Tommy and the Talking Dog

Lewis Shiner
Talking Dog

By Lewis Shiner
Distributed under Creative Commons license. Some rights reserved.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/
"If you can answer three questions," the dog said, "you can wear the
magic shoes."
Tommy looked up and down the deserted street. "Did you ... say
something?"
"That's right. Didn't you hear me?" It was a gruff voice, with just a
trace of an English accent, and it was definitely coming out of the dog.
"You're a dog." In fact it was a huge, fat bulldog, with big flaps of skin
hanging off the sides of its face. From where it sat, on the front steps of
the abandoned motel, it looked Tommy straight in the eye.
"That's correct," the dog said.
Tommy stared hard at the dusty windows of the motel office. "This is a
trick, right? There's a TV camera back there and you want to make me
look stupid."
"No tricks, Tommy. Just three questions."
"C'mon," Tommy said. He deepened his voice. "Sit up." The dog stared
at him. "Roll over. Play dead."
"Cut the crap, Tommy. Do you want the shoes or not?"

"Let me see 'em."
The dog shifted its weight to one side, revealing a battered pair of red
Converse All-Stars. "Yuck," Tommy said. "Those are gross."
"Maybe," the dog said, "but they're magic."
"What are the questions?"
"Which of the following presidents died in office? Lincoln, McKinley,
F.D.R.?"
"C'mon. They all did. That's the same dumb question they use when
they're trying to sell you a free portrait on the telephone."
"Which weighs more, a pound of feathers or a pound of lead?"
"They both weigh a pound. This is stupid. Next you're going to ask me
who's buried in Grant's Tomb."
The dog narrowed its eyes. "Have you done this before?"
"Ulysses S. Grant," Tommy said. "Lemme see the shoes."
They were just his size and felt pretty good, even though they were
scuffed up and the metal things were gone out of the side vents. "I don't
feel any different," Tommy said.
"You need the shoes to look for the treasure," the dog said.
"What treasure?"
"When you're wearing the shoes, you can open the doors of the motel
rooms."
"Uh uh. No, sir. My parents told me not to go in there. Besides, they're
all empty anyway."
The dog shrugged. Tommy had never seen a dog shrug before. "Suit

yourself," the dog said.
"Hey, wait a minute. Tell me about this treasure."
"You have to find that for yourself." The dog started to walk away.
"Hey!" Tommy said. "Come back here!"
The dog kept on walking.
Tommy flexed his toes inside the shoes. Magic. He looked at the row
of motel rooms, their dusty tan walls almost golden in the late May
afternoon. He would already be in trouble if his folks knew he was
hanging around the place.
He went to the first door and opened it.
Inside a woman sat in a chair, watching TV. Tommy felt a hot flush go
up his face. "Jeez, I'm sorry," he said. "I didn't think there was anybody
here."
"It's okay, Tommy," the woman said. "Come on in."
Tommy took another step into the room. "You know me?"
"Sure," the woman said. "You're wearing the shoes." She was a little
older than his mother, and very fat. An open Whitman Sampler box sat
by her thick right arm.
"Who are you?" Tommy asked.
"Nobody. Just a mother." The room was bigger inside than out and
didn't look like a motel. There was a playpen in one dark corner with
two kids in it. One of them hit the other with a plastic rattle. A third kid
crawled around on the floor, dragging a blanket. The place smelled bad,
like sour milk and old coffee and the bathroom at school.
A man's voice on the TV said, "Susan's going to have my baby."

"What are you watching?" Tommy asked politely.
"Nothing. Just a show."
The kid who was getting hit started to whimper. The woman put a
chocolate into her mouth with a quick, almost guilty snap of the wrist.
"Well," Tommy said. He felt the way he did when he'd been looking
forward to going swimming and it rained. "I have to go."
"Shhh," the woman said. "This is the good part." Tommy went out
quietly and closed the door. He wondered what the dog had expected
him to find. He went to the next room and knocked gently.
"Come on," said a big male voice.
Tommy opened the door and found himself in front of a long wooden
desk. Behind the man at the desk was a window with narrow blinds,
slanted to let the sun in. It made it hard to see the man's face.
"Tommy!" the man said. "Come right on in!" He stood up
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