i
managed to focus and saw zoe looking down at me anxiously. she gave a
tentative wave of goodbye but i could produce only a slight twitch of
the cheek in reply.

granville kissed helen fondly then slammed the car door. moving back, he
peered in at me and brandished his arms. "see you soon, i hope, jim.
it's been a lovely evening!" his big face was wreathed in a happy smile
and as i drove away my final impression was that he was thoroughly
satisfied.

i chapter 25.

being away from darrowby and living a different life i was able to stand
back and assess certain things objectively. i asked myself many
questions. why, for instance, was my partnership with siegfried so
successful? even now, as we still jog along happily after thirty-five
years, i wonder about it. i know i liked him instinctively when i first
saw him in the garden at skeldale house on that very first afternoon,
but i feet there is another reason why we get on together. maybe it is
because we are opposites. siegfried's restless energy impels him
constantly to try to alter things while i abhor change of any kind. a
lot of people would call him brilliant, while not even my best friends
would apply that description to me. his mind relentlessly churns out
ideas of all grades-excellent, doubtful and very strange indeed. 1, on
the other hand, rarely have an idea of any sort. he likes hunting,
shooting and fishing; i prefer football, cricket and tennis. i could go
on and on-we are even opposite physical types-and yet, as i say, we get
along. this of course doesn't mean that we have never had our differences. over the years there have been minor clashes on various points.
one, i recall, was over the plastic calcium injectors. they were
something new so siegfried liked them, and by the same token i regarded
them with deep suspicion. my doubts were nourished by my difficulties
with them. their early troubles have now been ironed out but at the
beginning i found the things so temperamental that i abandoned them. my
colleague pulled me up about it when he saw me washing out my flutter
valve by running the surgery tap through it. 208

"for god's sake, james, you're not still using that old thing, are you?"
"yes, i'm afraid i am." "but haven't you tried the new plastics?" "i
have." "well ... t' "can't get away with them, siegfried." "can't ...
what on earth do you mean?" i trickled the last drop of water through
the tube, rolled it small and slipped it into its case. "well, the last
time i used one the calcium squirted all over the place. and ivs messy,
sticky stuff. i had great white streaks down my coat." "but james!" he
laughed incredulously. "that's crazyl they're childishly simple to use.
i haven't had the slightest trouble." "i believe you," i said. "but you
know me. i haveni got a mechanical mind." "for heaven's sake, you don't
need a mechanical mind. they're foolproof." "not to me, they aren't.
i've had enough of them." my colleague put his hand on my shoulder and
his patient look began to creep across his face. "james, james, you must
persevere." he raised a finger. "there is another point at issue here,
you know." "what's that?" "the matter of asepsis. how do you know that
length of rubber you,have there is clean?" "well, i wash it through
after use, i use a boiled needle, and. . ." "but don't you see, my boy,
you're only trying to achieve what already exists in the plastic pack.
each one is self-contained and sterilised." "oh i know all about that,
but what's the good of it if i can't get the stuff into the cow?" i said
querulously. "oh piffle, james!" siegfried assumed a grave expression.
"it only needs a little application on your part, and i must stress that
you are behaving in a reactionary manner by- being stubborn. i put it to
you seriously that we have to move with the times and every time you use
that antiquated outfit of yours it is a retrograde step." we stood, as
we often did, eyeball to eyeball, in mutual disagreement till he smiled
suddenly. "look, you're going out now, aren't you, to see that
milk-fever cow i treated at john tillot's. i understand it's not up
yet." "that's right." "well, as a favour to me, will you give one of the
new packs a try?" i thought for a moment. "all right, siegfried, i'll
have one more go." when i reached the farm i found the cow comfortably
ensconced in a field, in the middle of a rolling yellow ocean of
buttercups. "she's had a few tries to get on 'er feet," the farmer said.
"but she can't quite make it." "probably just wants another shot." i
went to my car which i had driven, rocking and bumping, over the rig and
furrow of the field, and took one of the plastic packs from the boot.
mr. tillot raised his eyebrows when he saw me coming back. "is that one
o' them new things?" "yes, it is, mr. tillot, the very latest invention.
all completely sterilised." "ah don't care what it is, ah don't eke itl"
"you don't?" "naw!" "well . . . why not?" "ah'11 tell ye. mr. farnon
used one this mornin'. some of the stuff went in me eye, some went in
'is ear 'ole and the rest went down 'is trousers. ah don't think
t'bloody cow got any!"

there was another time siegfried had to take me to task. an old-age
pensioner was leading a small mongrel dog along the passage on the other
end of a piece of string. i patted the consulting room table. "put him
up here, will you?" i said. the old man bent over slowly, groaning and
puffing. "wait a minute." i tapped his shoulder. "let me do it." i
hoisted the little animal on to the smooth surface. "thank ye, sir." the
man straightened up and rubbed his back and leg. "i 'ave arthritis bad
and i'm not much good at liftin'. my name's. bailey and i live at
t'council houses.9' "right, mr. bailey, what's the trouble?"

"it's this cough. he's allus at it. and'e kind of retches at cend of
it." "i see. how old is he?" "he were ten last month." "yes . . ." i
took the temperature and carefully auscultated the chest. as i moved the
stethoscope over the ribs siegfried came in and began to rummage in the
cupboard. "it's a chronic bronchitis, mr. bailey," i said. "many older
dogs suffer from it just like old folks." he laughed, "aye, ah'm a bit
wheezy meself sometimes." "nat's right, but you're not so bad, really,
are you?" "naw, naw." "well neither is your little dog. i'm going to
give him an injection and a course of tablets and it will help him quite
a bit. i'm afraid he'll never quite get rid of this cough, but bring him
in again if it gets very bad." he nodded vigorously. "very good, sir.
thank ye kindly, sir." as siegfried banged about in the cupboard i gave
the injection and counted out twenty of the new m&b 693 tablets. the old
man gazed at them with interest then put them in his pocket. "now what
do ah owe ye, mr. herriot?" i looked at the ragged tie knotted carefully
over the frayed shirt collar, at the threadbare antiquity of the jacket.
his trouser knees had been darned but on one side i caught a pink
glimpse of the flesh through the material. "no, that's all right, mr.
bailey. just see how he goes on." "eh?" "there's no charge." "but . .
"now don't worry about it-it's nothing, really. just see he gets his
tablets regularly." "i will, sir, and it's very kind of you. i never
expected . . ." "i know you didn't, mr. bailey. goodbye for now and
bring him back if he's not a lot better in a few days." the sound of the
old man's footsteps had hardly died away when siegfried emerged from the
cupboard. "god, i've been ages hunting these down. i'm sure you
deliberately hide things from me, james." i smiled but made no reply and
as i was replacing my syringe on the trolley my colleague spoke again.
"james, i don't like to mention this, but aren't you rather rash, doing
work for nothing?" i looked at him in surprise. "he was an old-age
pensioner. pretty hard up i should think." "maybe so, but really, you
know, you just cannot give your services free." "oh but surely
occasionally, siegfried-in a case like this..." "no, james, not even
occasionally. it's just not practical." "but i've seen you do it-time
and time again!" "me?" his eyes widened in astonishment. "never! i'm too
aware of the harsh realities of life for that. everything has become so
frightfully expensive. for instance, weren't those m&b 693 tablets you
were dishing out? heaven help us, do you know those things are
threepence each? it's no good-you must never work without charging."
"but dammit, you're always doing itl" i burst out. .,only last week
there was that. . ." siegfried held up a restraining hand, "please,
james, please. you imagine things, that's your trouble." i must have
given him one of my most exasperated stares because he reached out and
patted my shoulder. "believe me, my boy, i do understand. you acted from
the highest possible motives and i have often been tempted to do the
same. but you must be firm. these are hard times and one must be hard to
survive. so remember in future-no more robin hood stuff, we can't afford
it." i nodded and went on my way somewhat bemusedly, but i soon forgot
the incident and would have thought no more about it had i not seen mr.
bailey about a week later. his dog was once more on the consulting room
table and siegfried was giving it an injection. i didn't want to
interfere so i went back along the passage to the front office and sat
down to write in the day book. it was a summer afternoon, the window was
open and through a parting in the curtain i could see the front steps.
as i wrote i heard siegfried and the old man passing on their way to the
front door. they stopped on the steps. the little dog, still on the end
of its string, looked much as it did before. "all right, mr. bailey," my
colleague said. "i can only tell you the same as mr. herriot. i'm afraid
he's got that cough for life, but when it gets bad you must came and see
us." "very good, sir," the old man put his hand in his pocket. "and what
is the charge, please?" "the charge, oh yes . . . the charge siegfried
cleared his throat a few times but seemed unable to arctic ulate. he kept
looking from the mongrel dog to the old man's tattered clothing and back
again. then he glanced furtively into the house and spoke in a hoarse
whisper. "it's nothing, mr. bailey." "but mr. farnon, i can't let ye
"shh! shh!" siegfried waved a hand agitatedly in the old man's face.
"not a word now! i don't want to hear any more about it." having
silenced mr. bailey he produced a large bag. "there's about a hundred
m&b tablets in here," he said, throwing an anxious glance over his
shoulder. "he's going to keep needing them, so i've given you a good
supply." i could see my colleague had spotted the hole in the trouser
knee because he gazed down at it for a long time before putting his hand
in his jacket pocket. "hang on a minute." he extracted a handful of
assorted chattels. a few coins fell and rolled down the steps as he
prodded in his palm among scissors, thermometers, pieces of string,
bottle openers. finally his search was rewarded and he pulled out a bank
note. "here's a quid," he whispered and again nervously shushed the
man's attempts to speak. mr. bailey, realising the futility of argument,
pocketed the money. "well, thank ye, mr. farnon. ah'ii take tmissus to
scarborough wi' that." "good lad, good lad," muttered siegfried, still
looking around him guiltily. "now off you go." the old man solemnly
raised his cap and began to shuffle painfully down the street. "hey,
hold on, there," my colleague called after him. "what's the matter?
you're not going very well."

"it's this dang arthritis. ah go a long way in a long time." "and you've
got to walk all the way to the council houses?" siegfried rubbed his
chin irresolutely. "it's a fair step." he took a last wary peep down the
passage then beckoned with his hand. 'too~, my car's right here," he
whispered. "nip in and i'll run you home."

some of our disagreements were sharp and short. i was sitting at the
lunch table, rubbing and flexing my elbow. siegfried, carving
enthusiastically at a joint of roast mutton, looked up from his work.
"what's the trouble, james-rheumatism?" "no, a cow belted me with her
horn this morning. right on the funny bone." "oh, bad luck. were you
trying to get hold of her nose?" "no, giving her an injection." my
colleague, transporting a slice of mutton to my plate, paused in
mid-air. "injecting her? up there?" "yes, in the neck." "is that where
you do it?" "yes, always have done. why?" "because if i may say so, it's
rather a daft place. i always use the rump." "is that so?" i helped
myself to mashed potatoes. "and what's wrong with the neck?" "well,
you've illustrated it yourself, - haven't you? it's too danm near the
horns for a start." "okay, well the rump is too damn near the hind
feet." "oh, come now, james, you know very well a cow very seldom kicks
after a rump injection." "maybe so, but once is enough." "and once is
enough with a bloody horn, isn't it?" i made no reply, siegfried plied
the gravy boat over both our plates and we started to eat. but he had
hardly swallowed the first mouthful when he returned to the attack.
"another thing, the rump is so handy. your way you have to squeeze up
between the cows." "well, so what?" "simply that you get your ribs
squashed and your toes stood on, that's all."

"all right." i spooned some green beans from the tureen. "but your way
you stand an excellent chance of receiving a faceful of cow shit." "oh
rubbish, james, you're just making excuses!" he hacked violently at his
mutton. "not at all," i said. "it's what i believe. and anyway, you
haven't made out a case against the neck." "made out a case? i haven't
started yet. i could go on indefinitely. for instance, the neck is more
painful." "the rump is more subject to contamination," i countered. "the
neck is often thinly muscled," snapped siegfried. "you haven't got a
nice pad there to stick your needle into." "no, and you haven't got a
tail either," i growled. "tail? what the hell are you talking about?"
"i'm talking about the bloody tail! it's all right if you have somebody
holding it but otherwise it's a menace, lashing about." siegfried gave a
few rapid chews and swallowed quickly. "lashing about? what in god's
name has that got to do with it?" "quite a lot," i replied. "i don't
like a whack across the face from a shitty tail, even if you do." there
was a heavy-breathing lull then my colleague spoke in an ominously quiet
voice. "anything else about the tail?" "yes, there is. some cows can
whip a syringe out of your hand with their tails. the other day one
caught my big fifty cc and smashed it against a wall. broken glass
everywhere." siegfried flushed slightly and put down his knife and fork.
"james, i don't like to speak to you in these terms, but i am bound to
tell you that you are talking the most unmitigated balls, bullshit and
poppycock." i gave him a sullen glare. "that's your opinion, is it?" "it
is indeed, james." "right." "right." "okay." "very well." we continued
our meal in silence.

but over the next few days my mind kept returning to the conversation.
siegfried has always had a persuasive way with him and the thought kept
recurring that there might be a lot in what he said. it was a week later
that i paused, syringe in hand, before pushing between two cows. the
animals, divining my intent as they usually did, swung their craggy hind
ends together and blocked my way. yes, by god, siegfried had a point.
why should i fight my way in there when the other end was ready and
waiting? j i came to a decision. "hold the tail, please," i said to the
farmer and pushed my needle into the rump. the cow never moved and as i
completed the injection and pulled the needle out i was conscious of a
faint sense -of shame. that lovely pad of gluteal muscle, the easy
availability of the site-my colleague had been dead right and i had been
a pigheaded fool. i knew what to do in future. the farmer laughed as he
stepped back across the dung channel. "it's a funny thing how you
fellers all have your different ways." "what do you mean?" "well, mr.
farnon was 'ere yesterday, injecting that cow over there." "he was?" a
sudden light flashed in my mind. could it be that siegfried was not the
only convincing talker in our practice. . . ? "what about it?" "just
that'e had a different system from you. had savage good arguments
'against going' near the rump. he injected into the neck." something in my
expression must have conveyed a message to him. "there now, mr. herriot,
ye mustn't let that bother ye." he touched my arm sympathetically.
"you're still young. after all, mr. farnon is a man of experience."
chapter 26.

1 leaned on the handle of my spade, wiped away the sweat which had begun
to run into my eyes and gazed around me at the hundreds of men scattered
over the dusty green. we were still on our toughening course. at least
that's what they told us it was. i had a private suspicion that they
just didn't know what to - do with all the air crews under training and
that somebody had devised this method of getting us out of the way.
anyway, we were building a reservoir near a charming little shropshire
town and a whole village of tents had sprung up to house us. nobody was
quite sure about the reservoir but we were supposed to be building
something. they issued us with denim suits and pick-axes and spades and
for hour after hour we pecked desultorily at a rocky hillside. but, hot
as i was, i couldn't help thinking that thing's could be a lot worse.
the weather was wonderful and it was a treat to be in the open all day.
i looked down the slope and away across the sweetly rolling countryside
to where low hills rose in the blue distance; it was a gentler landscape
than the stark fells and moors i had left behind in yorkshire, but
infinitely soothing. and the roofs of the town showing above the trees
held a rich promise. during the hours under the fierce sun, with the
rock rust caking round our lips, we built up a gargantuan thirst which
we nurtured carefully till the evening when we were allowed out of camp.
there, in cool taverns in the company of country folk, we slaked it with
pints of glorious rough cider. i don't suppose you would find any there
now. it is mostly factory-made cider which is drunk in the south of england these days, but many of the pubs used to have 217

their own presses, where they squeezed the juice from the local apples.
to me, there was something disturbing about sleeping in a tent. each
morning when i awoke with the early sun beating on the thin walls it was
as if i were back in the hills above the firth of clyde long before the
war was dreamed of. there was something very evocative about the tent
smell of hot canvas and rubber ground sheet and crushed grass and the
flies buzzing in a little cloud at the top of the pole. i was jerked
back in an instant to rosneath and when i opened my eyes i half expected
to find alex taylor and eddie hutchison, the friends of my boyhood,
lying there in their sleeping bags. the three of us went camping at
rosneath every weekend from easter to october, leaving the smoke and
dirt of glasgow behind us; and here in shropshire, in the uncanny tent
smell, when i closed my eyes i could see the little pine-wood behind the
tent and the green hillside running down to -the turn and, far below,
the long blue mirror of the gareloch glinting under the great mountains
of argyll. they have desecrated rosneath and the gareloch now, but to
me, as a boy, it was a fairyland which led me into the full wonder and
beauty of the world. it was strange that i should dwell on that period
when i was in my teens because alex was in the middle east, eddie was in
burma and i was in another tent with a lot of different young men. and
it was as though the time between had been rubbed away and darrowby and
helen and all my struggles in veterinary practice had never happened.
yet those years in darrowby had been the most important of my life. i
used to sit up and shake myself, wondering at how my thoughts had been
mixed up by the war. but as i say, i quite enjoyed shropshire. the only
snag was that reservoir, or whatever it was that we were hacking out of
the face of the hill. i could never get really involved with it. so that
i pricked up my ears when our flight sergeant made an announcement one
morning. "some of the local farmers want help with their harvest," he
called out at the early parade. "are there any volunteers?" my hand was
the first up and after a few moments' hesitation others followed, but
none of my particular friends volunteered for the job. when everything
had been sorted out i found i had been allotted to a farmer edwards with
three other airmen who were from a different flight and strangers to me.
mr. edwards arrived the following day and packed the four of us into a
typical big old-fashioned farmer's car. i sat in the front with him
while the three others filled the back. he asked our names but nothing
else, as though he felt that our station in civil life was none of his
concern. he was about thirty-five with jet black hair above a sunburnt
face in which his white teeth and clear blue eyes shone startlingly. he
looked us over with a good-humoured grin as we rolled into his farmyard.
"well, here we are, lads," he said. 'this is where we're going to put
you through it." but i hardly heard him. i was looking around me at the
scene which had been part of my life a few months ago. the cobbled yard,
the rows of doors leading to cow byre, barn, pigsties and loose boxes.
an old man was mucking out the byre and as the rich bovine smell drifted
across, one of my companions wrinkled his nose. but i inhaled it like
perfume. the farmer led us all into the fields where a reaper and binder
was at work, leaving the sheaves of corn lying in long golden swathes.
"any of you ever done any stooking?" he asked. we shook our heads
dumbly. "never mind, you'll soon learn. you come with me, jim." we
spaced ourselves out in the big field, each of my colleagues with an old
man while mr. edwards took charge of me. it didn't take me long to
realise that i had got the tough section. the farmer grabbed a sheaf in
each hand, tucked them under his arms, walked a few steps and planted
them -on end, resting against each other. i did the same till there were
eight sheaves making up a stook. he showed me how to dig the stalks into
the ground so that they stood upright and sometimes he gave a nudge with
his knee to keep them in the right alignment. i did my best but often my
sheaves would fall over and i had to dart back and replace them. and i
noticed with some alarm that mr. edwards was going about twice as fast
as the three old men. we had nearly finished the row while they were
barely half way along, and my aching arms and back told me i was in for
a testing time. we went on like that for about two hours; bending,
lifting, bending, lifting and shuffling forward without an instant's
respite. one of the strongest impressions i had gained when i first came
into country practice was that farming was the hardest way of all of
making a living, and now i was finding out for myself. i was about ready
to throw myself down on the stubble when mrs. edwards came over the
field with her young son and daughter. they carried baskets with the
ingredients for our ten o'clock break; crusty apple tart and jugs of
cider. the farmer, watched me quizzically as i sank gratefully down and
began to drink like a parched traveller in the desert. the cider, from
his own press, was superb, and i closed my eyes as i swallowed. the
right thing, it seemed to me, would be to lie here in the sunshine for
the rest of the day with about a gallon of this exquisite brew by my
side, but mr. edwards had other ideas. i was still chewing at the solid
crust when he grasped a fresh pair of sheaves. "right, lad, must get
on," he grunted, and i was back on the treadmir. with a pause at
lunchtime for bread, cheese and more cider we went on at breakneck speed
all day. i have always been grateful to the raf for what they did for my
physical well-being. when i was called up there was no doubt i was going
slightly to seed under helen's beneficent regime. too much good cooking
and the discovery of the charms of an'armchair; i was getting fat. but
the raf changed all that and i don't think i have ever slipped back.
after the six months at scarborough i am certain i didn't carry a
surplus pound. marching, drilling, pt, running-i could trot five miles
along the beach and cliffs without trouble. when i arrived in shropshire
i was really fit. but i wasn't as fit as mr. edwards. he was a compact
bundle of power. not very big but with the wiry durability i remembered
in the yorkshire farmers. he seemed tireless, hardly breaking sweat as
he moved along the rows, corded brown arms bulging from the sleeves of a
faded collarless shirt, slightly bowed legs stumping effortlessly. all
things wise and wonderful 221

the sensible thing would have been to tell him straight that i couldn't
go at his pace, but some demon of pride impelled me to keep up with him.
i am quite sure he didn't mean to rub it in. like any other farmer he
had a job to do and was anxious to get on with it. at the lunch break he
looked at me with some commiseration as i stood there, shirt sticking to
my back, mouth hanging open, ribs heaving. "you're doin' fine, jim," he
said, then, as if noticing my distress for the first time, he shifted
his feet awkwardly. "i know you city ]ads ain't used to this kind of
work and . . . well . . . it's not a question of strength, it's just
knowin' how to do it." when we drove back to camp that night i could
hear my companions groaning in the back of the car. they, too, had
suffered, but not as badly as me. after a few days i did begin to get
the knack of the thing and though it still tested me to the utmost i was
never on the border of collapse again. mr. edwar& noticed the
improvement and slapped me playfully on the shoulder. "what did i tell
you? it's just knowin' how to do it!" but a new purgatory awaited me
when we started to load the corn on to the stack. forking the sheaves up
on to, the cart, roping them there then throwing them again, higher and
higher as the stack grew in size, i realised with a jolt that stooking
ha ' d been easy. mrs. edwards joined in this part. she stood on the top
of the stack with her husband, expertly turning the sheaves towards him
while he arranged them as they should be. i had the unskilled job way
below, toiling as never before, back breaking, the handle of the fork
blistering my palms. i just couldn't go fast enough and mr. edwards had
to hop down to help me, grasping a fork and hurling the sheaves up with
easy flicks of the wrist. he looked at me as before and spoke the
encouraging words. "you're comin' along grand, jim. it's just knowin'how
to do it." but there were many compensations. the biggest was being
among farming folk again. mrs. edwards in her undemonstrative way was
obviously anxious to show hospitality to these four rather bewildered
city boys far from,home, and set us down to a splendid meal every
evening. she was dark like her husband, with large eyes which joined in
her quick smile and a figure which managed to be thin and shapely at the
same time. she hadn't much chance to get fat because she never stopped
working. when she wasn't outside throwing the corn around like any man
she was cooking and baking, looking after her children and scouring her
great barn of a farmhouse. those evening meals were something to look
forward to and remember. steaming rabbit pies with fresh green beans and
potatoes from the garden. bilberry tarts and apple crumble and a massive
jug of thick cream to pour ad lib. home-baked bread and farm cheese. the
four of us revelled in the change from the raf fare. it was said the
aircrews got the best food in the services and i believed it, but after
a while it all began to taste the same. maybe it was the bulk cooking
but it palled in time. sitting at the farm table, looking at mrs.
edwards serving us, at her husband eating stolidly and at the two
children, a girl of ten whose dark eyes showed pron-dse of her mother's
attractiveness and a sturdy, brown- limbed boy of eight, the thought
recurred; they were good stock. the clever economists who tell us that
we don't need british agriculture and that our farms should be turned
into national parks seem to ignore the rather obvious snag that an
unfriendly country could starve us into submission in a week. but to me
a greater tragedy still would be the loss of a whole community of people
like the edwardses. it was late one afternoon and i was feeling more of
a weakling than ever, with mr. edwards throwing the sheaves around as
though they were weightless while i groaned and strained. the farmer was
called away to attend to a calving cow and as he hopped blithely from
the stack he patted my shoulder as i leaned on my fork. "never mind,
jim," he laughed. an hour later we were going into the kitchen for our
meal when mrs. edwards said, "my husband's still on with that cow. he
must be having difficulty with her." i hesitated in the doorway. "do you
mind if i go and see how he's getting on?" she smiled. "all right, if
you like. i'll keep your food warm for you." i crossed the yard and went
into the byre. one of the old men was holding the tail of a big red poll
and puffing his pipe placidly. mr. edwards, stripped to the waist, had
his arm in the cow up to the shoulder. but it was a different mr.
edwards. his back and chest glistened and droplets of sweat ran down his
nose and dripped steadily from the end. his mouth gaped and he panted as
he fought his private battle somewhere inside. he turned glazed eyes in
my direction. at first he didn't appear to see me in his absorption,
then recognition dawned. ... ullo, jim," he muttered breathlessly. "i've
got a right job onere." "sorry to hear that. what's the trouble?" he
began to reply then screwed up his face. "aaahl the old bitchl she's
squeezin' the life out of me arm again! she'll break it afore she's
finished!" he paused, head hanging down, to recover, then he looked up
at me. "the calf's laid wrong, jim. there's just a tail comin' into the
passage and i can't get the hind legs round." a breech. my favourite
presentation but one which always defeated farmers. i couldn't blame
them really because they had never had the opportunity to read franz
benesch's classical work on veterinary obstetrics which explains the
mechanics, of parturition so lucidly. one phrase has always stuck in my
mind: "the necessity for simultaneous application of antagonistic
forces." benesch points out that in order to correct many
malpresentations it is necessary to apply traction and repulsion at the
same time, and to do that with one hand in a straining cow is
impossible. as though to endorse my thoughts mr. edwards burst out once
more. "dang it, i've missed it again! i keep pushin' the hock away then
grabbin' for the foot but the old bitch just shoves it all back at me.
i've been doin' this for an hour now and i'm about knackered." i never
thought i would hear such words from this tough little man, but there
was no doubt he had suffered. the cow was a massive animal with a back
like a dining table and she was heaving the farmer back effortlessly
every time she strained. we didn't see many red polls in yorkshire but
the ones i had met were self-willed and strong as elephants; the idea of
pushing against one for an hour made me quail. mr. edwards pulled his
arm out and stood for a moment leaning against the hairy rump. the animal was quite unperturbed by
the interference of this puny human but the farmer was a picture of
exhaustion. he worked his dangling fingers gingerly then looked up at
me. "by god!" he grunted. "she's given me some stick. i've got hardly
any feelin' left in this arm." he didn't have to tell me. i had known
that sensation many a time. even benesch in the midst of his coldly
scientific "reposition s," "retropulsions," "malpositions" and
"counteracting pressures" so far unbends as to state that "great demands
are made upon the strength of the operator." mr. edwards would agree
with him. the farmer took a long shuddering breath and moved over to the
bucket of hot water on the floor. he washed his arms then turned back to
the cow with something like dread on his face. "look," i said. "please
let me help you." he gave me a pallid smile. "thanks, jim, but there's
nuthin' you can do. those legs have got to come round." "that's what i
mean. i can do it." "what ... t' "with a bit of help from you. have you
got a piece of binder twine handy?" "aye, we've got yards of it, lad,
but i'm tellin' you you need experience for this job. you know nuthin'
about . . ." he stopped because i was already pulling my shirt over my
head. he was too tired to argue in any case. hanging the shirt on a nail
on the wall, bending over the bucket and soaping my arms with the scent
of the antiseptic coming up to me brought a rush of memories which was
almost overwhelming. i held out my hand and mr. edwards wordlessly
passed me a length of twine. i soaked it in the water, then quickly tied
a slipknot at one end and inserted my hand into the cow. ah yes, there
was the tail, so familiar, hanging between the calf's pelvic bones. oh,
i did love a breech, and i ran my hand with almost voluptuous
satisfaction along the hair of the limb till i reached the tiny foot. it
was a moment's work to push the loop over the fetlock and tighten it
while i passed the free end between the digits of the cloven foot. "hold
that," i said to the farmer, "and pull it steadily when i tell you."

1 put my hand on the hock and began to push it away from me into the
uterus. "now pull," i said. "but carefully. don't jerk." like a man in a
dream he did as i said and within seconds the foot popped out of the
vulva. "hell!" said mr. edwards. "now for the other one," i murmured as
i removed the loop. i repeated the procedure, the farmer, slightly
popeyed, pulling on the twine. the second little hoof, yellow and
moist, joined its fellow on the outside almost immediately. "bloody
hell!" said mr. edwards. "right," i said. "grab a leg and we'll have him
out in a couple of ticks." we each took a bold and leaned back, but the
big cow did the job for us, giving a great heave which deposited the
calf wet and wriggling into my arms. i staggered back and dropped with
it on to the straw. "grand bull calf, mr. edwards," i said.-"better give
him a rub down." the farmer shot me a disbelieving glance then twisted
some hay into a wisp and began to dry off the little creature. "if you
ever get stuck with a breech presentation again," i said, "i'll show you
what you ought to do. you have to push and pull at the same time and
that's where the twine comes in. as you repel the hock with your hand
somebody else pulls the foot round, but you'll notice i have the twine
between the calf's cleats and that's important. that way it lifts the
sharp little foot up and prevents injury to the vaginal wall." the
farmer nodded dumbly and went on with his rubbing. when he had finished
he looked up at me in bewilderment and his lips moved soundlessly a few
times before he spoke. "what the how . . . how the heck do you know all
that?" i told him. there was a long pause then he exploded. "you young
bugger! you kept that dark, didn't you?" "well ... you never asked me."
he scratched his head. "well, i don't want to be nosey with you ]ads
that helps me. some folks don't like it. his voice trailed away. we
dried our arms and donned our shirts in silence. before leaving he
looked over at the calf, already making strenuous efforts to rise as its
mother licked it. "he's a lively little beggar," he said. "and we might
have lost 'im. i'm right grateful to you." he put an arm round my
shoulders. "anyway, come on, mister veterinary surgeon, and we'll 'ave
some supper." half way across the yard he stopped and regarded me
ruefully. "you know, i must have looked proper daft to you, fumblin'
away inside there for an hour and damn near killin' myself, then you
step up and do it in a couple of minutes. i feet as weak as a girl."
"not in the least, mr. edwards," i replied. "it's i hesitated a moment.
"it's not a question of strength, it's just knowing how to do it." he
nodded, then became very still and the seconds stretched out as he
stared at me. suddenly his teeth shone as the brown face broke into an
ever-widening grin which developed into a great shout of laughter. he
was still laughing helplessly when we reached the house and as i opened
the kitchen door he leaned against the wall and wiped his eyes. "you
young devil!" he said. "i allus had a feeling there was something behind
that innocent face of yours." chapter 27.

at last we were on our way to flying school. it was at windsor and that
didn't seem far on the map, but it was a typical wartime journey of
endless stops and changes and interminable waits. it went on all through
the night and we took our sleep in snatches. i stole an hour's fitful
slumber on the waiting-room table at a tiny nameless station and despite
my hard pillowless bed i drifted deliciously back to darrowby. i was
bumping along the rutted track to nether lees farm, hanging on to the
jerking wheel. i could see the house below me, its faded red tiles
showing above the sheltering trees, and behind the buildings the scrubby
hillside rose to the moor. up there the trees were stunted and sparse
and dotted widely over the steep flanks. higher still there was only
scree and cliff and right at the top, beckoning in the sunshine, i saw
the beginning of the moor-smooth, unbroken and bare. a scar on the broad
sweep of green showed where long ago they quarried the stones to build
the massive farmhouses and the enduring walls which have stood against
the unrelenting climate for hundreds of years. those houses and those
endlessly marching walls would still be there when i was gone and
forgotten. helen was with me in the car. i loved it when she came with
me on my rounds, and after the visit to the farm we climbed up the
fell-side, panting through the scent of the warm bracken, feeling the
old excitement as we neared the summit. then we were on the top, facing
into the wide free moorland and the clean yorkshire wind and the cloud
shadows racing over the greens and browns. helen's hand was warm in mine
as we wandered among the heather 227

through green islets nibbled to a velvet sward by the sheep. she raised
a finger as a curlew's lonely cry sounded across the wild tapestry and
the wonder in her eyes sbone through the dark flurry of hair blowing
across her face. the gentle shaking at my shoulder pulled me back to
wakefulness, to the hiss of steam and the clatter of boots. the table
top was hard against my hip and my neck was stiff where it had rested on
my pack. "train's in, jim." an airman was looking down at me. "i hated
to wake you-you were smiling."

two hours later, sweaty, unshaven, half asleep, laden with kit, we
shuffled into the airfield at windsor. sitting in the wooden building we
only half listened to the corporal giving us our introductory address.
then suddenly his words struck home. "'mere's one other thing," he said.
"remember to wear your identity discs at all times. we had two prangs
last week-couple of fellers burned beyond recognition and neither of 'em
was wearing his discs. we didn't know who they were." he spread his
hands appealingly. "this sort of thing makes a lot of work for us, so
remember what i've told you." in a moment we were all wide awake and
listening intently. probably thinking as i was-that we had only been
playing at being airmen up till now. i looked through the window at the
wind sock blowing over the long flat stretch of green, at the scattered
aircraft, the fire tender, the huddle of low wooden huts. the playing
was over now. this was where everything started. chapter 28.

this was a very different uniform. the wellingtons and breeches of my
country vet days seemed far away as i climbed into the baggy flying suit
and pulled on the sheepskin boots and the gloves-the silk ones first
then the big clumsy pair on top. it was all new but i had a feeling of
pride. leather helmet and goggles next, then i fastened on my parachute
passing the straps over my shoulders and between my legs and buckling
them against my chest before shuffling out of the flight hut on to the
long stretch of sunlit grass. flying officer woodham was waiting for me
there. he was to be my instructor and he glanced at me apprehensively as
though he didn't relish the prospect. with his dark boyish good looks be
resembled all the pictures i had seen of battle of britain pilots and in
fact, like all our instructors, he had been through this~ crisis in our
history. they had been sent here as a kind of holiday after their
tremendous experience but it was said that they regarded their
operations against the enemy as a picnic compared with this. they had
faced the might of the luftwaffe without flinching but we terrified
them. as we walked over the grass i could see one of my friends coming
in to land. the little biplane slewed and weaved crazily in the sky,
just missed a clump of trees then about fifty feet from the ground it
dropped like a stone, bounced high on its wheels, bounced twice again
then zig-zagged to a halt. the helmeted head in the rear cockpit jerked
and nodded as though it were making some pointed remarks to the head in
front. flying officer woodham's face was expressionless but i knew what
he was thinking. it was his turn next. the tiger moth looked very small
and.alone on the 229

wide stretch of green. i climbed up and strapped myself into the cockpit
while my instructor got in behind me. he went through the drill which i
would soon know by heart like a piece of poetry. a fitter gave the
propellor a few turns for priming. then "contact!" the fitter swung the
prop, the engine roared, the chocks were pulled away from the wheels and
we were away, bumping over the grass, then suddenly and miraculously
lifting and soaring high over the straggle of huts into the summer sky
with the patchwork of the soft countryside of southern england unfolding
beneath us. i felt a sudden elation, not just because i liked the
sensation but because i had waited so long for this moment. the months
of drilling and marching and studying navigation bad been leading up to
the time when i would take the air and now it had arrived. f. 0.
woodham's voice came over the intercom. "now you've got her. take the
stick and hold her steady. watch the artificial horizon and keep it
level. see that cloud ahead? line yourself up with it and keep your nose
on it." i gripped the joystick in my gauntleted hand. this was lovely.
and easy, too. they had told me flying would be a simple matter and they
had been right. it was child's play. cruising along i glanced down at
the grandstand of ascot racecourse far below. i was just beginning to
smile happily when a voice crashed in my ear. "relax, for god's sake!
what the hell are you play i ng at?" i couldn't understand him. i felt
perfectly relaxed and i thought i was doing fine, but in the mirror i
could see my instructor's eyes glaring through his goggles. "no, no, no!
that's no bloody good! relax, can't you hear me, relax!" "yes, sir," i
quavered and immediately began to stiffen up. i couldn't imagine what
was troubling the man but as i began to stare with increasing
desperation, now at the artificial horizon then at the nose of the
aircraft against the cloud ahead, the noises over the intercom became
increasingly apoplectic. i didn't seem to have a single problem, yet all
i could hear were curses and --roans and on one occasion the voice rose
to a scream. "get your bloody finger out, will you!" i stopped enjoying
myself and a faint misery welled in me. and as always when that happened
i began to think of helen and the happier life i had left behind. in the
open cockpit the wind thundered in my ears, lending vivid life to the
picture forming in my mind. the wind was thundering here, too, but it
was against the window of our bed-sitter. it was early november and a
golden autumn had changed with brutal suddenness to arctic cold. for two
weeks an icy rain had swept the grey towns and villages which huddled in
the folds of the yorkshire dales, turning the fields into shallow lakes
and the farmyards into squelching mudholes. everybody had colds. some
said it was flu, but whatever it was it decimated the population. half
of darrowby seemed to be in bed and the other half sneezing at each
other. i myself was on a knife edge, crouching over the fire, sucking an
antiseptic lozenge and wincing every time i had to swallow. my throat
felt raw and there was an ominous tickling at the back of my nose. i
shivered as the rain hurled a drumming cascade of water against the
glass. i was all alone in the practice. siegfried had gone away for a
few days and i just daren't catch cold. it all depended on tonight. if
only i could stay indoors and then have a good sleep i could throw this
off, but as i glanced over at the phone on the bedside table it looked
like a crouching beast ready to spring. helen was sitting on the other
side of the fire, knitting. she didn't have a cold-she never did. and
even in those early days of our marriage i couldn't help feeling it was
a little unfair. even now, thirty-five years later, things are just the
same and, as i go around sniffling, i still feel tight-lipped at her
obstinate refusal to join me. i pulled my chair closer to the blaze.
there was always a lot of night work in our kind of practice but maybe i
would be lucky. it was eight o'clock with never a cheep and perhaps fate
had decreed that i would not be hauled out into that sodden darkness in
my weakened state. helen came to the end of a row and held up her
knitting. it was a sweater for me, about half done. "how does it look,
jim?" she asked. i smiled. there was something in her gesture that
seemed to epitomise our life together. i opened my mouth to tell her it
was simply smashing when the 'phone pealed with a suddenness which made
me bite my tongue. tremblingly i lifted the receiver while horrid
visions of

calving heifers floated before me. an hour with my shirt off would just
tip me dicely over the brink. "this is sowden of long pasture," a voice
croaked. "yes, mr. sowdcn?" i gripped the phone tightly. i would know my
fate in a moment. "i 'ave a big calf 'ere. looks very dowly and gruntin'
bad. will ye come?" a long breath of relief escaped me. a calf with
probable stomach trouble. it could have been a lot worse. "right, i'll
see you in twenty minutes," i said. as i turned back to the cosy warmth
of the little room the injustice of life smote me. "i've got to go out,
helen." "oh, what a shame." "yes, and i have this cold coming on," i
whimpered. "and just listen to that rain!" "yes, you must wrap up well,
jim." i scowled at her. "that place is ten miles away, and a cheerless
dump if ever there was one. there's not a warm corner anywhere." i
fingered my aching throat. "a trip out there's just what i need-i'm sure
i've got a temperature." i don't know if all veterinary surgeons blame
their wives when they get an unwanted call, but heaven help me, i've
done it all my life. instead of giving me a swift kick in the pants
helen smiled up at me. "i'm really sorry, jim, but maybe it won't take
you long. and you can have a bowl of hot soup when you get back." i
nodded sulkily. yes, that was something to look forward to. helen had
made some brisket broth that day, rich and meaty, crowded with celery,
leeks and carrots and with a flavour to bring a man back from the dead.
i went over and kissed her and trailed off into the night. long pasture
farm was in the little hamlet of dowsett and i had travelled this narrow
road many times. it snaked its way high into the wild country and on
summer days the bare lonely hills had a serene beauty; treeless and
austere, but with a clean wind sweeping over the grassy miles. but
tonight as i peered unhappily through the streaming windscreen the
unseen surrounding black bulk pressed close and i could imagine the
dripping stone walls climbing high to the summits where the rain drove
across the moorland, drenching the heather and bracken, churning the
dark mirrors of the bog water into liquid mud. when i saw mr. sowden i
realised that i was really quite fit. he had obviously been suffering
from the prevalent malady for some time, but like most farmers he just
had to keep going at his hard ceaseless work. he looked at me from
swimming eyes, gave a couple of racking coughs that almost tore him
apart and led me into the buildings. he held an oil lamp high as we
entered a lofty barn and in the feeble light i discerned various rusting
farm implements, a heap of potatoes and another of turnips and in a
corner a makeshift pen where my patient stood. it wasn't the two week
old baby calf i had half expected, but a little animal of six months,
almost stirk age, but dot well grown. it had all the signs of a "bad
doer"-thin and pot-beffied with its light roan coat hanging in a thick
overgrown fringe below its abdomen. "allus been a poor calf," mr. sowden
wheezed between coughs. "never seemed to put on flesh. rain stopped for
a bit this afternoon, so ah let 'im out for a bit of fresh air and now
look at 'im." i climbed into the pen and as i slipped the thermometer
into the rectum i studied the little creature. he offered no resistance
as i gently pushed him to one side, his head hung down and he gazed
apathetically at the floor from deep sunk eyes. worst of all was the
noise he was making. it was more than a grunt-rather a long, painful
groan repeated every few seconds. "it certainly looks like his stomach,"
i said. "which field was he in this afternoon?" "i nob but let 'irn have
a walk round vorchard for a couple of hours." "i see." i looked at the
thermometer. the temperature was subnormal. "i suppose there's a bit of
fruit lying around there." mr. sowden went into another paroxysm, then
leaned on the boards of the pen to recover his breath. "aye, there's
apples and pears all over t'grass. had a helluva crop this year." i put
the stethoscope over the rumen and instead of the normal surge and
bubble of the healthy stomach i heard only a deathly silence. i palpated
the flank and felt the typical doughy fullness of impaction.

"well, mr. sowden, i think he's got a bellyful of fruit and it's brought
his digestion to a complete halt. he's in a bad way." the farmer
shrugged. "well, if vs just a bit bunged up a good dose of linseed oil
'ud shift 'im." "i'm afraid it's not as simple as that," i said. "his is
a serious condition." "well what are we going' to do about it, then?" he
wiped his nose and looked at me morosely. i hesitated. it was bitterly
cold in the old building and already i was feeling shivery and my throat
ached. the thought of helen and the bed-sitter and the warm fire was
unbearably attractive. but i had seen impactions like this before and
tried treating them with purgatives and it didn't work. this animal's
temperature was falling to the moribund level and he had a sunken eye-if
i didn't do something drastic he would be dead by morning. "there's only
one thing will save him," i said. "and that's a rumenotomy." "a what?"
"an operation. open up his first stomach and clear out all the stuff
that shouldn't be there." "are ye sure? d'ye not think a good pint of
oil would put 'im right. it 'ud be a lot easier." it would indeed. for a
moment the fireside and helen glowed like a jewel in a cave, then i
glanced at the calf. scraggy and long-haired, he looked utterly
unimportant, infinitely vulnerable and dependent. it would be the
easiest thing in the world to leave him groaning in the dark till
morning. "i'm quite sure, mr. sowden. he's so weak that i think i'll do
it under a local anaesthetic, so we'll need some help." the farmer
nodded slowly. "awright, ah'il go down t'village and get george
hindley." he coughed again, painfully. "but by gaw, ah could do without
this tonight. ah'm sure i've got brown chitis." brown chitis was a
common malady among the farmers of those days and there was no doubt
this poor man was suffering from it but my pang of sympathy faded as he
left because he took the lamp with him and the darkness closed tightly
on me. there are all kinds of barns. some of them are small, cosy and
fragrant with hay, but this was a terrible place. i had been in here on
sunny afternoons and even then the dank gloom of crumbling walls and
rotting beams was like a clammy blanket and all warmth and softness
seemed to disappear among the cobwebbed rafters high above. i used to
feel that people with starry-eyed notions of farming ought to take a
look inside that barn. it was evocative of the grim comfortless other
side of the agricultural life. i had it to myself now, and as i stood
there listening to the wind rattling the door on its latch a variety of
draughts whistled round me and a remorseless drip-drip from the broken
pantiles on the roof sent icy droplets trickling over my head and neck.
and as the minutes ticked away i began to hop from foot to foot in a
vain effort to keep warm. dales farmers are never in a hurry and i
hadn't expected a quick return, but after fifteen minutes in the
impenetrable blackness bitter thoughts began to assail me. where the
hell was the man? maybe he and george hindley were brewing a pot of tea
for themselves or perhaps settling down to a quick game of dominoes. my
legs were trembling by the time the oil lamp reappeared in the entrance
and mr. sowden ushered his neighbour inside. "good evening, george," i
said. "how are you?" "only moderate, mr. herriot," the newcomer
sniffled. `1This bloody caud's just-ab-ah-whooosh-just getting' a haud o'
me." he blew lustily into a red handkerchief and gazed at me blearily. i
looked around me. "well let's get 9tarted. we'll need an operating
table. perhaps you could stack up a few straw bales?" the two men
trailed out and returned, carrying a couple of bales apiece. when they
-were built up they were about the right height but rather wobbly. "we
could do with a board on top." i blew on my freezing fingers and stamped
my feet. "any ideas?" mr. sowden rubbed his chin. "aye, we'll get a
door." he shuffled out into the yard with his lamp and i watched
him.struggling to lift one of the cow byre doors from its hinges. george
went to give him a hand and as the two of them pulled and heaved i
thought wearily that veterinary operations didn't trouble me all that
much but getting ready for them was a killer. finally the men staggered
back into the barn, laid the door on top of the bales and the theatre
was ready.

