The Other Tadzio
Sydney Harth
Sophie brought back a beautiful dog from her months in eastern Europe, a Polish Owczarek Nizinny Sheepdog, and she had papers to
prove it. Not everybody, even among dog
people, had even heard of such an animal, and among the few who had, most would live and
die without ever seeing an example of the first native Polish breed recognized in America.
Cold often lonely months Sophie had spent in the east, months of trying to teach
Chaucer and middle English to students who wanted to read William Burroughs and the Beat
poets, months when she was always at least slightly hungry and never could count on an
adequate supply of toilet paper. And her
small triumph, bringing back a Polish Owczarek Nizinny Sheepdog puppy, known to those with
small linguistic gifts as a PONS, she did not accomplish easily. As if tearing him loose from Poland had not been
hard enough, his crate somehow failed to turn up at the Dane county airport with her other
luggage. It had been at Kennedy all right. She had seen it there, but when she changed planes
in Chicago, her dog, named Tadzio, apparently did not.
Selma met her at the airport and said of her loss, "You must be out of your
mind. Bringing a dog all the way from
Poland. And why would you want a PONS? I suppose this country doesn't have enough breeds
to pick from? And where do you plan to keep
an unlikely dog likle that? You never did
have the most ordinary common sense"
Sophie answered with dignity, "He isn't unlikely in Poland, although he will
be rare in Wisconsin. And don't call him a
PONS. He's a Polish Owczarek Nizinny
Sheepdog, and I plan to keep him in the house. I'd
hardly bring a dog this far and then put him out in the kennel."
"He'll upset the other inside dogs, or is that your plan? And why a PONS?
They look enough like beardies to confuse potential customers," Selma said. She
had some reputation as a breeder of bearded collies, and she kept inside the house the two
or three she planned to show that year. Also
inside were a feisty Yorkie by the name of Bridget who yapped her way into precious
moments of silence with intemperate displays of jealousy, or so Sophie often complained
without winning much sympathy from Selma, and Sophie's Magic, a vaguely pretty chocolate
lab whom Sophie felt worth breeding and Selma did not.
"Tadzio won't be able to upset anyone if they don't find him," Sophie
said, her red tired eyes filling with tears. It
had been a long trip from Krakow, and she had suffered nausea most of the way. The thought of the firm lump-free mattresses at
home made a few of those tears roll down her face. To
lie in her own bed again would be heaven, even with Bridget yelping hysterically at the
foot, Magic lolling in the middle, and Selma at her most demanding.
Selma put a large awkward arm around her shoulder and gave her a quick hug. Sophie's small tense body relaxed a bit. Selma had always objected to public displays of
affection, even the simplest hand-squeeze. "She
did miss me, and she's more worried than she's admitting," Sophie thought. The hard work in their relationship fell to her,
and she only saved herself from complete domination by Selma with her threat to leave and
have a baby as soon as her career turned a satisfactory corner. That threat, Selma always took seriously, in spite
of the love she knew they shared.
Sophie's petite figure and perky little face regularly attracted men, and to keep
her from drawing too close to any of them, Selma asserted that Sophie would have no reason
to leave if she became pregnant. She swore
she wanted nothing more than to have a hand in raising Sophie's baby. She had always wanted a baby herself, had thought
seriously about having one, but she passed the forty mark without implementing the idea. Sophie's baby would fulfill a need in both of
them.
They sometimes discussed the genetic credentials any man should have to father
their baby. Intellectual moral and physical
credentials were as many as Sophie's problems with any chosen man. Would she have to date an eligible
father-candidate more than once, Sophie wondered? Experience
in college had taught a fair number of men bummed her the second time around. One meeting would have to be enough, she said,
unless the man had a truly remarkable collection of qualities. Someone who looked like Cary Grant, for starters. He appealed to her in his old movies, and Selma
agreed that a man in that mold might do, although she did hope the baby would have
Sophie's tiny tip-tilted nose.
Sophie kept saying she could easily find the man she needed, once she decided the
time had come to need him. Selma asserted
that she, certainly, had never met such a person, and that the men Sophie brought out to
the kennels from time to time obviously did not meet any Cary Grant standard. Nor did that vet visiting from Poland, whom
Sophie had met at the university. He did not
know an ear infection from epilepsy and was overweight on top of it. Sophie was not as hard to please as her
friend, but she did worry that, once she found an appropriate man, he might balk at having
sex for her reasons. She had once--early on
when she was still in graduate school--given a suitable fellow student an honest
explanation for inviting him into her bed. She
also had offered, when he still seemed a bit hesitant, a generous honorarium, but he had
called her offer insulting, refusing flatly. Absurd
and hypocritical behavior, she found that. Women
were supposed to feel flattered when a man wanted to have sex just because he was feeling
sexy. She had given a much better reason, and
did not agree to apologize as the man demanded. She
resolved to tell less of the truth to the next man, although she would draw the line at
chattering about love the way some men did, with nothing more than sex on their minds. She did not think it necessary to chatter with
Oswald, the visiting vet, now home in Krakow.
