Posts tagged ‘dog’

05/24/2013

Actaeon

by Pierce Nahigyan

Do we chase? Are we not born to chase? We have four legs, while the man has two. The man has arms, to carry the bow, and shoot the bow; the man has arms to hold the spear, and throw the spear; the man has arms to hold and caress, pet and offer; the man has arms to love, so we are born to chase, that he love us.

Do we kill? Are we not born to kill? Man and dog are born to kill. Man raises his dogs to kill. We kill for love.

And we kill because we are hungry.

We heard the man’s voice, like a frightened man, in the wilderness, where the shades become grottoes and trees forced apart rocks, where sun spilt on shallow pools bathing maidens used in virtue. He had never been a frightened man. Did we chase? Of course we chased. We lunged snapping at the shades, poked our noses into grottos, smelled him, tasted his spoor on trampled ferns and living leaves, ran. We chased. We chased the smell of fear the way he’d have us do, our voices rising over the shriek of birds, their scattering forms splitting the sunlight. Were we not born for this, his chase, his need for us?

And on four legs galloped the stag, strong, tall. On its lathered haunches rose the smell of the man, the frightened man, and we snapped. We barked. We roared like Cerberus divided, hearts beating with love, bloody love.

Were we not born to kill? We tore the stag apart. It went down, our teeth embedded in its fetlocks, my teeth deep in its throat. It moaned at us. Fear we smelled and, pervading it, pride. Were we not bred as his own, children of the man, loved by the man, the pride of the man, a pride unto ourselves? We chased, and we killed. We licked our muzzles clean of the deer’s blood and bent our noses to the forest floor. Where was Actaeon? His scent ended in our jaws.

As one we howled. We are doomed to howl.

05/20/2013

Acrylic

by Pierce Nahigyan

When Uncle Davis passed away, we hung his hunting rifle in the parlor. We put up a shelf for his pipe and his spectacles. Together, the artifacts composed a triptych of our departed uncle. The fine smells, the mounted elk heads, his Sunday morning crossword, all things he carried with him on his person, were his remains, a fond tribute after his inevitable passing. Aunt Tabby is a solid woman but my mother keeps circling the parlor asking what’s to be done about her. She says we cannot hang her television remote or her novelty ash tray or her acrylic nails on the wall. People would say things. I ask her if people don’t say things about keeping Uncle Davis in a separate room entirely, but she says her brother makes a much better coatrack than he does a table.

Until the dog goes, Aunt Tabby will have to remain where she is. If my mother wants to quibble with our taxidermy she’s more than welcome to, but in the future she better plan her accessories first. Dad’s fishing pole was a fine relic after he passed out of the parlor, and the curl of his fingers made for a perfect umbrella stand. That’s how you plan ahead. If she wanted classier mementos for Aunt Tabby, we could have moved her to the garage weeks ago. We need a new step ladder. But we can’t get her in there until we have something suitable for the wall, next to grandpa’s knife and grandma’s snuff box. We respect the dead in this house, my mother says, and reminds me to use a coaster for my drink.

03/25/2013

Acolyte

by Pierce Nahigyan

Joining the cult had been a bad idea. Ryan realized that only some months after the fact, and some months more after the incident that had driven him into the salty, saffron-hued robes. He had been two months behind on rent, jobless, his dog had died chasing his cat into the street, the cat was long gone, he hadn’t been intimate with a woman since the last president was in office, and he found out – and this was more just icing on the cake and not so awful in and of itself, more an annoying epilogue to a bad, bad season – that he was allergic to peas. Very allergic to peas. Very suddenly. As if God, or whoever was running the universe, had mishandled his dietary prescription until his late twenties; only then was his paperwork sorted out and his lethal reaction to that small emerald vegetable certified. A pop-up on the internet had led him to the cult, promising to take care of his earthly worries for the sake of enlightenment. Rash, even risky, but Ryan had very little to lose.

The cult had done what it promised. After signing some documents in blood, they paid his rent, got him a job working in their downtown office, and introduced him to a cute, petite girl in accounts-receivable who was a little lonely, a little messy, and low maintenance. They dated for four weeks until it became serious, and he liked that. They had found each other as acolytes to the shining cause of human redemption, two human beings in a dense urban landscape, preaching their way to personal improvement and the general welfare of their fellow men.