"let's get him up," i gasped. we lifted the unresisting little creature
on to the improvised table and stretched him on his right side. mr.
sowden held his head while george took charge of the tail and the rear
end. quickly i laid out my instruments, removed coat and jacket and
rolled up my shirt sleeves. "damn! we've no hot water. will you bring
some, mr. sowden?" i held the head and again waited interminably while
the farmer went to the house. this time it was worse without my warm
clothing and the cold ate into me as i pictured the farm kitchen and the
slow scooping of the water from the side boiler into a bucket, then the
unhurried journey back to the buildings. when mr. sowden linally
reappeared i added antiseptic to the bucket and scrubbed my arms
feverishly. then i clipped the hair on the left side and filled the
syringe with local anaesthetic. but as i infiltrated the area i felt my
hopes sinking. "i can hardly see a damn thing." i looked helplessly at
the oil lamp balanced on a nearby turnip chopper. "that light's in the
wrong place." wordlessly mr. sowden left his place and began to tie a
length of plough cord to a beam. he threw it over another beam and made
it fast before suspending the lamp above the calf. it was a big
improvement but it took a long time and by the time he had finished i
had abandoned all hope of ever throwing off my cold. i was frozen right
through and a burning sensation had started in my chest. i would soon be
in the same state as my helpers. brown chitis was just round the corner.
anyway, at least i could start now, and i incised skin, muscles,
peritoneum and rumenal wall at record speed. i plunged an arm deep into
the opened organ, through the fermenting mass of stomach contents, and
in a flash all my troubles dissolved. along the floor of the rumen
apples and pears were spread in layers, some of them bitten but most of
them whole and intact. bovines take most of their food in big swallows
and chew it over later at their leisure, but no animal could make cud
out of this lot. i looked up happily. "it's just as i thought. he's full
of fruit." "hhrraaagh!" replied mr. sowden. coughs come in various forms
but this one was tremendous and fundamental, starting at the soles of
his hob-nailed boots and exploding right in my face. i hadn't realised
how vulnerable i was with the farmer leaning over the calf's neck, his
head a few inches from mine. "hhrraaagh!" he repeated, and a second
shower of virus laden moisture struck me. apparently mr. sowden either
didn't know or didn't care about droplet infection, but with my hands
inside my patient there was nothing i could do about it. instinctively i
turned my face a little in the other direction. "whoosh!" went george.
it was a sneeze rather than a cough, but it sent a similar deadly spray
against my other cheek. i realised there was no escape. i was hopelessly
trapped between the two of them. but as i say, my morale had received a
boost. eagerly i scooped out great handfuls of the offending fruit and
within minutes the floor of the barn was littered with bramley's
seedlings and conference pears. "enough here to start a shop," i
laughed. "hhrraaagh!" responded mr. sowden. "whooosh!" added george, not
to be outdone. when i had sent the last apple and pear rolling into the
darkness i scrubbed up again and started to stitch. this is the longest
and most wearisome part of a rumenotomy. the excitement of diagnosis and
discovery is over and it is a good time for idle chat, funny stories,
anything to pass the time. but there in the circle of yellow light with
the wind whirling round my feet from the surrounding gloom and
occasional icy trickles of rain running down my back i was singularly
short of gossip, and my companions, sunk in their respective miseries,
were in no mood for badinage. i was half way down the skin sutures when
a tickle mounted at the back of my nose and i had to stop and stand
upright. "ah-ah-ashooo!" i rubbed my forearm along my nose. "he's
startin'," murmured george with mournful satisfaction. "aye, i e's off,"
agreed mr. sowden, brightening visibly. i was not greatly worried. i had
long since come to the conclusion that my cause was lost. the long
session of freezing in my shirt sleeves would have done it without the
incessant germ bombardment from either side. i was resigned to my fate
and besides, when i inserted the last stitch and helped ' the calf down
from the table i felt a deep thrill of satisfaction. that horrible groan
had vanished and the little animil was looking around him as -though he
had been away for a while. he wasn't cheerful yet, but i knew his pain
had gone and that he would live. "bed him up well, mr. sowden." i
started to wash my instruments in the bucket. "and put a couple of sacks
round him to keep him warm. i'll call in a fortnight to take out the
stitches." that fortnight seemed to last a long time. my cold, as i had
confidently expected, developed into a raging holocaust which settled
down into the inevitable brown chitis with an accompanying cough that
rivalled mr. sowden's. mr. sowden was never an ebullient man but i
expected him to look a little happier when i removed the stitches.
because the calf was bright and lively and i had to chase him around his
pen to catch him. despite the fire in my chest i had that airy feeling
of success. "well," i said expansively. "he's done very well. he'll make
a good bullock some day." the farmer shrugged gloomily. "aye, reckon'e
will. but there was no need for all that carry on." "no need ... ?"
"naw. ah've been talkin' to one or two folk about t'job and they all
said it was daft to open 'im up like that. ah should just 'ave given 'im
a pint of oil like i said." "mr. sowden, i assure you. . ." "and now
ah'll have a big bill to pay." he dug his hands deep into his pockets.
"believe me, it was worth it." "nay, nay, never." he started to walk
away, then looked over his shoulder. "it would've been better if you
'adn't come."

i had done three circuits with f. 0. woodharn and on this third one he
had kept fairly quiet. obviously i was doing all right now and i could
start enjoying myself, again. flying was lovely. the voice came over the
intercom again. "i'm going to let you land her yourself this time. i've
told you how to do it. right, you've got her."

"i've got her," i replied. he had indeed told me how to do it-again and
again-and i was sure i would have no trouble. as we lost height the tops
of the trees appeared then the grass of the airfield came tip to meet
us. it was the moment of truth. carefully i eased the stick back, then
at what i thought was the right moment i slammed it back against my
stomach. maybe a bit soon because we bounced a couple of times and that
made me forget to seesaw the rudder bar so that we careered from side to
side over the turf before coming to a halt. with the engine stilled i
took a deep breath. that was my first landing and it hadn't been bad. in
fact i had got better and better all the time and the conviction was
growing in me that my instructor must have been impressed with my
initial showing. we climbed out and after walking a few steps in silence
f. 0. woodham halted and turned to me. "what's your name?" he asked. ah
yes, here was the proof. he knew i had done well. he was interested in
me. "herriot, sir," i replied smartly. for a few moments he gave me a
level stare. "well, herriot," he murmured. "that was bloody awful." he
turned and left me. i gazed down at my feet in their big sheepskin
boots. yes, the uniform was different, but things hadn't changed all
that much. chapter 29.

life in the raf reminded me of something i always knew: men are like
animals. i don't mean men are "beastly." the fact is i don't think
animals are "beastly." what i mean is that no two are exactly alike.
many people think my farm patients are all the same, but cows, pigs,
sheep and horses can be moody, placid, vicious, docile, spiteful,
loving. there was one particular pig called gertrude, but before i come
to her i must start with mr. barge. nowadays the young men from the
pharmaceutical companies who call on veterinary surgeons are referred to
as "reps," but nobody would have dreamed of applying such a term to mr.
barge. he was definitely a "representative" of cargill and sons,
manufacturers of fine chemicals since 1850, and he was so old that he
might have been in on the beginning. it was a frosty morning in late
winter when i opened the front door at skeldale house and saw mr. barge
standing on the front step. he raised his black homburg a few inches
above the sparse strands of silver hair and his pink features relaxed
into a smile of gentle benevolence. he had always treated me as a
favourite son and i took it as a compliment because he was a man of
immense prestige. "mr. herriot," he murmured, and bowed slightly. the
bow was rich in dignity and matched the dark morning coat, striped
trousers and shiny leather briefcase. "please come in, mr. barge," i
said, and ushered him into the house. he always called at midday and
stayed for lunch. my young boss, siegfried farnon, a man not easily
overawed, invariably treated him with deference and in fact the visit
was something of a state occasion. 240

the modern rep breezes in, chats briefly about blood levels of
antibiotics and steroids, says a word or two about bulk discounts, drops
a few data sheets on the desk and hurries away. in a way i feel rather
sorry for these young men because, with a few exceptions, they are all
selling the same things. mr. barge, on the other hand, like all his
contemporaries, carried a thick catalogue of exotic remedies, each one
peculiar to its own firm. siegfried pulled out the chair at the head of
the dining table. "come and sit here, mr. barge." "you are very kind."
the old gentleman inclined his head slightly and took his place. as
usual there was no reference to business during the meal and it wasn't
until the coffee appeared that mr. barge dropped his brochure carelessly
on the table as though this part of the visit was an unimportant
afterthought. siegfried and i browsed through the pages, savouring the
exciting whiff of witchcraft which has been blown from our profession by
the wind of science. at intervals my boss placed an order. "i think we'd
better have a couple of dozen electuaries, mr. barge." "thank you so
much." the old gentleman flipped open a leather-bound notebook and made
an entry with a silver pencil. "and we're getting a bit low on fever
drinks, aren't we, james?" siegfried glanced round at me. "yes, we'll
need a gross of them if you please." "i am most grateful," mr. barge
breathed, noting that down, too. my employer murmured his requests as he
riffled through the catalogue. a winchester of spirits of nitre and
another of formalin, castration clams, triple bromide, stockholm tar-all
the things we never use now-and mr. barge responded gravely to each with
"i do thank you" or "thank you indeed," and a flourish of his silver
pencil. finally siegfried lay back in his chair. "well now, mr. barge, i
think that's it-unless you have anything new." "as it happens, my dear
mr. farnon, we have." the eyes in the pink face twinkled. "i can offer
you our latest product, soothitt, an admirable sedative." in an instant
siegfried and i were all attention. every animal doctor is keenly
interested in sedatives. anything which makes our patients more amenable
is a blessing. mr. barge extolled the unique properties of soothitt and
we probed for further information. "how about unmaternal sows?" i asked.
"you know -the kind which savage their young. i don't, suppose it's any
good for that?" "my dear young sir." mr. barge gave me the kind of
sorrowing smile a bishop might bestow on an erring curate. "soothitt is
a specific for this condition. a single injection to a farrowing sow and
you will have no problems." "that's great," i said. "and does it have
any effect on car sickness in dogs?" the noble old features lit up with
quiet triumph. "another classical indication, mr. herriot. soothitt
comes in tablet form for that very purpose." "splendid." siegfried
drained his cup and stood up. "better send us a good supply then. and if
you will excuse us, we must start the afternoon round, mr. barge. thank
you so much for calling." we all shook hands, mr. barge raised his
homburg again on the front step and another gracious occasion was over.
within a week the new supplies from cargill and sons arrived. medicines
were always sent in tea chests in those days and as i prised open the
wooden lid i looked with interest at the beautifully packed phials and
tablets of soothitt. and it seemed uncanny that i had a call for the new
product immediately. that same day one of the town's bank managers, mr.
ronald beresford, called to see me. "mr. herriot," he said. "as you know
i have worked here for several years but i have been offered the
managership of a bigger branch down south and i leave tomorrow for
portsmouth." from his gaunt height he looked down at me with the
unsmiling gaze which was characteristic of him. "portsmouth! gosh,
that's a long way." "yes, it is-about three hundred miles. and i have a
problem." "really?" "i have, i fear. t recently purchased a six month
old cocker spaniel and he is an excellent little animal but for the fact
that he behaves peculiarly in the car."

"in what way?" he hesitated. "well, he's outside now. if you've got a
minute to spare i could demonstrate." "of course," i said. "i'll come
with you now." we went out to the car. his wife was in the passenger
seat, as fat as her husband was thin, but with the same severe unbending
manner. she nodded at me coldly but the attractive little animal on her
lap gave-me an enthusiastic welcome. i stroked the long silky ears.
"he's a nice little fellow." mr. beresford gave me a sidelong glance.
"yes, his name is coco and he really is quite charming. it's only when
the engine is running that the trouble begins." i got in the back, he
pressed the starter and we set off. and i saw immediately what he meant.
the spaniel stiffened and raised his head till his nose pointed at the
roof. he formed his lips into a cone and emitted a series of
high-pitched howls. "hooo, hooo, hooo, hooo," wailed coco. - it really
startled me because i had never heard anything quite like it. i don't
know whether it was the perfectly even spacing of the hoots, their
piercing, jarring quality, or the fact that they never stopped which
drove the sound deep into my brain, but my head was singing after a two
minute circuit of the town. i was vastly relieved when we drew up again
outside the surgery. mr. beresford switched off the engine and it was as
though he had switched off the noise, too, because the little animal
relaxed instantly and began to lick my hand. "yes i said. "you have a
problem without a doubt." he pulled nervously at his tie. "and it gets
louder the longer you drive. let me take you a bit farther round and . .
." "no-no, no-no," i put in hastily. "that won't be necessary. i can see
exactly how you are placed. but you say you haven't had coco for long.
he isn't much more than a pup. i'm sure he'll get used to the car in
time." "very possibly he will." mr. beresford's voice was taut with
apprehension. "but i'm thinking of tomorrow. i've got to drive all the
way to portsmouth with my wife and this dog and i've tried car sickness
tablets without result." a full day with that appalling din was
unthinkable but at that moment the image of mr. barge rose before me. he
had sprouted wings and floated in front of my eyes like an elderly
guardian angel. what an incredible piece of luck! "as it happens," i
said with a reassuring smile, "there is something new for this sort of
thing, and by a coincidence we have just received a batch of it today.
come in and i'll fix you up." "well, thank heavens for that." mr.
beresford examined the box of tablets. "i just give one half an hour
before the journey and all will be well?" "that's the idea," i replied
cheerfully. "i've given you a few extra for future journeys." "i am most
grateful, you've taken a great load off my mind." he went out to the car
and i watched as he started the engine. as if in response to a signal
the little brown head on the back seat went up and the lips pursed.
"hooo, hooo, hooo, hooo," coco yowled, and his master shot me a
despairing look as he drove away. i stood on the steps for some time,
listening incredulously. many people in darrowby didn't like mr.
beresford very much, probably because of his cold manner, but i felt he
wasn't a bad chap and he certainly had my sympathy. long after the car
bad disappeared round the corner of trengate i could still hear coco.
"hooo, hooo, hooo, hooo."

about seven o'clock that evening i had a phone call from will hollin.
"gertrude's started farrowin'!" he said urgently. "and she's tryin' to
worry her pigs!" it was bad news. sows occasionally attacked their
piglets after birth and in fact would kill them if they were not removed
from their reach. and of course it meant that suckling was impossible.
it was a tricky problem at any time but particularly so in this case
because gertrude was a pedigree sow-an expensive animal will hollin had
bought to improve his strain of pigs. "how many has she had?" i asked.
"four-and she's gone for every one." his voice was tense. it was then i
remembered soothitt and again i blessed the coming of mr. barge. 1
smiled into the receiver. "there's a new product i can use, mr. hollin.
just arrived today. i'll be right out." i trotted through to the
dispensary, opened the box of phials and had a quick read at the
enclosed pamphlet. ah yes, there it was. "ten cc's intramuscularly and
the sow will accept the piglets within twenty minutes." it wasn't a long
drive to the hollin farm but as i sped through the darkness i could
discern the workings of fate in the day's events. the soothitt had
arrived this morning and right away i had two urgent calls for it. there
was no doubt mr. barge had been sent for a purpose-living proof,
perhaps, that everything in our lives is preordained. it gave me a
prickling at the back of my neck to think about it. i could hardly wait
to get the injection into the sow and climbed eagerly into the pen.
gertrude didn't appreciate having a needle rammed into her thigh and she
swung round on me with an explosive bark. but i got the ten cc's in
before making my escape. "we just wait twenty minutes, then?" will
hollin leaned on the rail and looked down anxiously at his pig. he was a
hard-working smallholder in his fifties and i knew this meant a lot to
him. i was about to make a comforting reply when gertrude popped out
another pink, squirming piglet. the farmer leaned over and gently nudged
the little creature towards the udder as the sow lay on her side, but as
soon as the nose made contact with the teat the big pig was up in a
flash, all growls and yellow teeth. he snatched the piglet away quickly
and deposited it with the others in a tall cardboard box. "well, you see
how it is, mr. herriot." "i certainly do. how many have you got in there
now?" "there's six. and they're grand pigs, too." i peered into the box
at the little animals. they all had the classical long-bodied shape.
"yes, they are. and she looks as though she has a lot more in her yet."
the farmer nodded and we waited. it seemed to take a long time for the
twenty minutes to pass but finally i lifted a couple of piglets and
clambered into the pen. i was about to put them to the sow when one of
them squealed. gertrude rushed across with a ferocious roar, mouth
gaping, and i leaped to safety with an agility which surprised me. "she
don't look very sleepy," mr. hollin said.

"no ... no ... she doesn't, does she? maybe we'd better wait a bit
longer." we gave her another ten minutes and tried again with the same
result. i injected a further ten cc's of the soothitt, then about an
hour later a third one. by nine o'clock gertrude had produced fifteen
beautiful young pigs and had chased me and her family from the pen six
times. she was, if anything, livelier and fiercer than when i started.
"well, she's cleansed," mr. hollin said gloomily. "so it looks like
she's finished." he gazed, sad-faced, into the box. "and now i've got
fifteen pigs to rear without their mother's milk. i could lose all this
lot." "nay, nay." the voice came from the open doorway. "you won't lose
'em." i looked round. it was grandad hollin, his puckish features set in
their customary smile. he marched to the pen and poked gertrude's ribs
with his stick. she responded with a snarl and a malignant glare and the
old man's smile grew broader. "ah'll soon fettle the awd beggar," he
said. "fettle her?" i shifted my feet uncomfortably. "what do you mean?"
,.,why, she just wants quietin', that knaws." i took a long breath. "yes,
mr. hollin, that's exactly what i've been trying to do." "aye, but
you're not doin' it the right way, young man." i looked at him narrowly.
the know-all with his liberal advice in a difficult situation is a
familiar figure most veterinary surgeons have to tolerate, but in
grandad hollin's case i didn't feel the usual irritation. i liked him.
he was a nice man, the head of: a fine family. will was the eldest of
his four sons and he had several farmer grandsons in the district.
anyway, i had failed miserably. i was in no position to be uppity.
"well, i've given her the latest injection," i mumbled. he shook his
head. "she don't want injections, she wants beer." "eh?" "beer, young
man. a drop o' good ale." he, turned to his son. "hasta got a clean
bucket, will, ]ad?" "aye, there's a new-scalded one in t'milk house."

"right, ah'11 slip down to the pub. won't be long." grandad swung on his
heel and strode briskly into the night. he must have been around eighty
but from the back be looked like a twenty five year old-upright~
square-shouldered, jaunty. will hollin and i didn't have much to say to
each other. he was sunk in disappointment and i was awash with shame. it
was a relief when grandad returned bearing an enamel bucket brimming
with brown liquid. "by gaw," he chuckled. "you should've seen their
faces down at magon and horses. reckon they've never heard of a two
gallon order afore." i gaped at him. "you've got two gallons of beer?"
"that's right, young man, and she'll need it all." he turned again to
his son. "she hasn't had a drink for a bit, has she, will?" "naw i was
going' to give her some water when she'd finished piggin', but i haven't
done it yet." grandad poised his bucket. "she'll be nice and thirsty,
then." he leaned over the rail and sent a dark cascade frothing into the
empty trough. gertrude ambled moodily across and sniffed at the strange
fluid. after some hesitation she dipped her snout and tried a tentative
swallow, and within seconds the building echoed with a busy slobbering.
"by heck, she likes it!" will exclaimed. "she should," grandad murmured
wistfully. "it's john smith's best bitter." it took the big sow a
surprisingly short time to consume the two gallons and when she had
finished she licked out every corner of the trough before turning away.
she showed no inclination to return to her straw bed but began to
saunter round the pen. now and then she stopped at the trough to check
that there was no more beer in it and from time to time she looked up at
the three faces overhanging the timber walls. on one of these occasions
i caught her eye and saw with a sense of disbelief that the previously
baleful little orb now registered only a gentle benevolence. in fact
with a little effort i could have imagined she was smiling. as the
minutes passed her perambulations became increasingly erratic. there
were times when she stumbled and almost fell and finally with an
unmistakable hiccup she flopped on the straw and rolled on to her side.

grandad regarded her expressionlessly for a few momerits, whistling
tunelessly, then he reached out again and pushed his stick against the
fleshy thigh; but the only response he received from the motionless
animal was a soft grunt of pleasure. gertrude was stoned to the wide.
the old man gestured towards the cardboard box. "put the little 'uns in
now." will went into the pen with a wriggling armful, then another, and
like all new born creatures they didn't have to be told what to do.
fifteen ravenous little mouths fastened on to the teats and with mixed
feelings i gazed at the sight which i had hoped to bring about with my
modetn veterinary skill, the long pink row filling their tiny stomachs
with the life-giving fluid. well, i had fallen down on the job and an
octogenarian farmer had wiped my eye with two gallons of strong ale. i
didn't feel great. sheepishly i closed the box of soothitt phials and
was beating an unobtrusive retreat to my car when will hoilin called
after me. "come in and have a cup o' coffee afore you go, mr. herriot."
his voice was friendly, with nothing to suggest that i had made no
useful contribution all evening. i i made my way into the kitchen and as
i went over to the table will dug me in the ribs. "hey, look at this."
he held out the bucket in which a quantity of the good beer still
sloshed around the bottom. "there's surnmat better than coffee
'ere-enough for a couple of good drinks. i'll get two glasses." he was
fumbling in the dresser when grandad walked in. the old man hung his hat
and stick on a hook on the wall and rubbed his hands. "that can get
another glass out, will," he said. "remember a did the pourin' and a
left enough for three."

next morning i might have been inclined to dwell despondently on my
chastening experience but i had a prebreakfast call to a cow with a
prolapsed uterus and there is nothing like an hour of feverish activity
to rid the mind of brooding. it was 8 a.m. when i drove back into
darrowby and i pulled into the market place petrol station which was
just opening. with a pleasantly blank mind i was watching bob cooper
running the petrol into my tank when i heard the sound in the distance.
"hooo, hooo, hooo, hooo." tremblingly i scanned the square. there was no
other vehicle in sight but the dread ululation approached inexorably
until mr. beresford's car rounded the far corner, heading my way. i
shrank behind a petrol pump but it was of no avail. i had been spotted
and the car bumped over the strip of cobbles before screeching to a halt
beside me. "hooo, booo, hooo, hooo." at close quarters the noise was
insupportable. i peeped round the pump and into the bulging eyes of the
bank manager as he lowered his window. he switched off the engine and
coco stopped his howling and gave me 4 friendly wag through the glass.
his master, however, did not look at all friendly. "good morning, mr.
herriot," he said, grim-faced. "good morning," i replied hoarsely, then
working up a smile i bent at the window. "and good morning to you, mrs.
beresford." the lady withered me with a look and was about to speak when
her husband went on. "i administered one of the wonderful new tablets
early this morning on your advice." i-es chin quivered slightly. "oh,
yes ... ?" "yes, i did, and it had no effect, so i gave him another." he
paused. "since this produced a similar result i tried a third and a
fourth." i swallowed. "really ... ?" "indeed." he gave me a cold stare.
"so i am driven to the conclusion that the tablets are useless." "weller ... it certainly does look. . he held up a hand. "i cannot listen
to explanations. i have already wasted enough time and there are three
hundred miles' driving in front of me." "i'm truly sorry . . ." i began,
but he was already closing the window. he started the engine and coco
froze immediately into his miniature wolf position, nose high, lips
puckered into a small circle. i watched the car roll across the square
and turn out of sight on the road to the south. for quite a while after
it had gone i could still hear coco. "hooo, hooo, hooo, hooo."

feeling suddenly weak, i leaned against the pump. my heart went out to
mr. beresford. as i have said, i felt sure he was a decent man. in fact
i quite liked him, but for all that i was profoundly grateful that i
would probably never see him again.

our audiences with mr. barge usually took place every three months and
it was mid june before i saw him again at the head of our luncheon
table. the silvery head gleamed under the summer sunshine as he sipped
his coffee and murmured politenesses. at the end of the meal he dabbed
his lips with a napkin and slid his brochure unhurriedly along the table
cloth. siegfried reached for it and asked the inevitable question.
"anything new, mr. barge?" "my dear sir." the old gentleman's smile
seemed to convey that the follies of the young, though incomprehensible
to him, were still delightful. "cargill and sons never send me to you
without a host of new products, many of them specific, all of them
efficient. i have many sovereign remedies to offer you." i must have
uttered some sort of strangled sound because he turned and regarded me
quizzically. "ah, mr. herriot, did you say something, young sir?" i
swallowed a couple of times and opened my mouth as the waves of
benevolence flowed over me, but against that dignity and presence i was
helpless. "no . . . not really, mr. barge," i replied. i knew i would
never be able to tell him about the soothitt.

0 chapter 30.

now that we were faced with the reality of life at flying school, the
ties which bound me to my fellow airmen were strengthened. we had a
common aim, a common worry. the feeling of comradeship was very like my
relationship with siegfried and tristan, back in darrowby. but there,
the pressures came not from learning to fly but from the daily challenge
of veterinary practice. our existence was ruled by sudden and unexpected
alarms. tristan, however, didn't let it get him down. he and i were
sitting in t1ke big room at skeldale house one night when the telephone
burst into strident voice. he reached from kis chair and lifted the
receiver. "allo, phs, oo is dis?" he enquired. he listened attentively
for a few moments then shook his head. "naw, naw, verree sorry, but
meester farnon no at home. yis, yis, i tell heem when he come. hokey
dokey, bye bye-" i looked across at him wonderingly from the other side
of the fireplace as he replaced the instrument. these strange accents
were only one facet of his constant determination to extract amusement
from every situation. he didn't do it all the time, only when the mood
was on him, but it was not unusual for farmers to say that "some foreign
feller" had answered the phone. tristan settled comfortably bekind his
daily mirror and was fumbling for a woodbine when the ringing started
again. he stretched out once more. "yaas, yaas, goot efening, howdy do.
vat you vant, huh?" i could just hear a deep rumble from the other end
of the line and tristan suddenly snapped upright in his 251

chair. his daily mirror and cigarettes slithered to the floor. "yes, mr.
mount," he said smartly. "no, mr. mounl yes, indeed, mr. mount, i shall
pass on your message immediately. thank you very much, goodbye." he fell
back in the chair and blew out his cheeks. "that was mr. mount." "so i
gathered. and he certainly wiped the smile off your face, triss." "yes .
. . yes ... just a little unexpected." he recovered his woodbines and
lit one thoughtfully. "quite," i said. "what did he ring for, anywayt'
"oh, he has a cart horse to see tomorrow morning. something wrong with
its hind feet." i made a note on the pad and turned back to the young
man. "i don't know how you find the time in your hectic love life, but
you're running around with that chap's daughter, aren't you?" tristan
took the cigarette from his mouth and studied the glowing end. "yes, as
a matter of fact i have taken deborah mount out a few times. why do you
ask?" "oh, no particular reason. her old man seems a bit formidable,
that's all." i could picture mr. mount the last time i saw him. he was
well named; a veritable massif of a man towering several inches over six
feet. from shoulders like the great buttresses of the fell which
overhung his farm rose a beetling cliff of head with craggy outcrops of
jaw and cheek and brow. he had the biggest hands i had ever seen
-approximately three times the size of my own. "oh, i don't know,"
tristan said. "he's not a bad sort." "i agree, i've nothing against
him." mr. mount was deeply religious and had the reputation of being
hard but fair. "it's just that i wouldn't like him to come up to me and
ask if i was trifling with his daughter's affections." tristan
swallowed, and anxiety flitted briefly in his eyes. "oh, that's
ridiculous. deborah and i have a friendly relationship, that's all."
"well i'm glad to bear it," i said. "i've been told her father is very
protective about her and i'd hate to feel those big bands round my
throat." tristan gave me a cold stare. "you're a sadistic bugger

at times, jim. just because i occasionally enjoy a little fernale
company . . ." "oh, forget it, triss, i'm only kidding. you've nothing
to worry about. when i see old mount tomorrow i promise i won't mention
that deborah is one of your harem." i dodged a flying cushion and went
through to the dispensary to stock up for the next day's round. but i
realised next morning that my joke was barbed when i saw mr. mount
coming out of the farm house. for a moment his bulk filled the doorway
then he advanced with measured tread over the cobbles tw he loomed over
me, blocking out the sunshine, throwing a large area around me into
shade. "that young man, tristan," he said without preamble. "he was
speakin' a bit funny like on the phone last night. what sort of a feller
is he?" i looked up at the great head poised above me, at the unwavering
grey eyes probing into mine from beneath a bristling overhang of brow.
"tristan?" i answered shakily. "oh, he's a splendid chap. a really fine
type." "mmm." the huge man continued to look at me and one banana-like
finger rubbed doubtfully along his chin. "does he drinkt' mr. mount was
renowned for his rigid antagonism to alcohol and i thought it unwise to
reply that tristan was a popular and esteemed figure at most of the
local hostelries. "oh, er-" i said. "hardly at all . . . in the
strictest moderation. . ." at that moment deborah came out of the house
and began to walk across the yard. she was wearing a flowered cotton
dress. about nineteen, shining golden hair falling below her shoulders,
she radiated the healthy buxom beauty of the country girl. as she went
by she flashed a smile at me and i had a heartlifting glimpse of white
teeth and warm brown eyes. it was in the early days before i had met
helen and i had as sharp an interest in a pretty lass as anybody. i
found myself studying her legs appreciatively after she had passed. it
was then that i had an almost palpable awareness of her father's gaze
upon me. i turned and saw a new expr-ssion there-a harsh disapproval
which chilled me and left a deep conviction in my mind. deborah was a
little smasher all right, and she looked nice, too, but no no . never.
tristan had more courage than i had. mr. mount turned away abruptly.
"this 'oss is in the stable," he grunted. in those late thirties the
tractor had driven a lot of the draught horses from the land but most of
the farmers kept a few around, perhaps because they had always worked
horses and it was part of their way of life and maybe because of the
sheer proud beauty of animals like the one which stood before me now. it
was a magnificent shire gelding, standing all of eighteen hands. he was
a picture of massively muscled power but when his master spoke, the
great white-blazed face which turned to us was utterly docile. the
farmer slapped him on the rump. "he's a good sort is bobby and i think a
bit about 'im. what a noticed first was a strange smell about his hind
feet and then a had a look for meself. i've never seen owl like it." i
bent and seized a handful of the long feathered hair behind the horse's
pastern. bobby did not resist as i lifted the huge spatulate foot and
rested it on my knee. it seemed to occupy most of my lap but it was not
the size which astonished me. mr. mount had never seen owl like it and
neither had 1. the sole was a ragged, sodden mass with a stinking
exudation oozing from the underrun horn, but what really bewildered me
was the series of growths sprouting from every crevice. they were like
nightmare toadstools-long papillae with horny caps growing from the
diseased surface. i had read about them in the books; they were - called
ergots, but i had never imagined them in such profusion. my thoughts
raced as i moved behind the horse and lifted the other foot. it was just
the same. just as bad. i had been qualified only a few months and was
still trying to gain the confidence of the darrowby farmers. this was
just the sort of thing i didn't want. ")"at is it?" mr. mount asked, and
again i felt that unwinking gaze piercing me. i straightened up and
rubbed my bands. "it's canker, but a very bad case." i knew all about
the theory of the thing, in fact i was bursting with theory, but putting
it into practice with this animal was a bit different. "how are you
going to cure it?" mr. mount had an uncomfortable habit of going
straight to the heart of things. "well, you see, all that loose horn and
those growths will have to be cut away and then the surface dressed with
caustic," i replied, and it sounded easy when i gaid it. "it won't get
better on its own, then?" "no, if you leave it the sole will
disintegrate and the pedal bone will come through. also the discharge
will work up under the wall of the hoof and cause separation." the
farmer nodded. "so he'd never walk again, and that would be the end of
bobby." "i'm afraid so." "right, then." mr. mount threw up his head with
a decisive gesture. "when are you going to do it?" it was a nasty
question, because i was preoccupied at that moment not so much with when
i would do it but how i would do it. "well now, let's see," i said
huskily. "would it be . the farmer broke in. "we're busy hay-makin' all
this week, and you'll be wantin' some men to help you. how about monday
next week?" a wave of relief surged through me. thank heavens he hadn't
said tomorrow. i had a bit of time to think now. "very well, mr. mount.
that suits me fine. don't feed him on the sunday because he'll have to
have an anaesthetic." driving from the farm, a sense of doom oppressed
me. was i going to ruin that beautiful animal in my ignorance? canker of
the foot was unpleasant at any time and was not uncommon in the days of
the draught horse, but this was something away out of the ordinary. no
doubt many of my contemporaries have seen feet like bobby's, but to the
modern young veterinary surgeon it must be like a page from an ancient
manual of farriery. as is my wont when i have a worrying case i started
mulling it over right away. as i drove, i rehearsed various procedures.
would that enormous horse go down with a chloroform muzzle? or would i
have to collect all mr. mount's men and rope him and pull him down? but
it would be like trying to pull down st. paul's cathedral. and then how
long would it take me to hack away all that horn-all those dreadful
vegetations? within ten minutes my palms were sweating and i was tempted
to throw the whole lot over to siegfried. but i was restrained by the
knowledge that i had to establish myself not only with the farmers but
with my new boss. he wasn't going to think much of an assistant who
couldn't handle a thing on his own. i did what i usually did when i was
worried; drove off the unfenced road, got out of the car and followed a
track across the moor. the track wound beneath the brow of the fell
which overlooked the mount farm and when i had left the road far behind
i flopped on the grass and looked down on the sunlit valley floor a
thousand feet below. in most places you could hear something-the call of
a bird, a car in the distance-but here there was a silence which was
absolute, except when the wind sighed over the hill top, rustling the
bracken around me. the farm lay in one of the soft places in a harsh
countryside; lush flat fields where cattle grazed in comfort and the cut
hay lay in long even swathes. it was a placid scene, but it was up here
in the airy heights that you found true serenity. peace dwelt here in
the high moorland, stealing across the empty miles, breathing from the
silence and the tufted grass and the black, peaty earth. the heady
fragrance of the hay rose in the warm summer air and as always i felt my
troubles dissolving. even now, after all the years, i still count myself
lucky that i can so often find tranquillity of mind in the high places.
as i rose to go i filled with a calm resolve. i would do the job
somehow. surely i could manage the thing without troubling siegfried. in
any case siegfried had other things on his mind when i met him over the
lunch table. "i looked in at granville bennett's surgery at hartington
this morning," he said, helping himself to some new potatoes which had
been picked that morning from the garden. "and i must say i was very
impressed with his waiting room. all those magazines. i know we don't
have the numbers to cater for, but there's often a lot of farmers in
there." he poured gravy on to a corner of his plate. "tristan, i'll give
you the job. slip round to garlow's and order a few suitable things to
be delivered every week, will you?" "okay," his student brother replied.
"i'll do it this afternoon."

"splendid." siegfried chewed happily. "we must keep progressing in every
way. do have some more of these potatoes, james, they really are very
good." tristan went into action right away and within two days the table
and shelves in our waiting room carried a tasteful selection of
periodicals, the illustrated london news, the farmer's weekly, the
farmer and stock- breeder, punch. but as usual he had to embroider the
situation. "look at this, jim," he whispered one afternoon, guiding me
through the door. "i've been having a little harmless sport." "what do
you mean?" i looked around me uncomprekendingly. tristan said nothing,
but pointed to one of the shelves. there, among the innocent journals,
was a german naturist magazine displaying a startling frontispiece of
full frontal nudity. even in these permissive days it would have caused
a raised eyebrow but in rural yorkshire in the thirties it was
cataclysmic. "where the devil did you get this?" i gasped, leafing
through it hurriedly. it was just the same inside. "and what's the idea,
anyway?" tristan repressed a giggle. "a fellow at college gave it to me.
and it's rather a lark to sneak in quietly and find some solid citizen
having a peek when he thinks nobody's looking. i've had some very
successful incursions. my best bags so far have been a town councillor,
a justice of the peace and a lay preacher." i shook my head. "i think
you're sticking your neck out. what if siegfried comes across it?" "no
fear of that," he said. "he rarely comes in here and he's always in too
much of a hurry. anyway, it's well out of the way." i shrugged. tristan
had been blessed with an agile intelligence which i envied, but so much
of it was misapplied. h6wever, at the moment i hadn't time for his
tricks. my mind was feverishly preoccupied. mentally i had cast that
horse by innumerable methods and operated on his feet a thousand times
by night and day. in daylight, riding around in the car, it wasn't so
bad, but the operations i carried out in bed were truly bizarre. all the
time i had the feeling that something was wrong, that there was some
fatal flaw in the picture of myself carving away those hideous growths in one session. finally i buried my
pride. "siegfried," i said, one afternoon when the practice was slack.
"i have rather a weird horse case." my boss's eyes glinted and the mouth
beneath the small sandy moustache crooked into a smile. the word "horse"
usually had this effect. "really, james? tell me." i told him. "yes ...
yes he murmured. "maybe we'd better have a look together." the mount
farm was deserted when we arrived. everybody was in the hayfields
working frantically while the sunshine lasted. "where is he?" siegfried
asked. "in here." i led the way to the stable. my boss lifted a hind
foot and whistled softly. then he moved round and examined the other
one. for a full minute he gazed down at the obscene fungi thrusting from
the tattered stinking horn. when he stood up be looked at me
expressionlessly. it was a few seconds before he spoke. "and you were
just going to pop round here on monday, tip this big fellow on to the
grass and do the job?" "yes," i replied. "that was the idea." a strange
smile spread over my employer's face. it held something of wonder,
sympathy, amusement and a tinge of admiration. finally he laughed and
shook his head. "ah, the innocence of youth," he murmured. "what do you
mean?" after all, i was only six years younger thart siegfried. he came
over and patted my shoulder. "i'm not mocking you, james. this is the
worst case of canker i've ever seen and i've seen a few." "you mean i
couldn't do it at one go?" "that's exactly what i mean. there's six
weeks' work here, james." "six weeks . . . t' "yes, and there'll be
three men involved. we'll have to get this horse in to one of the loose
boxes at skeldale house and then the two of us plus a blacksmith will
have a go at him. after that his feet ww have to be dressed every day in
the stocks."

"t see.~, "yes, yes." siegfried was warming to his subject. "we'll use
the strongest caustic-nitric acid-and he'll be shod with special shoes
with a metal plate to exert pressure on the sole." he stopped, probably
because i was beginning to look bewildered, then he continued in a
gentler tone. "believe me, james, all this is necessary. the alternative
is to shoot a fine horse, because he can't go on much longer than this."
i looked at bobby, at the white face again turned towards us. the
thought of a bullet entering that noble head was unbearable. "all right,
whatever you say, siegfried," i mumbled, and just then mr. mount's vast
bulk darkened the entrance to the stable. "ah, good afternoon to you,
mr. mount," my boss said. "i hope you're getting a good crop of hay."
"aye, thank ye, mr. farnon. we're doing very nicely. we've been lucky
with the weather." the big man looked curiously from one of us to the
other, and siegfried went on quickly. "mr. herriot asked me to come and
look at your horse. he's been thinking the matter over and has decided
that it would be better to hospitalise him at our place for a few weeks.
i must say i agree with him. it's a very bad case and the chances of a
permanent cure would be increased." bless you, siegfried, i thought. i
had expected to emerge from this meeting as the number one chump, but
all was suddenly well. i congratulated myself, not for the first time,
on having an employer who never let me down. mr. mount took off his hat
and drew a forearm across his sweating brow. "aye well, if that's what
you think, both of ye, we'd better do it. ah want the best for bobby.
he's a favourite o' mine." "yes, he's a grand sort, mr. mount."
siegfried went round the big animal, patting and stroking him, then as
we walked back to the car he kept up an effortless conversation with the
farmer. i had always found it difficult to speak to this formidable man,
but in my colleague's presence he became quite chatty. in fact there
were one or two occasions when he almost smiled. bobby came in to the
yard at skeldale house the following day and when i saw the amount of sheer hard labour which the
operation entailed i realised the utter impossibility of a single man
doing it at one go. pat jenner the blacksmith with his full tool kit was
pressed into service and between us, taking it in turns, we removed all
the vegetations and diseased tissue, leaving only healthy horn.
siegfried applied the acid to cauterise the area, then packed the sole
with twists of tow which were held in place by the metal plate pat had
made to fit under the shoe. this pressure from the tow was essential to
effect a cure. after a week i was doing the daily dressings myself. this
was when i began to appreciate the value of the stocks with their
massive timbers sunk deep into the cobbles of the yard. it made
everything so much easier when i was able to lead bobby into the stocks,
pull up a foot and make it fast in any position i wished. some days pat
jenner came in to check on the shoes and he and i were busy in the yard
when i heard the familiar rattle of my little austin in the back lane.
the big double doors were open and i looked up as the car turned in and
drew alongside us. pat looked too, and his eyes popped. "bloody 'ell!"
he exclaimed, and i couldn't blame him, because the car had no driver.
at least it looked that way since there was nobody in the seat as it
swung in from the lane. a driverless car in motion is quite a sight, and
pat gaped open-mouthed for a few seconds. then just as i was about to
explain, tristan shot up from the floor with a piercing cry. "hi there!"
he shrieked. pat dropped his hammer and backed away. "god 'elp usl" he
breathed. i was unaffected by the performance because it was old stuff
to me. whenever i was in the yard and a call came in, tristan would drive my car round from the front street and this happened so many times
that inevitably he grew bored and tried to find a less orthodox method.
after a bit of practice he mastered the driverless technique. he
crouched on the floor with a foot on the accelerator and one hand on the
wheel and nearly frightened the life out of me the first time he did it.
but i was used to it now, and blas6.

within a few days i was able to observe another of tristan's little
jokes. as i turned the corner of the passage at skeldale house i found
him lurking by the waiting-room door which was slightly ajar. "i think
i've got a victim in there," he whispered. "let's see what happens." he
gently pushed the door and tiptoed inside. as i peeped through the crack
i could see that he had indeed scored a success. a man was standing
there with his back to him and he was poring over the nudist magazine
with the greatest absorption. as he slowly turned the pages, his
enthralment showed in the way he frequently moved the pictures towards
the light from the french window, inclining his head this way and that
to take in all the angles. he looked as though he would be happy to
spend all day there but when he heard tristan's exquisitely timed cough
he dropped the magazine as though it was white hot, snatched hurriedly
at the farmer's weekly and swung round. that was when tristan's victory
went flat. it was mr. mount. the huge farmer loomed over him for a few
seconds and the deep bass rumble came from between clenched teeth. "it's
you, is it?" he glanced quickly from the young man to the embarrassing
magazine and back again and the eyes in the craggy face narrowed
dangerously. "yes . . . yes ... yes, mr. mount," tristan replied
unsteadily. "and how are you, mr. mount?" "ah'm awright." "good . . .
good . . . splendid." tristan backed away a few steps. "and how is
deborah?" the eyes beneath the sprouting bristles drew in further.
"she's awright." there was a silence which lingered interminably and i
felt for my young friend. it was not a merry meeting. at last he managed
to work up a sickly smile. "ah well, yes, er . . . and what can we do
for you, mr. mount?" "ah've come to see me 'oss." "yes, indeed, of
course, certainly. i believe mr. herriot is just outside the room." i
led the big man down the long garden into the yard. his encounter with
tristan had clearly failed to improve

his opinion of the young man and he glowered as i opened the loose box.
but his expression softened when he saw bobby eating hay contentedly. he
went in and patted the arching neck. "how's he going' on, then?" '~oh,
very well." i lifted a hind foot and showed him the metal plate. "i can
take this off for you if you like." "nay, nay, ah don't want to disturb
the job. as long as all's well, that's all ah want to know." the
dressings went on for a few more weeks till finally siegfried was
satisfied that the last remnants of the disease had been extirpated.
then he telephoned for mr. mount to collect his horse the following
morning. it is always nice to be in on a little triumph, and i looked
over my boss's shoulder as he lifted bobby's feet and displayed the
finished job to the owner. the necrotic jumble on the soles had been
replaced by a clean, smooth surface with no sign of moisture anywhere.
mr. mount was not enthusiastic by nature but he was obviously impressed.
he nodded his head rapidly several times. "well now, that's champion.
i'm right capped wi' that." siegfried lowered the foot to the ground and
straightened with a pleased smile. there was a general air of bonhomie
in the yard, and then i heard my car in the back lane. i felt a sudden
tingle of apprehension. oh no, tristan, not this time, please. you don't
know.... my toes curled as i waited but i realised all was lost when the
car turned in through the double doors. it had no driver. with a
dreadful feeling of imminent catastrophe i watched as it stopped within
a few feet of siegfried and mr. mount who were staring at it in
disbelief. nothing happened for a few seconds, then without warning
tristan catapulted like a jack-in-the-box into the open window.
"yippeeeet" he screeched, but his happy grin froze as he found himself
gazing into the faces of his brother and mr..mount. siegfried's
expression of exasperation was familiar to me, but the farmer's was
infinitely more menacing. the eyes in the stony visage were mere slits,
the jaw jutted, the great tangle of eyebrows bristled fiercely. there
was no doubt he had finally made up his mind about tristan.

1 felt the young man had suffered enough, and i kept off the subject for
a week or two afterwards, but we were sitting in the big room at
skeldale house when he mentioned casually that he wouldn't be taking
deborah out any more. "seems her father has forbidden it," he said. i
shrugged in sympathy, but said nothing. after all, it had been an
ill-starred romance from the beginning. chapter 31.