He sometimes had found toilet paper for her, and she had almost loved
him during the coldest part of the winter, but she did not say so. Nor did she tell him that according to the
simplistic testing available in Krakow, when she left, she was seven weeks along.
The man in the blue airlines uniform had a strong chin and a beautiful mustache,
Sophie noted. She interrupted Selma's account
of a mysterious rash on some of the beardies, which required her to put them all on lamb
and rice which was costing a fortune, when he returned to his post, and she rushed up to
ask him if he had any news of her missing puppy.
He greeted her with a smile, proud of himself, and told her not to worry her little
head further. The puppy was in Chicago. Too bad no more planes were coming from there that
evening--Sophie had arrived on the last--but she would have her puppy in her arms by
six-thirty the following morning. She told
the smiling man she could arrange to drive down to Chicago and collect the pup that night,
but he doubted if she could locate him at midnight, and it would be that or later by the
time she arrived. Selma's frown told her to
stop talking nonsense, and Sophie was too tired to fight.
"I don't see why they couldn't have put my Polish Owczarek Nizinny Sheepdog on
the right plane," she said to the man in some irritation. He
smiled again, his blandness unmoving, and told her that workers had found her pup
wandering around the field. He had thrown
himself against his crate walls, and his flimsy box had fallen apart. No one on the field had had a minute to fix it up
and put it on the right plane. The man said,
"We're talking, aren't we, about a shaggy black and white puppy with a bob tail? One of the guys at O'Hare--a guy who knows a lot
about dogs they told me--is taking care of your puppy overnight, and will put him on the
first plane tomorrow. Comes in at 6.30,
usually right on time. You won't be up to
much before the crack of dawn anyway, will you?."
"Of course not. Come on Sophie,
you know the dog's all right, and there's nothing more you can do at the moment,"
Selma said. Sophie, reeling with fatigue,
agreed. Tomorrow morning at six-thirty, Selma
would be busy with kennel chores, and she could fetch her pup by herself. She sensed that this short interval alone with
Tadzio would be the last one in which she could enjoy him freely. Selma, once she saw him, would start belittling
him, calling him an inferior PONS, and her a fool for bringing him all the way home.
Through a window at the airport, the next morning, she saw a young man unload from
the first flight a dog crate, which she recognized as her own, although pieced together
with bits of unmatched wire. She had thought,
back in Krakow, that this rickety box might collapse once it had a healthy dog inside, and
so she had told Oswald, but she admitted this prior weakness to no one, not even Selma. The man with the nice mustache yesterday had
thought the airline might offer her some compensation for the crate, and she could accept
what the airline had to give, not because the wreck had ever been worth anything, but
because the airline clearly owed her for the anguish it had caused her.
She remembered Oswald's confidence in the crate when he sold it to her (for no more
than he paid, he assured her), and how he had called it,
"built for the ages." She
shook her head sadly, remembering Oswald's satiric smile and gentle hands. Oswald had been her comfort in those Krakow
months, and it had been fair to buy Tadzio from him to make up for refusing to marry him
to help him obtain an American visa. She kept
the issue from arising again by not even hinting to him about her pregnancy.
The battered box emerged from the black hole and began to circle unsteadily with
the other luggage. A dignified looking
gentleman helped her grab the clumsy load before it sailed back into the darkness from
which it had come. A puppy slept inside the
crate, and she sighed with relief.
She realized, an instant later, that this softly curled animal was not Tadzio. He was pale, almost white, but with light beige
shadings, like a saltine. He was a yellow lab
with a perfectly shaped head and those appealing dark eyes that look like they have
eyeliner sketched around them. An enchanting
puppy. About three months old. Tadzio's age.
She had been sorry when Selma stopped breeding labs, had even tried, without
success, to bring her back to them by actively seeking a partner for Magic.
"Labs are so suburban. People do
buy them, and they're useful if you're looking for quick profit, but now that I've paid
for the kennel renovation, I don't need labs any more.
Beardies are much more interesting. They
also bring in twice as much for the effort, and their breeders don't have to deal with
macho men or whining housewives," Selma had said.
She advised her house mate to finish writing her dissertation and leave kennel
decisions to her. Sophie did finish that job
the following year, but Selma, by then, had dug so deep into beardies, Sophie had seen no
point in bringing up labs again.
