I generally finished my shift at the theatre some time
between 12.30 and 1am, and the ten
minute walk home was usually very quiet because it fell in the lull between the
closing of the pubs, theatres, concert halls and cinemas, and the later rush
that happened when the nightclubs and casinos finished. And so it was that
night.
The first part of the route home was a two hundred yard walk
downhill on the main road, before crossing over and turning right into Victoria
Street on which I lived. There were no vehicles or
any pedestrians to disturb the peace until I approached the end of my street,
at which point I saw two men walking uphill on the other side of the road and
approaching the same junction.
Their staggering walk indicated they were drunk, which
irritated me a bit because drunks have a habit of doing irritating things –
like barging into you and throwing up without warning! I hoped they would cross
the end of Victoria Street
and continue uphill so I wouldn’t have to get too close to them. One of them
did, but the other turned left – which meant I would be following him once I
turned into the same street. I crossed the road, came around the end of a high
wall, and turned into Victoria Street,
expecting the drunk to be a few yards ahead of me.
There was no drunk. Instead, in just about exactly the spot
where I expected him to be, there was a big dog. At least, it looked vaguely
like a dog, but unlike any dog I’d ever seen. It was about the height of a
German Shepherd and looked something similar to that breed, except that it had
a substantially broader head and shoulders. I confess to thinking that it looked
like something not of this world, and it was standing in the middle of the
pavement, facing me and staring coldly into my eyes. Apart from the two of us,
the street was deserted.
I stopped for a moment and considered the facts. The timing
of events and the layout of the properties precluded any possibility of the drunken
man having entered a house, and there was nowhere else he could have gone
either. I looked at the dog again, which was still blocking my way and fixing
me with that devilish stare. What was there to do except take the risk and walk
around it? There was no way of escaping the beast had it wanted to attack, and
it was showing no obvious signs of aggression anyway. It looked very spooky, but
not necessarily vicious, so walk past I did. It walked alongside me all the way
home, occasionally nudging my leg with its outsize head. When I reached my
front door I pointed along the street, said ‘go home now,’ and it trotted away
quite happily.
I wondered later whether the two men I’d seen approaching
the junction were not two men at all, but one man and a dog. I threw the idea
out. The road is well lit, and the dog wouldn’t have been the height of a man
even if it had been standing on its hind legs. Besides, I’d seen the second man
turn left and walk into Victoria Street.
Could I really have mistaken a dog for a man on a well lit urban street and at
a distance of less than a hundred feet? I hardly think so. I wasn’t tired and
hadn’t had a drink. So where had the second man gone?
As for the dog, all I can say is that I lived on that street
for nearly ten years and it was the only one I ever saw loose. I’d never seen
it before and I never saw it again. And it was certainly the oddest looking dog
I’ve ever seen. In fact, the memory of it stayed with me and I had it vaguely
in mind when I described the demon in the wood in Odyssey. And isn’t it a bit strange that it should have been
standing on the very spot where the drunken man should have been? So, as the
station master in The Ghost Train
famously said:
‘If it be a natural thing, where do it come from, where do
it go?’
4 comments:
a nice read you have here!
Thank you, John. Nice dog you have there.
I've been thinking about the story to reply to your email with and whether or not i should share that particular one. After reading this i think i will.
Share any story you like, Andrea. I'm very open minded about that sort of thing. 'There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.'
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