"circuits and bumps" they called it. taking off, circling the field and
landing, over and over and over. after an hour of it with f. 0. woodham
in full voice i had had enough and it was a blessed relief when we
climbed out at the end. as my instructor walked away, one of his fellow
officers strolled by his side. "how are you getting on with that chap,
woody?" he asked, smiling. f. 0. woodham did not pause in his stride or
turn his head. "oh godl" he said with a hollow groan, and that was all.
i knew i wasn't meant to hear the words but they bit deep. my
spirits.did not rise till i entered the barrack hut and was greeted by
the cheerful voices of my fellow airmen. "hello, jim!" "how's it going,
jim?" the words were like balm. i looked around at the young men
sprawled on their beds, reading or smoking and i realised that i needed
them and their friendship. animals are the same. they need friends. have
you ever watched.two animals in a field? they may be of different
species-a pony and a sheep-but they hang together. this comradeship
between animals has always fascinated me, and i often think of jack
sanders' two dogs as a perfect eiample of mutual devotion. one of them
was called jingo and as i injected the local anaesthetic, alongside the
barbed wire tear in his skin the powerful white bull. terrier whimpered.
just once. then he decided to resign himself to his fate and looked
stolidly to the front as i depressed the plunger. meanwhile his
inseparable friend, skipper the corgi, gnawed gently at jingo?s hind
leg. it was odd to see two 264

dogs on the table at once, but i knew the relationship between them and
made no comment as their master hoisted them both up. after i had
infiltrated the area around the wound i began to stitch and jingo
relaxed noticeably when he found that he could feel nothing. "maybe
this'll teach you to avoid barbed wire fences in future, jing," i said.
jack sanders laughed. "i doubt if it will, mr. herriot. i thought the
coast was clear when i took him down the lane this morning, but he
spotted a dog on the other side of the fence and he was through like a
bullet. fortunately it was a greyhound and he couldn't catch it."
"you're a regular terror, jing." i patted my patient, and the big
roman-nosed face turned to me with an earto-ear grin and at the other
end the tail whipped delightedly. "yes, it's amazing, isn't it?" his
master said. "he's always looking for a fight, yet people and children
can do anything with him. he's the best natured dog in the world." i
finished stitching and dropped the suture needle into a kidney dish on
the trolley. "well, you've got to- remember that the bull terrier is the
original english fighting dog and jing is only obeying an age-old
instinct." "oh i realise that. i'll just have to go on scanning the
horizon every time i let him off the lead. no dog is safe from him."
"except this one, jack." i laughed and pointed to the little corgi who
had tired of his companion's leg and was now chewing his ear. "yes,
isn't it marvelous. i think he could bite jing's ear off without
reprisal." it was indeed rather wonderful. the corgi was eleven years
old and beginning to show his age in stiffness of movement and
impairment of sight while the bull terrier was only three, at the height
of his strength and power. a squat, barrel-chested bundle of bone and
muscle, he was a formidable animal. but when the ear-chewing became too
violent, all he did was turn and gently engulf skipper's head in his
huge jaws till the little animal desisted. those jaws could be as
merciless as a steel trap but they held the tiny head in a loving
embrace. ten days later their master brought both dogs back to the
surgery for the removal of the stitches. he looked worried as he lifted
the animals on to the table. "jingo isn't at all well, mr. herriot," he
said. "he's been off his food for a couple of days and he looks
miserable. could that wound make him ill if it turned septic?" "yes it
could, of course." i looked down anxiously at the area of the flank
where i had stitched, and my fingers explored the long sear. "but
there's not the slightest sign of infection here. no swelling, no pain.
he's healed beautifully." i stepped back and looked at the bull terrier.
h~ was strangely disconsolate, tail tucked down, eyes gazing ahead with
total lack of interest. not even the busy nibbling of his friend at one
of his paws relieved his apathy. clearly skipper didn't like being
ignored in this fashion. he transferred his operations to the front end
and started on the big dog's ear. as his efforts still went unnoticed he
began to chew and tug harder, dragging the massive head down to one
side, but as far as jingo was concerned he might as well not have been
there. "hey, that's enough, skipper," i said. "jing isn't in the mood
for rough stuff today." i lifted him gently to the floor where he paced
indignantly around the table legs. i examined the bull terrier
thoroughly and the only significant finding was an elevated temperature.
"it's a hundred and five, jack. he's very ill, there's no doubt about
that." "but what's the matter with him?" "with a high fever like that he
must have some acute infection. but at the moment it's difficult to
pinpoint." i reached out and stroked the broad skull, running my fingers
over the curving white face as my thoughts raced. for an instant the
tail twitched between his hocks and the friendly eyes rolled round to me
and then to his master. it was that movement of the eyes which seized my
whole attention. i quickly raised the upper lid. the conjunctiva
appeared to be a normal pink, but in the smooth white sclera i could
discern the faintest tinge of yellow. "he's got jaundice," i said. "have
you noticed anything peculiar about his urine?" jack sanders nodded.
"yes, now you mention it. i saw him cock his leg in the garden and his
water looked a bit dark."

"those are bile pigments." i gently squeezed the abdomen and the dog
winced slightly. "yes, he's definitely tender in there." "jaundice?" his
master stared at me across the table. "where would he get that?" i
rubbed my chin. "well, when i see a dog like this i think firstly of two
things-phosphorus poisoning and leptospirosis. in view of the high
temperature i go for the leptospirosis." "would he catch it from another
dog?" "possibly, but more likely from rats. does he come into contact
with any rats?" "yes, now and then. there's a lot of them in an old hen
house at the foot of the lane and jing sometimes gets in there after
them." "well that's it." i shrugged. "i don't think we need to look any
further for the cause." he nodded slowly. "anyway, it's something to
know what's wrong with him. now you can set about putting him right." i
looked at him for a moment in silence. it wasn't like that at all. i
didn't want to upset him, but on the other hand he was a highly
intelligent and sensible man in his forties, a teacher at the local
school. i felt i had to tell him the whole truth. "jack," i said. "this
is a terrible condition to treat. if there's one thing i hate to
see'it's a jaundiced dog." "you mean it's serious?" "i'm afraid so. in
fact the mortality rate is very high." i felt for him when i saw the
sudden pain and concern in his face, but a warning now was better than a
shock later, because i knew that jingo could be dead within a few days.
even now, thirty years later, i quail when i see that yellowish
discolouration in a dog's eyes. penicillin and other antibiotics have
some effect against the causal organism of leptospirosis but the disease
is still very often f atal. "i see . . . i see he was collecting his
thoughts. "but surely you can do something?" "yes, yes, of course," i
said briskly. "i'm going to give him a big shot of antileptospiral serum
and some medicine to administer by the mouth. it isn't completely
hopeless." i injected the serum in the knowledge that it didn't have
much effect at this stage, but i had nothing else to offer. i gave
skipper a shot, too, with the happier feeling that it would protect him
against the infection. "one thing more, jack," i added. "this disease
also affects humans, so please take all hygienic precautions when
handling jingo. all right?" he nodded and lifted the bull terrier from
the table. the big dog, as most of my patients do, tried to hurry away
from the disturbing white-coat-and-antiseptic atmosphere of the surgery.
as he trotted along the passage his master turned to me eagerly. "look
at that! he doesn't seem too bad, does he?" i didn't say anything. i
hoped with all my heart that he was right, but i was fighting off the
convictiou that this nice animal was doomed. at any rate i would soon
know. i knew, in fact, next day. jack sanders was on the ,phone before
nine o'clock in the morning. "jing's not so good," he said, but the
tremor in his voice belied the lightness of his words. . "oh." i
experienced the familiar drooping of the spirits. "what is he doing?"
"nothing, i'm afraid. won't eat a thing ... lying around . just
lifeless. and every now and then he vomits." it was what i expected, but
i still felt like kicking the desk by my side. "very well, i'll be right
round." there were no tail wags from jing to-day. he was crouched before
the fire, gazing listlessly into the coals. the yellow in his eyes had
deepened to a rich orange and his temperature still soared. i repeated
the serum injection, but the big dog did not heed the entry of the
needle. before i left i ran my hand over the smooth white body and
skipper as ever kept burrowing in on his friend, but jingo's thoughts
were elsewhere, sunk in his inner misery. i visited him daily and on the
fourth day i found him stretched almost comatose on his side. the
conjunctiva, sclera, and the mucous membranes of the mouth were a dirty
chocolate colour. "is he suffering?" jack sanders asked. i hesitated for
a moment. "i honestly don't think he's in pain. sickness, nausea, yes,
but i'd say that's all." "well i'd like to keep on trying," he said. "i
don't want to put him down even though you think it's hopeless. you do.
. . don't you?" i made a non-committal gesture. i was watching skip-

per who seemed bewildered. he had given up his worrying tactics and was
sniffing round his friend in a puzzled mander. only once did he pull
very gently at the unresponsive ear. i went through the motions with a
feeling of helplessness and left with the unpleasant intuition that i
would never see jingo alive again. and even though i was waiting for it,
jack sanders' 'phone call next morning was a bad start to the day. "jing
died during the night, mr. herriot. i thought i'd better let you know.
you said you were coming back this morning." he was trying to be
matter-of-fact. "i'm sorry, jack," i said. "i did rather expect. . "yes,
i know. and thank you for what you did." it made it worse when people
were nice at these times. the sanderses were a childless couple and
devoted to their animals. i knew how he was feeling. i stood there with
the receiver in my hand. "anyway, jack, you've still got skipper." it
sounded a bit lame, but it did help to have the comfort of one remaining
dog, even though he was old. "that's right," he replied. "we're very
thankful for skipper." i went on with my work. patients died sometimes
and once it was over it was almost a relief, especially when i knew in
jingo's case that the end was inevitable. but this thing wasn't over.
less than a week later jack sanders was on the 'phone again. "it's
skipper," he said. "he seems to be going the same way as jing." a cold
hand took hold of my stomach and twisted it. "but ... but ... he can't
bel i gave him the protective injectionl" "well, i don't know, but he's
hanging around miserably and hardly eats a thing. he seems to be going
down fast." i ran out and jumped into my car. and as i drove to the edge
of the town where the sanderses lived my heart thudded and panicky
thoughts jostled around in my mind. how could he have got the infection?
i had little faith in the serum as a cure but as a prevention i felt it
was safe. i had even given him a second shot to make sure. the idea of
these people losing both their dogs was bad enough but i couldn't bear
the thought that the second one might be my fault.

the little corgi trailed unhappily across the carpet when he saw me and
i lifted him quickly on to the kitchen table. i almost snatched at his
eyelids in my anxiety but there was no sign of jaundice in the sclera
nor in the mucous membranes of the mouth. the temperature was dead
normal and i felt a wave of relief. "he hasn't got leptospirosis,
anyway," i said. mrs. sanders clasped her hands. "oh thank god for that.
we were sure it was the same thing. he looks so awful." i examined the
little animal meticulously and when i finished i put my stethoscope in
my pocket. "well, i can't find much wrong here. he's got a bit of a
heart murmur but you've known about that for some time. he's old, after
all." "do you think he could be fretting for jing?" jack sanders asked.
"yes, i do. they were such friends. he must feel lost." "but he'll get
over that, won't he?" "oh of course he will. i'll leave some mild
sedative tablets for him and i'm sure they'll help." i met jack a few
days later in the market place. "how is skipper?" i asked. he blew out
his cheeks. "about the same. maybe a bit worse. the trouble is he eats
practically nothing-he's getting very thin." i didn't see what else i
could do but on the following day i looked in at the sanderses' as i was
passing. i was shocked at the little corgi's appearance. despite his age
he had been so cocky and full of bounce, and when jing was alive he had
been indisputably the boss dog. but now he was utterly deflated. he
looked at me with lack-lustre eyes as i came in, then crept stiffly to
his basket where he curled himself as though wishing to shut out the
world. i examined him again. the heart murmur seemed a little more
pronounced but there was nothing else except that he looked old and
decrepit and done. "you know, i'm beginning to wonder if he really is
fretting," i said. "it could be just his age catching up on him. after
all, he'll be twelve in the spring, won't he?" mrs. sanders nodded.
"that's right. then you think . this could be the end?"

"it's possible." i knew what she was thinking. a couple of weeks ago two
healthy dogs rolling around and playing in this house and now there
could soon be none. "but isn't there anything else you can do?" "well i
can give him a course of digitalis for his heart. and perhaps you would
bring in a sample of his urine. i want to see how his kidneys are
functioning." i tested the urine. there was a little albumen, but no
more than you would expect in a dog of his age. i ruled out nephritis as
a cause. as the days passed i tried other things; vitamins, iron tonics,
organo-phosphates, but the little animal declined steadily. it was about
a month after jing's death that i was called to the house again. skipper
was in his basket and when i called to him he slowly raised his head.
his face was pinched and fleshless and the filmed eyes regarded me
without recognition. "come on, lad," i said encouragingly. "lets see you
get out of there." jack sanders shook his head. "it's no good, mr.
herriot. he never leaves his basket now and when we lift him out he's
almost too weak to walk. another thing . . . he makes a mess down here
in the kitchen during the night. that's something he's never done." it
was like the tolling of a sad bell. everything he said pointed to a dog
in the last stages of senility. i tried to pick my words. "i'm sorry,
jack, but it all sounds as if the old chap has come to the end of the
road. i don't think fretting could possibly cause all this." he didn't
speak for a moment. he looked at his wife then down at the forlorn
little creature. "well of course this has been in the back of our minds.
but we've kept hoping he would start to eat. what ... what do you
suggest?" i could not bring myself to say the fateful words. "it seems
to me that we can't stand by and let him suffer. he's just a little
skeleton and i can't think he's getting any pleasure out of his life
now." "i see," he said. "and i agree. he lies there all dayhe has no
interest in anything." he paused and looked at his wife again. "i tell
you what, mr. herriot. let us think it over till tomorrow. but you do
think there's no hope?"

"yes, jack, i do. old dogs often go this way at the end. skipper has
just cracked up . . . he's finished, i'm afraid." he drew a long breath.
"right, if you don't hear from me by eight o'clock tomorrow morning,
please come and put him to sleep." i had small hope of the call coming
and it didn't. in those early days of our marriage helen worked as a
secretary for one of the local millers. we often started our day
together by descending the long flights of stairs from our bed-sitter
and i would see her out of the front door before getting ready for my
round. this morning she gave me her usual kiss before going out into the
street but then she looked at me searchingly. "you've been quiet all
through breakfast, jim. what's the matter?" "it's nothing, really. just
part of the job," i said. but when she kept her steady gaze on me i told
her quickly about the sanderses. she touched my arm. "it's such a shame,
jim, but you can't let your sad cases depress you. you'd never survive."
"aagh, i know that. but i'm a softy, that's my trouble. sometimes i
think i should never have been a vet." "you're wrong there," she said.
"i couldn't imagine you as anything else. you'll do what you have to do,
and you'll do it the right way." she kissed me again, turned and ran
down the steps. it was mid morning before i drew up outside the
sanderses' home. i opened the car boot and took out the syringe and the
bottle of concentrated anaesthetic which would give the old dog a
peaceful and painless end. the first thing i saw when i went into the
kitchen was a fat little white puppy waddling across the floor. i looked
down in astonishment. "what's this ... ?" mrs. sanders gave me a
strained smile. "jack and i had a talk yesterday. we couldn't bear the
idea of not having a dog at all, so we went round to mrs. palmer who
bred jing and found she had a litter for sale. it seemed like fate.
we've called him jingo, too." "what a splendid idea!" i lifted the pup
which squirmed in my hand, grunted in an obese manner and tried to lick
my face. this, i felt, would make my unpleasant task easier. "i think
you've been very sensible." i lifted the bottle of anaesthetic
unobtrusively from my pocket and went over to the basket in the comer.
skipper was still curled in the unheeding ball of yesterday and the
comforting thought came to me that all. i was going to do was push him a
little further along the journey he had already begun. i pierced the
rubber diaphragm on the bottle with my needle and was about to withdraw
the barbiturate when i saw that skipper bad raised his head. chin
resting on the edge of the basket, he seemed to be watching the pup.
wearily his eyes followed the tiny creature as it made its way to a dish
of milk and began to lap busily. and there was something in his intent
expression which had not been there for a long time. i stood very still
as the corgi made a couple of attempts then heaved himself to a standing
position. he almost fell out of the basket and staggered on shaking legs
across the floor. when he came alongside the pup he remained there,
swaying, for some time, a gaunt caricature of his former self, but as i
watched in disbelief, he reached forward and seized the little white ear
in his mouth. stoicism is not a characteristic of pups and jingo the
second yelped shrilly as the teeth squeezed. skipper, undeterred,
continued to gnaw with rapt concentration. i dropped bottle and syringe
back in my pocket. "bring him some food," i said quietly. mrs. sanders
hurried to the pantry and came back with a few pieces of meat on a
saucer. skipper continued his ear-nibbling for a few moments then
sniffed the pup unhurriedly from end to end before turning to the
saucer. he hardly had the strengtk to chew but he lifted a portion of
meat and his jaws moved slowly. "good heavensl" jack sanders burst out.
"that's the first thing he's eaten for days i" his wife seized my arm.
"what's happened, mr. herriot? we only got the puppy because we couldn't
have a house without a dog." "well, it looks to me as though you've got
two again." i went over to the door and smiled back at the two people
watching fascinated as the corgi swallowed then started determinedly on
another piece of meat.

about eight months later, jack sanders came into the surgery and put
jingo two on the table. he was growing into a fine animal with the wide
chest and powerful legs of the breed. his good-natured face and whipping
tail reminded me strongly of his predecessor. "he's got a bit of eczema
between his pads," jack said, then he bent and lifted skipper up. at
that moment i had no eyes for my patient. all my attention was on the
corgi, plump and bright-eyed, nibbling at the big white dog's hind limbs
with all his old bounce and vigour. "just look at that!" i murmured.
"it's like turning the clock back." jack sanders laughed. "yes, isn't
it. they're tremendous friends-jut like before." "come here, skipper."
i grabbed the little corgi and looked him over. when i had finished i
held him for a moment as he tried to wriggle his way back to his friend.
"do you know, i honestly think he'll go on for years yet." "really?"
jack sanders looked at me with a mischievous light in his eyes. "but i
seem to remember you saying quite a long time ago that his days were
over-he was finished." i held up a hand. "i know, i know. but sometimes
it's lovely to be wrong." chapter 32.

"to-day," said f. 0. woodham, "we're going to try a few new things.
spinning, side-slipping and how to come out of a stall." his voice was
gentle, and before he pulled on his helmet he turned his dark,
fine-featured face towards me and smiled. walking over the grass i
thought what a likeable chap he was. i could have made a friend of him.
but he was always like that on the ground. he was altogether different
in The air. yet i could never understand it. flying was no trouble at
all, and as we spun and dropped and soared about the summer sky his
instructions appeared simple and easy to carry out. but the rot, as
always, began to set in very soon. "didn't i tell you opposite rudder
and stick to sideslip?" he bawled over the intercom. "yes sir," was all
i replied, instead of the more appropriate "that's just what i'm doing,
you stupid bugger!" which i might have used in civil life. the goggled
eyes bulged in the mirror. "well, why the bloody hell aren't you doing
it?" his voice rose to a wild shriek. "sorry, sir." "well take her up.
we'll try again. and for god's sake keep your wits about you!" it was
the same with the spins and stalls. i hadn't the slightest difficulty in
pulling out of them but at times i thought my instructor was going out
of his mind. berserk cries rang in my ears. "full opposite rudder and
centralise the stick! centralise it! can't you hear me? oh god, god!"
and of course the panic gradually crept in and i began to crack. one
moment i could see a railway station in 275

front of me whirling around in crazy circles, then there was nothing but
the empty heavens and within seconds fields and trees would start to
rush at me. everything kept changing bewilderingly except the enraged
eyes in the mirxor and the exasperated yells. "centralise it, you bloody
fool! keep your eyes on that cloud! watch your artificial horizon! don't
you know what the altimeter's for? i told you to keep at 1,000 feet but
it's like talking to a bloody wall!" after a while a kind of numbness
took over and the words rang meaninglessly in my head, one sentence
seeming to contradict another. desperately i tried to sort out the
volleys of advice, but the whole thing began to slip from my grasp. back
on the ground and still dizzy, not from the flight but from the
bewildering cataract of words, it occurred to me that i had felt like
this somewhere before. there was a familiar ring about this jumble in my
brain. then it came back to me. it was like being back at the birtwhis-
tles'. ' the trouble with the birtwhistles was that they all spoke at
once. mr. birtwhistle invariably discussed his livestock, his wife
concentrated on family matters and len, their massive eighteen year old
son, talked of nothing but football. i was examining nellie, the big
white cow that always stood opposite the doorway in the grey stone byre.
she had been lame for over a week and i didn't like the look of her.
"lift her foot, will you, len," i said. it was wonderful to have a
muscular giant to hoist the hind limb instead of going through the
tedious business of hauling it up with a ,rope over a beam. with the
cloven hoof cradled in the great hands i could see that my fears were
realised. the space between the cleats was clear but there was a
significant swelling around the interphalangeal joint. i looked up from
my stooping position. "can you see that, mr. birtwhistle? the infection
is spreading upwards." "aye . . . aye . . ." the farmer thrust a finger
against the turnefied area and nellie flinched. "it's going' up her leg
on that side right enough. ah thought it was nowt but a bit o' foul and
i've been puttin' . . ."

"by gaw," len interjected. "the ]ads 'ad a good win against hellerby on
saturday. johnnie nudd got another couple o' goals and . . ." 11. . .
puttin' that caustic lotion between 'er cleats." mr. birtwhistle didn't
appear to have heard his son, but it was always like that. "done it
regular night and mornin'. and ah'll tell ye the best way to do it. get
a hen feather an'. . ". . . ah wouldn't be surprised if'e scores a few
more this saturday," continued len unheedingly. "he's a right bobby
dazzler when'e . . ." ". . . ye just dip it in t'lotion and push the
feather in between t'cleats. it works like a . . ." ". . . gets that
ball on 'is right foot. he just whacks lem in . . ." i raised a hand.
"wait a minute. you must realise this cow hasn't got foul. she has
suppurative arthritis in this little joint just at the coronet here. i
don't want to use a lot of big words but she has pus-matter-right inside
the joint cavity, and it's a very nasty thing." mr. birtwhistle nodded
slowly. "sort of a abscess, you mean? well, maybe it 'ud be best to
lance it. once you let t'matter out it would . . ." ". . . just like a
rocket," went on len. "ah'll tell ye, johnnie could get a trial for
darlington one o' these days and then . . ." i always think it is polite
to look at a person when they are talking to you, but it is difficult
when they are both talking at once, especially when one of them is bent
double and the other standing behind you. "thank you, len," i said. "you
can put her foot down now." i straightened up and directed my gaze
somewhere between them. "the trouble with this condition is that you
can't just stick a knife into it and relieve it. very often the smooth
surfaces of the joint are eaten away and it's terribly painful." nellie
would agree with me. it was the outside cleat which was affected and she
was standing with her leg splayed sideways in an attempt to take the
weight on the healthy inner digit. the farmer asked the inevitable
question. "well, what are we going' to do?" i had an uncomfortable
conviction that it wasn't going to make much difference what we did, but
i had to make an effort. "we'll give her a course of sulphanilamide
powders and i also want you to put a poultice on that foot three times
daily." "poultice?" the farmer brightened. "ah've been doin' that. ah've
been . . ." "if darlington signed johnnie nudd i reckon..." "hold on,
len," i said. "what poultice have you been using, mr. birtwhistle?" "cow
shit," the farmer replied confidently. "ye can't beat a good cow shit
poultice to bring t'bad out. ah've used it for them bad cases o' . . ."
". . . ah'd have to go through to darlington now and then instead of
watchin' the kestrels," len broke in. "ah'd have to see how johnnie was
getting' on wi' them professionals because . . ." i managed a twisted
smile. i like football myself and i found it touching that len ignored
the great panorama of league football to concentrate on a village team
who played in front of about twenty spectators. "yes, yes, len, i quite
understand how you feel." then i turned to his father. "i was thinking
of a rather different type of poultice, mr. birtwhistle." the farmer's
face lengthened and the corners of his mouth drooped. "well, ah've never
found owl better than cow shit and ah've been among stock all me life."
i clenched my teeth. this earthy medicament was highly regarded among
the dales farmers of the thirties and the damnable thing was that it
often achieved its objective. there was no doubt that a sackful of
bovine faeces applied to an inflamed area set up a tremendous heat and
counter-irritation. in those days i had to go along with many of the
ancient cures and keep my tongue between my teeth but i had never
prescribed cow shit and i wasn't going to start now. "maybe so," i said
firmly, "but what i was thinking of was kaolin. you could call down at
the surgery for some. you just heat the tin in a pan of hot water and
apply the poultice to the foot. it keeps its heat for several hours."
mr. birtwhistle showed no great enthusiasm so i tried again. "or you
could use bran. i see you've got a sack over there."

he cheered up a little. "aye ... that's right." "okay, put on some hot
bran three times a day and give her the powders and i'll see her again
in a few days." i knew the farmer would do as i said, because he was a
conscientious stockman, but i had seen cases like this before and i
wasn't happy. nothing seems to pull a good cow down quicker than a
painful foot. big fat animals could be reduced to skeletons within weeks
because of the agony of septic arthritis. i could only hope. "very good,
mr. herriot," mr. birtwhistle said. "and now come into the house.
t'missus has a cup o' tea ready for you." i seldom refuse such an
invitation but as i entered the kitchen i knew this was where the going
got really tough. "now then, mr. herriot," the farmer's wife said,
beaming as she handed me a steaming mug. "i was talkin' to your good
lady in the market place yesterday, and she said . . ." "and ye think
them powders o' yours might do the trick?" her husband looked at me
seriously. "i 'ope so, because nellie's a right good milker. ah reckon
last lactation she gave . . ." "kestrels is drawn agin dibharn in
t'hulton cup," len chimed in. "it'll be some game. last time. . ." mrs.
birtwhistle continued without drawing breath, . . you were nicely
settled in at top of skeldale house. it must be right pleasant up there
with the lovely view and . . ." ". . . five gallons when she Just calved
and she kept it up for . . ." ". . . they nearly kicked us off t'pitch,
but by gaw aht tell ye, we'll . . ." ". . . you can see right over
darrowby. but it wouldn't do for a fat body like me. i was sayin' to
your missus that you 'ave to be young and slim to live up there. all
them stairs and . . ." i took a long draught from my cup. it gave me a
chance to focus my eyes and attention on just one thing as the
conversation crackled unceasingly around me. i invariably found it
wearing trying to listen to all three birtwhistles in full cry and of
course it was impossible to look at them all simultaneously and adjust
my expression to their different remarks.

the thing that amazed me was that none of them ever became angry at the
others butting in. nobody ever said, "i'm speaking, do you mind?" or
"don't interrupt!" or "for pete's sake, shut upl" they lived together in
perfect harmony with all of them talking at once and none paying the
slightest heed to what the other was saying. when i saw the cow during
the following week she was worse. mr. birtwhistle had followed my
instructions faithfully but nellie could scarcely hobble as he brought
her in from the field. len was there to lift the foot and i gloomily
surveyed the increased swelling. it ran right round the coronet from the
heel to the interdigital cleft in front, and the slightest touch from my
finger caused the big cow to jerk her leg in pain. i didn't say much,
because i knew what was in store for nellie, and i knew too that mr.
birtwhistle wasn't going to like it when i told him. when i visited
again at the end of the week i had only to look at the farmer's face to
realise that everything had turned out as i feared. for once he was on
his own and he led me silently into the byre. nellie was on three legs
now, not daring even to bring the infected foot into momentary contact
with the cobble flooring. and worse, she was in an advanced state of
emaciation, the sleek healthy animal of two weeks ago reduced to little
more than bone and hide. "i doubt she's 'ad it," mr. birtwhistle
muttered. cow's hind feet are difficult to lift, but today i didn't need
any help because nellie had stopped caring. i examined the swollen
digit. it was now vast-a great ugly club of tissue with a trickle of pus
discharging down the wan. "i see it's bust there," the farmer poked a
finger at the ragged opening. "but it hasn't given 'er no relief."
"well, i wouldn't expect it to," i said. "remember i told you the
trouble is all inside the joint." "well, these things 'appen," he
replied. "ah might as well telephone for mallock. she's hardly givin' a
drop o' milk, poor awd lass, she's nowt but a screw now." i always had
to wait for the threat of the knacker man's humane killer before i said
what i had to say now. right from the start this had been a case for
surgery, but it would have been a waste of time to suggest it at the beginning. amputation of the bovine digit has always filled farmers with
horror and even now i knew i would have trouble convincing mr.
birtwhistle. "there's no need to slaughter her," i said. "there's
another way of curing this." "another way? we've tried 'and enough,
surely." i bent and lifted the foot again. "look at this." i seized the
inner cleat and moved it freely around. "this side is perfectly healthy.
there's nothing wrong with it. it would bear nellie's full weight."
"aye, but . . . how about vother 'orrible thing?" "i could remove it."
"you mean . cut it off?" "yes." he shook his head vigorously. "nay, nay,
i'm not bavin' that. she's suffered enough. far better send for jeff
mallock and get the job over." here it was again. farmers are anything
but shrinking violets, but there was something about this business which
appalled them. "but mr. birtwbistle," i said. "don't you see-the pain is
immediately relieved. the pressure is off and all the weight rests on
the good side." "ah said no, mr. herriot, and ah mean no. you've done
your best and i thank ye, but i'm not havin' her foot cut off and that's
all about it." he turned and began to walk away. i looked after him
helplessly. bne thing i hate to do is talk a man into an operation on
one of his beasts for the simple reason that if anything goes wrong i
get the blame. but i was just about certain that an hour's work could
restore this good cow to her former state. i couldn't let it go at this.
i trotted from the byre. 'me farmer was already half way across the yard
on his way to the 'phone. i panted up to him as he reached the farmhouse
door. "mr. birtwhistle, listen to me for a minute. i never said anything
about cutting off her foot. just one cleat." "well that's half a foot,
isn't it?" he looked down at his boots. "and it's ower much for me."
"but she wouldn't know a thing," i pleaded. "she'd be under a general
anaesthetic. and i'm nearly sure it would be a success."

"mr. herriot, i just don't fancy it. i don't like fidea. and even if it
did work it would be like havin' a crippled cow walkin' about." "not at
all. she would grow a little stump of horn there and i'd re to bet you'd
never notice a thing." he gave me a long sideways look and i could see
he was weakening. "mr. birtwhistle," i said, pressing home the attack.
"within a month nellie could be a fat cow again, giving five gallons of
milk a day." this was silly talk, not to be recommended to any
veterinary surgeon, but i was seized by a kind of madness. i couldn't
bear the thought of that cow being cut up for dog food when i was
convinced i could put her right. and there was another thing; i was
already savouring the pleasure, childish perhaps, of instantly relieving
an animal's pain, of bringing off a spectacular cure. there aren't many
operations in the field of bovine surgery where you can do this but
digit amputation is one of them. something of my fervour must have been
communicated to the farmer because he looked at me steadily for a few
moments then shrugged. "when do you want to do it?" he asked.
"romorrow." "right. will you need a lot o' f ellers to help?" "no, just
you and len. i'll see you at ten o'clock."

next day the sun was warm on my back as i laid out my equipment on a
small field near the house. it was a typical setting for many large
animal operations i have carried out over the years; the sweet stretch
of green, the grey stone buildings and the peaceful bulk of the fells
rising calm and unheeding into the white scattering of clouds. it took a
long time for them to lead nellie out, though she didn't have far to go,
and as the bony scarecrow hopped painfully towards me, dangling her
useless limb, the brave words of yesterday seemed foolhardy. 'all
right," i said. "stop there. that's a good spot." on the grass, nearby,
lay my tray with the saw, chloroform, bandages, cotton wool and
iodoform. i had my long casting rope too, which we used to pull cattle
down, but i had a feeling nellie wouldn't need it.

1 was right. i buckled on the muzzle, poured some chloroform on to the
sponge and the big white cow sank almost thankfully on to the cool green
herbage. "kestrels had a smashin' match on wednesday night," len
chuckled happily. "johnnie nudd didn't score but len bottonfley . . ."
"i 'ope we're doin' vright thing," muttered mr. birtwhistle. "the way
she staggered out 'ere i'd say it was a waste of time to . . ." ". . .
cracked in a couple o' beauties." len's face lit up at the memory.
"kestrels is lucky to 'ave two fellers like. .." "get hold of that bad
foot, len!" i barked, playing them at their own game. "and keep it
steady on that block of wood. and you, mr. birtwhistle, hold her head
down. i don't suppose she'll move, but if she does we'll have to give
her more chloroform." cows are good subjects for chloroform anaesthesia
but i don't like to keep them laid out too long in case of regurgitation
of food. i was in a hurry. i quickly tied a bandage above the hoof,
pulling it tight to serve as a tourniquet, then i reached back to the
tray for the saw. the books are full of sophisticated methods of digit
amputation with much talk of curved incisions, reflections of skin to
expose the region of the articulations, and the like. but i have whipped
off hundreds of cleats with a few brisk strokes of the saw below the
coronary band with complete success. i took a long breath. "hold tight,
len." and set to work. for a few moments there was silence except' for
the rhythmic grating of metal on bone, then the offending digit was
lying on the grass, leaving a flat stump from which a few capillary
vessels spurted. using curved scissors i speedily disarticulated the
remains of the pedal bone from the second phalanx and held it up. "look
at thatl" i cried. "almost eaten away." i pointed to the necrotic tissue
in and around the joint. "and d'you see all that rubbish? no wonder she
was in pain." i did a bit of quick curetting, dusted the surface with
iodoform, applied a thick pad of cotton wool and prepared to bandage.
and as i tore the paper from the white rolls i felt a stab of remorse.
in my absorption i had been rather rude. i had never replied to len's
remark about his beloved team. maybe i could pass the next few minutes
with a little gentle banter. "hey, len," i said. "when you're talking
about the kestrels you never mention the time willerton beat them five
nil. how is that?" in reply the young man hurled himself
1111hesitatingly at me, butting me savagely on the forehead. the assault
of the great coarse-haired head against my skin was like being attacked
by a curlypolled bull, and the impact sent me flying backwards on to the
grass. at first the inside of my cranium was illuminated by a firework
display but as consciousness slipped away my last sensation was of
astonishment and disbelief. i loved football myself but never had i
thought that len's devotion to the kestrels would lead him to physical
violence. he had always seemed a most gentle and harmless boy. i suppose
i was out for only a few seconds but i fancy i might have spent a good
deal longer lying on the cool turf but for the fact that something kept
hammering out the message that i was in the middle of a surgical
procedure. i blinked and sat up. nellie was still sleeping peacefully
against the green background of hills. mr. birtwhistle, hands on her
neck, was regarding me anxiously, and len was lying unconscious face
down across the cow's body. "has he hurt that, mr. herriot?" "no ... no
... not really. what happened?" "i owl to have told ye. he can't stand
the sight o' blood. great daft beggar." the farmer directed an
exasperated glare at his slumbering son. "but ah've never seen 'im go
down as fast as that. pitched right into you,'e did!" i rolled the young
man's inert form to one side and began again. i bandaged slowly and
carefully because of the danger of post operative haemorrhage. i
finished with several layers of zinc oxide plaster then turned to the
farmer. "you can take her mulzle off now, mr. birtwhistle. the job's
done." i was starting to wash my instruments in the bucket when len sat
up almost as suddenly as he had slumped down. he was deathly pale but he
looked at me with his usual friendly smile. "what was that ye were
sayin' about t'kestrels, mr. herriot?" , "nothing, len," i replied
hastily. "nothing at all."

after three days i returned and removed the original dressing which was
caked hard with blood and pus. i dusted the stump with powder again and
bandaged on a clean soft pad of cotton wool. "she'll feel a lot more
comfortable now," i said, and indeed nellie was already looking vastly
happier. she was taking some weight on the affected f oot-rather
gingerly, as though she couldn't believe that terrible thing had gone
from her life. as she watked away i crossed my fingers. the only thing
that can ruin these operations is if the infection spreads to the other
side. the inevitable result then is immediate slaughter and terrible
disappointment. but it never happened to nellie. when i took off the
second dressing she was almost sound and i didet see her again until
about five weeks after the operation. i had finished injecting one of
mr. birtwhistle's pigs when i asked casually, "and how's nellie?" "come
and 'ave a look at her," the farmer replied. "she's just in that field
at side of t'road." we walked together over the grass to where the white
cow was standing among her companions, head down, munching busily. and
she must have done a lot of that since i saw her because she was fat
again. "get on, lass." the farmer gently nudged her rump with his thumb
and she ambled forward a few paces before setting to work on another
patch of grass. there wasn't the slightest trace of lameness. "well,
that's grand," i said. "and is she milking well, too?" "aye, back to
five gallons." he pulled a much dented tobacco tin from his pocket,
unscrewed the lid and produced an ancient'watch. "it's ten o'clock,
young man. len'll have gone into t'house for his tea, and lowance. will
ye come in and have a cup?" i squared my shoulders and followed him
inside, and the barrage began immediately.

"summat right funny happened on saturday," len said with a roar of
laughter. "walter gimmet was refereein' and'e gave two penalties agin
t'kestrels. so what did the lads do, they . . ." "eee, wasn't it sad
about old mr. brent?" mrs. birtwhistle put her head on one side and
looked at me piteously. "we buried 'im on saturday and. . ." "you know,
mr. herriot," her husband put in. "ah thought you were pullin' ma leg
when you said nellie would be givin' five gallons again. i never . . ."
". . . dumped the beggar in a 'oss trouah. he won't give no more
penalties agin t'kestrels. you should 'ave seen. . ." ". . . it would
'ave been his ninetieth birthday today, poor old man. he was well liked
in t'village and there was a big congregation. parson said . . ." ". . .
expected owl like that. ali thought she might maybe put on a bit of
flesh so we could get 'er off for beef. ah'm right grateful to . . ." at
that moment, fingers clenched tensely around my cup, i happened to catch
sight of my reflection in a cracked mirror above the kitchen sink. it
was a frightening experience because i was staring glassily into space
with my features contorted almost out of recognition. there was
something of an idiot smile as i acknowledged the humour of walter in
the horse trough, a touch of sorrow at mr. brent's demise, and, i swear,
a suggestion of gratification at the successful outcome of nellie's
operation. and since i was also trying to look in three directions at
once, i had to give myself full marks for effort. but as i say, i found
it a little unnerving and excused myself soon afterwards. the men were
still busy with mrs. birtwhistle's apple pie and scones and the
conversation was raging unabated when i left. the closure of the door
behind me brought a sudden peace. the feeling of tranquillity stayed
with me as i got into my car and drove out of the yard and onto the
narrow country road. it persisted as i stopped the car after less than a
hundred yards and wound down the window to have a look at my patient.
nellie was lying down now. she had eaten her fill and was resting
comfortably on her chest as she chewed her cud. to a doctor of farm
animals there is nothing more reassuring than that slow lateral
grinding. it means contentment and health. she gazed at me across the
stone wall and the placid eyes in the white face added to the
restfulness of the scene, accentuating the silence after the babel of
voices in the farmhouse. nellie couldn't talk, but those calmly moving
jaws told me all i wanted to know. chapter 33. 33

to me there are few things more appealing than a dog begging. this one
was tied to a lamp post outside a shop in windsor. its eyes were fixed
steadfastly on the shop doorway, willing its owner to come out, and
every now and then it sat up in mute entreaty. flying had been suspended
for an afternoon. it gave us all a chance to relax and no doubt it eased
the frayed nerves of our instructors, but as i looked at that dog all.
the pressures of the raf fell away and i was back in darrowby. it was
when siegfried and i were making one of our market day sorties that we
noticed the little dog among the stalls. when things were quiet in the
surgery we often used to walk together across the cobbles and have a
word with the farmers gathered round the doorway of the drovers arms.
sometimes we collected a few outstanding bills or drummed up a bit of
work for the forthcoming week -and if nothing like that happened we
still enjoyed the fresh air. the thing that made its notice the dog was
that he was sitting up begging in front of the biscuit stall. "look at
that little chap," siegfried said. "i wonder where he's sprung from." as
he spoke, the stallholder threw a biscuit which the dog devoured eagerly
but when the man came round and stretched out a hand the little animal
trotted away. he stopped, however, at another stall which sold produce;
eggs, cheese, butter, cakes and scones. without hesitation he sat up
again in the begging position, rock steady, paws dangling, head pointing
expectantly. i nudged siegfried. "there he goes again." my colleague
nodded. "yes, be's an engaging little thing, isn't he? what breed would
you call him?" 288

"a cross, i'd say. he's like a little brown sheepdog, but there's a
touch of something else-maybe terrier." it wasn't long before he was
munching a bun, and this time we walked over to him. and as we drew near
i spoke gently. "here, boy," i said, squatting down a yard away. "come
on, let's have a look at you." he faced me and for a moment two friendly
brown eyes gazed at me from a singularly attractive little face. the
fringed tail waved in response to my words but as i inched nearer he
turned and ambled unhurriedly among the market day crowd till he was
lost to sight. i didn't want to make a thing out of the encounter
because i could never quite divine siegfried's attitude to the small
animals. he was eminently wrapped up in his horse work and often seemed
amused'at the way i rushed around after dogs and cats. at that time, in
fact, siegfried was strongly opposed to the whole idea of keeping
animals as pets. he was quite vociferous on the subject-said it was
utterly foolish-despite the fact that five assorted dogs travelled
every- where with him in his car. now, thirty-five years later, he is
just as strongly in favour of keeping pets, though he now carries only
one dog in his car. so, as i say, it was difficult to assess his
reactions in this field and i refrained from following the little
animal. i was standing there when a young policeman came up to me. "i've
been watching that little dog begging among the stalls all morning," he
said. "but like you, i haven't been able to get near him." "yes, it's
strange. he's obviously friendly, yet he's afraid. i wonder who owns
him." "i reckon be's a stray, mr. herriot. i'm interested in dogs myself
and i fancy i know just about all of them around here. but this 'un's a
stranger to me." i nodded. "i bet you're right. so anything could have
happened to him. he could have been ill-treated by somebody and run
away, or he could have been dumped from a car." "yes," he replied.
"there's some lovely people around. it beats me how anybody can leave a
helpless animal to fend for itself like that. i've had a few goes at
catching him myself but it's no good."

the memory stayed with me for the rest of the day and even when i lay in
bed that night i was unable to dispel the disturbing image of the little
brown creature wandering in a strange world, sitting up asking for help
in the only way he knew.

i was still a bachelor at that time and on the friday night of the same
week siegfried and i were arraying ourselves in evening dress in
preparation for the hunt ball at east hirdsley, about ten miles away. it
was a tortuous business because those were the days of starched shirt
fronts and stiff high collars and i kept hearing explosions of colourful
language from siegfried's room as he wrestled with his studs. i was in
an even worse plight because i had outgrown my suit and even when i had
managed to secure the strangling collar i had to fight my way into the
dinner jacket which nipped me cruelly under the arms. i had just managed
to (ion the complete outfit and was trying out a few careful breaths
when the 'phone rang. it was the same young policeman i had been
speaking to earlier in the week. "we've got that dog round here, mr.
herriot. you know-the one that was begging in the market place." "oh
yes? somebody's managed to catch him, then?" there was a pause. "no, not
really. one of our men found him lying by the roadside about a mile out
of town and brought him in. he's been in an accident." .1 told
siegfried. he looked at his watch. "always happens, doesn't it, james.
just when we're ready to go out. it's nine o'clock now and we should be
on our way." he thought for a moment. ."anyway, slip round there and
have a took and i'll wait for you. it would be better if we could go to
this affair together." as i drove round to the police station i hoped
fervently that there wouldn't be much to do. this hunt ball meant a lot
to my boss because it would be a gathering of the horse-loving
fraternity of the district and he would have a wonderful time just
chatting and drinking with so many kindred spirits even though he hardly
danced at all. also, he maintained, it was good for business to meet the
clients socially. the kennels were at the bottom of a yard behind the
station and the policeman led me down and opened one of the doors. the
little dog was lying very still under the single electric bulb and when
i bent and stroked the brown coat his tail stirred briefly among the
straw of his bed. "he can still manage a wag, anyway," i said. the
policeman nodded. "aye, there's no doubt he's a good-natured little
thing." i tried to examine him as much as possible without touching. i
didn't want to hurt him and there was no saying what the extent of his
injuries might be. but even at a glance certain things were obvious; he
had multiple lacerations, one hind leg was crooked in the unmistakable
posture of a fracture and there was blood on his lips. this could be
from damaged teeth and i gently raised the head with a view to looking
into his mouth. he was lying on his right side and as the head came
round it was as though somebody had struck me in the face. the right eye
had been violently dislodged from its socket and it sprouted like some
hideous growth from above the check bone, a great glistening orb with
the eyelids tucked behind the white expanse of sclera. i seemed to squat
there for a long time, stunned by the obscenity, and as the seconds
dragged by i looked into the little dog's face and he looked back at
me-trustingly from one soft brown eye, glaring meaninglessly from the
grotesque ball on the other side. the policeman's voice broke my
thoughts. "he's a mess, isn't he?" "yes . . . yes . . . must have been
struck by some vehicle-maybe dragged along by the look of all those
wounds." "what d'you think, mr. herriot?" i knew what he meant. it was
the sensible thing to ease this lost unwanted creature from the world.
he was grievously hurt and he didn't seem to belong to anybody. a quick
overdose of anaesthetic-his troubles would be over and i'd be on my way
to the dance. but the policeman didn't say anything of the sort. maybe,
like me, he was looking into the soft depths of that one trusting eye. i
stood up quickly. "can i use your 'phone?" at the other end of the line
siegfried's voice crackled with impatience. "hell, james, it's half past
nine! if we're going to this thing we've got to go now or we might as
well not bother. a stray dog, badly injured. it doesn't sound such a
great problem." "i know, siegfried. i'm sorry to bold you up but i can't
make tip my mind. i wish you'd come round and tell me what you think."
there was a silence then a long sigh. "all right, james. see you in five
minutes." he created a slight stir as he entered the station. even in
his casual working clothes siegfried aways managed to look
distinguished, but as he swept into the station newly bathed and shaved,
a camel coat thrown over the sparkling white shirt and black tie, there
was something ducal about him. he drew respectful glances from the men
sitting around, then my young policeman stepped forward. "this way,
sir," he said, and we went back to the kennels. siegfried was silent as
he crouched over the dog, looking him over as i had done without
touching him. then he carefully raised the head and the monstrous eye
glared. "my god!" he said softly, and at the sound of his voice the long
fringed tail moved along the ground. for a few seconds he stayed very
still looking fixedly at the dog's face while in the silence, the
whisking tail rustled the straw. then he straightened up. "let's get him
round there," jae murmured. in the surgery we anaesthetised the little
animal and as he lay unconscious on the table we were able to examine
him thoroughly. after a few minutes siegfried stuffed his stethoscope
into the pocket of his white coat and leaned both hands on the table.
"luxated eyeball, fractured femur, umpteen deep lacerations, broken
claws. there's enough here to keep us going till midnight, james." i
didn't say anything. my boss pulled the knot from his black tie and
undid the front stud. he peeled off the stiff collar and hung it on the
cross bar of the surgery lamp. "by god, that's better," he muttered, and
began to lay out suture materials. i looked at him across the table.
"how about the hunt ball?"