Selma respected Sophie's natural abilities with dogs and claimed she had enlarged
them by teaching her all she knew. To the
extent that an academic career left Sophie any time, Selma said her talents might have
practical use applied to a breed like bearded collies, but would be wasted on easy-going
labs. Sophie had bought the Polish Owczarek
Nizinny Sheepdog not only because Oswald desperately needed the money, but to try her luck with a breed notoriously more difficult to train
than labs, or even beardies.
Well bred labs were so eager to please, training them took no special gift, Selma
said, but the Polish Owczarek Nizinny Sheepdog was clever and self-willed, the way
beardies often were, only worse. Sophie's aim
was to have Tadzio win some titles, in conformation and obedience, at big dog shows. This achievement would establish her as a trainer
in her own right, and expert trainers were making pots of money. She might even take Tadzio back to Krakow, mate
him with Oswald's lovely bitch, and become a breeder at last. She was tired of LTE pickings at universities
where no one valued her as a Chaucerian. Once
people realized she was a first-class trainer, Selma would have to stop pretending she was
just "helping out a little," at the kennels and would have to pay her what she
was worth. Maybe take her into a
partnership, before some other kennel did.
Sophie's plans all depended on her
having Tadzio in hand.
She ran to the airline company's counter, the large crate flopping against her leg,
her inner voice telling her not to show hysteria even if she felt it. Some absurd mistake had been made in Chicago, and
now the smiling man with the mustache would undo it.
The way Cary Grant always did.
"This is not my dog," she said, not too loudly, to the person behind the
counter, not the mustached man in the blue uniform, as it happened. A grinning young woman, in a blue skirt and white
blouse--not official looking at all--stood in his place.
She said pleasantly, "He's not my dog either, but isn't he cute? I've always wanted a darling puppy like
this."
"You don't see the problem. This
is my crate bu someone has put some other dog in it.
My valuable Polish Owczarek Nizinny Sheepdog, whom I brought from Krakow, has
vanished, and all I have in exchage is some lab without papers," Sophie said, her
eyes shooting the fury her voice controlled.
"That beat up crate made it here from Krakow?" the woman said.
Sophie stared wordlessly at the unofficial looking woman who did not realize what
had happened and would not have cared in any case. Where
was Cary Grant? Why was her luck always bad? Any teaching job anywhere--on the moon--she would
have taken rather than hose down kennels for Selma year after year, but why had she been
so thrilled with that crappy job in Krakow? Why
had she let Oswald talk her into buying a sly stupid puppy who would not learn the
simplest commands in Polish or English? Its
stubbornness, combined with its looks, had reminded her so insistently of Selma's beardies
that the vacation from Selma, the one she had needed to preserve her sanity, her year in
Krakow had not given her.
"Tadzio, come," she said four months after her traumatic arrival. She held up a small dog treat, and the charming
little biscuit colored lab cocked one deeply outlined eye, and ambled over to to receive
his reward from her. She hugged him happily
but rather clumsily because she had gained so much weight so fast. "Oh what a good Tadzio. What a wonderful Tadzio," she cried out. He slid from her embrace and ran to a corner where
he had left a toy.
Selma burst into the training area
waving a paper. "Greta found your dog. Didn't I say she would? She's one of the best PI's in the business.
Im sure she is, but it cant be too hard to trace a dog with an
identifying tattoo.
"HHHHed taken off, and
Greta traced him to Kansas City. The police
impounded him, and he's at the Humane Society there.
Once I found your PONSs tattoo number among with those leftover
travelers checks I took to the bank for you, I knew it wouldnt be long. We can
go get him tonight." Selma said.
"You only want to be with your
friend Greta.
"You're no one to talk, and you six months pregnant.
I dont think I mentioned that I found a tattoo on my little Tadzio. The airport guy said switching dogs was all an
accident, and he sent me Tadzios papers when I sent him his reasonable price. He said he didnt get much for the other
Tadzio either. Sold him as a beardie. He must have run away.
Selma gaped at Sophie, her inability to grasp the significance of these remarks as
palpable as the sensible shoes she wore.
You cant imagine the
prices purebred Labs go for in Krakow. So
western and all. And now that Oswalds a
professor in the Vet school there, once Tadzio and Magic have a litter, well do just
fine.
You
can keep the other Tadzio, if you like, which will cover the expense of driving to Kansas
City, and a nice celebration with your friend Greta.
Better start calling him
lets see
Jerzy. Yes. Jerzy. Cant have two Tadzios in one kennel, even
for the three or four months I plan to stay because its safer all around to have my
baby here.
She turned to the little lab who had been listening carefully and threw a tennis
ball she held. Tadzio, bring it
here, she said.
He caught it on the fly and brought
it to her as she had taught him to do.
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