It was only when Cindy and he were engaged to be married that he was reminded by his pastor of his sacred duty. And having failed to read the fine print on his bloody documents until that cryptic suggestion, Ryan was surprised to discover, in one of several plain clauses inside his contract, written to negate any alternative interpretation, the stipulation that he donate his brain to his personal cephalopod (given to each acolyte upon entering the cult, to serve as their aquatic avatar). Ryan and Cindy were to transcend frail human flesh and live on in the massive aquarium the cult operated near the harbor. The donation (i.e. surgery) was to take place the night before his wedding.

The odder aspects of the cult had never frightened him. He didn’t mind keeping a schedule that prevented him from going out during the day; he and Cindy worked the same schedule and enjoyed midnight movies. The tending of his personal squid was a fair replacement for his lost dog and cat. He did miss his relationship with his family, but it was necessary to sever all communication with non-members to further his personal rejuvenation. Ryan did feel, however, that it was in his best interest not to let the pastors try to squeeze his brain and upper spinal cord into his squid. He didn’t really see where it would fit (it was not a very big squid).

Ryan confronted Cindy about this, but she was enthusiastic. It made sense to her. She told him not to worry, that he was just getting cold feet, and after they were in their new bodies everything would be perfect and enlightened.

The night before the operation, Ryan told everyone the wedding was off. Cindy was devastated. The pastors were disappointed.

The squids, in their tanks, shrugged their tentacles and returned to knitting more saffron robes. Transcendence was not for everyone.

02/25/2013

Acicular

by Pierce Nahigyan

He waited for it under the ferns. Marissa thought he was napping, but he was wide awake. This time there would be no retreat for it.

He pawed at a millipede that marched blindly out from under a rock and down a tiny embankment. When he rolled it over it curled up in a ball and played dead. He sniffed at it, licked it. He tried to eat it twice but it just rolled off his tongue.

It was nearing dark when he saw movement at the perimeter. Between the fence and where Marissa had planted her tomatoes, its tiny black nose peeked over the wooden planter. He barked at it and scampered out of the ferns.

“Mugsy!” Marissa shouted.

The porcupine snorted. It dropped the tomato and ran back to the fence. He thought the rotted wood would catch on the little monster’s acicular mane but it slid underneath it with no trouble at all. Mugsy slammed into it and fell over, his legs still pumping when he flopped on his side. Marissa was screaming at him and he was barking and the porcupine made its own repulsive sound and waddled off into the shadows.

He tried with all his might to claw his way to the other side but Marissa was already running at him with the water bottle and pulling the trigger. He bit at the stream of water that fired at him and jerked away from it, snapping and dancing as she told him to get inside. He tried to slink under the stream but she lowered it and soaked his tail. He curled it between his legs and loped to the patio.

12/21/2012

Accouter

by Pierce Nahigyan

Tentative, Mugsy dug his paw into the shallow divot. He pressed his wet nose inside. The earth trickled in after him, after every hungry snootful. The hideyhole was suffused with the smell of the moldy biscuit, but it was not there. He snorted. A throaty growl bubbled up from him and inside the house Marissa called his name and shouted no. He snuffled and looked up at her washing dishes in the kitchen window.

Mugsy let the smell guide him. The biscuit had been dragged over the yard, back through the fence into the trees that bordered the swingset. He stumbled a little as he stepped into the hideyhole. He didn’t let it bother him. He was on the trail, head bent low after the truant treat. His jowls wobbling, tail wagging, he plunged into the trees, midway between two wood slats where Billy had kicked in the fence. Marissa yelled at his buttocks.

“Get out of there, Mugs!”

He could smell it. He could smell the biscuit. Its moldy fragrance cried out to him like an oratorio, not far, not far at all. He scrabbled in the low green branches of the firs, his legs behind him kicking dirt into the swingset. Marissa yelled again but he squeezed onward.

He snapped a branch and came face to face with it. A squat porcupine, accoutered in a shell of pale quills, held his biscuit in its claws. At the sight of him its beady eyes bugged like mud blisters.

He barked at it. It grasped the biscuit tightly and waddled back against the tree. It oinked, or hissed, or whatever stupid noise porcupines made. He barked at it again. He thrust his body forward, paws outstretched, jaws open, teeth slavered in froth – and felt Marissa’s thick arms encircle his waist. His paws dragged in the dirt and he was lifted backwards into the backyard.

“Mugsy!” the woman shouted, “Mugsy, you bad boy! You get back in here.”

His tail went limp as he was pulled back through the branches. The porcupine oinked and slobbered over his biscuit. Mugsy growled, and Marissa swatted him on his haunch.

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