"oh bugger the hunt ball," siegfried said. "let's get busy." we were
busy, too, for a long time. i hung up my collar next to my colleague's
and we began on the eye. i know we both felt the same-we wanted to get
rid of that horror before we did anything else. i lubricated the great
ball and pulled the eyelids apart while siegfried gently manoeuvered it
back into the orbital cavity. i sighed as everything slid out of sight,
leaving only the cornea visible. siegfried chuckled with satisfaction.
"looks like an eye again, doesn't it." he seized an ophthalmoscope and
peered into the depths. "and there's no major damage-could be as good as
new again. but we'll just stitch the lids together to protect it for a
few days." the broken ends of the fractured tibia were badly displaced
and we had a struggle to bring them into apposition before applying the
plaster of paris. but at last we finished and started on the long job of
stitching the many cuts and lacerations. we worked separately for this,
and for a long time it was quiet in the operating room except for the
snip of scissors as we clipped the brown hair away from the wounds. i
knew and siegfried knew that we were almost certainly working without
payment, but the most disturbing thought was that after all our efforts
we may still have to put him down. lie was still in the care of the
police and if nobody claimed him within ten days it meant euthanasia.
and if his late owners were really interested in his fate, why hadn't
they tried to contact the police before now ... ? by the time we had
completed our work and washed the instruments it was after midnight.
siegfried dropped the last suture needle into its tray and looked at the
sleeping animal. "i think he's beginning to come round," he said. "let's
take him through to the fire and we can have a drink while he recovers."
we stretchered the dog through to the sitting room on a blanket and laid
him on the rug before the. brightly burning coals. my colleague reached
a long arm up to the glass-fronted cabinet above the mantelpiece and
pulled down the whisky bottle and two glasses. drinks in hand,
collarless, still in shirt sleeves, with our starched white fronts and
braided evening trousers to remind us of the lost dance we lay back in
our chairs on either side of the fireplace and between us our patient
stretched peacefully. he was a happier sight now. one eye was closed by
the protecting stitches and his bind leg projected stiffly in its white
cast, but he was tidy, cleaned up, cared for. he looked as though he
belonged to somebody-but then there was a great big doubt about that. it
was nearly one o'clock in the morning and we were getting well down the
bottle when the shaggy brown head began to move. siegfried leaned
forward and touched one of the ears and immediately the tail flapped
against the rug and a pink tongue lazily licked his fingers. "what an
absolutely grand little dog," he murmured, but his voice had a distant
quality. 1 knew he was worried too.

i took the stitches out of the eyelids in two days and was delighted to
find a normal eye underneath. the young policeman was as pleased as i
was. "look at thatl" he exclaimed. "you'd never know anything had
happened there." "yes, it's done wonderfully well. all the swelling and
inflammation has gone." i hesitated for a moment. "has anybody enquired
about him?" he shook his head. "nothing yet. but there's another eight
days to go and we're taking good care of him here." i visited the police
station several times and the little animal greeted me with undisguised
joy, all his fear gone, standing upright against my legs on his
plastered limb, his tail swishing. but all the time my sense of
foreboding increased, and on the tenth day i made my way almost with
dread to the police kennels. i had heard nothing. my course of action
seemed inevitable. putting down old or hopelessly ill dogs was often an
act of mercy but when it was a young healthy dog it was terrible. i
hated it, but it was one of the things veterinary surgeons had to do.
the young policeman was standing in the doorway. "still no news?" i
asked, and he shook his head.

1 went past him into the kennel and the shaggy little creature stood up
against my legs as before, laughing into my face, mouth open, eyes
shining. i turned away quickly. i'd have to do this right now or i'd
never do it. "mr. herriot." the policeman put his hand on my arm. "i
think i'll take him." "you?" i stared at him. "aye, that's right. we get
a lot o' stray dogs in here and though i feet sorry for them you can't
give them all a home, can you?" "no, you can't," i said. "i have the
same problem." he nodded slowly. "but somehow this 'un's different, and
it seems to me he's just come at the -right time. i have two little
girls and they've been at me for a bit to get 'em a dog. this little
bloke looks just right for the job." warm relief began to ebb through
me. "i couldn't agree more. he's the soul of good nature. i bet he'd be
wonderful with children." "good. that's settled then. i thought i'd ask
your advice first." he smiled happily. i looked at him as though i had
never seen him before. "what's your name?" "phelps," he replied. "p. c.
phelps." he was a good-looking young fellow, clear-skinned, with
cheerful blue eyes and a solid dependable look about him. i had to fight
against an impulse to wring his hand and thump him on the back. but i
managed to preserve the professional exterior. "well, that's fine." i
bent and stroked the little dog. "don't forget to bring him along to the
surgery in ten days for removal of the stiches, and we'll have to get
that plaster off in about a month."

it was siegfried who took out the stitches, and i didn't see our patient
again until four weeks later. p. c. phelps had his little girls, aged
four and six, with him as well as the dog. "you said the plaster ought
to come off about now," he said, and i nodded. he looked down at the
children. "well, come on, you two, lift him on the table."

eagerly the little girls put their arms around their new pet and as they
hoisted him the tail wagged furiously and the wide mouth panted in
delight. "looks as though he's been a success," i said. he smiled.
"that's an understatement. he's perfect with these two. i can't tell you
what pleasure he's given us. he's one of the family." i got out my
little saw and began to hack at the plaster. "it's worked both ways, i
should say. a dog loves a secure home." "well, he couldn't be more
secure." he ran his hand along the brown coat and laughed as he
addressed the little dog. "that's what you get for begging among the
stalls on market day, my lad. you're in the hands of the law now."
chapter 34.

when i entered the raf i had a secret fear. all my life i have suffered
from vertigo and even now i have only to look down from the smallest
height to be engulfed by that dreadful dizziness and panic. what would i
feel, then, when i started to fly? as it turned out, i felt nothing. i
could gaze downwards from the open cockpit through thousands of feet of
space without a qualm, so my fear was groundless. i i had my fears in
veterinary practice, too, and in the early days the thing which raised
the greatest terror in my breast was the ministry of agriculture. an
extraordinary statement, perhaps, but true. it was the clerical side
that scared me-all those forms. as to the practical ministry work
itself, i felt in all modesty that i was quite good at it. my thoughts
often turned back to all the tuberculin testing i used to do-clipping a
clean little area from just the right place in the cow's neck, inserting
the needle into the thickness of the skin and injecting one tenth of a
cc of tuberculin. it was on mr. hill's farm, and i watched the
satisfactory intradermal "pea" rise up under my needle. that was the way
it should be, and when it came up like that you knew you were really
doing your job and testing the animal for tuberculosis. "that 'un's
number 65," the farmer said, then a slightly injured look spread over
his face as i checked the number in the ear. "you're wastin' your time,
mr. herriot. i 'ave the whole list, all in t'correct order. wrote it out
special for you so you could take it away with you." i had my doubts.
all farmers were convinced that their herd records were flawless but i
had been caught out before. i seemed to have the gift of making every
possible 297

clerical mistake and i didn't need any help from the farmers. but still
. . . it was tempting. i looked at the long list of figures dangling
from the horny fingers. if i accepted it i would save a lot of time.
there were still more than fifty animals to test here and i had to get
through two more herds before lunch time. i looked at my watch. damn! i
was well behind my programme and i felt the old stab of frustration.
"right, mr. hill, i'll take it and thank you very much." i stuffed the
sheet of paper into my pocket and began to move along the byre, clipping
and injecting at top speed. a week later the dread words leaped out at
me from the open day book. "ring min." the cryptic phrase in miss
harbottle's writing had the power to freeze my blood quicker than
anything else. it meant simply that i had to telephone the ministry of
agriculture office, and whenever our secretary wrote those words in the
book it meant that i was in trouble again. i extended a trembling hand
towards the receiver. as always, kitty pattison answered my call and i
could detect the note of pity in. her voice. she was the attractive girl
in charge of the office staff and she knew all about my misdemeanours.
in fact when it was something very trivial she sometimes brought it to
my attention herself, but when i had really dropped a large brick i was
dealt with by the boss, charles harcourt the divisional inspector. "ah,
mr. herriot," kitty said lightly. i knew she sympathised with me but she
couldn't do a thing about it. "mr. harcourt wants a word with you."
there it was., the terrible sentence that always set my heart thumping.
"thank you," i said huskily, and waited an eternity as the 'phone was
switched through. "herriot!" the booming voice made me jump. i
swallowed. "good morning, mr. harcourt. how are you?" "i'll tell you how
i am, i'm bloody annoyed!" i could imagine vividly the handsome,
high-coloured, choleric face flushing deeper, the greenish eyes glaring.
"in fact i'm hopping bloody madl" 'oh." "it's no use saying 'oh.' that's
what you said the last time when you tested that cow of frankland's that
had been dead for two years! that was very clever-i don't know how you
managed it. now i've been going over your test at hill's of high view
and there are two cows here that you've tested-numbers 74 and 103. now
our records show that he sold both of them at brawton auction mart six
months ago, so you've performed another miracle." "i'm sorry. . .19
"please don't be sorry, it's bloody marvelous how you do it. i have all
the figures here-skin measurements, the lot. i see you found they were
both thin-skinned animals even though they were about fifteen miles away
at the time. clever stuff!" "well i ... "all right, herriot, i'll
dispense with the comedy. i'm going to tell you once more, for the last
time, and i hope you're listening." he paused and i could almost see the
big shoulders hunching as he barked into the phone. "look in the bloody
ears in future!" i broke into a rapid gabble. "i will indeed, mr.
harcourt, i assure you from now on . . ." "all right, all right, but
there's something else." "something else?" "yes, i'm not finished yet."
the voice took on a great weariness. "can i ask you to cast your mind
back to that cow you took under the the order from wilson of low parks?"
i dug my nails into my palm. we were heading for deep water. "yes-i
remember it." "well now, herriot, lad, do you remember a little chat we
had about the forms?" charles was trying to be patient, because he was a
decent man, but it was costing him dearly. "didn't anything i told you
sink in?" "well yes, of course." "then why, why didn't you send me a
receipt for slaughter?" "receipt for ... didn't,1. .. t' "no, you
didn't," he said. "and bonestly i can't understand it. i went over it
with you step by step last time when you forgot to forward a copy of the
valuation agreement." "oh dear, i really am sorry." adeep sigh came from
the other end. "and theres nothing to it." he paused. "tell you what
we'll do. let's go over the procedure once more, shall we?" :,yes, by
all means." 'very well," he said. "first of all, when you find an
infected animal you serve b. 205.d.t., form a., which is the notice
requiring detention and isolation of the animal. next," and i could hear
the slap of finger on palm as he enumerated his points. "next, there is
b. 207 d.t., form c., notice of intended slaughter. then b. 208 d.t.,
form d., post mortem certificate. then b. 196 d.t., veterinary
inspector's report. then b. 209 d.t., valuation agreement, and in cases
where the owner objects, there is b. 213 d.t., appointment of valuer.
then we have b. 212 d.t., notice to owner of time and place of
slaughter, followed by b. 227 d.t., receipt for animal for slaughter,
and finally b. 230 d.t., notice -requiring cleansing and disinfection.
dammit, a child could understand that. it's perfectly simple, isn't it?"
"yes, yes, certainly, absolutely." it wasn't simple to me, but i didn't
mention the fact. he had calmed down nicely and i didn't want to inflame
him again. "well thank you, mr. harcourt," i said. "i'll see it doesn't
happen again." i put down the receiver with the feeling that things
could have turned out a lot worse, but for all that my nerves didn't
stop jangling for some time. the trouble was that the ministry work was
desperately important to general practitioners. in fact, in those
precarious days it was the main rent payer. this business of the
tuberculosis order. when a veterinary surgeon came upon a cow with open
the it was his duty to see that the animal was slaughtered immediately
because its milk could be a danger to the public. that sounds easy, but
unfortunately the law insisted that the demise of each unhappy creature
be commemorated by a confetti-like shower of the doom-laden forms. it
wasn't just that there were so many of these forms, but they had to be
sent to an amazing variety of people. sometimes i used to think that
there were very few people in england who didn't get one. apart from
charles harcourt, other recipients included the farmer concerned, the
police, the head office of the ministry, the knacker man, the local
authority. i nearly always managed to forget one of them. i used to have
nightmares about standing in the middle of the market place, throwing
the forms around me at the passers-by and laughing hysterically. looking
back, i can hardly believe that for all this wear and tear on the
nervous system the payment was one guinea plus ten and sixpence for the
post mortem. it was a mere two days after my interview with the
divisional inspector that i had to take another cow under the t.b.
order. when i came to fill in the forms i sat at the surgery desk in a
dither of apprehension, going over them again and again, laying them out
side by side and enclosing them one by one in their various envelopes.
this time there must be no mistake. i took them over to the post myself
and uttered a silent prayer as i dropped them into the box. charles
would have them the following morning, and i would soon know if i had
done it again. when two days passed without incident i felt i was safe,
but midway through the third morning i dropped in at the surgery and
read the message in letters of fire. "ring min!" kitty pattison sounded
strained. she didn't even try to ~ppear casual. "oh yes, mr. herriot,"
she said hurriedly. "mr. harcourt asked me to call you. i'm putting you
through now." my heart almost stopped as i waited for the familiar
bellow, but when the quiet voice came on the line it frightened me even
more. "good morning, herriot." charles was curt and impersonal. "i'd
like to discuss that last cow you took under the order." "oh yes?" i
croaked. "but not over the telephone. i want to see you here in the
office." "in the ... the office?" "yes, right away if you can." i put
down the 'phone and went out to the car with my knees knocking. charles
was really upset this time. there was a kind of restrained fury in his
words, and this business of going to the office-that was reserved for
serious transgressions. twenty minutes later my footsteps echoed in the
corridor of the ministry building. marching stiffly like a condemned man
i passed the windows'where i could see the typists at work, then i read
"divisional inspector" on the door at the end.

i took one long shuddering breath then knocked. "come in." the voice was
still quiet and controlled. charles looked up unsmilingly from his desk
as i entered. he motioned me to a chair and directed a cold stare at me.
"herriot," he said unernotionally. "you're really on the carpet this
time." charles had been a major in the punjabi rifles and he was very
much the indian army officer at this moment. a fine looking man,
clear-skinned and ruddy, with massive cheek bones above a powerful jaw.
looking at the dangerously glinting eyes it struck me that only a fool
would trifle with somebody like him-and i had a nasty feeling that i had
been trifling. dry-mouthed, i waited. "you know, herriot," he went on.
"after our last telephone conversation about the forms i thought you
might give me a little peace." "peace . . . t' "yes, yes, it was silly
of me, t know, but when i took all that time to go over the procedure
with you i actually thought you were listening." "oh i was, i was!" "you
were? oh good." he gave me a mirthless smile. "then i suppose it was
even more foolish of me to expect you to act upon my instructions. in my
innocence i thought you cared about what i was telling you." "mr.
harcourt, believe me, i do care, i . . .11 "then why," he bawled without
warning, bringing his great hand flailing down on the desk with a crash
that made pens and inkwells dance. "why the bloody hell do you keep
making a balls of itt' i resisted a strong impulse to run away. "making
a ... i don't quite understand." "you don't?" he kept up his pounding on
the desk. "well it tell you. one of my veterinary officers was on that
farm, and he found that you hadn't served a notice of cleansing and
disinfection!" "is that so?" "yes, it bloody well is so! you didn't give
one to the farmer but you sent one to me. maybe you want me to go and
disinfect the place, is that it? would you like me to slip along there
and get busy with a hosepipe i'll go now if it'll make you feel any
happierl"

"oh no, no, no ... no." charles was apparently not satisfied with the
thunderous noise he was making because he began to use both hands,
bringing them down simultaneously with sickening force on the wood while
he glared wildly. "herriot!" he shouted. "there's just one thing i want
to know from you--do you want this bloody work or don't you? just say
the word and i'll give it to another practice and then maybe we'd both
be able to live a quiet life!" "please, mr. harcourt, i give you my
word, i we . . . we do want the work very much." and i meant it with all
my heart. the big man slumped back in his chair and regarded me for a
few moments in silence. then he glanced at his wrist watch. "ten past
twelve," he murmured. "they'll be open at the red lion. let's go and
have a beer." in the pub lounge he took a long pull at his glass, placed
it carefully on the table in front of him, then turned to me with a
touch of weariness. "you, know, herriot, i do wish you'd stop doing this
sort of thing. it takes it out of me." i believed him. his face had lost
a little of its colour and his hand trembled slightly as he raised his
glass again. "i'm truly sorry, mr. harcourt, i don't know how it
happened. i did try to get it right this time and i'll do my best to
avoid troubling you in future." he nodded a few times then clapped me on
the shoulder. "good, good-let's just have one more." he moved over to
the bar, brought back the drinks then fished out a brown paper parcel
from his pocket. "little wedding present, herriot. understand you're
getting married soon-this is from my missus and me with our best
wishes." i didn't know what to say. i fumbled the wrapping away and
uncovered a-small square barometer. shame engulfed me as i muttered a
few words of thanks. this man was the head of the ministry in the area
while i was the newest and lowest of his minions. not only that, but i
was pretty sure i caused him more trouble than all the others put
together-i was like a hair shirt to him. there was no earthly reason why
he should give me a barometer.

this last experience deepened my dread of form filling to the extent
that i hoped it would be a long time before i encountered another
tuberculous animal, but fate decreed that i had some concentrated days
of clinical in- spections and it was with a feeling of inevitability
that i surveyed mr. moverley's ayrshire cow. it was the soft cough which
made me stop and look at her more closely, and as i studied her my
spirits sank. this was another one. the skin stretched tightly over the
bony frame, the slightly accelerated respirations and that deep careful
cough. mercifully you don't see cows like that now, but in those days
they were all too common. i moved along her side and examined the wall
-in front of her. the tell-tale blobs of sputum were clearly visible on
the rough stones and i quickly lifted a sample and smeared it on a glass
slide. back at the surgery i stained the smear by ziehlnielson's method
and pushed the slide under the microscope. the red clumps of tubercle
bacilli lay among the scattered cells, tiny, iridescent and deadly. i
hadn't really needed the grim proof but it was there. mr. moverley was
not amused when i told him next morning that the animal would have to be
slaughtered. "it's nob but got a bit of a chill," he grunted. the farmers
were never pleased when one of their milk producers was removed by a
petty bureaucrat like me. "but ah suppose it's no use arguin'." "i
assure you, mr. moverley, there's no doubt about it. i examined that
sample last night and . . ." "oh never mind about that." the farmer
waved an impatient hand. "if t'bloody government says me cow's got to go
she's got to go. but ah get compensation, don't i?" "yes, you do." "how
much?" i thought rapidly. the rules stated that the animal be valued as
if it were up for sale in the open market in its present condition. the
minimum was five pounds and there was no doubt that this emaciated cow
came into that category. "the statutory value is five pounds," i said.
"shit!" replied mr. moverley. "we can appoint a valuer if you don't
agree."

"oh 'ell, let's get t'job over with." he was clearly disgusted and i
thought it imprudent to tell him that he would only get a proportion of
the five pounds, depending on the post mortem. "very well," i said.
"i'll tell jeff matlock to collect her as soon as possible."

the fact that i was unpopular with mr. moverley didn't worry me as much
as the prospect of dealing with the dreaded forms. the very thought of
sending another batch winging hopefully on its way to charles harcourt
brought me out in a sweat. then i had a flash of inspiration. such
things don't often happen to me, but this struck me as brilliant. i
wouldn't send off the forms till i'd had them vetted by kitty pattison.
i couldn't wait to get the plan under way. almost gleefully i laid the
papers out in a long row, signed them and laid them by their envelopes,
ready for their varied journeys. then i 'phoned the ministry office.
kitty was patient and kind. i am sure she realised that i did my work
conscientiously but that i was a clerical numbskull and she sympathised.
when i had finished going through the list she congratulated me. "well
done, mr. herriot, you've got them right this timel all you need now is
the knacker man's signature and your post mortem. report and you're home
and dry." "bless you, kitty," i said. "you've made my day." and she had.
the airy sensation of relief was tremendous. the knowledge that there
would be no come-back from charles this time was like the sun bursting
through dark clouds. i felt like singing as i went round to mat- lock's
yard and arranged with him to pick up the cow. "have her ready for me to
inspect tomorrow, jeff," i said, and went on my way with a light heart.
i couldn't understand it i when mr. moverley waved me down from his farm
gate next day. as i drew up i could see he was extremely agitated.
"heyl" he cried. "ah've just got back from the market and my missus
tells me matlock's been!" i smiled. "that's right, mr. moverley.
remember i told you i was going to send him round for your cow." "aye,
ah know all about thatl" he paused and glared at me. "but he's took the
wrong onel"

"wrong ... wrong what?" "wrong cow, that's what! he's off withe best
cow in me herd. pedigree ayrshire-ah bought 'er in dumfries last week
and they only delivered 'er this mornin'." horror drove through me in a
freezing wave. i had told the knacker man to collect the ayrshire which
would be isolated in the loose box in the yard. the new animal would be
in a box, too, after her arrival. i could see jeff and his man leading
her up the ramp into his wagon with a dreadful clarity. "this is your
responsibility, that knaws!" the farmer waved a threatening finger. "if
he kills me good cow you'll 'ave to answer for it!" he didn't have to
tell me. i'd have to answer for it to a lot of people, including charles
harcourt. "get on the 'phone to the knacker yard right away!" i gasped.
the farmer waved his arms about. "ah've tried that and there's no reply.
ah tell ye he'll shooter afore we can stop 'im. do you know how much
ah paid for that cow?" :'never mind about that! which way did he go?"
't'missus said he went towards grampton-about ten minutes ago." i
started my engine. "he'll maybe be picking up other beasts-i'll go after
him." teeth clenched, eyes popping, i roared along the grampton road.
the enormity of this latest catastrophe was almost more than i could
assimilate. the wrong form was bad enough, but the wrong cow was
unthinkable. but it had happened. charles would crucify me this time. he
was a good bloke but he would have no option, because the higher-ups in
the ministry would get wind of an immortal boner like this and they
would howl for blood. feverishly but vainly i scanned each farm entrance
in grampton village as i shot through, and when i saw the open
countryside ahead of me again the tension was almost unbearable. i was
telling myself that the thing was hopeless when in the far distance
above a row of trees i spotted the familiar top of mallock's wagon. it
was a high, wooden-sided vehicle and i couldn't mistake it. repressing a
shout of triumph i put my foot on the boards and set off in that
direction with the fanatical zeal of the hunter. but it was a long way
off and i hadn't travelled a mile before i realised i had lost it. over
the years many things have stayed in my memory, but the great cow chase
is engraven deeper than most. the sheer terror i felt is vivid to this
day. i kept sighting the wagon among the maze of lanes and side roads
but by the time i had cut across country my quarry had disappeared
behind a hillside or dipped into one of the many hollows in the wide
vista. i was constantly deceived by the fact that i expected him to be
turning towards darrowby after passing through a village, but he never
did. clearly he had other business on the way. the whole thing seemed to
last a very long time and there was no fun in it for me. i was gripped
throughout by a cold dread, and the violent swings-the alternating
scents of hope and despair-were wearing to the point of exhaustion. i
was utterly drained when at last i saw the tall lorry rocking along a
straight road in front of me. i had him dow! forcing my little car to
the limit, i drew abreast of him, sounding my horn repeatedly till be
stopped. breathlessly i pulled tip in front of him and ran round to
offer any explanations. but as i looked up into the driver's cab my
eager smile vanished. it wasn't jeff matlock at all. i had been
following the wrong man. it was the "ket fetter." he had exactly the
same type of wagon as matlock and he went round a wide area of yorkshire
picking up the nameless odds and ends of the dead animals which even the
knacker men didn't want. it was a strange job and he was a
strange-looking man. the oddly piercing eyes glittered uncannily from
under a tattered army peaked cap. "wot's tip, guvnor'?" he removed a
cigarette from his mouth and spat companionably into the roadway. my
throat was tight. "i-i'm sorry. i thought you were jeff matlock." the
eyes did not change expression, but the corner of his mouth twitched
briefly. "if that wants jeff he'll be back at his yard now, a reckon." he
spat again and replaced his cigarette. i nodded dully. jeff would be
there now all right-long ago. i had been chasing the wrong wagon for
about an hour and that cow would be dead and hanging lip on hooks at
this moment. the knacker man was a fast and skilful worker and wasted no
time when he got back with his beasts. "well, ah'm off 'ome now," the
ket feller said. "so long, boss." he winked at me, started his engine
and the big vehicle rumbled away. i trailed back to my car. there was no
hurry now. and strangely, now that all was lost my mood relaxed. in
fact, as i drove away, a great calm settled on me and i began to assess
my future with cool objectivity. i would be drummed out of the
ministry's service for sure, and idly i wondered if they had any special
ceremony for the occasion-perhaps a ritual stripping of the panel
certificates or something of the sort. i tried to put away~ the thought
that more than the ministry would be interested in my latest exploit.
how about the royal college? did they strike you off for something like
this? well, it was possible, and in my serene state of mind i toyed with
the possibilities of alternative avenues of employment. i had often
thought it must be fun to run a second hand book shop and now that i
began to consider it seriously i felt sure there was an opening for one
in darrowby. i experienced a comfortable glow at the vision of myself
sitting under the rows of dusty volumes, pulling one down from the shelf
when i felt like it or maybe just looking out into the street through
the window from my safe little world where there were no forms or
telephones or messages saying "ring min." in darrowby i drove round
without haste to the knacker yard. i left my car outside the grim little
building with the black smoke drifting from its chimney. i pulled back
the sliding door and saw jeff seated at his ease on a pile of cow hides,
holding a slice of apple pie in blood-stained fingers. and, ah yes,
there, just behind him hung the two great sides of beef and on the
floor, the lungs, bowels and other viscera-the sad remnants of mr.
moverley's pedigree ayrshire. "hello, jeff," i said. "now then, mr.
herriot." he gave me the beatific smile which mirrored his personality
so well. "ah'm just havin' a little snack. i allus like a bite about
this time." he sank his teeth into the pie and chewed appreciatively.
"so i see." i sorrowfully scanned the hanging carcase. just dog meat and
not even much of that. ayrshires were never very fat. i was wondering
how to break the news to him when he spoke again. "ah'm sorry you've
caught me out this time, mr. herriot," he said, reaching for a greasy
mug of tea. "what do you mean?" "well, i allus reckon to have t'beast
dressed and ready for you but you've come a bit early." i stared at him.
"but . . . everything's here, surely." i waved a hand around me. "nay,
nay, that's noter." "you mean ... that isn't the cow from moverley's."
"that's right." he took a long draught from the mug and wiped his mouth
with the back of his hand. "i 'ad to do this 'un first. moverley's cow's
still in t'wagon out at the back." "alive?" he looked mildly surprised.
"aye, of course. she's never had a finger on 'er. nice cow for a screw,
too." i could have fainted with relief. "she's no screw, jeff. that's
the wrong cow you've got there!" "wrong cow?" nothing ever startled him
but he obviously desired more information. i told him the whole story. .
when i had finished, his shoulders began to shake gently and the
beautiful clear eyes twinkled in the pink face. "well, that's a licker,"
he murmured, and continued to laugh gently. there was nothing immoderate
in his mirth and indeed nothing i had said disturbed him in the least.
the fact that he had wasted his journey or that the farmer might be
annoyed was of no moment to him. again, looking at jeff mallock, it
struck me, as many times before, that there was nothing like a lifetime
of dabbling among diseased carcases and lethal bacteria for breeding
tranquillity of mind. "you'll slip back and change the cow?" i said.
"aye, in a minute or two. there's nowt spoilin'. ah never likes to hurry
me grub." he belched contentedly. "and how about you, mr. herriot? you
could do with summat to keep your strength up." he produced another mug
and broke off a generous wedge of pie which he offered to me. "no ... no
. er no, thank you, jeff. it's kind of you, but no . . . no ... not just
now." he shrugged his shoulders and smiled as he stretched an arm for
his pipe which was balanced on a sheep's skull. flicking away some
shreds of stray tissue from the stem he applied a match and settled down
blissfully on the hides. "i'll see ye later, then," he said. "come round
tonight and everything'll be ready for you." he closed his eyes and
again his shoulders quivered. "ah'd better get the right lun this time."

it must be more than twenty years since i took a cow under the the order,
because the clinical cases so rarely exist now. "ring min" no longer has
the power to chill my blood, and the dread forms which scarred my soul
lie unused and yellowing in the bottom of a drawer. all these things
have gone from my life. charles harcourt has gone too, but i think of
him every day when i look at the little barometer which still hangs on
my wall. chapter 35.

the food was so good at the winckfield flying school that it was said
that those airmen whose homes were within visiting distance wouldn't
take a day's leave because they might miss some culinary speciality.
difficult to believe, maybe, but i often think that few people in
wartime britain fared as well as the handful of young men in the scatter
of wooden huts on that flat green stretch outside windsor. it wasn't as
though we had a french chef, either. the cooking was done by two
grizzled old men-civilians who wore cloth caps and smoked pipes and went
about their business with unsmiling taciturnity. it was rumoured that
they were two ex-army cooks from the first world war, but whatever their
origins they were artists. in their bands, simple stews and pies assumed
a new significance and it was possible to rhapso- dise even oyer the
perfect flouriness of their potatoes. so it was surprising when at lunch
time my neighbour on the left threw down his spoon, pushed away his
plate and groaned. we ate on trestle tables, sitting in rows on long
forms, and i was right up against the young man. "what's wrong?" i
asked. "this apple dumpling is terrific." "ah, it's not the grub." he
buried his face in his hands for a few seconds then looked at me with
tortured eyes. "i've been doing circuits and bumps this morning with
routledge and he's torn the knackers off me-all the time, it never
stopped." suddenly my own meal lost some of its flavour. i knew just
what he meant. f. 0. woodharn did the same to me. he gave me another
despairing glance then stared straight ahead.

311

"i know one thing, jim. i'll never make a bloody pilot." his words sent
a chill through me. he was voicing the conviction which had been
gradually growing in me. i never seemed to make any progress-whatever i
did was wrong, and i was losing heart. like all the others i was hoping
to be graded pilot, but after every session with f. 0. woodharn the idea
of ever flying an aeroplane all on my own seemed more and more
ludicrous. and i had another date with him at 2 p.m. he was as quiet and
charming as ever when i met him -till we got up into the sky and the
shouting started again. "relax! for heaven's sake, relax!" or "watch
your heightl where the hell d'you think you're going?" or "didn't i tell
you to centralise the stick? are you bloody deaf or something?" and
finally, after the first circuit when we juddered to a halt on the
grass, "that was an absolutely bloody ropy landingl take off againl" on
the second circuit he fell strangely silent. and though i should have
felt relieved i found something ominous in the unaccustomed peace. it
could mean only one thing-he bad finally given me up as a bad job. when
we landed he told me to switch off the engine and climbed out of'the
rear cockpit. i was about to unbuckle my stiaps and follow him when he
signalled me to remain in my seat. "stay where you are," he said. "you
can take her up now." i stared down at him through my goggles. "what ...
2" "i said take her up." "you mean, on my own ... ? go solo ... t' "yes,
of course. come and see me in the flight hut after you've landed and
taxied in." he turned and walked away over the green. he didn't look
back. after a few minutes a fitter came over to where i sat trembling in
my seat. he spat on the turf then looked at me with deep distaste.
"look, mate," he said. "that's a-good aircraft you've got there." i
nodded agreement. "well i don't want it-well smashed up, okay?" "okay.,'

he gave me a final disgusted glance then went round to the propellor.
panic-stricken though i was, i did not forget the cockpit drill which
had been dinned in to me so often. i never thought i'd have to use it in
earnest but now i automatically tested the controls-rudder, ailerons and
elevator. fuel on, switches off, throttle closed, then switches on,
throttle slightly open. "contact!" i cried. the fitter swung the
propellor and the engine roared. i pushed the throttle full opi5n and
the tiger moth began to bump its way over the grass. as we gathered
speed i eased the stick forward to lift the tail, then as i pulled it
back again the bumping stopped and we climbed smoothly into the air with
the long dining hut at the end of the airfield flashing away beneath. i
was gripped by exhilaration and triumph. the impossible had happened. i
was up here on my own, flying, really flying at last. i had been so
certain of failure that the feeling of relief was overpowering. in fact
it intoxicated me, so that for a long time i just sailed along, grinning
foolishly to myself. when i finally came to my senses i looked down
happily over the side. it must be time to turn now, but as i stared
downwards cold reality began to roll over me in a gathering flood. i
couldn't recognise a thing in the great hazy tapestry beneath me. and
everything seemed smaller than usual. dry-mouthed, i looked at the
altimeter. i was well over 2,000 feet. and suddenly it came to me that
f. 0. woodham's shouts had not been meaningless; he had been talking
sense, giving me good advice, and as soon as i got up in the air by
myself i had ignored it all. i hadn't lined myself up on a cloud, i
hadn't watched my artificial horizon, i hadn't kept an eye on the
altimeter. and i was lost. it was a terrible feeling, this sense of
utter isolation as i desperately scanned the great chequered landscape
for a familiar object. what did you do in a case like this? soar around
southern england till i found some farmer's field big enough to land in,
then make my own abject way back to winckfield? but that way i was going
to look the complete fool, and also i'd stand an excellent chance of
smashing up that fitter's beloved aeroplane and maybe myself. it seemed
to me that one way or another i was going to make a name for myself.
funny things had happened to some of the other lads-many had been
air-sick and vomited in the cockpit, one had gone through a hedge,
another on his first solo had circled the airfield again and again-seven
times he had gone round-trying to find the courage to land while his
instructor sweated blood and cursed on the ground. but nobody had really
got lost like me. nobody had flown off into the blue and returned on
foot without his aeroplane. my visions of my immediate fate were
reaching horrific proportions and my heart was hammering uncontrollably
when far away on my left i spotted the dear familiar bulk of the big
stand on ascot racecourse. almost weeping with joy, i turned towards it
and within minutes i was banking above its roof as i had done so often.
and there, far below and approaching with uncomfortable speed was the
belt of trees which fringed the airfield and beyond, the windsock
blowing over the wide green. but i was still far too high-i could never
drop down there in time to hit that landing strip, i would have to go
round again. the ignominy of it went deep. they would all be watching on
the ground and some would have a good laugh at the sight of herriot
over-shooting the field by several hundred feet and cruising off again
into the clouds. but what was i thinking about? there was a way of
losing height rapidly and, bless you, f. 0. woodham, i knew how to do
it. opposite rudder and stick. he had'told me a hundred times how to
side slip and i did it now as hard as i could, sending the little
machine slewing like an airborne crab down, down towards those trees.
and by golly it workedl the green copse rushed up at me and before i
knew i was almost skimming the branches. i straightened up and headed
for the long stretch of grass. at fifty feet i rounded out then checked
the stick gradually back till just above the ground when i slammed it
into my abdomen. the undercarriage made contact with the earth with
hardly a tremor and i worked the rudder bar to keep straight until i
came to a halt. 11en i taxied in, climbed from the cockpit and walked
over to the flight hut. f. 0. woodham was sitting at a table, cup in
hand, and he looked up as i entered. he had got out of his flying suit
and was wearing a battle dress jacket with the wings we all dreamed
about and the ribbon of the dfc. "ah, herriot, i'm just having some
coffee. will you join me?" 'thank you, sir." i sat down and he pushed a
cup towards me. "i saw your landing," he said. "delightful, quite
delightful." "thank you, sir." "and that side-slip." one comer of his
mouth twitched upwards. "very good indeed, really masterly." he reached
for the coffee pot and went on. "you've done awfully well, herriot. solo
after nine hours' instruction, eh? splendid. but then i never had the
slightest doubt about you at any time." he poised the pot over my cup.
"how do you like your coffee-black or whitet' chapter 36.

i was only the third man in our flight of fifty to go solo and it was a
matter of particular pride to me because so many of my comrades were
eighteen and nineteen year olds. they didn't say so but i often had the
impression that they felt that an elderly gentleman like me in my
twenties with a wife and baby had no right to be there, training for
aircrew. in the nicest possible way they thought i was past it. of
course, in many ways they had a point. the pull i had from home was
probably stronger than theirs. when our sergeant handed out the letters
on the daily parade i used to secrete mine away till i had a few minutes
of solitude to read about how fast little jimmy was growing, how much he
weighed, the unmistakable signs of outstanding intelligence, even
genius, which helen could already discern in him. i was missing his
babyhood and it saddened me. it was something i deeply regret because it
comes only once and is gone so quickly. but i still have the bundles of
letters which his proud mother wrote to keep me in touch with every
fascinating stage, and when i read them now it is almost as though i had
been there to see it all. at the time, those letters pulled me back
almost painfully to the comforts of home. on the other hand there were
occasions when life in darrowby hadn't been all that comfortable. . . .
i think it was the early morning calls in the winter which were the
worst. it was a fairly common experience to be walking sleepy-eyed into
a cow byre at 6 a.m. for a calving but at mr. blackburn's farm there was
a difference. in fact several differences. firstly, there was usually an
anxious-faced farmer to greet me with news of how the calf was coming,
when p6

labour had started, but today i was like an unwelcome stranger.
secondly, i had grown accustomed to the sight of a few cows tied up in a
cobbled byre with wooden partitions and an oil lamp, and now i was
gazing down a long avenue of concrete under blazing electric light with
a seemingly endless succession of bovine backsides protruding from
tubular metal standings. thirdly, instead of the early morning peace
there was a clattering of buckets, the rhythmic pulsing of a milking
machine and the blaring of a radio loudspeaker. there was also a frantic
scurrying of white-coated, white-capped men, but none of them paid the
slightest attention to me. this was one of the new big dairy farms. in
place of a solitary figure on a milk stool, head buried in the cow's
side, pulling forth the milk with a gentle "hiss-hiss," there was this
impersonal hustle and bustle. i stood just inside the doorway while out
in the yard a particularly cold snow drifted from the blackness above. i
had left a comfortable bed and a warm wife to come here and it seemed
somebody ought at least to say "hello." then i noticed the owner
hurrying past with a bucket. he was moving as fast as any of his men.
"hey, mr. blackburnl" i cried. "you rang me-you've got a cow calving?"
he stopped and looked at me uncomprehendingly for a moment. "oh aye . .
. aye . . . she's down there on t'riglat." he pointed to a light roan
animal half way along the byre. she was easy to pick out-the only one
lying down. "how long has she been on?" i asked, but when i turned round
mr. blackburn had gone. i trotted after him, cornered him in the milk
house and repeated my question. "oh, she should've calved last night.
must be summat amiss." he began to pour his bucket of milk over the
cooler into the churn. "have you had a feel inside her?" "nay, haven't
had time." he turned harassed eyes towards me. "we're a bit behind with
milkin' this mornin'. we can't be late for t'milk man." i knew what he
meant. the drivers who collected the churns for the big dairy companies
were a fierce body of men. probably kind husbands and fathers at normal
times but subject to violent outbursts of rage if they were kept waiting
even for an instant. i couldn't blame them, because they had a lot of
territory to cover and many farms to visit, but i had seen them when
provoked and their anger was frightening to behold. "all right," i said.
"can i have some hot water, soap and a towel, please?" mr. blackburn
jerked his head at the comer of the milk house. "you'll 'ave to help
yourself. there's everythin' there. ah must get on." he went off again
at a brisk walk. clearly he was more in fear of the milk man than he was
of me. i filled a bucket, found a piece of soap and threw a towel over
my shoulder. when i reached my patient i looked in vain for some sign of
a name. so many of the cows of those days had their names printed above
their stalls but there were no marigolds, alices or snowdrops here, just
numbers. before taking off my jacket i looked casually in the ear where
the tattoo marks stood out plainly against the creamy white surface. she
was number eighty seven. i was in more trouble when i stripped off my
shirt. in a modern byre like this there were no nails jutting from the
walls to serve as hangers. i bad to roll my clothes into a ball and
carry them through to the milk house. there i found a sack which i tied
round my middle with a length of binder twine. still ignored by
everybody, i returned, soaped my arm and inserted it into the cow. i had
to go a long way in to reach the calf, which was strange considering the
birth should have taken place last night. it was the top of the little
creature's head i touched first; the nose was tucked downwards instead
of thrusting its way along the vagina towards the outside world, and the
legs were similarly coiled under the body. and i noticed something else.
the entry of my arm did not provoke any answering strain from the cow,
nor did she try to rise to her feet. there was something else troubling
number eighty seven. lying flat on the concrete, still buried to the
shoulder in the cow, i raised my head and looked along the shaggy back
with its speckle of light red and white hairs, and when i reached the
neck i knew i need seek no further. the lateral kink was very obvious.
number eighty seven, slumped on her chest, was gazing wearily and
without interest at the wall in front of her but there was that funny
little bend in her neck that told me everything. i got up, washed and
dried my arm and looked for mr. blackburn. i found him bending by the
side of a fat brown animal, pulling the cups from her teats. i tapped
him on the shoulder. "she's got milk fever," i said. "oh aye," he
replied, then he hoisted the bucket, brushed past me and made off down
the byre. i kept pace with him. "that's why she can't strain. her uterus
has lost its tone. she'll never calve till she gets some calcium."
"right." he still didn't look at me. "ye'll give 'er some then?" "yes,"
i said to his retreating back. the snow still swirled in the outer
darkness and i toyed with the idea of getting dressed. but i'd only have
to strip again so i decided to make a dash for it. with the car boot
open it seemed to take a long time to fish out the bottles and rutter
valve with the rakes settling thickly on my naked flesh. back in the
byre i looked around for a spare man to help me but there was no
lessening of the feverish activity. i would have to roll this cow onto
her side and inject into her milk vein without assistance. it all
depended on how comatose she was. and she must have been pretty far gone
because when i braced my feet against the tubular steel and pushed both
hands against her shoulder she flopped over without resistance. to keep
her there i lay on top of her as i pushed in the needle and ran the
calcium into the vein. one snag was that my sprawling position took me
right underneath the neighbouring cow on the right, a skittish sort of
animal who didn't welcome the rubberbooted legs tangling with her hind
feet. she expressed her disapproval by treading painfully on my ankles
and giving me a few smart kicks on the thigh, but i daren't move because
the calcium was flowing in beautifully. when the bottle was empty i
kneed my patient back onto her chest and ran another bottle of calcium
magnesium and phosphorus under her skin. by the time i had finished and
rubbed away the subcutaneous fluid number eighty seven was looking
decidedly happier. i didn't hurry over cleaning and putting away my in-

jection outfit and re-soaping my arms because i knew that every minute
would bring back strength to my patient. the lightning response to
intravenous calcium has always afforded me a simple pleasure and when i
pushed my arm in again the difference was remarkable. the previously
flaccid uterus gripped at my hand and as the cow went into a long
expulsive effort she turned her head, looked back at me and opened her
mouth in a muffled bellow. it was not a sound of pain but rather as
though she was saying, "i'm back in business now." "all right, my lass,"
i replied. "i'll stay with you till it's all over." at other times i
might have been a little chary of being overheard conversing with a cow,
but with the clamour of buckets and the nonstop blasting of the radio
there was no chance of that happening. i knew that i had to guide the
calf back into the correct position and that it would take time, but i
had a strange sense of oneness with this animal because neither of us
seemed to be of the slightest importance in the present setting. as i
lay there face down on the concrete which grew harder all the time and
with the milkers stumbling over my prostrate form i felt very much
alone. there was just myself and number eighty seven for it. another
thing i missed was the sense of occasion. there was a compensation in
many an arduous calving in the feeling of a little drama being enacted;
the worried farmer, attentive stockmen, the danger of losing the calf or
even the mother-it was a gripping play and there was no doubt the vet
was the leading man. he may even be the villain but he was number one.
and here i was now, a scrabbling nonentity with hardly a mention in the
cast. it was the shape of things to come. and yet . . . and yet . . .
the job was still there. i lifted the calf's lower jaw and as the cow
gave a heave i eased it over the brim of the pelvis. then i groped for
the tiny legs and straightened them as another expulsive effort pushed
the little creature towards me. he was definitely on his way now. i
didn't rush things-just lay there and let the cow get on with it. my
worst moment was when one of the men came to put the milking machine on
the temperamental animal on my right. as he tried to step up beside her
she swung round, cocked her tail and sent a jet of faeces cascading
across my back. the man pushed her back into place, slipped on the teat
cups then lifted the hose which was lying ready for swilling down the
byre. a moment later i felt the icy flow of water playing from my
shoulders to my hips then the application of a spare udder cloth as the
helpful fellow cleaned me off. "thanks very muck," i gasped. and i was
really grateful. it was the only attention i had received all morning.
within half an hour the feet appeared at the vulva followed by a wet
nose whose nostrils twitched reassuringly. but they were big feet-this
would be a bull calf and his final entry into the world could be a tight
squeeze. i got into a sitting position and gripped a slippery cloven
hoof in each hand. leaning back, feet against the dung channel, i
addressed number eighty seven again. "come on, old lass. a couple of
good shoves and we're there." she responded with a mighty inflation of
the abdomen and the calf surged towards me as i pulled, giving me a
glimpse of a broad forehead and a pair of slightly puzzled eyes. for a
moment i thought the ears were going to slip through but then the cow
relaxed and the head disappeared back inside. "once more, girll" i
pleaded, and this time it seemed that she had decided to stop playing
around and get the job over with. she gave a prolonged strain which sent
head and shoulders through, and as i hauled away i had only that
momentary panic i always feel that the hips might jam in the pelvis. but
this one didn't stick and came sliding beautifully on to my lap. puffing
slightly, i got to my feet and parted the hind legs. sure enough the
little scrotum was there; he was a fine bull calf. i pulled some hay
from the rack and dried him off and within minutes he was sitting up,
sniffing and snorting, looking around him with interest. he wasn't the
only interested party. his' mother, craning round in her neck chain,
gazed fascinatedly at the new arrival before releasing a deafening
bellow. i seized the front feet again and pulled the calf up to the
front of the stall where the cow after a brief examination began to lick
him from head to tail. then as i watched, entranced, she suddenly rose
to her feet so that she could reach some of the little creature's more
inaccessible corners. i smiled to myself. so that was that. she had got
over the milk fever and had a nice live calf, too. all was well with
number eighty seven. mr. blackburn came up and stood by my side and i
realised that the noise in the byte had subsided. the milking was
finished. the farmer took off his white hat and wiped away the sweat
from his brow. "by gaw, that was a rush. we were short-handed this
mornin' and i was sure we were going' to miss that milk feller. he's a
terror-won't wait a minute, and i've had to chase after 'im in a tractor
with the churns afore now." as he finished speaking a hen leaped with a
squawk from the rack. mr. blackburn reached forward and lifted a warm
newlaid egg out of the hay. he inspected it for a moment then turned to
me. "have you 'ad your breakfast?" "no, of course not." "well tell your
missus to put this in the fryin' pan," he said, handing me the egg. "oh,
thank you very much, mr. blackburn, i'll enjoy that." he nodded and
continued to stand there, gazing at the cow and calf. dairy farming is
one of the hardest ways of making a living and this predawn turmoil was
an every day occurrence in his life. but i knew he was pleased with my
efforts because he faced me suddenly and his weathered features broke
into a delighted grin. without warning he gave me a friendly thump on
the chest. "good old jiml" he said, and walked away. i dressed, got into
the car and placed my egg with the utmost care on the dash, then i eased
myself gingerly on to the seat, because that hosing had sent a pint or
two of dirty water down into my underpants and sitting down was
intensely uncomfortable. as i drove away the darkness was thinning into
the grey beginning of a new day and around me the white bulk of the
fells began to lift from the half light-massive, smooth and
inexpressibly cold. i looked at the egg rocking gently on the dash, and
smiled to myself. i could still see mr. blackburn's sudden grin, still
feel his punch on the chest, and my main sensation was of reassurance.
systems may be changing, but cows and calves and yorkshire farmers were
just the same. chapter 37. 37

on my wage of seven and threepence a day, out of which was deducted
maintenance for wife and child, i was unable to indulge in high living
even if i had wanted to, but one evening in windsor i decided to allow
myself the luxury of one glass of beer, and as i pushed open the pub
doorway the first thing i saw was a man sitting at the corner of the bar
with a small dog under his chair. little things like that could lift me
effortlessly back to my old life, and i could almost hear george wilks,
the auctioneer, in the drovers arms at darrowby. "i reckon that's the
best pub terrier i've ever seen." he bent down from the bar counter and
patted theo's shaggy head as it protruded from beneath his master's
stool. it struck me that "pub terrier" wasn't a bad description. theo
was small and mainly white, though there were odd streaks of black on
his flanks, and his muzzle had a bushy outgrowth of hair which made him
undeniably attractive but still more mysterious. i warmed to a scottish
colleague recently who, when pressed by a lady client to diagnose her
dog's breed and lineage replied finally, "madam, i think it would be
best to call him a wee broon dug." by the same token theo could with
safety be described as a wee white dug, but in yorkshire the expression
"pub terrier" would be more easily understood. his m aster, paul
cotterell, looked down from his high perch. "what's he saying about you,
old chap?" he murmured languidly, and at the sound of his voice the
little animal leaped, eager and wagging, from his retreat. theo spent a
considerable part of his life between the four metal legs of that stool,
as did his master on the 324

seat. and it often seemed to me to be a waste of time for both of them.
i often took my own dog, sam, into pubs and He would squat beneath my
seat, but whereas it was an occasional thing with me-maybe once or twice
a week-with paul cotterell it was an unvarying ritual. every night from
eight o'clock onwards he could be found sitting there at the end of the
bar of the drovers' arms, pint glass in front of him, little curly pipe
drooping over his chin. for a young man like him-he was a bachelor in
his late thirties-and a person of education and intelligence, it seemed
a sterile existence. he turned to me as i approached the counter.
"hello, jim, let me get you a drink." "that's very kind of you, paul," i
replied. "i'll have a pint." "splendid." he turned to the barmaid with
easy courtesy. "could i trouble you, moyra?" we sipped our beer and we
chatted. this time it was about the music festival at brawton and then
we got on to music in general. as with any other topic i had discussed
with him he seemed to know a lot about it. "so you're not all that keen
on bach?" he enquired lazily. "no, not really. some of it, yes, but on
the whole i like something a bit more emotional. elgar, beethoven,
mozart. even tchaikovsky-i suppose you highbrows look down your noses at
him?" he shrugged, puffed his little pipe and regarded me with a half
smile, one eyebrow raised. he often looked like that and it made me feet
he ought to wear a monocle. but he didn't enthuse about bach, though it
seemed he was his favourite composer. he never enthused about anything,
and he listened with that funny look on his face while i rhapsodised
about the elgar violin concerto. paul cotterell was from the south of
england, but the locals had long since forgiven him for that because he
was likeable, amusing, and always ready to buy anybody a drink from his
corner in the drovers'. to me, he had a charm which was very english;
casual, effortless. he never got excited, he was always polite and
utterly self contained. "while you're here, jim," he said. "i wonder if
you'd have a look at theo's foot?"

"of course." it is one of a vet's occupational hazards that wherever he
goes socially it is taken for granted that there is nothing he would
rather do than dole out advice or listen to symptoms. "let's have him
up." "here, boy, come on." paul patted his knee and the little dog
jumped up and sat there, eyes sparkling with pleasure. and i thought as
i always did that theo should be in pictures. he was the perfect film
dog with that extraordinarily fuzzy laughing face. people paid good
money to see dogs just like him in cinemas all over the world. "all
right, theo," i said, scooping him from his master's knee. "where's the
trouble?" paul indicated the right fore foot with the stem of his pipe.
"it's that one. he's been going a bit lame off and on for the i ast few
days." "i see." i rolled the little animal on his back and then laughed.
"oh, he's only got a broken claw. there's a little bit hanging off here.
he must have caught it on a stone. hang on a minute." i delved in my
pocket for the scissors which'always dwelt there. a quick snip and the
job was done. "is that all?" asked paul. "yes, that's it." one eyebrow
went up mockingly as he looked at theo. "so that's what you were making
all the fuss about, eh? silly old trout." he snapped his fingers. "back
you go." the little dog obediently leaped to the carpet and disappeared
into his sanctuary beneath the stool. and at that moment i had a flash
of intuition about paul-about his charm which i had often admired and
envied. he didn't really care. he was fond of his dog, of course. he
took him everywhere with him, exercised him regularly by the river, but
there was none of the anxiety, the almost desperate concern which i had
so often seen in the eyes of my clients when i dealt with even the most
trivial of their ailments. they cared too much-as i have always done
with my own animals. and of course he was right. it was an easier and
more comfortable way to live. caring made you vulnerable while paul
cruised along, impregnable. that attractive casualness, the nonchalant
good manners, the imperturbability-they all had their roots in the
fact that nothing touched him very deeply.

and despite my snap diagnosis of his character i still envied him. i
have always been blown around too easily by my emotions; it must be
lovely to be like paul. and the more i thought about it the more i
realised how everything fitted in. he had never cared enough to get
married. even bach, with his mathematical music, was part of the
pattern. "i think that major operation deserves another pint, jim." he
smiled his lop-sided smile. "unless you demand a higher fee?" i laughed.
i would always like him. we are all different and we have to act as we
are made, but as i started my second glass i though~t again of his
carefree life. he had a good job in the government offices in brawton,
no domestic responsibilities, and every night he sat on that same stool
drinl6ng beer with his dog underneath. he hadn't a worry in the world.
anyway, he was part of the darrowby scene, part of something i liked,
and since i have always hated change it was in a sense reassuring to
know that no matter what night you went into the drovers' you would find
paul cotterell in the corner and theo's shaggy muzzle peeping from
below. i felt like that one night when i dropped in near closing time.
"d'you think he's got worms?" the question was typically off-hand. "i
don't know, paul. why do you ask?" he drew on his pipe. "oh i just
thought he looked a bit thin lately. come up, theo!" the little dog,
perched on his master's knee, looked as chirpy as ever and when i
reached over and lifted him he licked my hand. but his,ribs did feel
rather prominent. "mram, yes," i said. "maybe he has lost a bit of
weight. have you noticed him passing any worms?" "i haven't, actually."
"not even little bits-whitish segments sticking round his rear?" "no,
jim." he shook his head and smiled. "but i haven't looked all that
closely, old boy." "okay," i said. "let's worm him, just in case. i'll
bring in some tablets tomorrow night. you'll be here ... t' the eyebrow
went up. "i think that's highly probable." theo duly got his worm
tablets and after that there was a space of several weeks when i was too
busy to visit the drovers'. when i finally did get in it was a saturday
night and the athletic club dance was in full spate. a rhythmic beat
drifted from the ballroom, the little bar was packed, and the domino
players were under pressure, squashed into a corner by the crush of
dinner jackets and backless dresses. in the noise and beat i struggled
towards the bar, thinking that the place was unrecognisable. but there
was one feature unchanged-paul cotterell on his stool at the far end of
the counter. i squeezed in next to him and saw he was wearing his usual
tweed jacket. "not dancing, paul?" he half closed his eyes, shook his
head slowly and smiled at me over his bent little pipe. "not for me, old
boy," he murmured. "too much like work." i glanced down and saw that
something else hadn't changed. theo was there, too, keeping his nose
well clear of the milling feet. i ordered two beers and we tried to
converse, but it was difficult to shout above the babel. arms kept
poking between us towards the counter, red faces pushed into ours and
shouted greetings. most of the time we just looked around us. then paid
leaned close and spoke into my ear. "i gave theo those pills but he's
still getting thinner." "really?" i shouted back. "that's unusual." "yes
... perhaps you'd have a look at him?" i nodded, he snapped his fingers
and the little dog was on his knee in an instant. i reached and lifted
him onto mine and i noticed immediately that he was lighter in my hands.
"you're right," i said. "he's still losing weight." balancing the dog in
my lap, i pulled down an eyelid and saw that the conjunctiva was pale. i
shouted again. "he's anaemic." i felt my way back over his face and
behind the angle of the jaw i found that the post pharyngeal lymph
glands were very enlarged. this was strange. could he have some form of
mouth or throat infection? i looked helplessly around me, wishing
fervently that paul wouldn't invariably consult me about his dog in a
pub. i wanted to examine the animal, but i couldn't very well deposit
him among the glasses on the bar.

1 was trying to get a better grip with a view to looking down his throat
when my hand slipped behind his fore leg and my heart gave a sudden
thump a$ i encountered the axillary gland. it, too, was grossly
enlarged. i whipped my fingers back into his groin and there was the
inguinal gland, prominent as an egg. the prescapular was the same, and
as i groped around feverishly i realised that every superficial lymph
gland was several times its normal size. hodgkin's disease. for a few
moments i was oblivious of the shouting and laughter, the muffled blare
of music. then i looked at paul who was regarding me calmly as he puffed
his pipe. bow could i tell him in these surroundings? he would ask me
what hodgkin's disease was and i would have to explain that it was a
cancer of the lymphatic system and that his dog was surely going to die.
as my thoughts raced i stroked the shaggy head and theo's comic
whiskered face turned towards me. people jostled past, hands reached out
and bore gins and whiskies and beers past my face, a fat man threw his
arm round my neck. i leaned across. "paul," i said. "yes, jim?" "will
you . . . will you bring theo round to the surgery tomorrow morning.
it's ten o'clock on a sunday." momentarily the eyebrow twitched upwards,
then he nodded. "right, old boy." i didn't bother to finish my drink. i
began to push my way towards the door and as the crush closed around me
i glanced back. the little dog's tail was just disappearing under the
stool. next day i had one of those early waking mornings when i started
tossing around at six o'clock and finished by staring at the ceiling.
even after i had got my feet on the ground and brought helen a cup of
tea the waiting was interminable until the moment arrived which i had
been dreadingwhen i faced paul across the surgery table with theo
standing between us. i told him straight away. i couldn't think of any
easy way to lead up to it.

his expression did not change, but he took his pipe out of his mouth and
looked steadily at me, then at the dog and back again at me. "oh," he
said at last. "i see.9' i didn't say anything and he slowly ran his hand
along the little animal's back. "are you quite sure, jim?" "absolutely.
i'm terribly sorry." "is there no treatment?" "there are various
palliatives, paul, but i've never seen any of them do any good. the end
result is always the same." "yes . he nodded slowly. "but he doesn't
look so bad. what will happen if we don't do anything?" i paused. "well,
as the internal glands enlarge, various things will happen. ascites ---
dropsy-will develop in the abdomen. in fact you can see he's a little
bit pot-bellied now." "yes . . . i do see, now you mention it. anything
else?" "as the thoracic glands get bigger he'll begin to pant." "i've
noticed that already. he's breathless after a short walk." "and all the
time he'll get thinner and thinner and more debilitated." paul looked
down at his feet for a few moments then faced me. "so what it amounts to
is that he's going to be pretty miserable for the rest of his life." he
swallowed. "and how long is that going to be?" "a few weeks. it varies.
maybe up to three months." "well, jim." he smoothed back his hair. "i
can't let that happen. it's my responsibility. you must put him to sleep
now, before he really starts to suffer. don't you agree?" "yes, paul,
it's the kindest thing to do." "will you do it immediately-as soon as i
am out of that door?" "i will," i replied. "and i promise you he won't
know a thing." his face held a curious fixity of expression. he put his
pipe in his mouth, but it had gone out so he stuffed it into his pocket.
then he leaned forward and patted his dog once on the head. the bushy
face with the funny shock of hair round the muzzle turned to him and for
a few seconds they looked at each other. all things wise and
wonderful331

then, "goodbye, old chap," he muttered and strode quickly from the room.
i kept my promise. "good lad, good old neo," i murmured, and stroked the
face and ears again and again as the little creature slipped peacefully
away. like all vets i hated doing this, painless though it was, but to
me there has always been a comfort in the knowledge that the last thing
these helpless animals knew was the sound of a friendly voice and the
touch of a gentle hand. sentimental, maybe. not like paul. he had been
practical and utterly rational in the way he had acted. he had been able
to 'do the right thing because he was not at the mercy of his emotions.
later, over a sunday lunch which i didn7t enjoy as much as usual i told
helen about theo. i had to say something because she had produced a
delicious pot roast on the gas ring which was our only means of cooking
and i wasn't doing justice to her skill. sitting at our bench i looked
down at her. it was my turn for the high stool. "you know, helen," i
said. "that was an object lesson for me. the way paul acted, i mean. if
i'd been in his position i'd have shilly-shallied-tried to put off
something which was inevitable." she thought for a moment. "well, a lot
of people would." "yes, but he didn't." i put down my knife and fork and
stared at the wall. "he behaved in a mature way. i suppose paul has one
of those personalities you read .about. well-adjusted, completely
adequate." '~come on, jim, eat your lunch. i know it was a sad thing but
it had to be done and you mustn't start criticising yourself. paul is
paul and you are you." i started again on the meat but i couldn't
repress the rising sense of my own inadequacy. then as i glanced to one
side i saw that my wife was smiling up at me. i felt suddenly reassured.
it seemed that she at least didn't seem to mind that i was me.

that was on the sunday, and on tuesday morning i was handing out some
wart lotion to mr. sangster who kept a few dairy cows down by the
station. "dab that on the udder night and morning after milking," i said. "i think you'll find that the warts will start to drop
off, after a week or two." "thank ye." he handed over half a crown and i
was dropping it into the desk drawer when he spoke again. "bad job about
paul cotterell, wasn't it?" "what do you mean?" "ah thought you'd have
heard," he said. "he's dead." "dead!" i stared at him stupidly. "how ...
what ... 2" "found 'im this mornin'. he did away with 'isself." i leaned
with both hands on the desk. "do you mean . suicide?" "aye, that's what
they say. took a lot o' pills. it's all ower vtown." i found myself
hunching over the day book, sightlessly scanning the list of calls while
the farmer's voice seemed to come from far away. "it's a bad job, right
enough. he were a nice feller. reckon everybody liked 'im." later that
day i was passing paul's lodgings when i saw his landlady, mrs. clayton,
in the doorway. i pulled up and got out of the car. "mrs. clayton," i
said. "i still can't believe this." "nor can 1, mr. herriot, it's
terrible." her face was pale, her eyes red. "he was with me six years,
you know -he was like a son." "but why on earth.. . t' "oh, it was
losin' his dog that did it. he just couldn't stand it." a great wave of
misery rose and engujfed me and she put her hand on my arm. "don't look
like that, mr. herriot. it wasn't your fault. paul told me all about it
and nobody could have saved theo. people die of that, never mind dogs."
i nodded dumbly and she went on. "but it tell you something in
confidence, mr. herriot. paul wasn't able to stand things like you or
me. it was the way he was made-you see he suffered from depression."
"depression! paul ... t' "oh yes, he's been under the doctor for a long
time and takin' pills regular. he allus put a brave face on, but he's
had nervous trouble off and on for years." "nervous trouble . . . i'd
never have dreamed "no, nobody would, but that's how it was. he had an
unhappy childhood from what i made out. maybe thavs why he was so fond
of his dog. he got too attached to him, really." "yes ... yes. . she
took out a screwed up handkerchief and blew her nose. "well, as i said,
the poor lad had a rough time most of his life, but he was brave." there
didn't seem anything else to say. i drove away out of the town and the
calm green hills offered a quiet contrast to the turmoil which can fill
a man's mind. so much for herriot as a judge of character. i couldn't
have been more wrong, but paul had fought his secret battle with a
courage which had deceived everybody. i thought of the object lesson
which i thought he had given me, but in fact it was a lesson of another
kind and one which i have never forgotten; that there are countless
people like paul who are not what they seem. chapter 38.

the shock of paul cotterell's death stayed with me for a. long time, and
in fact i know i have never quite got over it because even now when the
company in the bar of the drovers' has changed and i am one of the few
old faces left from thirty-five years ago i can still see the jaunty
figure on the corner stool and the bushy face peeping from beneath. it
was the kind of experience i didn't want repeated in my -lifetime yet,
uncannily, i ran into the same sort of thing almost immediately
afterwards. it couldn't have been more than a week after paul's funeral
that andrew vine brought his fox terrier to the surgery. i put the
little dog on the table and exan-dned each of his eyes carefully in
turn. "i'm afraid he's getting worse," i said. without warning the man
slumped across the table and buried his face in his hands. i put my hand
on his shoulder. "what is it, andrew? what on earth's the matter?" at
first he did not answer but stayed there, huddled grotesquely by the
side of his dog as great sobs shook his body. when he spoke at last it
was into his hands and his voice was hoarse and desperate. "i can't
stand it! if digger goes blind i'll kill myself!" i looked down at the
bowed head in horrified disbelief. it couldn't be happening again. not
so soon after paul. and yet there were similarities. andrew was another
bachelor in his thirties and the terrier was his constant companion. he
lived in lodgings and appeared to have no worries though he was a shy,
diffident man with a fragile look about his tall stooping frame and
pahid face. 334

he had first consulted me about digger several months ago. "i call him
that because be's dug large holes in the garden ever since his puppy
days," he said with a half smite, looking at me almost apprehensively
from large dark eyes. i laughed. "i hope you haven't brought him to me
to cure that, because i've never read anything in the books about it."
"no, no, it's about something else-his eyes. and he's had that trouble
since he was a pup, too." "really? tell me." "well, when i first got him
he had sort of mattery eyes, but the breeder said he'd probably just got
some irritant in them and it would soon clear up. and in fact it did.
but he's never been quite right. he always seems to have a little
discomfort in his eyes." "how do you mean?" "he rubs the side of his
face along the carpet and he blinks in bright light." "i see." i pulled
the little animal's face around towards me and looked intently at the
eyelids. my mind had been busy as he spoke and i was fairly sure i
should find either entropion (inversion of the eyelids) or distichiasis
(an extra row of lashes rubbing against the eyeball) but there was no
sign of -either. the surface of the cornea, too, looked normal, except
perhaps that the deeper structures of lens and iris were not as easy to
define as usual. i moved over to a cupboard for the ophthalmoscope. "how
old is he now?" "about a year." "so he's had this for about ten months?"
"yes, about that. but it varies a lot. most of the time he seems normal
then there are days when he goes and lies in his basket with his eyes
half closed and you can tell there's something wrong. not pain, really.
more like discomfort as i said." i nodded and hoped i was looking wise
but none of this added up to anything familiar. i switched on the little
light on the ophthalmoscope and peered into the depths of that most
magical and delicate of all organs, down through the lens to the
brilliant tapestry of the retina with its optic papilla and branching
blood vessels. i couldn't find a thing wrong.

"does he still dig holes?" i asked. when baffled i often snatch at
straws and i wondered if the dog was suffering from a soil irritation.
andrew shook his head. "no, very seldom now, and anyway, his bad days
are never associated with his digging." "is that so?" i rubbed my chin.
the man was obviously ahead of me with his thinking and i had an
uncomfortable feeling of bewilderment. people were always bringing their
dogs in with "bad eyes" and there was invariably something to be seen,
some cause to be found. "and would you say that this was one of his bad
days?" "well i thought so this morning, but be seems a bit better now.
still, he's a bit blinky, don't you think?" "yes ... maybe so." digger
did appear to be reluctant to open his eyes fully to the sunshine
streaming through the surgery window. and occasionally he kept them
closed for a second or two as though he wasn't very happy. but damn it,
nothing gave me the slightest clue. i didn't tell the owner that i
hadn't the faintest idea what was wrong with his dog. such remarks do
not inspire confidence. instead, i took refuge in businesslike activity.
"i'm going to give you some lotion," i said briskly. "put a few drops
into his eyes three times daily. and let me know how he goes on. it's
possible he has some long-standing infection in there." i handed over a
bottle of 2% boric acid solution and patted digger's head. "i hope that
will clear things up for you, lad," i said, and the stumpy tail wagged
in reply. he was a sharp looking little animal, attractive and
good-natured and a fine specimen of the smooth-haired breed with his
long head and neck, pointed nose and beautifully straight limbs. he
jumped from the table and leaped excitedly around his master's legs. i
laughed. "he's eager to go, like most of my patients." i bent and
slapped him playfully on the rump. "my word, doesn't he look fit!" "he
is fit." andrew smiled proudly. "in fact i often think that apart from
those eyes he's a perfect little physical machine. you should see him
out in the fieldshe ran run like a whippet." "i'll bet he can. keep in
touch, will you?" i waved them out of the door and turned to my other
work, mercifully unaware that i had just embarked on one of the most
frustrating cases of my career. after that first time i took special
notice of digger and his owner. ~ andrew, a sensitive likeable man, was
a representative for a firm of agricultural chemists and, like myself,
spent most of his time driving around the darrowby district. his dog was
always with him and i had been perfunctorily amused by the fact that the
little animal was invariably peering intently through the windscreen,
his paws either on the dash or balanced on his master's hand as he
operated the gear lever. but now that i was personally interested i
could discern the obvious delight which the little animal derived from
taking in every detail of his surroundings. he missed nothing in his
daily journeys. the road ahead, the houses and people, trees and fields
which flashed by the windows-these made up his world. i met him one day
when i was exercising sam up on the high moors which crown the windy
summits of the fells. but this was may, the air was soft and a week's
hot sunshine had dried the green paths which wandered among the heather.
i saw digger flashing like a white streak over the velvet turf and when
he spotted sam he darted up to him, set himself teasingly for a moment
then shot back to andrew who was standing in a natural circular glade
among the harsh brown growth. here gorse bushes blazed in full yellow
glory and the little dog hurtled round and round the arena, exulting in
his health and speed. "that's what i'd call sheer joy of living," i
said. andrew smiled shyly. "yes, isn't he beautiful," he murmured. "how
are the eyes?" i asked. he shrugged. "sometimes good, sometimes not so
good. much the same as before. but i must say he seems easier whenever i
put the drops in." "but he still has days when he looks unhappy?" "yes .
. . i have to say yes. some days they bother him a lot." again the
frustration welled in me. "let's walk back to the car," i said. "i might
as well have a look at him." i lifted digger on to the bonnet and
examined him again. there wasn't a single abnormality in the eyelids-

i had wondered if i had missed something last time-but as the bright
sunshine slanted across the eyeballs i could just discern the faintest
cloudiness in the cornea. there was a slight keratitis there which
hadn't been visible before. but why ... why? "he'd better have some
stronger lotion." i rummaged in the car boot. "i've got some here. we'll
try silver nitrate this time." andrew brought him in about a week later.
the corneal discolouration had gone-probably the silver nitrate had
moved it-but the underlying trouble was unchanged. there was still
something sadly wrong. something i couldn't diagnose. that was when i
started to get really worried. as the weeks passed i bombarded those
eyes with everything in the book; oxide of mercury, chinosol, zinc
sulphide, ichthyol and a host of other things which are now buried in
history. i had none of the modern sophisticated antibiotic and steroid
applications but it would have made no difference if i had. i know that
now. the real nightmare started when i saw the first of the pigment
cells beginning to invade the cornea. sinister brown specks gathering at
the limbus and pushing out dark tendrils into the smooth membrane which
was digger's window on the world. i had seen cells like them before.
when they came they usually stayed. and they were opaque. over the next
month i fought them with my pathetic remedies, but they crept inwards,
slowly but inexorably, blurring and narrowing digger's field of vision.
andrew noticed them too, and when he brought the little dog into the
surgery he clasped and unclasped his hands anxiously. "you know, he's
seeing less all the time, mr. herriot. i can tell. he still looks out of
the car windows but he used to bark at all sorts of things he didn't
like-other dogs for instance-and now he just doesn't spot them he's-he's
losing his sight." i felt like screaming or kicking the table, but since
that wouldn't have helped i just looked at him. "it's that brown stuff,
isn't it?" he said. "what is it?" "it's called pigmentary keratitis,
andrew. it sometimes happens when the cornea-the front of the eyeball
-has been inflamed over a long period, and it is very difficult to
treat. i'll do the best i can." my best wasn't enough. that slow,
creeping tide was pitiless, and as the pigment cells were laid down
thicker and thicker the resulting layer was almost black, lowering a
dingy curtain between digger and ah the things he had gazed at so
eagerly. and all the time i suffered a long gnawing worry, a helpless
wretchedness as i contemplated the inevitable. it was when i examined
the eyes five months after i had first seen them that andrew broke down.
there wag hardly anything to be seen of the original corneal structure
now; just a brown-black opacity which left only minute chinks for
moments of sight. blindness was not far away. i patted the man's
shoulder again. "come on, andrew. come over here and sit down." i pulled
over the single wooden chair in the consulting room. he staggered across
the floor and almost collapsed on the seat. he sat there, head in hands,
for some time then raised a tear-stained face to me. his expression was
distraught. "i can't bear the thought of it," he gasped. "a friendly
little thing like digger-he loves everybody. what has he ever done to
deserve this?" "nothing, andrew. it's just one of the sad things which
happen. i'm terribly sorry." he rolled his head from side to side. "oh
god, but it's worse for him. you've seen him in the car-he's so
interested in everything. life wouldn't be worth living for him if he
lost his sight. and i don't want to live any more either!" "you mustn't
talk like that, andrew," i said. "that's going too far." i hesitated.
"please don't be offended, but you ought to see your doctor." "oh i'm
always at the doctor," he replied dully. "i'm full of pills right now.
he tells me i have a depression." the word was like a mournful knell.
coming so soon after paul it sent a wave of panic through me. "how long
have you been like this?" "oh, weeks. i seem to be getting worse." "have
you ever had it before?" "no, never." he wrung his hands and looked at
the floor. "the doctor says that if i keep on taking the pills i'll get
over it, but i'm reaching the end of my tether now." "but the doctor is
right, andrew. you've got to stick it and you'll be as good as new." "i
don't believe it," he muttered. "every day lasts a year. i never enjoy
anything. and every morning when i wake up i dread having to face the
world again." i didn't know what to say or how to help. "can i get you a
glass of water?" "no ... no thanks." he turned his deathly pale face up
to me again and the dark eyes held a terrible blankness. "what's the use
of going on? i know i'm going to be miserable for the rest of my life."
i am no psychiatrist but i knew better than to tell somebody in andrew's
condition to snap out of it. and i had a flash of intuition. "all
right," i said. "be miserable for the rest of your life, but while
you're about it you've got to look after this dog." "look after him?
what can i do? he's going blind. there's nothing anybody can do for him
now." "you're wrong, andrew. this is where you start doing things for
him. he's going to be lost without your help." "how do you mean?" "well,
you know all those walks you take himyou've got to get him used to the
same tracks and paths so that he can trot along on familiar ground
without fear. keep him clear of holes and ditches." he screwed up his
face. "yes, but he won't enjoy the walks any more." "he will," i said.
"you'll be surprised." "oh, but.. ." "and that nice big lawn at the back
of your house where he runs. you'll have to be on the lookout all the
time in case there are things left lying around on the grass that he
might bump into. and the eye dropsyou say they make him more
comfortable. who's going to put them in if you don't?" "but mr. herriot
... you've seen how he always looks out of the car when he's with me.
"he'll still look out." "even if he can't see?"

"yes." i put my hand on his arm. "you must understand, andrew, when an
animal loses his sight he doesn't realise what's happened to him. it's a
terrible thing, i know, but he doesn't suffer the mental agony of a
human being." he stood up and took a long shuddering breath. "but i'm
having the agony. i've been dreading this happening for so long. i
haven't been able to sleep for thinking about it. it seems so cruel and
unjust for this to strike a helpless animal-a little creature who's
never done anybody any harm." he began to wring his bands again and pace
about the room. "you're just torturing yourself!" i said sharply.
"that's part of your trouble. you're using digger to punish yourself
instead of doing something useful." "oh but what can i do that will
really help? all those things you talked about-they can't give him a
happy life." "oh but they can. digger can be happy for years and years
if you really work at it. it's up to you." like a man in a dream he bent
and gathered his dog into his arms and shuffled along the passage to the
front door. as he went down the steps into the street i called out to
him. "keep in touch with your doctor, andrew. take your pills
regularly-and remember." i raised my voice to a shout. "remember you've
got a job to do with that dog!"

after paul i was on a knife edge of apprehension but this time there was
no tragic news to shatter me. instead i saw andrew vine frequently,
sometimes in the town with digger on a lead, occasionally in his car
arith the little white head framed always in the windscreen, and most
often in the fields by the river where he seemed to be carrying out my
advice by following the good open tracks again and again. it was by the
river that i stopped him one day. "how are things going, andrew?" he
looked at me unsmilingly. "oh, he's finding his way around not too
badly. i keep my eye on him. i always avoid that field over
there-there's a lot of boggy places in it." "good, that's the idea. and
how are you yourself?" "do you really want to know?"

"yes, of course." he tried to smile. "well this is one of my good days.
i'm just tense and dreadfully unhappy. on my bad days i'm
terror-stricken, despairing, utterly desolate." "i'm sorry, andrew." he
shrugged. "don't think i'm wallowing in self pity. you asked me. anyway,
i have a system. every morning i look at myself in the mirror and i say,
'okay, vine, here's another bloody awful day coming up, but you're going
to do your job and you're going to look after your dog.' $9 "that's
good, andrew. and it will all pass. the whole thing will go away and
you'll be all right one day." "that's what the doctor says." he gave me
a sidelong glance. "but in the meantime . . ." he looked down at his
dog. "come on, digger." he turned and strode away abruptly with the
little dog trotting after him, and there was something in the set of the
man's shoulders and the forward thrust of his head which gave me hope.
he was a picture of fierce determination. my hopes were fulfilled. both
andrew and digger won through. i knew that within months, but the final
picture in my mind is of a meeting i had with the two of them about two
years later. it was on the flat table-land above darrowby where i had
first seen digger hurtling joyously among the gorse bushes. he wasn't
doing so badly now, running freely over the smooth green turf, sniffing
among the herbage, cocking a leg now and then with deep contentment
against the drystone wall which ran along the hillside. andrew laughed
when he saw me. he had put on weight and looked a different person.
"digger knows every inch of this walk," he said. "i think it's just
about his favourite spot-you can see how he's enjoying himself." i
nodded. "he certainly looks a happy little dog." "yei, he's happy all
right. he has a good life and honestly i often forget that he can't
see." he paused. "you were right, that day in your surgery. you said
this would happen." "well that's great, andrew," i said. "and you're
happy, too, aren't you?" "i am, mr. herriot. thank god, i am." a shadow
crossed his face. "when i think how it was then, i can't believe my
luck. it was like being in a dark valley, and bit by bit i've climbed
out into the sunshine." "i can see that. you're as good as new, now." he
smiled. "i'm better than that-better than i was before. that terrible
experience did me good. remember you said i was torturing myself? i
realised i had spent all my days doing that. i used to take every little
mishap of life and beat myself over the head with it." "you don't have
to tell me, andrew," i said ruefully. "i've always been pretty good at
that myself." "well yes, i suppose a lot of us are. but i became an
expert and look where it got me. it helped so much to have digger to
look after." his face lit up and he pointed over the grass. "just look
at that!" the little dog had been inspecting an ancient fence, a few
rotting planks which were probably part of an old sheep fold, and as we
watched he leaped effortlessly between the spars to the other side.
"marvelous!" i said delightedly. "you'd think there was nothing wrong
with him." andrew turned to me. "mr. herriot, when i see a thing like
that it makes me wonder. can a blind dog do such a thing. do you think
... do you think there's a chance he can see just a little?" i
hesitated. "maybe he can see a bit through that pigment, but it can't be
much-a flicker of light and shade, perhaps. i really don't know. but in
any case, he's become so clever in his familiar surroundings that it
doesn't make much difference." "yes ... yes." he smiled philosophically.
"anyway, we must get on our way. come on, digger!" he snapped his
fingers and set off along a track which pushed a vivid green finger
through the heather, pointing clean and unbroken to the sunny skyline.
his dog bounded ahead of him, not just at a trot but at a gallop.

i have made no secret of the fact that i never really knew the cause of
digger's blindness, but in the light of modern developments in eye
surgery i believe it was a condition called keratitis sicca. this was
simply not recogdised in those early days and anyway, if i had known i
could have done little about it. the name means "dryness of the cornea"
and it occurs when the dog is not producing enough tears. at the present
time it is treated by in-

stilling artificial tears or by an intricate operation whereby the
salivary ducts are transferred to the eyes. but even now, despite these
things, i have seen that dread pigmentation taking over in the end. when
i look back on the whole episode my feeling is of thankfulness. ar sorts
of things help people to pull out of a depression. mostly it is their
family-the knowledge that wife and children are dependent on
them-sometimes it is a cause to work for, but in andrew vine's case it
was a dog. i often think of the dark valley which closed around him at
that time and i am convinced he came out of it on the end of digger's
lead. chapter 39.

now that i had done my first solo i was beginning to appreciate the
qualities of my instructor. there was no doubt f. 0. woodham was a very
good teacher. there was a war on and no time for niceties. he had to get
green young men into the air on their own without delay and he had done
it with me. i used to fancy myself as a teacher, too, with the boys who
came to see practice in darrowby. i could see myself now, smiling
indulgently at one of my pupils. "you don't see this sort of thing in
country practice, david," i said. he was one of the young people who
occasionally came with me on my rounds. fifteen years old, and like all
the others he thought he wanted to be a veterinary surgeon. but at the
moment he looked a little bewildered. i really couldn't blame him. it
was his first visit and he had expected to spend a day with me in the
rough and tumble of large animal practice in the yorkshire dales and now
there was this lady with the poodle and emmeline. the lady's progress
along the passage to the consulting room had been punctuated by a series
of squeaking noises produced by her squeezing a small rubber doll. at
each squeak lucy advanced a few reluctant steps until a final pressure
lured her on to the table. there she stood trembling and looking
soulfully around her. "she won't go anywhere without emmeline," the lady
explained. "emmeline?" "the doll." she held up the rubber toy. "since
this trouble started lucy has become devoted to her." "i see. and what
trouble is that?" "well, it's been going on for about two weeks now. 345

she7s so listless and strange, and she hardly eats any- 9p thing. i
reached behind me to the trolley for the thermometer. "right, we'll have
a look at her. there's something wrong when a dog won't eat." the
temperature was normal. i went over her chest thoroughly with my
stethoscope without finding any unusual sounds. the heart thudded
steadily in my ears. careful palpation of the abdomen revealed nothing
out of the way. the lady stroked lucy's curly poll and the little animal
looked up at her with sorrowful liquid eyes. -rrn getting really worried
about her. she doesn't want to go for walks. in fact we can7t even
entice her from the house without emmeline." "eh?9' "i say she won't
take a step outside unless we squeak emmeline at her, and then they both
go out together. even then she just trails along like an old dog, and
she's only three after 0. you know how lively she is normally." i
nodded. i did know. this little poodle was a bundle of energy. i had
seen her racing around the fields down by the river, jumping to enormous
heights as she chased a ball. she must be suffering from something
pretty severe, but so far i was baffled. and i wished the lady wouldn't
keep on about emmeline and the squeaking. i shot a side glance at david.
i had been holding forth to him, telling him how ours was a scientific
profession and that he would have to be really hot at physics, chemistry
and biology to gain entrance to a veterinary school, and it didn't fit
in with all this. maybe i could guide the conversation along more
clinical lines. "any more symptoms?" i asked. "any cough, constipation,
diarrhoea? does she ever cry out in pain?" the lady shook her head. "no.
nothing like that. she just looks around looking at us with such a
pitiful expression and searching for emmeline." oh dear, there it was
again. i cleared my throat. "she never vomits at all? especially after a
meal?" "never. when she does eat a little she goes straight away to find
emmeline and takes her to her basket." .'really? well i can't see that
that has anything to do with it. are you sure she isn't lame at times?"

the lady didn't seem to be listening. "and when she gets emmeline into
her basket she sort of circles around, scratching the blanket as though
she was making a bed for the little thing." i gritted my teeth. would
she never stop? then a light bashed in the darkness. "wait a minute," i
said. "did you say making a bedr' "yes, she scratches around for ages
then puts emmeline dovw' "ah yes." the next question would settle it.
"when was she last in seasonr' the lady tapped a finger against her
cheek. "let me see, it was in the middle of may-that would be about
weeks ago." there wasn!t a mystery any more. "roll her over, please," i
said. with lucy stretched on her back, her eyes regarding the surgery
ceiling with deep emotion, i ran my fingers over the mammary glands.
they were turgid and swollen. i gently squeezed one of the teats and a
bead of milk appeared. "she's got false pregnancy," i said. "what on
earth is that?" the lady looked at me, roundeyed. "oh, it's quite common
in bitches. they get the idea they are going to have pups and around the
end of the gestation period they start this business. making a bed for
the pups is typical, but some of them actually swell in the abdomen.
they do all sorts of peculiar things." "my goodness, how extraordinaryl"
the lady began to laugh. "lucy, you silly little thing, worrying us over
nothing." she looked at me across the table. "how long is she going to
be like this?" i turned on the hot tap and began to wash my hands. "not
for long. i'll give you some tablets for her. if she's not much better
in a week come back for more.'but you needn't worry-even if it takes a
bit longer she'll be her old self in the end." i went through to the
dispensary, put the tablets in a box and handed them over. the lady
thanked me then turned to her pet who was sitting on the tiled floor
looking dreamily into space. "come along lucy," she said, but the poodle
took no notice. "lucyl do you hear me? were going nowl" she

began to walk briskly along the passage but the little animal merely put
her head on one side and appeared to be hearkening to inward music.
after a minute her mistress reappeared and regarded her with some
exasperation. "oh really, you are naughty. i suppose there's only one
way." she opened her handbag and produced the rubber toy.
"squeak-squeak," went emmeline and the poodle raised her eyes with misty
adoration. "squeak-squeak, squeaksqueak." the sound retreated along the
passage and lucy followed entranced until she disappeared round the
corner. i turned to david with an apologetic grin. "right," i said.
"we'll get out on the road. i know you want to see farm practice and i
assure you it's vastly different from what you've seen here." sitting in
the car, i continued. "mind you, don't get me wrong. i'm not decrying
small animal work. in fact i'd have to admit that it is the most highly
skilled branch of the profession and i personally think that small
animal surgery is tremendously demanding. just don't judge it all by
emmeline. anyway, we have one doggy visit before we go out into the
country." "what's that?" the lad asked. "well, i've had a call from a
mr. rington to say that his dalmatian bitch has completely altered her
behaviour. in fact she's acting so strangely that he doesn't want to
bring her to the surgery." "what do you think that might be?" i thought
for a moment. "it seems a bit silly, but the first thing that comes to
my mind is rabies. this is the most dreadful dog disease of all, but
thank heaven we've managed to keep it out of this country so far by
strict quarantine regulations. but at college it was hammered into us so
forcibly that it is always at the back of my mind even though i don't
really expect to see it. but this case of the dalmatian could be
anything. i only hope she hasn't turned savage because that's the sort
of thing that leads to a dog being put down and i hate that." mr.
rington's opening remark didn't cheer me. "tessa's become really fierce
lately, mr. herriot. started moping about and growling a few days ago
and frankly i daren't trust her with strangers now. she nailed the
postman by the ankle this morning. most embarrassing." my spirits sank
lower. "actually bit somebodyl" mr.

rington went on. "it's unbelievable-she's such a softie. i've always
been able to do anything with her." "i know, i know," he muttered.
"she's marvelous with children, too. i can't understand it. but come
and have a look at her." the dalmatian was sitting in a comer of the
lounge and she glanced up sulkily as we entered. she was a favourite
patient and i approached her confidently. "hello, tessa," i said, and
held out my hand. i usually had a tail-lashing, tongue-lolling welcome
from this animal but today she froze into complete immobility and her
lips withdrew silently from her teeth. it wasn't an ordinary snarl-it
was as though the upper lip was operated by strings and there was
something unnerving about it. "what's the matter, old girl?" i enquired,
and again the gleaming incisors were soundlessly exposed. and as i
stared uncomprehendingly i could see that the eyes were glaring at me
with blazing primitive hatred. tessa was unrecognizable. "mr. herriot."
her owner looked at me apprehensively. "i don't think i'd go any nearer
if i were you." i withdrew a pace. "yes, i'm inclined to agree with you.
i don't think she'd cooperate if i tried to examine her. but never mind,
tell me all about her." "well, there's really nothing more to tell," mr.
rington said helplessly. "she's just different-like this." "appetite
good?" "yes, fine. eats everything in front of her." "no unusual
symptoms at all?" "none, apart from the altered temperament. the family
can handle her, but quite frankly i think she'd bite any stranger who
came too -near." i ran my fingers through my hair. "any change in family
circumstances? new baby? different domestic help? unusual people coming
to the house?" "no, nothing like that. there's been no change." "i ask
because animals sometimes act like this out of jealousy or disapproval."
"sorry." mr. rington shrugged his shoulders. "everything is just as it's
always been. only this morning my wife was wondering if tessa was still
cross with us because we kept her indoors for three weeks while she was
in season. but that was a long time ago-about two months now."

i whipped round and faced him. "two months?" "yes, about that." surely
not againl i gestured to the owner. "would you please lift her up so
that she's standing on her hind legs?" "like this?" he put his arms
round the dalmatian's chest and hoisted till she was in the upright
position with her abdomen facing me. and it was as if i knew beforehand.
because i felt not the slightest surprise when i saw the twin row of
engorged teats. it was unnecessary, but i leaned forward, grasped a
little nipple and sent a white jet spurting. "she's bulging with milk,"
i said. 'milk?" "yes, she's got false pregnancy. this is one of the more
unusual side effects, but i'll give you some tablets and she'll-soon be
the docile tessa again." as we got back into the car i had a good idea
what the schoolboy was thinking. he would be wondering where the
chemistry, physics and biology came in. "sorry about that, david," i
said. "i've been telling you all about the constant variety of a vet's
life and the first two cases you see are the same condition. but we are
going out to the farms now and as i said, you'll find it very different.
i mean, those two cases were really psychoiogical things. you don't get
that in country practice. it's a bit rough but it's real and down to
earth." as we drove into the farmyard i saw the farmer carrying a bag of
meal over the cobbles. i got out of the car with david. "you've got a
pig ill, mr. fisher?" "aye, a big sow. she's in 'ere." he led the way
into a pen and pointed to a huge white pig lying on her side. "she's
been off it for a few days," he said. "hardly eats owl-just picks at her
food. and she just lays there all t'time. ah don't think she's got
strength to get to her feet." my thermometer had been in the pig's
rectum as he spoke and i fished it out and read the temperature. it was
102.2-dead normal. i auscultated the chest and palpated the abdomen with
growing puzzlement. nothing wrong. i looked over at the trough nearby.
it was filled to the brim with fresh meal and water-untouched. and pigs
do love their food. i nudged her thigh with my fist. "come on, lass, get
up." and i followed it with a brisk slap across the rump. a healthy pig
would have leaped to her feet but the sow never moved. i tried not to
scratch my head. there was something very funny here. "has she ever been
ill before, mr. fisher?" "nay, never ailed a thing and she's allus been
a real lively pig, too. ah can't reckon it up." nor could 1. "what beats
me," i said, "is that she doesn't look like a sick animal. she's not
trembling or anxious, she's lying there as if she hadn't a care in the
world." "aye, you're right, mr. herriot. she's as 'appy as larry, but
she'll neither move nor eat. it's a rum 'un, isn't it?" it was very rum
indeed. i squatted on my heels, watching the big sow. she reached
forward and pushed gently with her snout at the straw bedding round her
head. sick pigs never did that. it was a gesture of well-being. and
those little grants which issued from deep in her chest. they were
grunts of deep contentment and there was something familiar about the
sound of them . . . something lurking,at the back of my mind which
wouldn't come forward. it was the same with the way the sow eased
herself further on to her side, pushing the great stretch of abdomen
outward as though in offering. i had heard and seen it so many times
before-the happy sounds, the careful movements. then i remembered. of
coursel she was like a sow with a litter, only there was no litter. a
wave of disbelief flowed over me. oh no, no, please not a third timel it
was dark in the pen and i couldn't get a clear view of the mammary
glands. i turned to the farmer. "open the door a little, will you,
please." as the sunshine flooded in everything was obvious. it was mere
routine to reach out to the long turnefied udder and squirt the milk
against the wall. i straightened up wearily and was about to make my now
commonplace announcement when david did it for me. "false pregnancy?" he
said. i nodded dumbly. "what was that?" enquired mr. fisher. "well your
sow has got it into her head that she is pregnant," i said. "not only
that, but she thinks she has given birth to a litter and she's suckling
the imaginary piglets now. you can see it, can't yout' the farmer gave a
long soft whistle. "aye . . . aye you're right. that's what she's doin'
. . . enjoyin' it, too." he took off his cap, rubbed the top of his head
and put the cap on again. "well, there's allus summat new, isn't there?"
it wasn't new to david, of course. old stuff, in fact, and i didn't want
to bore him further with a lengthy dissertation. "nothing to worry
about, mr. fisher," i said hastily. "call down to the surgery and i'll
give you something to put in her food. she'll soon be back to normal."
as i left the pen the sow gave a deep sigh of utter fulfillment and
moved her position with the utmost care to avoid crushing her phantom
family. i looked back at her and i could almost see the long pink row of
piglets sucking busily. i shook my head to dispel the vision and went
out to the car. i was opening the door when the farmer's wife trotted
towards me. "i've just had a phone call from your surgery, mr. herriot.
they want you to go to mr. rogers of east farm. there's a cow calving."
an emergency like this in the middle of a round was usually an irritant,
but today the news came as a relief. i had promised this schoolboy some
genuine country practice and i was beginning to feel embarrassed. "well,
david," i said with a light laugh as we drove away. "you must be
thinking all my patients are neurotic. but you're going to see a bit of
the real thing nowthere's nothing airy-fairy about a calving cow. this
is where the hard work of our job comes in. it's often pretty tough
fighting against a big straining cow, because you must remember the vet
only sees the difficult cases where the calf is laid wrong." the
situation of east farm seemed to add weight to my words. we were bumping
up the fellside along a narrow track which was never meant for motor
cars and i winced as the exhaust grated against the jutting rocks. the
farm was perched almost on the edge of the hilltop and behind it the
sparse fields, stolen from the moorland, rolled away to the skyline. the
crumbling stonework and broken roof tiles testified to the age of the
squat grey house. i pointed to some figures, faintly visible on the
massive stone lintel above the front door. "what does that date mean to
you, david?" "sixteen sixty-six, the great fire of london," he replied
promptly. "well done. strange to think they were building this place in
the same year as old london burned down." mr. rogers appeared, carrying
a steaming bucket and a towel. "she's out in ffield, mr. herriot, but
she's a quiet cow and easy to catch." "all right." i followed him
through the gate. it was another little annoyance when the farmer didn't
have the cow inside for me but again i felt that if david wanted to be a
vet he ought to know that a lot of our work was carried out in the open,
often in the cold and rain. even now on this july morning a cool breeze
whipped round my chest and back as i pulled off my shirt. it was never
very warm in the high country of the dales but i felt at home here. with
the cow standing patiently as the farmer held her halter, the bucket
perched among the tufts of wiry grass, and only a few stunted wind-bent
trees breaking the harsh sweep of green, it seemed that at last this boy
was seeing me in my proper place. i soaped my arms to the shoulder.
"hold the tail, will you, david. this is where i find out what kind of
job it's going to be." as i slipped my hand into the cow it struck me
that it would be no bad thing if it was a hard calving. if the lad saw
me losing a bit of sweat it would give him a truer picture of the life
in front of him. "sometimes these jobs take an hour or more," i said.
"but you have the reward of delivering a new living creature. seeing a
calf wriggling on the ground at the end of it is the biggest thrill in
practice." i reached forward, my mind alive with the possibilities.
posterior? head back? breech? but as i groped through the open cervix
into the uterus i felt a growing astonishment. there was nothing there.
i withdrew my arm and leaned for a moment on the hairy rump. the day's
events were taking on a dreamlike quality. then i looked up at the
farmer.

"there's no calf in this cow, mr. rogers." 'eh?" "she's empty. she's
calved already." the farmer gazed around him, scanning the acres of bare
grass. "well where the hangment is the thing? ins cow was messin' about
last night and i thought she'd calve, but there was nowt to find this
mornin'." his attention was caught by a cry from the right. "hey,
williel just a minute, willie!" it was bob sellars from the next farm.
he was leaning over the drystone wall about twenty yards away. "what's
matter, bobt' "ah thowt ah'd better tell ye. ah saw that cow hidin' her
calf this mornin'." "hidin'. . . ? what are ye on about?" "ah'm not
jokin' nor jestin', willie. she hid it in yon gutter over there and
every time t'calf tried to get out she pushed it back in again." "but .
. . nay, nay, i can't 'ave that. i've never heard of such a thing. have
you, mr. herriot?" i shook my head, but the whole thing seemed to fit in
with the air of fantasy which had begun to pervade the day's work. bob
sellars began to climb over the wall. "awright, if ye won't believe me
i'll show ye." he led the way to the far end of the field where a dry
ditch ran along the base of the wall. "there'e is!" he said
triumphantly. and there indeed he was. a tiny red and white calf half
concealed by the long herbage. he was curled comfortably in his grassy
bed, his nose resting on his fore legs. when the little creature saw his
mother he staggered to his feet and clambered shakily up the side of the
ditch, but no sooner had he gained the level of the field than the big
cow, released now from her halter, lowered her head and gently nudged
him back in again. bob waved his arm. "there y'are, she's hiding it,
isn't she?" mr. rogers said nothing and i merely shrugged my shoulders,
but twice more the calf managed to scramble from the ditch and twice
more his mother returned him firmly with her head. "well it teks a bit
o' believin'," the farmer murmured, half to himself. "she's had five
calves afore this and we've taken 'em straight away from 'er as we allus
do. maybe she wants to keep this 'un for 'erself? i dunno . . . i dunno
." his voice trailed away. later, as we rattled down the stony track,
david turned to me. "do you think that cow really hid her calf . . . so
that she could keep it for herself?" i stared helplessly through the
glass of the windscreen. "well, anybody would tell you it's impossible,
but you saw what happened. i'm like mr. rogers, i just don't know." i
paused as the car dipped into a deep rut and sent us bobbing about. "but
you see some funny things at our job." the schoolboy nodded
thoughtfully. "yes, it seems to me that yours is a funny life
altogether." chapter 40.

the doctor put down the folder containing my case history and gave me a
friendly smile across the desk. "i'm sorry, herriot, but you've got to
have an operation." his words, though gentle, were like a slap in the
face. after flying school we had been posted to heaton park, manchester,
and i heard within two days that i had been graded pilot. everything
seemed at last to be going smoothly."an operation ... are you sure?"
"absolutely, i'm afraid," he said, and he looked like a man who knew his
business. he was a wing commander, almost certainly a specialist in
civil life, and i had been sent to him after a medical inspection by one
of theregular doctors. "this old scar they mention in your documents,"
he went on. "you've already had surgery there, haven't you?" "yes, a few
years ago." "well, i'm afraid the thing is opening up again and needs
attention." i seemed to have run out of words and could think of only
one. "when?" "immediately. within a few days, anyway." i stared at him.
"but my flight's going overseas at the end of the week." "ah well,
that's a pity." he spread his hands and smiled again. "but they'll be
going without you. you will be in hospital." i had a sudden feeling of
loss, of something coming to an end, and it lingered after i had left
the wing commander's office. i realised painfully that the fifty men
with whom i had sweated my way through all those new experiences had become my friends. the first breaking-in at st. john's
wood in london, the hard training at scarborough itw, the "toughening
course" in shropshire and the final flying instruction at winckfield; it
had bound us together and i had come to think of myself not as an
individual but as part of a group. my mind could hardly accept the fact
that i was going to be on my own. the others were sorry, too, my own
particular chunu looking almost bereaved, but they were all too busy to
pay me much attention. they were being pushed around all over the place,
getting briefed and kitted out for their posting and it was a hectic
time for the whole flight-except me. i sat on my bed in the nissen hut
while the excitement billowed around me. i thought my departure would go
unnoticed but when i got my summons and prepared to leave i found,
tucked in the webbing of my pack, an envelope filled with the precious
coupons with which we drew our ration of cigarettes in those days. it
seemed that nearly everybody had chipped in and the final gesture
squeezed at my throat as i made my lonely way from the camp. the
hospital was at creden hill, near hereford, and i suppose it is one of
the consolations of service life that you can't feel lonely for very
long. the beds in the long ward were filled with people like myself who
had been torn from their comrades and were eager to be friendly. in the
few days before my operation we came to know each other pretty well. the
young man in the bed on my left spent his time writing excruciating
poetry to his girl friend and insisted on reading it out to me, stanza
by stanza. the lad on the right seemed a pensive type. everybody
addressed him as "sammy" but he replied only in grunts. when he found
out i was a vet he leaned from the sheets and beckoned to me. "i get fed
up wi' them blokes callin' me sammy," he muttered in a ripe birmingham
accent. "because me name's not sammy, it's desmond." "really? why do
they do it, then?" he leaned out further. "that's what i want to talk to
you about. you bein' a vet-you'll know about these things. it's because
of what's wrong with me-why i'm in ,ere." "well, why are you here?
what's your trouble?"

he looked around him then spoke in a confidevria whisper. "i gotta big
ball." "a what?" "a big ball.0the of me balls is a right whopper." "ali,
i see, but i still don't understand.. ." "well, it's like this," ke
said. "all the fellers in the ward keep sayin! the doctor's going' to cut
it off-then i'd be like sammy hall." i nodded in comprehension. memories
from my college days filtered back. it had been a popular ditty at the
parties. "my name is sammy hall and i've only got one ball . . ." "oh,
nonsense, they're pulling your leg," i said. "an enlarged testicle can
be all sorts of things. can you remember what the doctor called it?" he
screwed up his face. "it was a funny name. like vorry or varry
something." "do you mean varicocele?" "that's itl" he threw up an arm.
"that's the word!" "well, you can stop worrying," i said. "it's quite a
simple little operation. trifling, in fact." "you mean they won't cut me
ball off?" "definitely not. just remove a few surplus blood vessels,
that's all. no trouble." he fell back on the pillow and gazed
ecstatically at the ceiling. "'i'lianks, mate," he breathed. "you've
done me a world o' good. i'm getting' done tomorrow and i've been
dreadin' it." he was like a different person all that day, laughing and
joking with everybody, and next morning when the nurse came to give him
his premed injection he turned to me with a last appeal in his eyes.
"you wouldn't kid me, mate, would you? they're not going' to ... t' i
held up a hand. "i assure you, sammy-er-desmond, you've nothing to worry
about. i give you my word." again the beatific smile crept over his face
and it stayed there until the "blood wagon," the operating room trolley
pushed by a male orderly, came to collect him. the blood wagon was very
busy each morning and it was customary to raise a cheer as each man was
wheeled out. most of the victims responded with a sleepy wave before the
swing doors closed behind them, but., when i saw desmond grinning
cheerfully and giving the thumbsup sign i felt i had really done
something. next morning it was my turn. i had my injection at around
eight o'clock and by the time the trolley appeared i was pleasantly
woozy. they removed my pyjamas and arrayed me in a sort of nightgown
with laces at the neck and pulled thick woollen socks over my feet. as
the orderly wheeled me away the inmates of the ward broke into a ragged
chorus of encouragement and i managed the ritual flourish of an arm as i
left. it was a cheerless journey along white-tiled corridors until the
trolley pushed its way into the anaesthetics room. as i entered, the
doors at the far end parted as a doctor came towards me bearing a loaded
syringe. i had a chilling glimpse of the operating theatre beyond, with
the lights beating on the long table and the masked surgeons waiting.
the doctor pushed up my sleeve and swabbed my forearm with surgical
spirit. i decided i had seen enough and closed my eyes, but an
exclamation from above made me open them. "good god, it's jim herriot!"
i looked up at the man with the syringe. it was teddy mcqueen. he had
been in my class at school and i hadn't seen him since the day i left.
my throat was dry after the injection but i felt i had to say something.
"hello, teddy," i croaked. his eyes were wide. "what the hell are you
doing here?" "what the hell do you think?" i rasped crossly. "i'm going
in there for an operation." "oh, i know that-i'm the anaesthetist
here-but i remember you telling me at school that you were going to be a
vet." "that's right. i am a vet." "you are?" his face was a picture of
amazement. "but what the devil is a vet doing in the raft' it was a good
question. "nothing very much, teddy," i replied. he began to laugh.
obviously he found the whole situation intriguing. "well, jim, i can't
get over this!" he leaned over me and giggled uncontrollably. "imagine
our meeting here after all these years. i think it's an absolute hoot!"
his whole body began to shake and he had to dab away the tears from his
eyes. lying there on the blood wagon in my nightie and woolly socks i
didn't find it all that funny, and my numbed brain was searching for a
withering riposte when a voice barked from the theatre. "what's keeping
you, mcqueen? we can't wait all morningl" teddy stopped laughing.
"sorry, jim old chum," he said. "but your presence is requested within."
he pushed the needle into my vein and my last memory as i drifted away
was of his lingering amused smile. i spent three weeks at creden hill
and towards the end of that time those of us who were almost fully
recovered were allowed out to visit the nearby town of hereford. this
was embarrassing because we were all clad in the regulation suit of
hospital blue with white shirt and red tie and it was obvious from the
respectful glances we received that people thought we had been wounded
in action. when a veteran of the first war came up to me and asked,
"where did you get your packet, mate?" i stopped going altogether.

i left the raf hospital with a feeling of gratitudeparticularly towards
the hard-working, cheerful nurses. they gave us many a tongue lashing
for chattering after lights out, for smoking under the blankets, for
messing up our beds, but all the time i marvelled at their dedication. i
used to lie there and wonder what it was in a girl's character that made
her go in for the arduous life of nursing. a concern for people's
welfare? a natural caring instinct? whatever it was, i am sure a person
is born with it. this trait is part of the personalities of some animals
and it was exemplified in eric abbot's sheepdog, judy. i first met judy
when i was treating eric's bullock for wooden tongue. the bullock was
only a young one and the farmer admitted ruefully that he had neglected
it because it was almost a walking skeleton. "damnl" eric grunted. "he's
been runnin' out with that bunch in the far fields and i must have
missed 'im. i never knew he'd got to this state." when actinobacillosis
affects the tongue it should be treated right at the start, when the
first symptoms of salivation and swelling beneath the jaw appear.
otherwise the tongue becomes harder and harder till finally it sticks
out of the front of the mouth, as unyielding as the wood which gives the
disease its ancient name. this skinny little creature had reached that
stage, so that he not only looked pathetic but also slightly comic as
though he were making a derisive gesture at me. but with a tongue like
that he just couldn't eat and was literally starving to death. he lay
quietly as though he didn't care. "there's one thing, eric," i said.
"giving him an intravenous injection won't be any problem. he hasn't the
strength to resist." the great new treatment at that time was sodium
iodide into the vein-modern and spectacular. before that the farmers
used to paint the tongue with tincture of iodine, a tedious procedure
which sometimes worked and sometimes didn't. the sodium iodide was a
magical improvement and showed results within a few days. i inserted the
needle into the jugular and tipped up the bottle of clear fluid. two
drachms of the iodide i used to use, in eight ounces of distilled water
and it didn't take long to flow in. in fact the bottle was nearly empty
before i noticed judy. i had been aware of a big dog sitting near me all
the time, but as i neared the end of the injection a black nose moved
ever closer till it was almost touching the needle. then the nose moved
along the rubber tube up to the bottle and back again, sniffing with the
utmost concentration. when i removed the needle the nose began a careful
inspection of the injection site. then a tongue appeared and began to
lick the bullock's neck methodically. i squatted back on my heels and
watched. this was something more than mere curiosity; everything in the
dog's attitude suggested intense interest and concern. "you know, eric,"
i said. "i have the impression that this dog isn't just watching me.
she's supervising the whole job." the farmer laughed. "you're right
there. she's a funny old bitch is judy-sort of a nurse. if there's
anything amiss she's on duty. you can't keep her away."

judy looked up quickly at the sound of her name. she was a handsome
animal; not the usual colour, but a variegated brindle with waving lines
of brown and grey mingling with the normal black and white of the farm
collie. maybe there was a cross somewhere but the result was very
attractive and the effect was heightened by her bright-eyed,
laughing-mouthed friendliness. i reached out and tickled the backs of
her ears and she wagged mightily-not just her tail but her entire rear
end. "i suppose shesjust good-natured." "oh aye, she is," the farmer
said. "but it's not only that. it sounds daft but i think judy feels a
sense of responsibility to all the stock on ffarm." i nodded. "i believe
you. anyway, let's get this beast on to his chest." we got down in the
straw and with our hands under the back bone, rolled the bullock till he
was resting on his sternum. we balanced him there with straw bales on
either side then covered him with a horse rug. in that position he
didn't look as moribund as before, but the emaciated head with the
useless jutting tongue lolled feebly on his shoulders and the saliva
drooled uncontrolled on to the straw. i wondered if i'd ever see him
alive again. judy however didn't appear to share my pessimism. after a
thorough sniffing examination of rug and bales she moved to the front,
applied an encouraging tongue to the shaggy forehead then stationed
herself comfortably facing the bullock, very like a night nurse keeping
an eye on her patient. "will she stay there?" i closed the half door and
took a last look inside. "aye, nothing11 shift her till he's dead or
better," eric replied. "she's in her element now." "well, you never
know, she may give him an interest in life, just sitting there. he
certainly needs some help. you must keep him alive with milk or gruel
till the injection starts to work. if he'll drink it it'll do hiin most
good but otherwise you'll have to bottle it into him. but be careful-you can choke a beast that way."

a case like this had more than the usual share of the old fascination
because i was using a therapeutic agent which really worked-something
that didn't happen too often at that time. so i was eager to get back to
see if i had been able to pull that bullock from the brink of death. but
i knew i had to give the drug a chance and kept away for five days. when
i walked across the yard to the box i knew there would be no further
doubtl he would either be dead or on the road to recovery. the sound of
my steps on the cobbles hamt gone unnoticed. judy's head, ears cocked,
appeared above the half door. a little well of triumph brimmed in me. if
the nurse was still on duty then the patient must be alive. and i felt
even more certain when the big dog disappeared for a second then came
soaring effortlessly over the door and capered up to me, working her
hind end into convolutions of delight. she seemed to be doing her best
to tell me all was well. inside the box the bullock was still lying down
but be turned to look at me and i noticed a strand of bay hanging from
his mouth. the tongue itself had disappeared behind the lips. "well,
we're winnin', aren't we?" eric abbot came in from the yard. "without a
doubt," i said. "me tongue's much softer and i see lies been trying to
eat hay." "aye, can't quite manage it yet, but bes suppin' the milk and
gruel like a good 'un. he's been up a time or two but he's very wobbly
on his pins." i produced another bottle of sodium iodide and repeated
the injection with judy's nose again almost touching the needle as she
sniffed avidly. her eyes were focused on the injection site with fierce
concentration and so intent was she on extracting the full savour that
she occasionally blew out her nostrils with a sharp blast before
recommencing her inspection. when i bad finished she took up her
position at the head and as i prepared to leave i noticed a voluptuous
swaying of her hips which were embedded in the straw. i was a little
puzzled until i realiscd she was wagging in the sitting position. "well,
judy's happy at the way things are going," i said. the farmer nodded.
"yes, she is. she likes to be in charge. do you know, she gives every
new-born calf a good lick over as soon as it comes into tworld and it's
the same whenever one of our cats 'as kittens:1

:'bit of a midwife, too, eh?" 'you could say that. and another funny
thing about 'er -she lives with the livestock in the buildings. she's
got a nice warm kennel but she never bothers with it-sleeps with the
beasts in the straw every night." i revisited the bullock a week later
and this time he galloped round the box like a racehorse when i
approached him. when i finally trapped him in a comer and caught his
nose i was breathless but happy. i slipped my fingers into his mouth;
the tongue was pliable and almost normal. "one more shot, eric," i said.
"wooden tongue is the very devil for recurring if you don't get it
cleared up thoroughly." i began to unwind the rubber tube. "by the way,
i don't see judy around." "oh, i reckon she feels he's cured now, and
anyway, she has summat else on her plate this mornin'. can you see her
over there?" i looked, through the doorway. judy was stalking
importantly across the yard. she had something in her mouth -a yellow,
fluffy object. i craned out further. "what is she carrying?" :'it's a
chicken." 'a chicken?" "aye, there's a brood of them runnin' around just
now. they're only a month old and t'awd bitch seems to think they'd be
better off in the stable. she's made a bed for them in there and she
keeps tryin' to curl herself round them. but the little things won't
'ave it." i watched judy disappear into the stable. very soon she came
out, trotted after a group of tiny chicks which were pecking happily
among the cobbles and gently scooped one up. busily she made her way
back to the stable but as she entered the previous chick reappeared in
the doorway and pottered over to rejoin his friends. she was having a
frustrating time but i knew she would keep at it because that was the
way she was. judy the nurse dog was still on duty. chapter 41.

my experience in the raf hospital made me think. as a veterinary surgeon
i had become used to being on the other end of the knife and i preferred
it that way. as i remembered, i was quite happy that morning a couple of
years ago as i poised my knife over a swollen ear. tristan, one elbow
leaning wearily on the table, was holding an anaesthetic mask over the
nose of the sleeping dog when siegfried came into the room. he glanced
briefly at the patient. "ah yes, that haematoma you were telling me
about, james." then he looked across the table at his brother. "good
god, you're a lovely sight this morning i when did you get in last
night?" tristan raised a pallid countenance. his eyes were bloodshot
slits between puffy lids. "oh, i don't quite know. fairly late, i should
think." "fairly latel i got back from a farrowing at four o'clock and
you hadn't arrived then. where the hell were you, anyway?" "i was at the
licensed victuallers' ball. very good do, actually." "i bet it wasl"
siegfried snorted. "you don~t miss a thing, do you? darts team dinner,
bellringers' outing, pigeon club dance and now it's the licensed
victuallers' ball. if there's a good booze-up going on anywhere you'll
find it." when under fire tristan always retained his dignity and he
drew it around him now like a threadbare cloak. "as a matter of fact,"
he said, "many of the licensed victuallers are my friends." his brother
flushed. "i believe you. i should think you're the best bloody customer
they've ever hadl" tristan made no reply but began to make a careful
check of the flow of oxygen into the ether bottle. 365

"and another thing," siegfried continued. "i keep seeing you slinking
around with about a dozen different women. and you're supposed to be
studying for an exam." "that's an exaggeration." the young man gave him
a pained look. "i admit i enjoy a little female company now and
then-just like yourself." tristan believed in attack as the best form of
defence, and it was a telling blow because there was a constant stream
of attractive girls laying siege to siegfried at skeldale house. but the
elder brother was only temporarily halted. "never mind me!" he shouted.
"i've passed all my exams. i'm talking about you! didn't i see you with
that new barmaid from the drovers' the other night? you dodged rapidly
into a shop doorway but i'm bloody sure it was you." tristan cleared his
throat. "it quite possibly was. i have recently become friendly with
lydia-she's a very nice girl." "i'm not saying she isn't. what i am
saying is that i want to see you indoors at night with your books
instead of boozing and chasing women. is that clear?" "quite." the young
man inclined his head gracefully and turned down the knob on the
anaesthetic machine. his brother regarded him balefully for a few
moments, breathing deeply. these remonstrations always took it out of
him. then he turned away quickly and left. tristan's facade crumbled as
soon as the door closed. "watch the anaesthetic for a minute, jim," he
croaked. he went over to the basin in the comer, filled a measuring jar
with cold water and drank it at a long gulp. then he soaked some cotton
wool under the tap and applied it to his brow. "i wish he hadn't come in
just then. i'm in no mood for the raised voices and angry words." he
reached up to a large bottle of aspirins, swallowed a few and washed
them down with another gargantuan draught. "all right then, jim," be
murmured as he returned to the table and took over the mask again.
"let's go." i bent once more over the sleeping dog. he was a scottie
called hamish and his mistress, miss westerman, had brought him in two
days ago. she was a retired school teacher and i always used to think
she must have had little trouble in keeping her class in order. the
chilly pale eyes looking straight into mine reminded me that she was as
tall as i was and the square jaw between the muscular shoulders
completed a redoubtable presence. "mr. herriot," she barked. "i want you
to have a look at hamish. i do hope it's nothing serious but his ear has
become very swollen and painful. they don't get-ercancer there, do
they?" for a moment the steady gaze wavered. "oh that's most unlikely."
i lifted the little animal's chin and looked at the left ear which was
drooping over the side of his face. his whole head, in fact, was askew
as though dragged down by pain. carefully i lifted the ear and touched
the tense swelling with a forefinger. hamish looked round at me and
whimpered. "yes, i know, old chap. it's tender, isn't it?" as i turned
to miss westerman i almost bumped into the closecropped iron-grey bead
which was hovering close over the little dog. "he's got an aural
haematoma," i said. "what on earth is that?" "it's when the little blood
vessels between the skin and cartilage of the ear rupture and the blood
flows out and causes this acute distension." she patted the jet black
shaggy coat. "but what causes it?" "canker, usually. has he been shaking
his head lately?" "yes, now you mention it, he has. just as though he
had got something in his car and was trying to get rid of it." "well
that's what bursts the blood vessels. i can see he has a touch of canker
though it isn't common in this breed." she nodded. "i see. and how can
you cure it?" "only by an operation, i'm afraid." "oh dear!" she put her
hand to her mouth. "i'm not keen on that." "there's nothing to worry
about," i said. "it's just a case of letting the blood out and stitching
the layers of the ear together. if we don't do this soon he'll suffer a
lot of pain and finish up with a cauliflower car, and we don1 want that
because he's a bonny little chap." i meant it, too. hamish was a
proud-strutting, trim %the dog. the scottish terrier is an attractive
rmntnye '57*

i often lament that there are so few around in these modem days. after
some hesitation miss westerman agreed and we fixed a date two days from
then. when she brought him in for the operation she deposited hamish in
my arms, stroked his head again and again then looked from tristan to me
and back again. "you'll take care of him, won't you," she said, and the
jaw jutted and the pale blue eyes stabbed. for a moment i felt like a
little boy caught in mischief, and i think my colleague felt the same
because he blew out his breath as the lady departed. "by gum, jim,
that's a tough baby," he muttered. "i wouldn't like to get on the wrong
side of her." i nodded. "yes, and she thinks all the world of this dog,
so let's make a good job of him."

after siegfried's departure i lifted the ear which was now a turgid cone
and made an incision along the inner skin. as the pent-up blood gushed
forth i caught it in an enamel dish, then i squeezed several big clots
through the wound. "no wonder the poor little chap was in pain," i said
softly. "he'll feel a lot better when he wakes up." i filled the cavity
between skin and cartilage with sulphanilamide then began to stitch the
layers together, using a row of buttons. you had to do something like
this or the thing filled up again within a few days. when i first began
to operate on aural haematomata i used to pack the interior with gauze
then bandage the ear to the head. the owners often made little
granny-hats to try to keep the bandage in place, but a frisky dog
usually had it off very soon. the buttons were a far better idea and
kept the layers in close contact, lessening the chance of distortion. by
lunch time hamish had come round from the anaesthetic and though still
slightly dopey he already seemed to be relieved that his bulging ear had
been deflated. misswesterman had gone away for the day and was due to
pick him up in the evening. the little dog, curled in his basket, waited
philosophically. at tea time, siegfried glanced across the table at his
brother. "i'm going off to brawton for a few hours, tris-

tan," he said. "i want you to stay in the house and give miss westerman
her dog when she arrives. i don't know just when she'll come." he
scooped out a spoonful of jam. "you can keep an eye on the patient and
do a bit of studying, too. it's about time you had a night at home."
tristan nodded. "right, i'll do that." but i could see he wasn't
enthusiastic. when siegfried had driven away tristan rubbed his chin and
gazed reflectively through the french window into the darkening garden.
"this is distinctly awkward, jim.09 wfty?,$

"well, lydia has tonight off and i promised to see her." he whistled a
few bars under his breath. "it seems a pity to waste the opportunity
just when things are building up nicely. i've got a strong feeling that
girl fancies me. in fact she's nearly eating out of my hand." i looked
at him wonderingly. "my god, i thought you'd want a bit of peace and
quiet and an early bed after last nightl" "not me," he said. "i'm raring
to go again." and indeed he looked fresh and fit, eyes sparkling, roses
back in his cheeks. "look, jim," he went on. "i don't suppose you could
stick around with this dog?" i shrugged. "sorry, triss. i'm going back
to see that cow of ted binns'-right at the top of the dale. i'll be away
for nearly two hours." for a few moments he was silent, then he raised a
finger. "i think i have the solution. it's quite simple, in fact it's
perfect. i'll bring lydia in here." "whatl into the house?" "yes, into
this very room. i can put hamish in his basket by the fire and lydia and
i can occupy the sofa. marvellousl what could be nicer on a cold
winter's night. cheap, too." "but trissl how about siegfried's lecture
this morning? what if he comes home early and catches the two of you
here?" tristan lit a woodbine and blew out an expansive cloud. "not a
chance. you worry about such tiny things, jim. he's always late when he
goes to brawton. there's no problem at all."

"well, please yourself," i said. "but i think you're asking for trouble.
anyway, shouldn't you be doing a bit of bacteriology? the exams are
getting close." he smiled seraphically through the smoke. "oh, i'll have
a quick read through it all in good time." i couldn't argue with him
there. i always had to go over a thing about six times before it finally
sunk in, but with his brain the quick read would no doubt suffice. i
went out on my call. i got back about eight o'clock and as i opened the
front door my mind was far from tristan. ted binns' cow wasn't
responding to my treatment and i was beginning to wonder if i was on the
right track. when in doubt i liked to look the subject up and the books
were on the shelves in the sitting room. i hurried along the passage and
threw open the door. for a moment i stood there bewildered, trying to
roorientate my thoughts. the sofa was drawn close to the bright fire,
the atmosphere was heavy with cigarette smoke and the scent of perfume,
but there was nobody to be seen. .the most striking feature was the long
curtain over the french window. it was wafting slowly downwards as
though some object had just hurtled through it at great speed. i trotted
over the carpet and peered out into the dark garden. from somewhere in
the gloom i heard a scuffling noise, a thud and a muffled cry, then
there was a pitter-patter followed by a shrill yelping. i stood for some
time listening, then as my eyes grew accustomed to the darkness i walked
down the long path under the high brick wall to the yard at the foot.
the yard door was open as were the big double doors into the back lane,
but there was no sign of life. slowly i retraced my steps to the warm
oblong of light at the foot of the tall old house. i was about to close
the french window when i heard a stealthy moyoment and an urgent
whisper. "is that you, jim?" "triss! where the hell have you sprung
from?" the young man tiptoed past me into the room and looked around him
anxiously. "it was you, then, not siegfriedt' "yes, i've just come in."

he flopped on the sofa and sunk his head in his hands. "oh damn! i was
just lying here a few minutes ago with lydia in my arms. at peace with
the world. everything was wonderful. then i heard the front door open."
"but you knew i was coming back." "yes, and i'd have given you a shout,
but for some reason i thought, 'god help us, it's siegfried!' it sounded
like his step in the passage." "t'hen what happened?" he churned his
hair around with his fingers. "oh, i panicked. i was whispering lovely
things into lydia's ear, then the next second i grabbed her, threw her
off the couch and out of the french window." "i heard a thud . . ."
"yes, that was lydia falling into the rockery." "and then some sort of
high-pitched cries . . ." he sighed and closed his eyes. "that- was
lydia in the rose bushes. she doesn't know the geography of the place,
poor lass." "gosh, triss," i said. "i'm really sorry. i shouldn't have
burst in on you like that. i was thinking of something else." he rose
wearily and put a hand on my shoulder. "not your fault, jim, not your
fault. you did warn me." he reached for his cigarettes. "i don't know
how i'm going to face that girl again. i just chucked her out into the
lane and told her to beat it home with all speed. she must think i'm
stone balmy." he gave a hollow groan. i tried to be cheerful. "oh,
you'll get round her again. you'll have a laugh about it later." but he
wasn't listening. his eyes, wide with horror, were staring past me.
slowly he raised a trembling finger and pointed towards the fireplace.
his mouth worked for a few seconds before he spoke. "christ, jim, it's
gone!" he gasped. for a moment i thought the shock had deranged him.
"gone. . . ? what's gone?" "the bloody dog! he was there when i dashed
outside. right there!" i looked down at the empty basket and a cold hand
clutched at me. "oh no! he must have got out through the open window.
we're in trouble." we rushed into the garden and searched in vain. we
came back for torches and searched once more, prowling around the yard
and back lane, shouting the little dog's name with diminishing hope.
after ten minutes we trailed back to the brightly lit room and stared at
each other. tristan was the first to voice our thoughts. "what do we
tell miss westerman when she calls?" i shook my head. my mind fled from
the thought of informing that lady that we had lost her dog. just at
that moment the front door bell pealed in the passage and tristan almost
leaped in the air. "oh godl" he quavered. "that'll be her now. go and
see her, jim. tell her it was my fault-anything you likebut i daren't
face her." i squared my shoulders, marched over the long stretch of
tiles and opened the door. it, wasn't miss westerman, it was a
well-built platinum blonde and she glared at me angrily. "where's
tristan?" she rasped in a voice which told me we had more than one tough
female to deal with tonight. "well, he's--er-" "oh, i know he's in
therel" as she brushed past me i noticed she had a smear of soil on her
cheek and her hair was sadly disarranged. i followed her into the room
where she stalked up to my friend. "look at my bloody stockings!" she
burst out. "they're ruinedl" tristan peered nervously at the shapely
legs. "i'm sorry, lydia. i'll get you another pair. honestly, love, i
will." "you'd better, you buggerl" she replied. "and don't 'love'
me-i've never been so insulted in my life. what did you think you were
playing at?" "it was all a misunderstanding. let me explain tristan
advanced on her with a brave attempt at a winning smile, but she backed
away. "keep your distance," she said frigidly. "i've had enough of you
for one night." she swept out and tristan leaned his head against the
mantelpiece. "the end of a lovely friendship, jim." then he shook
himself. "but we've got to find that dog. come on." i set off in one
direction and he went in the other. it was a moonless night of
impenetrable darkness and we were looking for a jet black dog. i think
we both knew it was hopeless but we had to try. in a little town like
darrowby you are soon out on the country roads where there are no lights
and as i stumbled around peering vainly over invisible fields the utter
pointlessness of the activity became more and more obvious. occasionally
i came within tristan's orbit and heard his despairing cries echoing
over the empty landscape. "haamiish! haamiish! haamiish ... !" after
half an hour we met at skeldale house. tristan faced me and as i shook
my head he seemed to shrink within himself. his chest heaved as he
fought for breath. obviously he had been running while i had been
walking and i suppose that was natural enough. we were both in an
awkward situation but the final devastating blow would inevitably fall
on him. "well, we'd better get out on the road again," he gasped, and as
he spoke the front door bell rang again. the colour drained rapidly from
his face and he clutched my arm. "that must be miss westerman this time.
god almighty, she's coming in!" rapid footsteps sounded in the passage
and the sitting room door opened. but it wasn't miss westerman, it was
lydia again. she strode over to the sofa, reached underneath and
extracted her handbag. she didn't say anything but merely shrivelled
tristan with a sidelong glance before leaving. "what a night!" he
moaned, putting a hand to his forehead. "i can't stand much more of
this." over the next hour we made innumerable sorties but we couldn't
find hamish and nobody else seemed to have seen him. i came in to find
tristan collapsed in an armchair. his mouth hung_ open and he showed
every sign of advanced exhaustion. i shook my head and he shook his,
then i heard the telephone. i lifted the receiver, listened for a minute
and turned to the young man. "i've got to go out, triss. mr. drew's old
pony has colic again." he reached out a hand from the depths of his
chair. "you're not going to leave me, jim?" "sorry, i must. but i won't
be long. it's only a mile away." "but what if miss westerman comes?"

i shrugged. "you'll just have to apologise. hamish is bound to turn
up-maybe in the morning." "you make it sound easy . . ." he ran a hand
inside his collar. "and another thing-how about siegfried? what if he
arrives and asks about the dog? what do i tell him?" "oh, i shouldn't
worry about that," i replied airily. "just say you were too busy on the
sofa with the drovers' barmaid to bother about such things. he'll
understand." but my attempt at jocularity fell flat. the young man fixed
me with a cold eye and ignited a quivering woodbine. "i believe i've
told you this before, jim, but there's a nasty cruel streak in you." mr.
drew's pony had almost recovered when i got there but i gave it a mild
sedative injection before turning for home. on the way back a thought
struck me and i took a road round the edge of the town to the row of
modern bungalows where miss westerman lived. i parked the car and walked
up the path of number ten. and there was hamish in the porch, coiled up
comfortably on the mat, looking up at me with mild surprise as i hovered
over him. "come on, lad," i said. "you've got more sense than we had.
why didn't we think of this before?" i deposited him on the passenger
seat and as i drove away he hoisted his paws on to the dash and gazed
out interestedly at the road unfolding in the headlights. truly a
phlegmatic little hound. outside skeldale house i tucked him under my
arm and was about to turn the handle of the front door when i paused.
tristan had notched up a long succession of successful pranks against
me-fake telephone calls, the ghost in my bedroom and many others-and in
fact, good friends,as we were, he never neglected a chance to take the
mickey out of me. in this situation, with the positions reversed, he
would be merciless. instead of walking straight in as i always did, i
put my finger on the bell and leaned on it for several long seconds. for
some time there was neither sound nor movement from within and i
pictured the cowering figure mustering his courage before marching to
his doom. then the light came on in the passage and as i peered
expectantly crough the glass a nose appeared round the far corper
followed very gingerly by a wary eye. by degrees the full face inched
into view and when tristan recognised my grinning countenance he
unleashed a cry of rage and bounded along the passage with upraised
fist. i really think that in his distraught state he would have attacked
me, but the sight of hamish banished all else. he grabbed the hairy
creature and began to fondle him. "good little dog, nice little dog," he
crooned as he trotted through to the sitting room. "what a beautiful
thing you are." he laid him lovingly in the basket, and hamish, after a
"heigh-ho, here we are again" glance around him, put his head along his
side and promptly went to sleep. tristan fell limply into the armchair
and gazed at me with glazed eyes. "well, we're saved, jim," he
whispered. "but i'll never be the same after tonight. i've run bloody
miles and i've nearly lost my voice with shouting. i tell you i'm about
knackered." i too was vastly relieved, and the nearness of catastrophe
was brought home to us when miss westerman arrived within ten minutes.
"oh, my darling!" she cried as hamish leaped at her, mouth open, short
tail wagging furiously. "i've been so worried about you all day." she
looked tentatively at the ear with its rows of buttons. "oh, it does
took a lot better without that horrid swelling-and what a nice neat job
you have made. thank you, mr. herriot, and thank you, too, young man."
tristan, who had staggered to his feet, bowed slightly as i showed the
lady out. "bring him back in six weeks to have the stitches out," i
called to her as she left, then i rushed back into the room.
"siegfried's just pulled up outside! you'd better look as if you've been
working." he rushed to the book shelves, pulled down gaiger and davis's
bacteriology and a notebook and dived into a chair. when his brother
came in he was utterly engrossed. siegfried moved over to the fire and
warmed his hands. he looked pink and mellow. "i've just been speaking to
miss westerman," he said. "she's really pleased. well done, both of
you."

"thank you," i said, but tristan was too busy to reply, scanning the
pages anxiously and scribbling repeatedly in the notebook. siegfried
walked behind the young man's chair and looked down at the open volume.
"ah yes, clostridium septique," he murmured, smiling indulgently.-
"'mat's a good one to study. keeps coming up in exams." he rested a hand
briefly on his brother's shoulder. "i'm glad to see you at work. you've
been raking about too much lately and it's getting you down. a night at
your books will have been good for you." "am i not right, james?" he
said to me across the room. "tell him. few more nights like this will
put him right." stright.09 "put him just where he ought to be." "right.
99 "quite." and siegfried went off to bed. chapter 42.

when i was discharged from hospital i expected to be posted straight
overseas and i wondered if i would be able to catch up with my old
flight and my friends. however, i learned with surprise that i had to go
to a convalescent home for a fortnight before any further action could
be taken. this was in ' puddlestone, near leominster-a lovely mansion
house in acres of beautiful gardens. it was presided over by a
delightful old matron with whom we fortunate airmen played sedate games
of croquet or walked in the cool woods; it was easy to imagine there was
no such thing as a war. two weeks of this treatment left me feeling
revitalised. it wouldn't be long, i felt, before i was back on the job.
from puddlestone it was back to manchester and heaton park again and
this time it was strange to think that in all the great sprawl of huts
and the crowding thousands of men in blue there wasn't a soul who knew
me. except, of course, the wing commander who had sent me to hospital in
the first place. i had an interview with him on my arrival and he came
straight to the point. "herriot," he said. "i'm afraid you can't fly any
more." "but ... i've had the operation ... i'm a lot better." "i know
that, but you can no longer be classed as 100% fit. you have been
officially downgraded and i'm sure you realise that pilots have to be
grade one." "yes ... of course." he glanced at the file in his hand. "i
see you are a veterinary surgeon. mmm-this poses a problem. normally
when an aircrew man is grounded he remusters on the ground staff, but
yours is a reserved occupation. you really can't serve in any capacity
but aircrew. yes . . . yes ... we'll have to sec." 377

it was all very impersonal and businesslike. ilose few words coming from
a man like him left no room for argument and they obliterated at a
stroke every picture i had ever had of my future in the raf. i was
fairly certain that if my flying days were over i would be discharged
from the service and as i left the wing commander'& office and walked
slowly back to my hut at the other end of the park i pondered on my contribution to the war effort. i hwwt fired a shot in anger. i had peeled
mountains of potatoes, washed countless dishes, shovelled coke, mucked
out pigs, marched for miles, drilled interminably, finally and magically
learned to fly and now it was all for nothing. i passed the big dining
hall and the raf march blared out at me from the loudspeakers. the
familiar sound reminded me of so many experiences, so many friends, and
suddenly i felt intensely lonely and cut off. it was a new sensation for
me, and there, in those unlikely surroundings, i began to think of old
mr. potts from my veterinary days. he must have felt like that. "how are
you, mr. herriott' ordinary words, but the eagerness, almost desperation
in the old man's voice made them urgent and meaningful. i saw him nearly
every day. in my unpredictable life it was difficult to do anything
regularly but i did like a stroll by the river before lunch and so did
my beagle, sam. 71at was when we met mr. potts and nip, his elderly
sheepdog-they seemed to have the same habits as we did. his house backed
on to the riverside fields and he spent a lot of time just walking
around with his dog. many retired farmers'kept a bit of land and a few
stock to occupy their minds and ease the transition from their arduous
existence to day-long leisure, but mr. potts had bought a little
bungalow with a scrap of garden and it was obvious that time dragged.
probably his health had dictated this. as be faced me he leaned on his
stick and his bluish cheeks rose and fell with his breathing. he was a
heart case if ever i saw one. "i'm fine, mr. potts," i replied. "and how
are things with you?"

"nob but middlin', lad. ali soon get short & wind." he coughed a couple
of times then asked the inevitable question. "and what have you been
doin' this mornint' that was when his eyes grew intent and wide. he
really wanted to know. i thought for a moment. "well now, let's see." i
always tried to give him a detailed answer because i knew it meant a lot
to him and brought back the life he missed so much. "i've done a couple
of cleansings, seen a lame bullock, treated two cows with mastitis and
another with milk fever." he nodded eagerly at every word. "by gawl" he
exclaimed. "it's a beggar, that milk fever. when i were a lad, good cows
used to die like flies with it. allus good milkers after their third or
fourth calf. couldn't get to their feet and we used to dose 'em with all
sorts, but they died, every one of 'em." "yes," i said. "it must have
been heartbreaking in those days." "but then." he smiled delightedly,
digging a forefinger into my chest. "men we started blowin' up their
udders wi' a bicycle pump, and d'you know-they jumped up and walked
away. like magic it were." his eyes sparkled at the memory. "i know, mr.
potts, i've blown up a few myself, only i didn't use a bicycle pump-i
had a special little inflation apparatus." that black box with its
shining cylinders and filter is now in my personal museum, and it is the
best place for it. it had got me out of some difficult situations but in
the background there had always been the gnawing dread of transmitting
tuberculosis. i had heard of it happening and was glad that calcium
borogluconate had arrived. as we spoke, sam and nip played on the grass
beside us. i watched as the beagle frisked round the old animal while
nip pawed at him stiff-jointedly, his tail waving with pleasure. you
could see that he enjoyed these meetings as much as his master and for a
brief time the years fell away from him as he rolled on his back with
sam astride him, nibbling gently at his chest. i walked with the old
farmer as far as the little wooden bridge, then i had to turn for home.
i watched the two of them pottering slowly over the narrow strip of
timber to the other side of the river. sam and i had our work pressing,
but they had nothing else to do. i used to see mr. potts at other times,
too. wandering aimlessly among the stalls on market days or standing on
the fringe of the.group of farmers who always gathered in front of the
drovers' arms to meet cattle dealers, cow feed merchants, or just to
talk business among themselves. or i saw him at the auction mart,
leaning on his stick, listening to the rapid-fire chanting of the
auctioneer, watching listlessly as the beasts were bought and sold. and
all the time i knew there was an emptiness in him, because there were
none of his cattle in the stalls, none of his sheep in the long rows of
pens. he was out of it all, old and done. i saw him the day before he
died. it was in the usual place and i was standing at the river's edge
watching a heron rising from a rush-lined island and flapping lazily
away over the fields. the old man stopped as he came abreast of me and
the two dogs began their friendly wrestling. "well now, mr. herriot." he
paused and bowed his head over the stick which he had dug into the grass
of his farm for half a century. "what have you been doin' todayt,
perhaps his cheeks were a deeper shade of blue and the breath whistled
through his pursed lips as he exhaled, but i can't recall that he looked
any worse than usual. "i'll tell you, mr. potts," i said. "i'm feeling a
bit weary. i ran into a real snorter of a foaling this morning -took me
over two hours and i ache all over." "foaling, eh? foal would be laid
wrong, i reckon?" "yes, cross-ways on, and i had a struggle to turn it."
"by gaw, yes, it's hard work is that." he smiled reminiscently. "doesta
remember that clydesdale mare you foaled at ma place? must 'ave been one
of your first jobs when you came to darrowby." "of course i do," i
replied. and i remembered, too, how kind the old man had been. seeing i
was young and green and unsure of myself he had taken pains, in his
quiet way, to put me at my ease and give me confidence. "yes," i went
on. "it was late on a sunday night and we had a right tussle with it.
there was just the two of us but we managed, didn't we?"

he squared his shoulders and for a moment his eyes looked past me at
something i couldn't see. "aye, that's right. we made a job of 'er, you
and me. ah could push and pull a bit then." "you certainly could.
there's no doubt about that." he sucked the air in with difficulty and
blew it out again with that peculiar pursing of the lips. then he turned
to me with a strange dignity. 'they were good days, mr. herriot, weren't
theyt' "they were, mr. potts, they were indeed." "aye, aye." he nodded
slowly. "alive had a lot o' them days. hard but good." he looked down at
his dog. "and awd nip shared 'em with me, didn't ye, lad?" his words
took me back to the very first time i had seen mr. potts. he was perched
on a stool, milking one of his few cows, his cloth-capped head thrusting
into the hairy flank, and as he pulled at the teats old nip dropped a
stone on the toe of his boot. the farmer reached down, lifted the stone
between two fingers and flicked it out through the open door into the
yard. nip scurried delightedly after it and was back within seconds,
dropping the stone on the boot and panting hopefully. he wasn't
disappointed. his master repeated the throw automatically as if it was
something he did all the time, and as i watched it happening again and
again i realised that this was a daily ritual between the two. i had a
piercing impression of infinite patience and devotion. "right, then, mr.
herriot, we'll be off," mr. potts said, jerking me back to the present.
"come on, nip." he waved his stick and i watched him till a low-hanging
willow branch hid man and dog from my sight. that was the last time i
saw him. next day the man at the petrol pumps mumbled casually, "see old
mr. potts got his time in, eh?" and that was it. there was no
excitement, and only a handful of his old friends turned up at the
funeral. for me it was a stab of sorrow. another familiar face gone, and
i should miss him as my busy life went on. i knew our daffy
conversations had cheered him but i felt with a sad finality that there
was nothing else i could do for mr. potts. it was about a fortnight
later and as i opened the gate to let sam into the riverside fields i
glanced at my watch. twelve thirty-plenty of time for our pro-lunch walk
and the long stretch of green was empty. then i noticed a single dog
away on the left. it was nip, and as i watched he got up, took a few
indeterminate steps over the grass then turned and sat down again at the
gate of his back garden. instead of taking my usual route i cut along
behind the houses till i reached the old dog. he had been looking around
him aimlessly but when we came up to him he seemed to come to life,
snifling sam over and wagging his tail at me. on the other side of the
gate mrs. potts was doing a bit of weeding, bending painfully as she
plied her trowel. "how are you, mrs. potts?" i said. with an effort she
straightened up. "oh, not too bad, thank you, mr. herriot." she came
over and leaned on the gate. "i see you're lookin' at the awd dog. my
word, he's missin! his master." i didn't- say anything and she went on.
"he's eating all right and .1 can give him plenty of good food, but what
i can't do is take 'im. for walks." she rubbed her back. "i'm plagued
with rheurnatics, mr. herriot, and it takes me all my time to get around
the house and garden." "i can understand that," i said. "and i don't
suppose he'll walk by himself." "nay, he won't. there's the path he went
along every day." she pointed to the winding strip of beaten earth among
the grass. "but he won't go more'n a few yards." "ah well, dogs like a
bit of company just the same as we do." i bent and ran my hand over the
old animal's head and ears. "how would you like to come with us, nipt' i
set off along the path and he followed unhesitatingly, trotting
alongside sam with swinging tail. "eee, lookl" the old lady cried.
"isn't that grand to seel" i followed his usual route down to the river
where the water ran dark and silent under the branches of the gnarled
willows. then we went over the bridge and in front of us the river
widened into pebbly shallows and murmured and chattered among the
stones. it was peaceful down there with only the endless water sound and
the piping of birds in my ears and the long curtain of leaves parting
here and there to give glimpses of the green flanks of the fells.

1 watched the two dogs frisking ahead of me and the decision came to me
quite naturally; i would do this regularly. from that day i altered my
route and went along behind the houses first. nip was happy again, sam
loved the whole idea, and for me there was a strange comfort in the
knowledge that there was still something i could do for mr. potts.
chapter 43.

1 looked around me at the heap of boots, the piled mounds of shirts, the
rows of empty shelves and pigeon holes. i was employed in the stores at
heaton park, living proof that the raf was finding me something of a
problem. the big war machine was rumbling along pretty smoothly by this
time, turning out pilots, navigators, airgunners in a steady stream and
slotting them into different jobs if they failed to make the grade. it
ticked over like a welfmoiled engine as long as nothing disturbed the
rhythm. i was like a speck of sand in the works, and i could tell from
various interviews that i had caused the administrators a certain amount
of puzzlement. i don't suppose mr. churchill was losing any sleep over
me but since i wasn't allowed to fly and was ineligible for the ground
staff i was obviously a bit of a nuisance. nobody seemed to have come
across a grounded vet before. of course it was inevitable that i would
be sent back to my practice, but i could see that it was going to take
some time for the raf to regurgitate me into civil life. apparently i
had to go through the motions even though some of them were meaningless.
one of the interviews was with three officers. they were very nice and
they sat behind a table, beaming, friendly, reassuring. their task,
apparently, was to find out what ground staff job might suit me. i think
they were probably psychologists and they asked me all kinds of
questions, nodding and smiling kindly all the time. "well now, herriot,"
the middle officer said. "we are going to put you through a series of
aptitude tests. it will last two days, starting tomorrow, and by the end
of it i think we'll know all about you." he laughed. "it's nothing to
worry about. you might rather enjoy it." 384

i did enjoy it, in fact. i filled up great long sheets with my answers,
i drew diagrams, fitted odd-shaped pieces of wood into holes, it was
fun. i had to wait another two days before i was called before the
tribunal again. the three were if anything more charming than before and
i seemed to sense an air of subdued excitement about them this time.
they were all smiling broadly as the middle one spoke. "herriot, we have
really found out something about you," he said. "you have?" "yes,
indeed. we have found that you have an outstanding mechanical aptitude."
i stared at him. this was a facer, because if ever there was a
mechanical idiot that man is j. herriot. i have a loathing for engines,
wheels, pistons, cylinders, cogs. i can't mend anything and if a garage
mechanic tries to explain something to me i just can't take it in. i
told the officers this and the three smiles became rather fixed. "but
surely," said the one on the left, "you drive a car in the course of
your professional work?" "yes, sir, i do. i've driven one for years, but
i still don't know how it works and if i break down i have to scream for
help." "i see, i see." the smiles were very thin now and the three heads
came together for a whispered consultation. finally the middle one
leaned across the table. "tell you what, herriot. how would you like to
be a meteorologist?" "fine," i replied. i sympathised with them, because
they were obviously kind men, but i've never had any faith in aptitude
tests since then.

of course there was never the slightest chance of my becoming a
meteorologist and i suppose that's how i landed in the stores. it was
one of the bizarre periods of my life, mercifully brief but vivid. they
had told me to report to corporal weekes at the stores hut and i made my
way through the maze of roads of a heaton park populated by strangers.
corporal weekes was fat and he gave me a quick look over with crafty
eyes.

"herriot, eh? well you can make yourself useful around ,ere. not much to
do, really. this ain't a main stores-we deal mainly wiv laundry and boot
repairs." as he spoke a fair-haired young man came in. "ac2 morgan,
corporal," he said. "come for my boots. they've been re-soled." weekes
jerked his head and i had my first sight of the boot mountain. "they're
in there. they'll be labelled." the young man looked surprised but he
came round behind the counter and began to delve among the hundreds of
identical black objects. it took him nearly an hour to find his own pair
during which the corporal puffed at cigarettes with a total lack of
interest. when the boots were finally unearthed he wordlessly ticked off
the name on a long list. "this is the sort of thing you'll be doin'," he
said to me. "nothin' to it." he wasn't exaggerating. there was nothing
to life in those stores. it took me only a day or two to realise the
sweet existence weekes had carved out for himself. storebashing is an
honourable trade but not the way he did it. the innumerable
compartments, niches and alcoves around the big hut were all marked with
letters or numbers and there is no doubt the incoming boots and shirts
should have been tucked away in order for easy recovery. but that would
have involved work and the corporal was clearly averse to that. when the
boots came in they were tipped out in the middle of the floor and the
string-tied packages of laundry were stacked, shirts-uppermost where
they formed a blue tumulus reaching almost to the roof. after three days
i could stand it no longer. "look," i said. "it would pass the time if i
had something to do. do you mind if i start putting all this stuff on
the shelves? it would be a lot easier to band out." weekes continued to
study his magazine-he was a big reader-and at first i thought he hadn't
heard me. then he tongued his cigarette to the corner of his mouth and
glanced at me through the smoke. "now just get this through your 'ead,
mate," he drawled. "if i want any - thing doin' i'll - well tell you.
i'm the boss in 'ere and i give the - orders, awright?" he resumed his
perusal of the magazine.

1 subsided in my chair. clearly i had offended my overseer and i would
have to leave things as they were. but overseer is a misnomer for weekes
because on the following day, after a final brain-washing that the
procedure must remain unchanged, he disappeared and except for a few
minutes each morning he left me on my own. i had nothing to do but sit
there behind the wooden counter, ticking off the comings and goings of
the boots and shirts and i had the feeling that i was only one of many
displaced persons who had fallen under his thrall. i found it acutely
embarrassing to watch the lads scrabbling for their belongings and the
strongest impression left with me was of the infinite tolerance of the
british race. since i was in charge they thought i was responsible for
the whole system but despite the fact that i was of lowly rank nobody
attacked me physically. most of them muttered and grumbled as they
searched and one large chap came over to the counter and said, "you
should be filing away these boots in their proper order instead of
sitting there on your arse, you lazy sodl" but he didn't punch me on the
nose and i marvelled at it. but still, the knowledge that great numbers
of decent young men shared his opinion was uncomfortable and i found i
was developing a permanently ingratiating smile. the only time i came
very near to being lynched was when a mob suddenly appeared one
afternoon. an unexpected leave pass had been granted and there were
hundreds of men milin around on the tarmac and grass outside the stores.
they wanted their laundry-and quick, because they had trains to catch.
for a moment panic seized me. i couldn't let them all inside to fight
for their shirts. then inspiration came. i grabbed an armful of the flat
packets from the table and shouted the name on the label. "walters!" and
from somewhere among the surging heads an eager voice replied, "here!" i
located the source, held the packet between thumb and finger and with a
back-handed flick sent it ski9 over the crowd. "reillyll, "here!"
"mcdonaldl" "herell,

"gibsonl" "herel" i was getting quite skilful at it, propelling the blue
oblongs unerringly towards their owners, but it was a slow method of
distribution. also, there were occasional disasters when the strings
broke in mid-air, sending a shower of collars on the upturned faces.
sometimes the shirts themselves burst free from their wrappings and
plunged to earth. it wasn't long before, the voices had turned from
eager to angry. as my projectiles planed and glided, volleys-of abuse
came back at me. "you've made me miss my train, you useless buggerl"
"bloody skiver, you want locking upl" much of it was in stronger
language which i would rather not record here, but i have a particularly
vivid memory of one young man scraping up his laundry from the dusty
ground and approaching me with rapid strides. he pushed his face to
within inches of mine. despite the rage which disfigured it i could see
it was a gentle, goodnatured face. he looked a well-bred lad, the type
who didn't even swear, but as he stared into my eyes his lips trembled
and his cheeks twitched. "t'his is a . . ." he stammered. "this is a . .
. a bastard systemi" he spat the words out and strode away. i agreed
entirely with him, of course, but continued to hurl the packets doggedly
while somewhere in the back of my mind a little voice kept enquiring how
james herriot, member of the royal college of veterinary surgeons and
trainee pilot, had ever got into this. after half an hour there was no
appreciable diminution in the size of the multitude and i began to be
aware of an increasing restlessness among the medley of waiting faces.
suddenly there was a concerted movement and the packed mass of men
surged at me in a great wave. i shrank back, clutching an armful of
shirts, quite certain that this was when they rushed me and beat me up,
but my fears were groundless. all they wanted was a speedier delivery
and about a dozen of them swept past me behind the counter and began to
follow my example. whereas there had been only a single missile winging
over the heads the sky was now dark with the flying oh-

jects. mid-air collisions were frequent. collars sprayed, handkerchiefs
fluttered, underpants parachuted gracefully, but after an unbearably
long period of chaos the last airman -had picked up his scattered
laundry, given me a disgusted glance and departed. i was left alone in
the hut with the sad knowledge that my prestige was very low and the
equally sad conviction that the raf still did not know what to do with
me. chapter 44.

occasionally my period in limbo was relieved when i was allowed out of
camp into the city of manchester. and i suppose it was the fact that i
was a new-fangled parent that made me look at the various prams in the
streets. mostly the prams were pushed by women but now and then i saw a
man doing the job. i suppose it isn't unusual to see a man pushing a
prain in a town, but on a lonely moorland road the sight merits a second
glance. especially when the pram contains a large dog. that was what i
saw in the hills above darrowby one morning and i slowed down as i drove
past. i had noticed the strange combination before-on several occasions
over the last few weeks-and it was clear that man and dog had recently
moved into the district. as the car drew abreast of him the man turned,
smiled and raised his hand. it was a smile of rare sweetness in a very
brown face. a forty year old face, i thought, above a brown neck which
bore neither collar nor tie, and a faded striped shirt lying open over a
bare chest despite the coldness of the day. i couldn't help wondering
who or what he was. the outfit of scuffed suede golf jacket, corduroy
trousers and sturdy boots didn't give much clue. some people might have
put him down as an ordinary tramp, but there was a businesslike
energetic look about him which didn't fit the term. i wound the window
down and the thin wind of a yorkshire march bit at my cheeks. "nippy
this morning," i said. the man seemed surprised. "aye," he replied after
a moment. "aye, reckon it is." 1 looked at the pram, ancient and rusty,
and at the big 390

animal sitting upright inside it. he was a lurcher, a crossbred
greyhound, and he gazed back at me with unruffled dignity. "nice dog," i
said. "aye, that's jake." the man smiled again, showing good regular
teeth. "he's a grand 'un." i waved and drove on. in the mirror i could
see the compact figure stepping out briskly, head up, shoulders squared,
and, rising like a statue from the middle of the pram, the huge brindled
form of jake.

i didn't have to wait long to meet the unlikely pair again. i was
examining a carthorse's teeth in a farmyard when on the hillside beyond
the stable i saw a figure kneeling by a dry stone wall. and by his side,
a pram. and a big dog sitting patiently on the grass. "hey, just a
minute." i pointed at the hill. "who is that?" the farmer laughed.
"that's roddy travers. d'you ken lim?" "no, no -1 don't. i had a word
with him on the road the other day, that's all." "aye, on the road." he
nodded knowingly. "that's where you'd see roddy, right enough." "but
what is he? where does he come from?" "he comes from somewhere in
yorkshire, but a don't rightly know where and ah don't think anybody
else does. but i'll tell you this-he can turn 'is band to anything."
"yes," i said, watching the man expertly laying the flat slabs of stone
as he repaired a gap in the wall. "there's not many can do what he's
doing now." "that's true. wallin' is a skilled job and it's dying out,
but roddy's a dab hand at it. but he can do owl-hedgin, ditchin',
lookin' after stock, it's all the same to him." i lifted the tooth rasp
and began to rub a few sharp comers off the horse's molars. "and how
long will he stay here?" "oh, when he's finished that wall he'll be off.
ah could do with 'im stoppin' around for a bit but he never stays in one
place for long." "but hasn't he got a home anywhere?" "nay, nay." the
farmer laughed again. "roddy's got nowt. all 'e has in the world is in
that there pram." over the next weeks as the harsh spring began to
soften and the sunshine brought a bright speckle of primroses on to the
grassy banks i saw roddy quite often, sometimes on the road,
occasionally wielding a spade busily on the ditches around the fields.
jake was always there, either loping by his side or watching him at
work. but we didn't actually meet again tiff i was inoculating mr.
pawson's sheep for pulpy kidney. there were three hundred to do and they
drove them in batches into a small pen where roddy caught and held them
for me. and i could see he was an expert at this, too. the wild hill
sheep whipped past him like buffets but he seized their fleece
effortlessly, sometimes in mid-air, and held the fore leg up to expose
that bare clean area of skin behind the elbow that nature seemed to
provide for the veterinary surgeon's needle. outside, on the windy
slopes the big lurcher sat upright in typical pose, looking with mild
interest at the farm dogs prowling intently around the pens, but not
interfering in any way. "you've got him well trained," i said. roddy
smiled. "yes, ye'll never find jake dashin' about, annoyin' people. he
knows 'e has to sit there till i'm finished and there he'll sit." "and
quite happy to do so, by the look of him." i glanced again at the dog, a
picture of contentment. "he must live a wonderful life, travelling
everywhere with you. "you're right there," mr. pawson broke in as he
ushered another bunch of sheep into the pen. "he hasn't a care in
t'world, just like his master." roddy didn't say anything, but as the
sheep ran in he straightened up and took a long steady breath. he had
been working hard and a little trickle of sweat ran down the side of his
forehead but as he gazed over the wide sweep of moor and fell i could
read utter serenity in his face. after a few moments he spoke. "i reckon
that's true. we haven't much to worry us, jake and me." mr. pawson
grinned mischievously. "by gaw, roddy, you never spoke a truer word. no
wife, no kids, no life insurance, no overdraft at t'bank-you must have a
right peaceful existence." "ah suppose so," roddy said. "but then ah've
no money either."

the farmer gave him a quizzical look. "aye, how about that, then?
wouldn't you feel a bit more secure, like, if you had a bit o' brass put
by?" "nay, nay. ye can't take it with you and any road, as long as a man
can pay 'is way, he's got enough." there was nothing original about the
words, but they have stayed with me all my life because they came from
his lips and were spoken with such profound assurance. when i had
finished the inoculations and the ewes were turned out to trot back
happily over the open fields i turned to roddy. "well, thanks very much.
it makes my job a lot quicker when i have a good catcher like you." i
pulled out a packet of gold flake. "will you have a cigarette?" "no,
thank ye, mr. herriot. i don't smoke." "you don't?" "no-don't drink
either." he gave me his gentle smile and again i had the impression of
physical and mental purity. no drinking, no smoking, a life of constant
movement in the open air without material possessions or am- bitions-it
all showed in the unclouded eyes, the fresh skin and the hard muscular
frame. he wasn't very big but he looked indestructible. "c'mon, jake,
it's dinner time," he said and the big lurcher bounded around him in
delight. i went over and spoke to the dog and he responded with
tremendous bodyswaying wags, his handsome face looking up at me, full of
friendliness. i stroked the long pointed head and tickled the cars.
"he's a beauty, roddy-a grand 'un, as you said." i walked to the house
to wash my hands and before i went inside i glanced back at the two of
them. they were sitting in the shelter of a wall and roddy was laying
out a thermos flask and a parcel of food while jake watched eagerly. the
hard bright sunshine beat on them as the wind whistled over the top of
the wall. they looked supremely comfortable and at peace. "he's
independent, you see," the farmer's wife said as i stood at the kitchen
sink. "lies welcome to come in for a,bit o' dinner but he'd rather stay
outside with his dog." i nodded. "where does he sleep when he's going
round the farms like this." "oh, anywhere," she replied. "in hay barns
or granaries or sometimes out in the open, but when he's with us he
sleeps upstairs in one of our rooms. ah know for a fact any of the
farmers would be willin' to have him in the house because he allus keeps
himself spotless clean." "i see." i pulled the towel from behind the
door. "he's quite a character, isn't be?" she smiled ruminatively. "aye,
he certainly is. just him and his dogl" she lifted a fragrant dishful of
hot roast ham from the oven and set it on the table. "but i'll tell you
this. the feller's all right. everybody likes roddy travers-he's a very
nice man."

roddy stayed around the darrowby district throughout the summer and i
grew used to the sight of him on the farms or pushing his pram. along
the roads. when it was raining he wore a tattered over-long gaberdine
coat, but at other times it was always the golf jacket and corduroys. i
don't know where he bad accumulated his wardrobe. it was a safe bet he
had never been on a golf course in his life and it was just another of
the little mysteries about him. i saw him early one morning on a hill
path in early october. it had been a night of iron frost and the
tussocky pastures beyond the walls were held in a pitiless white grip
with every blade of grass stiffly ensheathed in rime. i was muffled to
the eyes and had been beating my gloved fingers against my knees to thaw
them out, but when i pulled up and wound down the window the first thing
i saw was the bare chest under the collarless unbuttoned shirt.
"mornin', mr. herriot," he said. "ah'rn glad i've seen ye." he paused
and gave me his tranquil smile. "there's a job along vroad for a couple
of weeks, then i'm movin' on." "i see.".1 knew enough about him now not
to ask where he was going. instead i looked down at jake who was
sniffing the herbage. "i see he's walking this morning." roddy'laughed.
"yes, sometimes 'e likes to walk, sometimes 'e likes to ride. he pleases
'himself." "right, roddy," i said. "no doubt we'll meet again. all the
best to you." he waved and set off jauntily over the icebound road and i
felt that a little vein of richness had gone from my LIFE. but i was
wrong. that same evening about eight o'clock the front door bell rang. i
answered it and found roddy on the front door steps. behind him, just
visible in the frosty darkness, stood the ubiquitous pram. "i want you
to look at me dog, mr. herriot," he said. "why, what's the trouble?" "ah
don't rightly know. he's havin' sort of ... faintin' fits." "fainting
fits? that doesn't sound like jake. where is he, anyway?" he pointed
behind him. "in t'pram, under t'cover." "all right." i threw the door
wide. "bring him in." roddy adroitly manhandled the rusty old vehicle up
the steps and pushed it, squeaking and rattling, along the passage to
the consulting room. there, under the bright lights he snapped back the
fasteners and threw off the cover to reveal jake stretched beneath. his
head was pillowed on the familiar gaberdine coat and around him lay his
master's worldly goods; a stringtied bundle of spare shirt and socks, a
packet of tea, a thermos, knife and spoon and an ex-army haversack, the
big dog looked up at me with terrified eyes and as i patted him i could
feel his whole frame quivering. "let him lie there a minute,, roddy," i
said. "and tell me exactly what you've seen." he rubbed his palms
together and his fingers trembled. "well it only started this afternoon.
he was right as rain, larkin' about on the grass, then he went into a
sort o' fit." "how do you mean?" "just kind of seized up and toppled
over on 'is side. he lay there for a bit, gaspin' and slaverin'. ah'll
tell ye, i thought he was a goner." his eyes widened and a comer of his
mouth twitched at the memory. "how long did that last?" "nob but a few
seconds. 'men he got up and you'd say there was nowt wrong with 'im."
"but he did it again?" "aye, time and time again. drove me near daft.
but in between 'e was normal. normal, mr. herriot!" it sounded ominously
like the onset of epilepsy. "how old is he?" i asked. "five gone last
february." ah well, it was a bit old for that. i reached for a
stethoscope and auscultated the heart. i listened intently but heard
only the racing beat of a frightened animal.

there was no abnormality. my thermometer showed no rise in temperature.
"let's have him on the table, roddy. you take the back end." the big
animal was limp in our arms as we hoisted him on to the smooth surface,
but after lying there for a moment he looked timidly around him then sat
up with a slow and careful movement. as we watched he reached out and
licked his master's face while his tail flickered between his legs.
"look at that!" the man exclaimed. "he's all right again. you'd think he
didn't all a thing." and indeed jake was recovering his confidence
rapidly. he peered tentatively at the floor a few times then suddenly
jumped down, trotted to his master and put his paws against his chest. i
looked at the dog standing there, tail wagging furiously. "well, that's
a relief, anyway. i didn't like the look of him just then, but
whatever's been troubling him seems to have righted itself. i'll . . ."
my happy flow was cut off. i stared at the lurcher. his fore legs were
on the floor again and his mouth was gaping as he fought for breath.
frantically he gasped and retched then he blundered across the floor,
collided with the pram wheels and fell on his side. "what the hell . . .
! quick, get him up again!" i grabbed the animal round the middle and we
lifted him back on to the table. i watched in disbelief as the huge form
lay there. there was no light for breath now-he wasn't breathing at all,
he was unconscious. i pushed my fingers inside his thigh and felt the
pulse. it was still going, rapid and feeble, but yet he didn't breathe.
he could die any moment and i stood there helpless, all my scientific
training useless. finally my frustration burst from me and i struck the
dog on the ribs with the flat of my hand. "jake!" i yelled. "jake,
what's the matter with you?" as though in reply, the lurcher immediately
started to take great wheezing breaths, his eyelids twitched back to
consciousness and he began to look about him. but he was still mortally
afraid and he lay prone as i gently stroked his head.

there was a long silence while the animal's terror slowly subsided, then
he sat up on the table and regarded us placidly. "there you are," roddy
said softly. "same thing again. ah can't reckon it up and ah thought ah
knew summat about dogs." i didn't say anything. i couldn't reckon it up
either, and i was supposed to be a veterinary surgeon. i spoke at last.
"roddy, that'wasn't a fit. he was choking. something was interfering
with his air flow." i took my hand torch from my breast pocket. "i'm
going to have a took at his throat." i pushed jakes jaws apart,
depressed his tongue with a forefinger and shone the light into the
depths. he was the kind of good-natured dog who, offered no resistance
as i prodded around, but despite my floodlit view of the pharynx i could
find nothing wrong. i had been hoping desperately to come across a bit
of bone stuck there somewhere but i ranged feverishly over pink tongue,
healthy tonsils and gleaming molars without success. everything looked
perfect. i was tilting his head a little further when i felt him stiffen
and heard roddy's cry. "he's going'agaihl" and he was, too. i stared in
horror as the brindled body slid away from me and lay prostrate once
more on the table. and again the mouth strained wide and froth bubbled
round the lips. as before, the breathing had stopped and the rib cage
was motionless. as the seconds ticked away i beat on the chest with my
hand but it didn't work this time. i pulled the lower eyelid down from
the staring orb-the conjunctiva was blue, jake hadn't long to live. the
tragedy of the thing bore down on me. this wasn't just a dog, he was
this man's family and i was watching him die. it was at that moment that
i heard the faint sound. it was a strangled cough which barely stirred
the dog's lips. "damn itl" i shouted. "he is choking. there must be
something down there." again i seized the head and pushed my torch into
the mouth and i shall always be thankful that at that very instant the
dog coughed again, opening the cartilages of the larynx and giving me a
glimpse of the cause of all the trouble. there, beyond the drooping
epiglottis i saw for a fleeting moment a smooth round object no bigger
than a pea. "i think it's a pebble," i gasped. "right inside his
larynx." "you mean, in 'is adam's apple?" "that's right, and it's acting
like a ball valve, blocking his windpipe every now and then." i shook
the _dog's head. "you see, look, i've dislodged it for the moment. he's
coming round again." once more jake was reviving and breathing steadily.
roddy ran his hand over the head, along the back and down the great
muscles of the hind limbs. "but ... but. it'll happen again, won't it?"
i nodded. "i'm afraid so." "and one of these times it isn't going' to
shift and that'll be the end of 'im?" he had gone very pale. "that's
about it, roddy, i'll have to get that pebble out." ~'but how. .. t'
"cut into the larynx. and right now-it's the only way." "all right." he
swallowed. "let's get on. i don't think ah could stand it if he went
down again." i knew what he meant. my knees had begun to shake, and i
had a strong conviction that if jake collapsed once more then so would
1. i seized a pair of scissors and clipped away the hair from the
ventral surface of the larynx. i dared not use a general anaesthetic and
infiltrated the area with local before swabbing with antiseptic.
mercifully there was a freshly boiled set of instruments lying in the
steriliser and i lifted out the tray and set it on the trolley by the
side of the table. "hold his head steady," i said hoarsely, and gripped
a scalpel. i cut down through skin, fascia and the thin layers of the
sterno-hyoid and omo-hyoid muscles till the ventral surface of the
larynx was revealed. this was something i had never done to a live dog
before, but desperation abolished any hesitancy and it took me only
another few seconds to incise the thin membrane and peer into the
interior. and there it was. a pebble right enough-grey and glistening
and tiny, but big enough to kill.

1 had to fish it out quickly and cleanly without pushing it into the
trachea. i leaned back and rummaged in the tray till i found some
broad-bladed forceps then i poised them over the wound. great surgeons'
hands, i felt sure, didn't shake like this, nor did such men pant as i
was doing. but i clenched my teeth, introduced the forceps and my hand
magically steadied as i clamped ther% over the pebble. i stopped
panting, too. in fact i didn't breathe at all as i bore the shining
little object slowly and tenderly through the opening and dropped it
with a gentle rat-tat on the table. "is that it?" asked roddy, almost in
a whisper. "that's it." i reached for needle and suture silk. "all is
well now." the stitching took only a few minutes and by the end of it
jake was bright-eyed and alert, paws shifting impatiently, ready for
anything. he seemed to know his troubles were over.

roddy brought him back in ten days to have the stitches removed. it was,
in fact, the very morning he was leaving the darrowby district, and
after i had picked the few loops of silk from the nicely healed wound i
walked with him to the front door while jake capered round our feet. on
the pavement outside skeldale house the ancient pram stood in all its
high, rusted dignity. roddy pulled back the cover. "up, boy," he
murmured, and the big dog leaped effortlessly into his accustomed place.
roddy took hold of the handle with both hands and as the autumn sunshine
broke suddenly through the clouds it lit up a picture which had grown
familiar and part of the daily scene. the golf jacket, the open shirt
and brown chest, the handsome animal sitting up, looking around him with
natural grace. "well, so long, roddy," i said. "i suppose you'll be
round these parts again." he turned and i saw that smile again. "aye,
reckon ah'll be back." he gave a push and they were off, the strange
vehicle creaking, jake swaying gently as they went down the street. the
memory came back to me of what i had seen under the cover that night in
the surgery. the haversack, which would contain his razor, towel, soap
and a few other things. the packet of tea and the thermos. and something
els a creased old photograph of a young woman which slipped from an
envelope in the scuflle. it added a little more mystery to the man ...
and explained other things, too. that farmer was right. all roddy
possessed was in that pram. and it seemed it was all he desired, too,
because as he turned the comer and disappeared from my view i could hear
him whistling. chapter 45.

i have never been much good at small talk but as i sat in the stores day
after day without seeing a friendly face i , realised how much i used to
enjoy chatting with the farmers during my veterinary calls. it is one of
the nicest things about country practice, but you have to keep your mind
on the job at the same time or you could be in trouble. and at mr.
duggleby's i nearly landed in the biggest trouble of all. he was a
smallholder who kept a few sows and reared the litters to pork weight in
some ramshackle sheds behind the railway line outside darrowby. he was
also a cricket fanatic, steeped in the lore and history of the game, and
he would talk about it for hours on end. he never tired of it. i was a
willing listener because cricket has always fascinated me, even though i
grew up in scotland where it is little played. as i moved among the
young pigs only part of my attention was focused on the little
animalsmost of me was out on the great green oval at headingly with the
yorkshire heroes, "by gaw, you should've seen len hutton on saturday,"
he breathed reverently. "a hundred and eighty and never gave a chance.
it was lovely to watch 'im." he gave a fair imitation of the great man's
cover drive. "yes, i can imagine it." i nodded and smiled. "you said
these pigs were lame, mr. duggleby?" "aye, noticed a few of 'em hoppin'
about with a leg up this mornin. and you know, maurice leyland was
nearly as good. not as classy as len, that knows, but by heck 'e can
clump 'em." "yes, he's a lion-hearted little player is maurice," i said.
i reached down, grabbed a pig by the tail and thrust 401

my thermometer into its rectum. "remember him and eddie paynter in the
test match against australia?" he gave a dreamy smile. "remember it? by
gaw, that's summat i'll never forget. what a day that was i" i withdrew
the thermometer. "this little chap's got a temperature of a hundred and
five. must be some infection somewhere-maybe a touch of joint ill." i
felt my way along the small pink limbs. "and yet it's funny, the joints
aren't swollen." "ah reckon bill bowes'll skittle somerset out when they
start their innings today. this wicket's just to 'is liking." "yes, he's
a great bowler, isn't he?" i said. "i love watching a good fast bowler.
i suppose yout have seen them all-larwogd, voce, g. 0. allen and the
rest?" "aye, that i have. i could go on all day about those men." i
caught another of the lame pigs and examined it. "this is rather
strange, mr. duggleby. about half the pigs in this pen seem to be lame
but there's nothing to see." "aye well, happen it's like you said-joint
ill. you can give 'em a jab for that, can't you? and while you're doin'
it i'll tell you of the time i saw wilfred rhodes take eight wickets in
an afternoon." i filled a syringe. "right, we'd better give them all a
,shot. have you got a marking pencil theret' the farmer nodded and
lifted one of the little animals which promptly unleashed a protesting
scream. "there was never anybody like awd wilfred," he shouted above the
noise. "it was about half past two and the wicket had had a shower of
rain on it when vskipper threw 'im the ball." i sniffed and raised my
syringe. it passed the time so pleasantly listening to these remini
cences. well content, i was about to plunge the needle into the pink
thigh when one of the pigs began to nibble at the heel of my wellington.
i looked down at a ring of the little creatures all looking up at me,
alarmed by the shrill screeches of their friend. my mind was stiff with
wilfred rhodes when i noticed what looked eke a small white knob on one
of the uptilted snouts. and there was another on that one-and that one
... i had been unable to see their faces until now because they had been
trying to run away from me, but a warning bell clanged suddenly in my
head.

1 reached down and seized a pig, and as i squeezed the swelling on the
snout a cold wind blew through me, scattering the gentle vision of
cricket and sunshine and green grass. it wasn't a knob, it was a
vesicle, a delicate blister which ruptured easily on pressure. i could
feel my arms shaking as i turned the piglet up and began to examine the
tiny cloven feet. there were more vesicles there, flatter and more
diffuse, but telling the same dread story. dry mouthed, i lifted two
other pigs. they were just the same. as i turned to the farmer i felt
bowed down by a crushing weight of pity, almost of guilt. he was still
smiling eagerly, anxious to get on with his tale, and i was about to
give him the worst news a veterinary surgeon can give a stockman. "mr.
duggleby," i said. "i'm afraid i'll have to telephone the ministry of
agriculture." "the ministry ... ? what for?" "to tell them i have a case
of suspected foot and mouth disease." "foot and mouth? neverl" "yes, i'm
terribly sorry." "are you sure?" "it's not up to me to be definite about
it, mr. duggleby. one of the ministry officers will have to do that-i
must ,phone them right away." it was an unlikely place to find a
telephone but mr. duggleby ran a little coal delivery round on the side.
i was quickly through to the ministry and i spoke to neville craggs, one
of the full time officers. he groaned. "sounds awful like it, jim.
anyway, stay put till i see you." in the farm kitchen mr. duggleby
looked at me enquiringly. "what now?" "you'll just have to put up with
me for a bit," i said. "i can't leave till i get the verdict." he was
silent for a moment. "what happens if it's what you think?" . "i'm
afraid your pigs will have to be slaughtered." "every one of 'em?" "that
is the law-i'm sorry. but you'll get compensation." he scratched his
head. "but they can get better. why do you have to kill 'em all?"

"you're quite right." i shrugged. "many animals do recover, but foot and
mouth is fiercely infectious. while you were treating them it would have
spread to neighbouring farms, then all over the country." "aye, but look
at the expense. slaughtering must cost thousands o' pounds." "i agree,
but it would cost a lot more the other way. apart from the animals that
die, just think of the loss of milk, loss of flesh in cows, pigs and
sheep. it would come to millions every year. it's lucky britain is an
island." "reckon you'll be right." he felt for his pipe. "and you're
pretty sure i've got it?" "yes." "aye well," he murmured. "these things
'appen." the old yorkshire words. i had heard them so often ~mder
circumstances that would make most city folk, including myself, beat
their heads against a wall. mr. duggleby's smallholding would soon be a
silent place of death, but he just chewed his pipe and said, "these
things'appen." it didn't take the ministry long to make up their minds.
the source of the infection was almost certainly some imported meat that
mr. duggleby hadn't boiled properly with his swill. the disease was
confirmed and a fifteen mile radius standstill order was imposed. i
disinfected myself and my car and went home. i undressed, my clothes
were taken away for fumigation and i climbed into a hot antiseptic bath.
lying there in the steam, i pondered on what might have been. if i had
failed to spot the disease i would have gone merrily on my way,
spreading destruction and havoc. i always washed my boots before leaving
a farm, but how about those little pigs nibbling round the hem of my
long coat, how about my syringe, even my thermometer? my next call was
to have been to terence bailey's pedigree herd of dairy shorthorns-two
hundred peerless cows, a strain built up over generations. foreigners
came from all over the world to buy them and i could have been the cause
of their annihilation. and then there was mr. duggleby himself. i could
picture him rattling around the farms in his coal wagon. he would have
done his bit of spreading, too. and like as not he would have taken a
few store pigs to the auction mart this week, sending the deadly
contagion all over yorkshire and beyond. it was easy to see how a major
outbreak could have started-a disaster of national importance costing
millions. if i hadn't been sweating already i would have started now at
the very thought of it. i would have joined the unhappy band of
practitioners who had missed foot and mouth. i knew of some of these
people and my heart bled for them. it could happen so easily. busy men
trying to examine kicking, struggling animals in dark buildings with
perhaps part of their mind on the list of calls ahead. and the other
hazards-the total unexpectedness, the atypical case, various
distractions. my distraction had been cricket and it had nearly caused
my downfall. but i had escaped and, huddling lower in the hot water, i
said a silent prayer of thanks. later, with a complete change of clothes
and instruments, i continued on my rounds and as i stood in terence
bailey's long byre i realised my luck again. the long rows of beautiful
animals meticulously groomed, firm high udders pushing between their
hocks, delicate heads, fine legs deep in straw; they were a picture of
bovine perfection and quite irreplaceable.

once foot and mouth is confirmed in a district there is a tense period
of waiting. farmers, veterinary surgeons and most of all, ministry
officials are on the rack, wondering if there has been any dissemination
before diagnosis, -bracing themselves against the telephone message that
could herald the raging spread they dreaded and which would tear their
lives apart. to the city dwellers a big foot and mouth outbreak is
something remote they read about in the newspapers. to the country folk
it means the transformation of the quiet farms and fields into charnel
houses and funeral pyres. it means heartbreak and ruin. we waited in
darrowby. and as the days passed and no frightening news of lame or
salivating animals came over the wires it seemed that the duggleby
episode was what we hoped-an isolated case caused by a few shreds of
imported meat. i almost bathed in disinfectant on every farm, sloshing
a-istrong solution of lysol over my boots and protective clothing so
that my car reeked of the stuff and i caused wrinkled noses when i
entered a shop, the post office, the bank. after nearly two weeks i had
begun to feel reasonably safe but when i had a call from the famous
bailey farm i felt a twinge of apprehension. it was terence bailey
himself. "will-you come and see one of my cows, mr. herriot. she's got
blisters on one of her teats." "blistersl" my heart went bump. "is she
slavering, is she lame?" "nay, nay, she just has these nasty blisters.
seem to have fluid in them." i was breathless as i put down the
receiver. one nasty blister would be enough. it sometimes started like
that in cows. i almost ran out to my car and on the journey my mind beat
about like a trapped bird. bailey's was the farm i had visited straight
from duggleby's. could i possibly have carried it there? but the chpnge
of clothes, the bath, the fresh thermometer and instruments. what more
could i do? how about my car wheels? well, i had disinfected them, too-i
couldn't possibly be blamed, but ... but .... it was mr. bailey's wife
who met me. "i noticed this cow when i was milking this morning, mr.
herriot." the herd was still hand-milked and in the hard-working family
tradition mrs. bailey did her stint night and morning with her husband
and the farm men. "as soon as i got hold of the teats i could see the
cow was uneasy," she continued. "then i saw there was a lot of little
blisters and one big one. i managed to milk her and most of the little
blisters burst, but the big one's still there." i bent and peered
anxiously at the udder. it was as she said-lots of small ruptured
vesicles and one large one, intact and fluctuating. it was all horribly
evocative and without speaking i moved along, grasped the cow's nose and
pulled her head round. i prised the mouth open and stared desperately at
lips, cheek and dental pad. i think i would have fainted if i had found
anything in there but it was all clean and normal. i lifted each
forefoot in turn and scrubbed out the clefts with soap and
water-nothing. i tied a rope round the hind leg, threw it over a beam
and with the help of one of the men pulled the foot up. more scrubbing
and searching without success then the same with the other hind foot.
when i finished i was perspiring but no further forward. i took the
temperature and found it slightly elevated, then i walked up and down
the byre. "is there any trouble among these other cows?" i asked. mrs.
bailey shook her head. "no, there's just this one." she was a
good-looking woman in her thirties with the red, roughened complexion of
the outdoor worker. "what do you think it is?" i didn't dare tell her. i
had a cow with vesicles on the teats right in the middle of a district
under foot and mouth restrictions. i just couldet take a chance. i had
to bring the ministry in. even then i was unable to speak the dread
words. all i could say was, "can i use your 'phone, please?" she looked
surprised, but smiled quickly. "yes, of course. come into the house." as
i walked down the byre i looked again at the beautiful cows and then
beyond, at the fold yard where i could see the young heifers and the
tiny calves in their pens. all of them carrying the bailey blood which
had been produced and perfected by generations of careful breeding and
selection. but a humane killer is no respecter of such things and if my
fears were realised a quick series of bang-bangs would wipe out an this
in an hour or two. we went into the farm kitchen and mrs. bailey pointed
to the door at the far end. "the 'phone's through there in the front
room," she said. i kicked off my wellingtons and was padding across the
floor in my stockinged feet when i almost fell over giles, the lusty one
year old baby of the family, as he waddled across my path. i bent to
ease him out of the way and he looked up at me with an enormous cheesy
grin. his mother laughed. "just look at him. full of the devil, and he's
had such a painful arm since his smallpox vaccination." "poor lad," i
said absently, patting his head as i opened the door, my mind already
busy with the uncomfortable conversation ahead. i had taken a few
strides over the carpet beyond, when i halted abruptly.

i turned and looked back into the kitchen. "did you say smallpox
vaccination?" "yes, all our other children have been done when they were
this age but they've never reacted like this. i've had to change his
dressing every day." "you changed his dressing . . . and you milked that
cow?" "yes, that's right." a great light beamed suddenly, spilling
sunshine into my dark troubled world. i returned to the kitchen and
closed the door behind me. mrs. bailey looked at me for a moment in
silence, then she spoke hesitantly. "aren't you going to use the
'phone?" "no. . . no.. ." i replied. "i've changed my mind." "i see."
she raised her eyebrows and seemed at a loss for words. then she smiled
and lifted the kettle. "well maybe you'll have a cup of tea, then?"
"thank you, that would be lovely." i sank happily on to one of the hard
wooden chairs. mrs. bailey put the kettle on and turned to me. "by the
way, you've never told me what's wrong with that cow." "oh yes, of
course, i'm sorry," i said airily as though i'd just forgotten to
mention it. "she's got cow pox. in fact you gave it to her." "i gave it
... ? what do you mean?" "well, the vaccine they use for babies is made
from the cow po:~ virus. you carried it on your hands from the baby to
the cow." i smiled, enjoying my big moment. her mouth fell open
slightly, then she began to giggle. "oh dear, i don't know what my
husband's going to say. i've never heard of anything like that." she
wiggled her fingers in front of her eyes. "and i'm always so careful,
too. but i've been a bit harassed with the poor little chap's arm." "oh
well, it isn't serious," i said. "i've got some ointment in the car
which will cure it quite quickly." i sipped my tea and watched giles's
activities. in a short time he had spread chaos throughout the kitchen
and at the moment was busily engaged in removing all the contents of a
cupboard in the corner. bent double, small bottom out thrust, he hurled
pans, lids, brushes behind him with intense dedication till the cupboard
was empty. then, as he looked around for further emplop.

ment, he spotted me and tacked towards me on straddled legs. my
stocking-clad toes seemed to fascinate him and as i wiggled them at him
he grasped at them with fat little hands. when he had finally trapped my
big toe he looked up at me with his huge gin in which four tiny teeth
glittered. i smiled back at him with sincere affection as the relief
flowed through me. it wasn't just that i was grateful to him-i really
liked him. i still like giles today. he is one of my clients, a burly
farmer with a family of his own, a deep love and knowledge of pedigree
cows and the same big grin, except that there are a few more teeth in
it. but he'll never know how near his smallpox vaccination came to
giving me heart failure. chapter 46.

they had sent me to eastchurch on the isle of sheppy and i knew it was
the last stop. as i looked along the disorderly line of men i realised i
wouldn't be taking part in many more parades. and it came to me with a
pang that at the scarborough itw this would not have been classed as a
parade at all. i could remember the ranks of blue outside the grand
hotel, straight as the grenadier guards and every man standing stiffly,
looking neither to left nor right. our boots gleaming, buttons shining
like gold and not a movement anywhere as the flight sergeant led the
officer round on morning inspection. i had moaned as loudly as anybody
at the rigid discipline, the "bull," the scrubbing and polishing,
marching and drilling, but now that it had all gone it seemed good and
meaningful and i missed it. here the files of airmen lounged, chatted
among themselves and occasionally took a surreptitious drag at a
cigarette as a sergeant out in front called the names from, a list and
gave us our leisurely instructions for the day. this particular morning
he was taking a long time over it, consulting sheaves of papers and
making laboured notes with a pencil. a big irishman on my right was
becoming increasingly restive and finally he shouted testily: "for-sake,
sergeant, get us off this-square. me -feet's killin'mel" the sergeant
didn't even look up. "shut your mouth, brady," he replied. "you'll get
off the square when i say so and not before." it was like that at
eastchurch, the great filter tank of the raf where what i had heard
described as the "odds and sods" were finally sorted out. it was a big
sprawling camp filled with a widely varied mixture of airmen who 410

had one thing in common; they were all waiting-some of them for
remuster, but most for discharge from the service. there was a resigned
air about the whole place, an acceptance of the fact that we were all
just putting in time. there was a token discipline but it was of the
most benign kind. and as i said, every man there was just waiting. . .
waiting.... little ned finch in his remote corner of the high yorkshire
dales always seemed to me to be waiting, too. i could -remember his boss
yelling at him. "for god's sake, shape up to t'job! you're not framin'
at. aill" mr. daggett grabbed hold of a leaping calf and glared in
exasperation. ned gazed back at him impassively. his face registered no
particular emotion, but in the pale blue eyes i read the expression that
was always there-as though he was waiting for something to happen, but
without much hope. he made a tentative attempt to catch a calf but was
brushed aside, then he put his arms round the neck of another one, a
chunky little animal of three months, and was borne along a few yards
before being deposited on his back in the straw. "oh, dang it, do this
one, mr. herriot!" mr. daggett barked, turning the hairy neck towards
me. "it looks as though i'll have to catch 'em all myself." i injected
the animal. i was inoculating a batch of twenty with preventive
pneumonia vaccine and ned was suffering. with his diminutive stature and
skinny, smallboned limbs he had always seemed to me to be in the wrong
job; but he had been a farm worker all his life and he was over sixty
now, grizzled, balding and slightly bent, but still battling on. mr.
daggett reached out and as one of the shaggy creatures sped past he
scooped the head into one of his great hands and seized the ear with the
other. the little animal seemed to realise it was useless to struggle
and stood unresisting as i inserted the needle. at the other end ned put
his knee against the calf's rear and listlessly pushed it against the
wall. he wasn't doing much good and his boss gave him a withering
glance. we finished the bunch with hardly any help from the little man,
and as we left the pen and came out into the yard mr. daggett wiped his
brow. it was a raw november day but he was sweating profusely and for a
moment he leaned his gaunt six foot frame against the wall as the wind
from the bare moorland blew over him. i "by gaw, he's a useless little
beggar is that," he grunted. "ah don't know how ah put up with 'im." he
muttered to himself for a few moments then gave tongue again. "hey,
nedl" the little man who had been trailing aimlessly over the cobbles
turned his pinched face and looked at him with his submissive but
strangely expectant eyes. "get them bags o' corn up into the granary!"
his boss ordered. wordlessly ned went over to a cart and with an effort
shouldered a sack of corn. as he painfully mounted the stone steps to
the granary his frail little legs trembled and bent under the weight.
mr. daggett shook his head and turned to me. his long cadaverous face
was set in its usual cast of melancholy. "you know what's wrong wined?" he murmured confidentially. "what do you mean?" "well, you know
why 'e can't catch them calves?" my own view was that ned wasn't big
enough or strong enough and anyway he was naturally ineffectual, but i
shook my head. "no," i said. "why is it?" "well i'll tell ye." mr.
daggett glanced furtively across the yard then spoke from behind his
hand. "he's ower fond of t'bright lights." "eh?" "ah'm telfin'ye, he's
crazed over t'bright lights." "bright ... what . . . where . . . t' mr.
daggett leaned closer. "he gets over to briston every night." "briston
... t' i looked across from the isolated farm to the village three miles
away on the other side of the dale. it was the only settlement in that
bleak vista-a straggle of ancient houses dark and silent against the
green fellside. i could recall that at night the oil lamps made yellow
flickers of light in the windows but they weren't very bright. "i don't
understand." "well . . . 'e gets into t'pub."

"ah, the pub." mr. daggett nodded slowly and portentously but i was
still puzzled. the hulton arms was a square kitchen where you could get
a glass of beer and where a few old men played dominoes of an evening.
it wasn't my idea of a den of vice. "does he get drunk there?" i asked.
"nay, nay," the farmer shook his head. "it's not that. it's the hours 'e
keeps." "comes back late, eh?" "aye, that 'e does!" the eyes widened in
their cavernous sockets. "sometimes 'e doesn't get back till 'alf past
nine or ten o'clockl" "gosh, is that so?" "sure as ah'm standin' here.
and there's another thing. he can't get out of 'is bed next day. ah've
done half a day's work before 'e starts." he paused and glanced again
across the yard. "you can believe me or believe me not, but sometimes 'e
isn't on the job till seven o'clock in t'morning!" "good heavensl" he
shrugged wearily. "aye well, you see how it is. come into t'house,
you'll want to wash your hands." in the huge flagged kitchen i bent low
over the brown earthenware sink. sear farm was four hundred years old
and the various tenants hadn't altered it much since the days of henry
the eighth. gnarled beams, rough white- washed walls and hard wooden
chairs. but comfort had never been important to mr. daggett or his wife
who was ladling hot water from the primitive boiler by the side of the
fire and pouring it into her scrubbing bucket. she clopped around over
the flags in her clogs, hair pulled back tightly from her weathered face
into a bun, a coarse sacking apron tied round her waist. she had no
children but her life was one of constant activity; in- doors or
outside, she worked all the time. at one end of the room wooden steps
led up through a hole in the ceiling to a loft where ned slept. that had
been the little man's room for nearly fifty years ever since he had come
to work for mr. daggett's father as a boy from school. and in all that
time he had never travelled further than darrowby, never done anything
outside his daily routine. wifeless, friendless, he plodded through his
life , endlessly milking, feeding and mucking out, and waiting, i
suspected with diminishing hope for something to happen. with my handle
on the car door i looked back at scar farm, at the sagging roof tiles,
the great stone lintel over the door. it typified the harshness of the
lives of the people within. little ned was no bargain as a stockman, and
his boss's exasperation was understandable. mr. dag- gett was not a
cruel or an unjust man. he and his wife had been hardened and squeezed
dry by the pitiless austerity of their existence in this lonely comer of
the high pennines. there was no softness up here, no frills. the stone
walls, sparse grass and stunted trees; the narrow road with its smears
of cow muck. everything was down to fundamentals, and it was a miracle
to me that most of the dalesmen were not like the daggetts but cheerful
and humourous. but as i drove away, the sombre beauty of the place
overwhelmed me. the lowering hillsides burst magically into life as a
shaft of sunshine stabbed through the clouds, flooding the bare flanks
with warm gold. suddenly i was aware of the delicate shadings of green,
the rich glowing bronze of the dead bracken spilling from the high tops,
the whole peaceful majesty of my work-a-day world. i hadn't far to drive
to my next call-just about a mile and it was in a vastly different
atmosphere. miss tremayne, a rich lady from the south, had bought a
tumbiedown manor house and spent many thousands of pounds in converting
it into a luxury home. as my feet crunched on the gravel i looked up at
the large windows with their leaded panes, at the smooth,
freshly-painted stones. elsie opened the door to me. she was miss
tremayne's cook-housekeeper, and one of my favourite people. aged about
fifty, no more than five feet high and as round as a ball with short
bandy legs sticking out from beneath a tight black dress. "good morning,
elsie," i said, and she burst into a peat of laughter. this, more than
her remarkable physical appearance, was what delighted me. she laughed
uproariously at every statement and occurrence; in fact she laughed at
the things she said herself. "come in, mr. herriot, ha-ha-ha," she said.
"it's been a bit nippy today, he-he, but i think it'll get out this
afternoon, ho-ho-ho." all the mirth may have seemed somewhat
unnecessary, and indeed, it made her rather difficult to understand, but
the general effect was cheering. she led me into the drawing room and
her mistress rose with some difficulty from her chair. miss tremayne was
elderly and half crippled with' arthritis but bore her affliction
without fuss. "ah, mr. herriott," she said. "how good of you to come."
she put her head on one side and beamed at me as though i was the most
delightful thing she had seen for a long time. she, too, had a bubbling,
happy personality, and since she owned three dogs, two cats and an
elderly donkey i had come to know her very well in her six months'
residence in the dale. my visit was to dress the donkey's overgrown
hooves, and a pair of clippers and a blacksmith's knife dangled from my
right hand. "oh, put those grisly instruments down over there," she
said. "elsie's bringing some tea-i'm sure you've time for a cup- 11 i
sank willingly into one of the brightly covered armchairs and was
looking round the comfortable room when elsie reappeared, gliding over
the carpet as though on wheels. she put the tray on the table by my
side. "there's yer tea," she said, and went into a paroxysm so hearty
that she had to lean on the back of my chair. she had no visible neck
and the laughter caused the fat little body to shake all over. when she
had recovered she rolled back into the kitchen and i heard her
clattering about with pans. despite her idiosyncrasies she was a
wonderful cook and very efficient in all she did. i spent a pleasant ten
minutes with miss tremayne and the tea, then i went outside and attended
to the donkey. when i had finished i made my way round the back of the
house and as i was passing the kitchen i saw elsie at the open window.
"many thanks for the tea, elsie," i said. 'The little woman gripped the
sides of the sink to steady, herself. "ha-ha-ha, that's all right.
that's, he-he, quite all right, ha-ha-ho-ho-ho."

wonderingly i got into the car and as i drove away, the disturbing
thought came to me that one day i might say something really witty to
elsie and cause her to do herself an injury.

i was called back to mr. daggett's quite soon afterwards to see a cow
which wouldn't get up. the farmer thought she was paralysed. i drove
there in a thin drizzle and the light was fading at about four o'clock
in the afternoon when i arrived at scar farm. when i examined the cow i
was convinced she had just got herself into an awkward position in the
stall with her legs jammed under the broken timbers of the partition. "i
think she's sulking, mr. daggett," i said. "she's had a few goes at
rising and now she's decided not to try any more. some cows are like
that." "maybe you're right," the farmer replied. "she's allus been a
stupid bitch." "and she's a big one, too. she'll take a bit of moving."
i lifted a rope from the byre wall and tied it round the hocks. "i'll
push the feet from the other side while you and ned pull the legs
round." "pull?" mr. daggett gave the little man a sour look. "he
couldn't pull the skin off a rice puddin'." ned said nothing, just gazed
dully to his front, arms hanging limp. he looked as though he didn't
care, wasn't even there with us. his mind was certainly elsewhere if his
thoughts were mirrored in his eyes-vacant, unheeding, but as always,
expectant. i went behind the partition and thrust steadily at the feet
while the men pulled. at least ~&7daggett pulled, mouth open, gasping
with effort, while ned leaned languidly on the rope. inch by inch the
big animal came round till she was lying almost in the middle of the
stall, but as i was about to call a halt the rope broke and mr. daggett
flew backwards on to the hard cobbles. ned of course did not fall down
because he hadn't been trying, and his employer, stretched flat, glared
up at him with frustrated rage. "ye little bugger, ye let me do that all
by meself i ah don't know why ah bother with you, you're bloody
useless." at that moment the cow, as i had expected, rose to her feet,
and the farmer gesticulated at the little man. "well, go on, dang ye,
get some straw and rub her legst they'll be numb." meekly ned twisted
some straw into a wisp and began to do a bit of massage. mr. daggett got
up stiffly, felt gingerly along his back then walked up beside the cow
to make sure the chain hadn't tightened round her neck. he was on his
way back when the big animal swung round suddenly and brought her cloven
hoof down solidly on the farmer's toe. if he had been wearing heavy
boots it wouldn't have been so bad, but his feet were encased in ancient
cracked wellingtons which offered no protection. "owl owl owl" yelled
mr. dagott, beating on the hairy back with his fists. "gerroff, ye awd
bitch!" he heaved, pushed and writhed but the ten hundredweight of beef
ground down inexorably. the farmer was only released when the cow slid
off his foot, and i know from experience that that sliding is the worst
part. - mr. daggett hopped around on one leg, nursing the bruised
extremity in his hands. "bloody 'ell," he moaned. "oh, bloody 'ell."
just then i happened to glance towards ned and was amazed to see the
apathetic little face crinkle suddenly into a wide grin of unholy glee.
i couldn't recall him even smiling before, and my astonishment must have
shown in my face because his boss whipped round suddenly and stared at
him. as if by magic the sad mask slipped back into place and he went on
with his rubbing. mr. - daggett hobbled out to the car with me and as i
was about to leave he nudged me. "look at 'im," he whispered. ned, milk
pail in hand, was bustling along the byre with unwonted energy. his
employer gave a bitter smile. "it's vonly time 'e ever hurries. can't
wait to get out to t'pub." "oh well, you say he doesn't get drunk. there
can't be any harm in it." the deep sunk eyes held me. "don't you believe
it. he'll come tiv a bad end gaddin' about the way 'e does." "but surely
the odd glass of beer. . ." "ah but there's more than that to it." he
glanced around him. "there's womenl"

i laughed incredulously. "oh come now, mr. daggett, what woment' "over
at t'pub," he muttered. "them bradley lasses." "the landlord's
daughters? oh really, i can't believe. . "all right, ye can say what ye
like. he's got 'is eye on lem. ali knaw-ah've only been in that pub once
but alive seen for meself." i didn't know what to say, but in any case i
had no opportunity because he turned and strode into the house. alone in
the cold darkness i looked at the gaunt silhouette of the old farmhouse
above me. in the dying light of the november day the rain streamed
down the rough stones and the wind caught at the thin tendril of smoke
from the chimney, hurling it in ragged streamers across the slate blue
pallor of the western sky. the fell hung over everything, a black
featureless bulk, oppressive and menacing. through the kitchen window i
could see the old lamp casting its dim light over the bare table, the
cheerless hearth with its tiny flicker of fire. in the shadows at the
far end the steps rose intoned's loft and i could imagine the little
figure clambering up to get changed and escape to briston. across the
valley the single street of the village was a broken grey thread in the
gloom but in the cottage windows the lamps winked faintly. these were
ned fincws bright lights and i could understand how he felt. after scar
farm, briston would be like monte carlo. the image stayed in my mind so
vividly that after two more calls that evening i decided to go a few
miles out of my way as i returned homeward. i cut across the dale and it
was about half past eight when i drove into briston. it was difficult to
find the hulton arms because there was no lighted entrance, no attempt
to advertise its presence, but i persevered because i had to find out
what was behind mr. daggett's tale of debauchery. i located it at last.
just re the door of an ordinary house with a faded wooden sign hanging
above it. inside, the usual domino game was in progress, a few farmers
sat chatting quietly. the misses bradley, plain but pleasantfaced women
in their forties, sat on either side of the fire, and sure enough there
was ned with a half pint glass in front of him. i sat down by his side.
"hello, ned."

"now then, mr. herriot," he murmured absently, glancing at me with his
strange expectant eyes. one of the bradley ladies put down her knitting
and came over. "pint of bitter, please," i said. "what will you have,
ned?" "nay, thank ye, mr. herriot. this'll do for me. it's me second and
ah'm not a big drinker, that knows." miss bradley laughed. "yes, he
nob but has 'is two glasses a night, but he enjoys them, don't you, ned?"
"that's right, ah do." he looked up at. her and she smiled kindly down
at him before going for my beer. he took a sip at his glass. "ah really
come for t'company, mr. herriot." "yes, of course," i said. i knew what
he meant. he probably sat on his own most of the time, but around him
was warmth and comfort and friendliness. a great log sent flames
crackling up to the wide chimney, there was electric light and shining
mirrors with whisky slogans painted on their surface. it wasn't anything
like scar farm. the little man said very little. he spun out his drink
for another hour, looking around him as the dominoes clicked and i
lowered another contemplative pint. the misses bradley knitted and
brewed tea in a big black kettle over the fire and when they had to get
up to serve their customers they occasionally patted ned playfully on
the cheek as they passed. by the time he tipped down the last drop and
rose to go it was a quarter to ten and he still had to cycle across to
the other side of the dale. another late night for ned.

it was a tuesday lunchtime ' in early spring. helen always cooked steak
and kidney pie on tuesdays and i used to think about it all morning on
my rounds. my thoughts that morning had been particularly evocative
because lambing had started and i had spent most of the time in my shirt
sleeves in the biting wind as my hunger grew and grew. helen cut into
her blissful creation and began to scoop the fragrant contents on to my
plate. "i met miss tremayne in the market place this morning, jim." "oh
yes?" i was almost drooling as my wife stopped shovelling out the pie,
sliced open some jacket potatoes and dropped pats of farm butter on to
the steaming surfaces. "yes, she wants you to go out there this
afternoon and put some canker drops in wilberforce's ears if you have
time." "oh i have time for that," i said. wilberforce was miss
tremayne's ancient tabby cat and it was just the kind of job i wanted
after my arm-aching morning. i was raising a luscious forkful when helen
spoke again. "oh, and she had an interesting item of news." "really?"
but i had begun to chew and my thoughts were distant. "it's about the
little woman who works for her-elsie. you know her?" i nodded and took
another mouthful. "of course, of course." "well it's quite unexpected, i
suppose, but elsie's getting married." i choked on my pie. "whatl" "it's
true. and maybe you know the bridegroom." "tell me." "he works on one of
the neighbouring farms. his name is ned finch." this time my breath was
cut off completely and helen had to beat me on the back as i spluttered
and retched. it wasn't until an occluding morsel of potato skin had shot
down my nose that i was able to utter a weak croak. "ned finch?" "that's
what she said." i finished my lunch in a dream, but by the end of it i
had accepted the extraordinary fact. helen and miss tremayne were two
sensible people-there couldn't be any mistake. and yet ... even as i
drew up outside the old manor house a feeling of unreality persisted.
elsie opened the door as usual. i looked at her for a moment. "what's
this i hear, elsie?" she started a giggle which rapidly spread over her
spherical frame. i put my hand on her shoulder. "is it true?" the giggle
developed into a mighty gale of laughter, and if she hadn't been holding
the handle i am sure she would have fallen over. "aye, it's right
enough," she gasped. "alive found a man at last and ah'm going' to get
wed!" she leaned helplessly on the door. "well, i'm pleased to hear it,
elsie. i hope you'll be very happy." she hadn't the strength to speak
but merely nodded as she lay against the door. then she led me to the
drawing room. "in ye go," she chuckled. "ah'11 bring ye some tea." miss
tremayne rose to greet me with parted lips and shining eyes. "oh, mr.
herriot, have you heard?" "yes, but how ... ?" "it all started when i
asked mr. daggett for some fresh eggs. he sent ned on his bicycle with
the eggs and it was like fate." "well, how wonderful." "yes, and i
actually saw it happen. ned walked in that door with his basket, elsie
was clearing the table here, and, mr. herriot." she clasped her hands
under her chin, smiled ecstatically and her eyes rolled upwards. "oh,
mr. herriot, it was love at first sight!" "yes ... yes, indeed.
marvelous!" "and ever since that day ned has been calling round and now
he comes every evening and sits with elsie in the kitchen. isn't it
romantic!" "it certainly is. and when did they decide to get married?"
"oh, he popped the question within a month, and i'm so happy for elsie
because ned is such a dear little man, don't you think so?" "yes he is,"
i said. "he's a very nice chap." elsie simpered and tittered her way in
with the tea then put her hand over her face and -fled in confusion, and
as miss tremayne began to pour i sank into one of the armchairs and
lifted wilberforce on to my lap. the big cat purred as i instilled a few
drops of lotion into his car. he had a chronic canker condition-not very
bad but now and then it became painful and needed treatment. it was
because miss tremayne didn't like putting the lotion in that i was
pressed into service. as i turned the ear over and gently massaged the
oily liquid into the depths, wilberforce groaned softly with pleasure
and rubbed his check against my hand. he loved this anointing of the
tender area beyond his reach and when i had finished he curled up on my
knee.

i leaned back and sipped my tea. at that moment, with my back and
shoulders weary and my hands red and chapped with countless washings on
the open hillsides this seemed to be veterinary practice at its best.
miss tremayne continued. "we shall have a little reception after the
wedding and'then the happy couple will take up residence here." "you
mean, in this house?" "yes, of course. there's heaps of room in this big
old place, and i have furnished two rooms for them on the east side. i'm
sure they'll be very comfortable. oh, i'm so excited about it all!" she
refilled my cup. "before you go you must let elsie show you where they
are going to live." on my way out the little woman took me through to
the far end of the house. "this, bee-hee-hee," she said, "is where we'll
sit of a night, and this, ha-ha-ho-ho, oh dear me, is our bedroom." she
staggered around for a bit, wiped her eyes and turned to me for my
opinion. "it's really lovely, elsie," i said. there were bright carpets,
chairs with flowered covers and a fine mahogany-ended bed. it was
nothing like the loft. and as i looked at elsie i realised the things
ned would see in his bride. laughter, warmth, vivacity, and-i had no
doubt at all-beauty and glamour.

i seemed to get round to most farms that lambing time and in due course
i landed at mr. daggett's. i delivered a fine pair of twins for him but
it didn't seem to cheer him at all. lifting the towel from the grass he
handed it to me. "well, what did ah tell ye about ned, eh? got mixed up
wi' a woman just like ah said." he sniffed disapprovingly. "all that
rakin' and chasin' about-ah knew he'd get into mischief at t'finish." i
walked back over the sunlit fields to the farm and as i passed the byre
door ned came out pushing a wheelbarrow. "good morning, ned," i said. he
glanced up at me in his vague way. "how do, mr. herriot." there was
something different about him and it took me a few moments to discern
what it was; his eyes had lost the expectant look which had been there
for so long, and, after all, that was perfectly natural. because it had
happened at last for ned. chapter 47.

i had plenty of time on my hands at eastchurch, plenty of time to think,
and like most servicemen i thought of home. only my home wasn't there
any more. when i left darrowby helen had gone back to live with her
father and the little rooms under the tiles of skeldale house would be
empty and dusty now. but they lived on in my mind, clear in every
detail. i could see the ivy-fringed window looking over the tumble of
roofs to the green hills, our few pieces of furniture, the bed and side
table and the old wardrobe which only stayed shut with the aid of one of
my socks jammed in the door. strangely, it was that 'dangling woollen
toe which gave me the sharpest stab as i remembered. and even though it
was all gone i could hear the bedside radio playing, my wife's voice
from the other side of the fire and on that winter evening tristan
shouting up the stairs from the passage far below. "jiml jiml" i went
out and stuck my head over the bannisters. "what is it, triss?" "sorry
to bother you, jim, but could you come down for a minute?" the upturned
face had an anxious look. i went down the long flights of steps two at a
time and when i arrived slightly breathless on the ground floor tristan
beckoned me through to the consulting room at the back of the house. a
teenage girl was standing by the table, her hand resting on a stained
roll of blanket. "it's a cat," tristan said. he pulled back a fold of
the blanket and i looked down at a large, deeply striped tabby. at
least he would have been large if he had had any flesh on his bones, but
ribs and pelvis stood out pain- 424

fully through the fur and as i passed my hand over the motionless body i
could feel only a thin covering of skin. tristan cleared his throat.
"there's something else, jim." i looked at him curiously. for once he
didn't seem to have a joke in him. i watched as he gently lifted one of
the cat's hind legs and rolled the abdomen into view. there was a gash
on the ventral surface through which a coiled cluster of intestines
spilled grotesquely on to the cloth. i was still shocked and staring
when the girl spoke. 't saw this cat sittin' in the dark, down brown's
yard. i thought 'e looked skinny, like, and a bit quiet and i bent down
to give 'im. a pat. then i saw 'e was badly hurt and i went home for a
blanket and brought 'im round to you." "that was kind of you," i said.
"have you any idea who he belongs to?" the girl shook her head. "no, he
looks like a stray to me." "he does indeed." i dragged my eyes away from
the terrible wound. "you're marjorie simpson, aren't you?" 'yes. "i know
your dad well. he's our postman." "that's right." she gave a half smile
then her lips trembled. "well, i reckon i'd better leave 'im with you.
you'll be going' to put him out of his misery. there's nothing anybody
can do about ... about that?" i shrugged and shook my head. the girl's
eyes filled with tears, she stretched out a hand and touched the
emaciated arjimal then turned and walked quickly to the door. "thanks
again, marjorie," i called after the retreating back. "and don't
worry-we'll look after him." in the silence that followed, tristan and i
looked down at the shattered animal. under the surgery lamp it was all
too easy to see. he had almost been disembowelled and the pile of
intestines was covered in dirt and mud. "what d'you think did this?"
tristan said at length. "has he been run over?" "maybe," i replied.
"could be anything. an attack by a big dog or somebody could have kicked
him or struck him." all things were possible with cats because some
people seemed to regard them as fair game for any cruelty. tristan
nodded. "anyway, whatever happened, he must have been on the verge of
starvation. he's a skeleton. i bet he's wandered miles from home." "ah
well," i sighed. "there's only one thing to do. those guts are
perforated in several places. it's hopeless." tristan didn't say
anything but he whistled under his breath and drew the tip of his
forefinger again and again across the furry cheek. and, unbelievably,
from somewhere in the scraggy chest a gentle purring arose. the young
man looked at me, round eyed. "my god, do you hear that?" "yes . . .
amazing in that condition. he's a good natured cat." tristan, head
bowed, continued his stroking. i knew how he felt because, although he
preserved a cheerfully hard-boiled attitude to our patients he couldn't
kid me about one thing; he had a soft spot for cats. even now, when we
are both around the sixty mark, he often talks to me over a beer about
the cat he has had for many years. it is a typical relationship-they
tease each other unmercifully-but it is based on real affection. "it's
no good, triss," i said gently. "it's got to be done." i reached for the
syringe but something in me rebelled against plunging a needle into that
mutilated body. instead i pulled a fold of the blanket over the cat's
head. "pour a little ether on to the cloth," i said. "he'll just sleep
away." wordlessly tristan unscrewed the cap of the ether bottle and
poised it above the head. then from under the shapeless heap of blanket
we heard it again; the deep purring which increased in volume till it
boomed in our ears like a distant motorcycle. tristan was like a man
turned to stone, hand gripping the bottle rigidly, eyes staring down at
the mound of cloth from which the purring rose in waves of warm friendly
sound. at last he looked up at me and gulped. "i don't fancy this much,
jim. can't we do something?" "you mean, put that lot back?" "yes.9v -
"but the bowels are damaged-they're like a sieve in parts." "we could
stitch them, couldn't we?" i lifted the blanket and looked again.
"honestly, triss, i wouldn't know where to start. and the whole thing is
filthy." he didn't say anything, but continued to look at me steadily.
and i didn't need much persuading. i had no more desire to pour ether on
to that comradely purring than he had. "come on, then," i said. "we'll
have a go." with the oxygen bubbling and the cat's head in the
anaesthetic mask we washed the whole prolapse with warm saline. we did
it again and again but it was impossible to remove every fragment of
caked dirt. then we started the painfully slow business of stitching the
many holes in the tiny intestines, and here i was glad of tristan's
nimble fingers which seemed better able to manipulate the small
round-bodied needles than mine. two hours and yards of catgut later, we
dusted the patched up peritoneal surface with sulphanilamide and pushed
the entire mass back into the abdomen. when i had sutured muscle layers
and skin everything looked tidy but i had a nasty feeling of sweeping
undesirable things under the carpet. the extensive damage, all that
contamination-peritonitis was inevitable. "he's alive, anyway, triss," i
said as we began to wash the instruments. "we'll put him on to
sulphapyridine and keep our fingers crossed." there were still no
antibiotics at that time but the new drug was a big advance. the door
opened and helen came in. "you've been a long time, jim." she walked
over to the table and looked down at the sleeping cat. "what a poor
skinny little thing. he's all bones." "you should have seen him when he
came in." tristan switched off the steriliser and screwed shut the valve
on the anaesthetic machine. "he looks a lot better now." she stroked the
little animal for a moment. "is he badly injured?" "i'm afraid so,
helen," i said. "we've done our best for him but i honestly don't think
he has much chance." "what a shame. and he's pretty, too. four white
feet and all those unusual colours." with her finger she traced the
faint bands of auburn and copper-gold among the grey and black. tristan
laughed. "yes, i think that chap has a ginger tom somewhere in his
ancestry." helen smiled, too, but absently, and i noticed a broody look
about her. she hurried out to the stock room and returned with an empty
box. "yes ... yes . . ." she said thoughtfully. "i can make a bed in
this box for him and he'll sleep in our room, jim." "he will?" "yes, he
must be warm, mustn't he?" "of course." later, in the darkness of our
bed-sitter, i looked from my pillow at a cosy scene. sam in his basket
on one side of the flickering fire and the cat cushioned and blanketed
in his box on the other. as i floated off into sleep it was good to know
that my patient was so comfortable, but i wondered if he would be alive
in the morning.... i knew he was alive at 7:30 a.m. because my wife was
already up and talking to him. i trailed across the room in my pyjamas
and the cat and i looked at each other. i rubbed him under the chin and
he opened his mouth in a rusty miaow. but he didn't try to move.
"helen," i said. "this little thing is tied together inside with catgut.
he'll have to live on fluids for a week and even then he probably won't
make it. if he stays up here you'll be spooning milk into him umpteen
times a day.,' "okay, okay." she had that broody look again. it wasn't
only milk she spooned into him over the next few days. beef essence,
strained broth and a succession of sophisticated baby foods found their
way down his throat at regular intervals. one lunchtime i found helen
kneeling by the box. "we shall call him oscar," she said. "you mean
we're keeping him?" "yes. i am fond of cats but we already had a dog in
our cramped quarters and i could see difficulties. still i decided to
let it go. "why oscar?" "i don't know." helen tipped a few drops of chop
gravy on to the little red tongue and watched intently as he swallowed.
one of the things i like about women is their mystery, the unfathomable
part of them, and i didn't press the matter further. but i was pleased
at the way things were going. i had been giving the sulphapyridine every
six hours and taking the temperature night and morning, expecting all
the time to encounter the roaring fever, the vomiting and the tense
abdomen of peritonitis. but it never happened. it was as though oscar's
animal instinct told him he had to move as little as possible because he
lay absolutely still day after day and looked up at us-and purred. his
purr became part of our lives and when he eventually left his bed,
sauntered through to our kitchen and began to sample sam's dinner of
meat and biscuit it was a moment of triumph. and i didn't spoil it by
wondering if he was ready for solid food; i felt he knew. from then on
it was sheer joy to watch the furry scarecrow fill out and grow strong,
and as he ate and ate and the flesh spread over his bones the true
beauty of his coat showed in the glossy medley of auburn, black and
gold. we had a handsome cat on our hands. once oscar had fully
recovered, tristan was a regular visitor. he probably felt, and rightly,
that he, more than 1, had saved oscar's life in the first place and he
used to play with him for long periods. his favourite ploy was to push
his leg round the comer of the table and withdraw it repeatedly just as
the cat pawed at it. oscar was justifiably irritated by this teasing but
showed his character by lying in wait for tristan one night and biting
him smartly in the ankle before he could start his tricks. from my own
point of view oscar added many things to our menage. sam was delighted
with him and the two soon became firm friends, helen adored him and each
evening i thought afresh that a nice cat washing his face by the hearth
gave extra comfort to a room. oscar had been established as one of the
family for several weeks when i came in from a late call to find helen
waiting for me with a stricken face. "what's happened?" i asked. "it's
oscar-he's gonel"

"gone? what do you mean?" "oh, jim, i think he's run away." i stared at
her. "he wouldn't do that. he often goes down to the garden at night.
are you sure he isn't there?" "absolutely. i've searched right into the
yard. i've even had a walk round the town. and remember." her chin
quivered. "he ... he ran away from somewhere before." i looked at my
watch. "ten o'clock. yes, that is strange. he shouldn't be out at this
time." as i spoke the front door bell jangled. i galloped down the
stairs and as i rounded the corner in the passage i could see mrs.
hesugton, the vicar's wife, 1hrough the glass. i threw open the door.
she was holding oscar in her arms. "i believe this is your cat, mr.
herriot," she said. "it is indeed, mrs. heslington. where did you find
him?" she smiled. "well it was rather odd. we were having a meeting of
the mothers' union at the church house and we noticed the cat sitting
there in the room." "just sitting ... ?" "yes, as though he were
listening to what we were saying and enjoying it all. it was unusual.
when the meeting ended i thought i'd better bring him along to you."
"i'm most grateful, mrs. heslington." i snatched oscar and tucked him
under my arm. "my wife is distraughtshe thought he was lost." it was a
little mystery. why should he suddenly take off like that? but since he
showed no change in his manner over the ensuing week we put it out of
our minds. then one evening a man brought in a dog for a distemper
inoculation and left the front door open. when i went up to our flat i
found that oscar had disappeared again. this time helen and i scoured
the market place and side alleys in vain and when we returned at half
past nine we were both despondent. it was nearly eleven and we were
thinking of bed when the door bell rang. it was oscar again, this time
resting on the ample stomach of jack newbould. jack was leaning against
a doorpost and the fresh country air drifting in from the dark street
was richly intermingled with beer fumes. jack was a gardener at one of
the big houses. he hiccuped gently and gave me a huge benevolent smile.
"brought your cat, mr. herriot."

"gosh, thanks, jack!" i said, scooping up oscar gratefully. "where the
devil did you find him?" "well, s'matter o' fact, 'e sort of found me."
"what do you mean?" jack closed his eyes for a few moments before
articulating carefully. "'thish is a big night, that knows, mr. herriot.
darts championship. lots of vlads round at t'dog and gun-lotsh and lotsh
of 'em. big gatherin'." "and our cat was there?" "aye, he were there,
all right. sittin' among vlads. shpent t'whole evenin' with us." "just
sat there, eh?" "that 'e did." jack giggled reminiscently. "by gaw 'e
enjoyed 'isself. ah gave 'im a drop o' best bitter out of me own glass
and once or twice ah thought 'e was going! to have a go at chuckin' a
dart. he's some cat." he laughed again. as i bore oscar upstairs i was
deep in thought. what was going on here? these sudden desertions were
upsetting helen and i felt they could get on my nerves in time. i didn't
have long to wait till the next one. three nights later he was missing
again. this time helen and i didn't bother to search-we just waited. he
was back earlier than usual. i heard the door bell at nine o'clock. it
was the elderly miss simpson peering through the glass. and she wasn't
holding oscar-he was prowling on the mat waiting to come in. miss
simpson watched with interest as the cat stalked inside and made for the
stairs. "ah, good, i'm so glad he's come home safely. i knew he was your
cat and i've been intrigued by his behaviour all evening." "where ...
may i ask?" "oh, at the women's institute. he came in shortly after we
started and stayed there till the end." "really? what exactly was your
programme, miss simpson?" "well, there was a bit of committee stuff,
then a short talk with lantern slides by mr. walters from the water
company and we finished with a cake-making competition." "yes ... yes
... and what did oscar do?" she laughed. "mixed with the company,
apparently enjoyed the slides and showed great interest in the cakes."
"i see. and you didn't bring him home?"

"no, he made his own way here. as you know, i have to pass your house
and i merely rang your bell to make sure you knew he had arrived." "i'm
obliged to you, miss simpson. we were a little worried." i mounted the
stairs in record time. helen was sitting with the cat on her knee and
she looked up as i burst in. "i know about oscar now," i said. "know
what?" "why he goes on these nightly outings. he's not running away-he's
visiting." "visiting?" "yes," i said. "don't you see? he likes getting
around, he loves people, especially in groups, and he's interested in
what they do. he's a natural mixer." helen looked down at the attractive
mound of fur curled on her lap. "of course . . . that's it . . . he's a
socialitel" "exactly, a high stepperl" "a cat-about-town!" it all
afforded us some innocent laughter and oscar sat up and looked at us
with evident pleasure, adding his own throbbing purr to the merriment.
but for helen and me there was a lot of - relief behind it; ever since
our cat had started his excursions there had been the gnawing fear that
we would losehim, and now we felt secure. from that night our delight in
him increased. there was endless joy in watching this facet of his
character unfolding. he did the social round meticulously, taking in
most of the activities of the town. he became a familiar figure at whist
drives, jumble sales, school concerts and scout bazaars. most of the
time he was made welcome, but was twice ejected from meetings of the
rural district council who did not seem to relish the idea of a cat
sitting in on their deliberations. at first i was apprehensive about his
making his way through the streets but i watched him once or twice and
saw that he looked both ways before tripping daintily across. clearly he
had excellent traffic sense and this made me feel that his original
injury had not been caused by a car. taking it all in all, helen and i
felt that it was a kind stroke of fortune which had brought oscar to us.
he was a warm and cherished part of our home life. he added to our
happiness. . when the blow fell it was totally unexpected. i was
finishing the evening surgery. i looked round the door and saw only a
man and two little boys. "next, please," i said. the man stood up. he
had no animal with him. he was middle-aged, with the rough weathered
face of a farm worker. he twirled a cloth cap nervously in his hands.
"mr. herriot?" he said. "yes, what can i do for you?" he swallowed and
looked me straight in the eyes. "ah think you've got ma cat." "whattl
"ah lost ma cat a bit since." he cleared his throat. "we used to live at
missdon but ah got a job as ploughman to mr. home of wederly. it was
after we moved to wederly that t'cat went missin'. ah reckon he was
tryin' to find 'is way back to his old home." "wederly? that's on the
other side of brawton--over thirty miles away." "aye, ah knaw, but cats
is funny things." "but what makes you think i've got him?" he twisted
the cap around a bit more. "there's a cousin o' mine lives in darrowby
and ah heard tell from 'im about this cat that goes around to meetin's.
i 'ad to come. we've been huntiw everywhere." "tell me," i said. "this
cat you lost. what did he look like?" "grey and black and sort o'
gingery. right bonny 'e was. and 'e was allus going' out to gatherin's."
a cold hand clutched at my heart. "you'd better come upstairs. bring the
boys with you." helen was putting some coal on the fire of the
bedsitter. "helen," i said. "this is mr.-er-i'm sorry, i don't know your
name." "gibbons, sep gibbons. they called me septimus because ah was the
seventh in family and it looks like alfm going' t'same way 'cause we've
got six already. these are our two youngest." the two boys, obvious
twins of about eight, looked up at us solemnly.

i wished my heart would stop hammering. "mr. gibbons thinks oscar is
his. he lost his cat some time ago." my wife put down her little shovel.
"oh . . . oh . . . i see." she stood very still for a moment then smiled
faintly. "do sit down. oscar's in the kitchen, i'll bring him through."
she went out and reappeared with the cat in her arms. she hadn't got
through the door before- the little boys gavetongue. "tigerl" they
cried. "oh, tiger, tiger!" the man's face seemed lit from within. he
walked quickly across the floor and ran his big work-roughened hand
along the fur. "hullo, awd lad," he said, and turned to me with a
radiant smile. "it's 'im, mr. herriot. it's 'im awright, and don't 'e
look well!" "you call him tiger, eh?" i said. "aye," he replied happily.
"it's them gingery stripes. the kids called 'im that. they were broken
hearted when we lost 'im." as the two little boys rolled on the floor
our oscar rolled with them, pawing playfully, purring with delight. sep
gibbons sat down again. "that's the way 'e allus went on withe family.
they used to play with 'im for hours. by gaw we did miss 'im. he were a
right favourite." i looked at the broken nails on the edge of the cap,
at the decent, honest, uncomplicated yorkshire face so like the many i
had grown to like and respect. farm men like him got thirty shillings a
week in those days and it was reflected in the threadbare jacket, the
cracked, shiny boots and the obvious hand-me-downs of the boys. but all
three were scrubbed and tidy, the man's face like a red beacon, the
children's knees gleaming and their hair carefully slicked across their
foreheads. they looked like nice people to me. i didn't know what to
say. helen said it for me. "well, mr. gibbons." her tone had an
unnatural brightness. "you'd better take him." the man hesitated. "now
then, are ye sure, missis herriot?" "yes ... yes, i'm sure. he was your
cat first." "aye, but some folks 'ud say finders keepers or summat like
that. ali didn't come 'ere to demand 'im back or owl of t'sort."

"i know you didn't, mr. gibbons, but you've had him all those years and
you've searched for him so hard, we couldn't possibly keep him from
you." he nodded quickly. "well, that's right good of ye." he paused for
a moment, his face serious, then he stooped and picked oscar up. "we'll
have to be off if we're going! to catch the eight o'clock bus." helen
reached forward, cupped the cat's head in her hands and looked at him
steadily for a few seconds. then she patted the boys' heads. "you'll
take good care of him, won't yout' "aye, missis, thank ye, we will
that." the two small faces looked up at her and smiled. "i'll see you
down the stairs, mr. gibbons," i said. on the descent i tickled the
furry cheek resting on the man's shoulder and heard for the last time
the rich purring. on the front door step we shook hands and they set off
down the street. as they rounded the comer of trengate they stopped and
waved, and i waved back at the. man, the two children and the cat's head
looking back at me over the shoulder. it was my habit at that time in my
life to mount the stairs two or three at a time but on this occasion i
trailed upwards re an old man, slightly breathless, throat tight, eyes
prickling. i cursed myself for a sentimental fool but as i reached our
door i found a flash of consolation. helen had taken it remarkably well.
she had nursed that cat and grown deeply attached to him, and i'd have
thought an unforeseen calamity like this would have upset her terribly.
but no, she had behaved calmly and rationally. you never knew with
women, but i was thankful. it was up to me to do as well. i adjusted my
features into the semblance of a cheerful smile and marched into the
room. helen had pulled a chair close to the table and was slumped face
down against the wood. one arm cradled her head while the other was
stretched in front of her as her body shook with an utterly abandoned
weeping. i had never seen her like this and i was appalled. i tried to
say something comforting but nothing stemmed the flow of racking sobs.
feeling helpless and inadequate i could only sit close to her and stroke
the back of her head. maybe i could have said something if i hadn't felt
just about as bad myself.

you get over these things in time. after all, we told ourselves, it
wasn't as though oscar had died or got lost again-he had gone to a good
family who would look after him. in fact he had really gone home. and of
course, we still had our much-loved sam, although he didn't help in the
early stages by snifling disconsolately where oscar's bed used to lie
then collapsing on the rug with a long lugubrious sigh. there was one
other thing, too. i had a little notion forming in my mind, an idea
which i would spring on helen when the time was right. it was about a
month after that shattering night and we were coming out of the cinema
at brawton at the end of our half day. i looked at my watch. "only eight
o'clock," i said. "how about going to see oscar?" helen looked at me in
surprise. "you mean-drive on to wederly?" "yes, it's only about five
miles." a smile crept slowly across her face. "that would be lovely. but
do you think they would mind?" "the gibbons? no, i'm sure they wouldn't.
let's go." wederly was a big village and the ploughman's cottage was at
the far end a few yards beyond the methodist chapel. i pushed open the
garden gate and we walked down the path. a busy-looking little woman
answered my knock. she was drying her hands on a striped towel. "mrs.
gibbons?" i said. "aye, that's me." "i'm james herriot-and this is my
wife." her eyes widened uncomprehendingly. clearly the name meant
nothing to her. "we had your cat for a while," i added. suddenly she
grinned and waved her towel at us. "oh aye, ah remember now. sep told me
about you. come in, come inl" the big kitchen-living room was a tableau
of life with six children and thirty shillings a week. battered
furniture, rows of much-mended washing on a pulley, black cooking range
and a general air of chaos. sep got up from his place by the fire, put
down his newspaper, took off a pair of steel-rimmed spectacles and shook
hands. he waved helen to a sagging armchair. "well, it's right nice to
see you. ah've often spoke of ye to t'missis." his wife hung up her
towel. "yes, and i'm glad to meet ye both. i'll get some tea in a
minnit." i she laughed and dragged a bucket of muddy water into a comer.
"i've been washin' football jerseys. them lads just handed them to me
tonight-as if i haven't enough to do." as she ran the water into the
kettle i peeped surreptitiously around me and i noticed helen doing the
same. but we searched in vain. there was no sign of a cat. surely he
couldn't have run away again? with a growing feeling of dismay i
realised that my little scheme could backfire devastatingly. it wasn't
until the tea had been made and poured that i dared to raise the
subject. "how-" i asked diffidently. "how is-er-tiger?" "oh, he's
grand," the little woman replied briskly. she glanced up at the clock on
the mantelpiece. "he should be back any time now, then you'll be able to
see 'im." as she spoke, sep raised a finger. "ah think ah can hear'im.
now." he walked over and opened the door and our oscar strode in with
all his old grace and majesty. he took one look at helen and leaped on
to her lap. with a cry of delight she put down her cup and stroked the
beautiful fur as the cat arched himself against her hand and the
familiar purr echoed round the room. "he knows me," she murmured. "he
knows me." sep nodded and smiled. "he does that. you were good to 'im.
he'll never forget ye, and we won't either, will we, mother?" "no, we
won't, mrs. herriot," his wife said as she applied butter to a slice of
gingerbread. "that was a kind thing ye did for us and i 'ope you'll come
and see us all whenever you're near." "well, thank you," i said. "we'd
love to-we're often in brawton."

i went over and tickled oscar's chin, then i turned again to mrs.
gibbons. "by the way, it's after nine o'clock. where has he been till
now?" she poised her butter knife and looked into space. "let's see,
now," she said. "it's thursday, isn't it? ah yes, it's 'is night for the
yoga class." chapter 48.

i knew it was the end of the chapter when i slammed the carriage door
behind me and squeezed into a seat between a fat waaf and a sleeping
corporal. i suppose i was an entirely typical discharged serviceman.
they had taken away my blue uniform and fitted me with a "demob suit," a
ghastly garment of stiff brown serge with purple stripes which made me
look like an old-time gangster, but they had allowed me to retain my raf
shirt and tie and the shiny boots which were like old friends. my few
belongings, including black's veterinary dictionary, lay in the rack
above in a small cardboard suitcase of a type very popular among the
lower ranks of the services. they were all i possessed and i could have
done with a coat because it was cold in the train and a long journey
stretched between eastchurch and darrowby. it took an age to chug and
jolt as far as london then there was a lengthy wait before i boarded the
train for the north. it was about midnight when we set off, and for
seven hours i sat there in the freezing darkness, feet numb, teeth
chattering. the last lap was by bus and it was the same rattling little
vehicle that had carried me to my first job those years ago. the driver
was the same too, and the time between seemed to melt away as the fells
began to rise again from the blue distance in the early light and i saw
the familiar farmhouses, the walls creeping up the grassy slopes, the
fringe of trees by the river's edge. it was mid morning when we rumbled
into the market place and i read "darrowby cooperative society" above
the shop on the far side. the sun was high, warming the tiles of the
fretted line of roofs with their swelling green background of hills. i got out and the bus went on its way,
leaving me standing by my case. and it was just the same as before. the
sweet air, the silence and the cobbled square deserted except for the
old men sitting around the clock tower. one of them looked up at me.
"now then, mr. herriot," he said quietly as though he had seen me only
yesterday. before me trengate curved away till it disappeared round the
grocer's shop on the comer. most of the quiet street with the church at
its foot was beyond my view and it was a long time since i had been down
there, but with my eyes closed i could see skeldale house with the ivy
climbing over the old brick walls to the little rooms under the eaves.
that was where i would have to make another start; where i would find
out how much i had forgotten, whether i was fit to be an animal doctor
again. but i wouldn't go along there yet, not just yet.... a lot had
happened since that first day when i arrived in darrowby in search of a
job but it came to me suddenly that my circumstances hadn't changed
much. all i had possessed then was an old case and the suit i stood in
and it was about the same now. except for one great and wonderful thing.
i had helen and jimmy. that made all the difference. i had no money, not
even a house to call my own, but any roof that covered my wife and son
was personal and special. sam would be with them, too, waiting for me.
they were outside the town and it was a fair walk from here, but i
looked down at the blunt toes of my boots sticking from the purple
striped trousers. the raf hadn't only taught me to fly, they had taught
me to march, and a few miles didn't bother me. i took a fresh grip on my
cardboard case, turned towards the exit from the square and set off,
left-right, left-right, left-right on the road for home. about the
author james herriot is still a practicing veterinary surgeon. he grew
up in scotland and went to glasgow veterinary college. after qualifying,
he went to work in the yorkshire dales of northern england. except for
wartime service in the r.a.f. he has never left yorkshire, and still
works with siegfried and tristan farnon, the colorful characters in his
books. outside his work, his interests are music, football and
dog-walking.

few authors have captivated readers throughout the world as james
herriot has. the quiet yorkshire vet burst on the scene in 1972 with
what became america's number one bestseller, all creatures great and
small. his two succeeding books, all things bright and beautiful and all
things wise and wonderful, have also become number one bestsellers. in
all three books-with a simple, direct and engaging manner-herriot tells
tales of the people, the animals and his life on the rolling farmlands
of northern england. each book reflects his daily life, filled with
challenges and yet met with blood, sweat and engaging humor. his
storytelling skill may only be excelled by his appealing barnyard manner
with animals of all kinds and sizes-an ark-full of delights ranging from
thoroughbred race horses to mongrel kittens. all creatures great and
small is the warm account of herriot's first two years as a young
veterinary surgeon in the yorkshire hills in the late 1930s. all things
bright and beautiful covers the period from herriot's marriage until his
entrance into the service during world war 11. all things wise and
wonderful deals with life in the service and past remembrances. each
book offers a magic change of pace and a mastery of both the comic and
the tragic. whether sad or glad, each story shows his deep affection for
animals and people. the reader comes away from a herriot book happier,
more sensitized to everyday drama, more sympathetic to fellow creatures
than he or she was before. each book is a celebration of life. all three
herriot books are bantam books, available wherever paperbacks are sold.
