Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Vet in Harness

    Page 23
    Prev Next

    in a corner and Will would have moved among them and caught their noses

      in his powerful fingers.

      They were thoroughly upset. They had been peacefully chewing the cud or

      having a mouthful of hay from the rack but now, goaded by the teasing

      rope, were charging around like racehorses. Will and I watched in

      growing despair as Mr Wiggin for once managed to get a loop round one of

      them, but it was too wide and slipped down and round the body. The

      bullock shook it off with an angry bellow then went off at full gallop,

      bucking and kicking. I looked at the throng of frenzied creatures

      milling past; it was getting more like a rodeo every minute.

      And it was a disastrous start to the afternoon. I had seen a couple of

      dogs at the surgery after lunch and it had been nearly two thirty when I

      set out. It was now nearly four o'clock and I hadn't done a thing.

      And I don't think I ever would have if fate hadn't stepped in. By an

      amazing fluke Mr Wiggin cast his loop squarely over the horns of a

      shaggy projectile as it thundered past him, the rope tightened on the

      neck and Mr Wiggin on the other end flew gracefully through the air for

      about twenty feet till he crashed into a wooden feeding trough.

      We rushed to him and helped him to his feet. Badly shaken but uninjured

      he looked at us.

      "Doggone, I jest couldn't hold the blame thing,' he murmured. "Reckon

      I'd better sit down in the house for a while. You'll have to catch that

      pesky lot yourselves.'

      Back in the barn, Will whispered to me, "By gaw it's an ill wind,

      guvnor. We can get on now. And maybe it'll make 'im forget that bloody

      lasso for a bit.'

      The bullocks were too excited to be caught by the nose but instead Will

      treated me to an exhibition of roping, Yorkshire style. Like many of the

      local stocksmen he was an expert with a halter and it fascinated me to

      see him dropping it on the head of a moving animal so that one loop fell

      behind the ears and the other snared the nose.

      J w ~ C~ &/` ~ ~1 I`GJJ With a gush of relief I pulled the syringe and

      bottle of vaccine from my pocket and had the whole batch inoculated

      within twenty minutes.

      Driving off I glanced at my watch and my pulse quickened as I saw it was

      a quarter to five. The afternoon had almost slipped away and there were

      still two more calls. But I had till seven o'clock and surely I wouldn't

      come across any more Mr Wiggin's. And as the stone walls flipped past I

      ruminated again on that mysterious little man. Had he once been a

      genuine cowboy or was the whole thing fantasy?

      I recalled that one Thursday evening Helen and I were leaving the

      Brawton cinema where we usually finished our half day; the picture had

      been a Western and just before leaving the dark interior I glanced along

      the back row and right at the far end I saw Mr Wiggin all on his own,

      huddled in the corner and looking strangely furtive.

      Ever since then I have wondered ... Five o'clock saw me hurrying into

      the smaliholding belonging to the Misses Dunn. Their pig had cut its

      neck on a nail and my previous experience of this establishment

      suggested that it wouldn't be anything very serious.

      These two maiden ladies farmed a few acres just outside Dollingsford

      village. They were objects of interest because they did most of the work

      themselves and in the process they lavished such affection on their

      livestock that they had become like domestic pets. The little byre held

      four cows and whenever I had to examine one of them I could feel the

      rough tongue of her neighbour licking at my back; their few sheep ran up

      to people in the fields and sniffed round their legs like dogs; calves

      sucked at your fingers, an ancient pony wandered around wearing a benign

      expression and nuzzling anyone within reach. The only exception among

      the amiable colony was the pig, Prudence, who was thoroughly spoiled.

      I looked at her now as she nosed around the straw in her pen. She was a

      vast sow and the four-inch laceration in her neck muscles was obviously

      posing no threat to her life; but it was gaping and couldn't be left

      like that.

      "I'll have to put a few stitches in there,' I said, and the big Miss

      Dunn gasped and put a hand to her mouth.

      "Oh dear! Will it hurt her? I shall't be able to look, I'm afraid.'

      She was a tall muscular lady in her fifties with a bright red face and

      often as I looked at her wide shoulders and the great arms with their

      bulging biceps I had the feeling that she could flatten me effortlessly

      with one blow if she so desired. But strangely she was nervous and

      squeamish about the realities of animal doctoring and it was always her

      little wisp of a sister who helped at lambings, carvings and the rest.

      '()h you needn't worry, Miss Dunn,' I replied. "It'll be all over before

      she knows what's happening.' I climbed into the pen, went up to

      Prudence, and touched her gently on the neck.

      Immediately the sow unleashed a petulant scream as though she had been

      stabbed with a hot iron and when I tried to give her back a friendly

      scratch the huge mouth opened again and the deafening sound blasted out.

      And this time she advanced on me threateningly. I stood my ground till

      the yawning cavern with its yellowed teeth was almost touching my leg

      then I put a hand on the rail and vaulted out of the pen.

      "We'll have to get her into a smaller space,' I said. "I'll never be

      able to stitch her in that big pen. She has too much room to move around

      and she's too big to hold.'

      Little Miss Dunn held up her hand. "We have the very place. In the calf

      house across the yard. If we got her into one of those narrow stalls she

      wouldn't be able to turn round.'

      "Fine!' I rubbed my hands. "And I'll be able to do the stitching over

      the top from the passage Let's get her over there.'

      I opened the door and after a bit of poking and pushing Prudence ambled

      majestically out on to the cobbles of the yard. But there she stood,

      grunting sulkily, a stubborn glint in her little eyes, and when I leaned

      my weight against her back end it was like trying to move an eltphant.

      She had no intention of moving any further; and that calf house was

      twenty yards away.

      I stole a look at my watch. Five fifteen, and I didn't seem to be

      getting anywhere.

      The little Miss Dunn broke into my thoughts. "Mr Herriot, I know how we

      can get her across the yard.'

      "You do?'

      "Oh yes, Prudence has been naughty before and we have found a way of

      persuading her to move.'

      I managed a smile. "Great! How do you do it?'

      "Well now,' and both sisters giggled, 'she is very fond of digestive

      biscuits.'

      "What's that?'

      "She simply loves digestive biscuits.'

      "She does?'

      "Adores them!'

      "Well, that's very nice,' I said. "But I don't quite see .. .'

      The big Miss Dunn laughed. "Just you wait and I'll show you.'

      She began to stroll towards the house and it seemed to me that though

      those ladies were by no means typical Dales' farmers they did share the

      general attitude that t
    ime was of no consequence. The door closed behind

      her and I waited ... and as the minutes ticked away I began to think she

      was brewing herself a cup of tea. In my mounting tension I turned away

      and gazed down over the hillside fields to where the grey roofs and old

      church tower of Dollingsford showed above the riverside trees. The quiet

      peace of the scene was in direct contrast to my mental state.

      Just when I was giving up hope, big Miss Dunn reappeared carrying a long

      round paper container. She gave me a roguish smile as she held it up to

      me.

      "These are what she likes. Now just watch.'

      She produced a biscuit and threw it down on the cobbles a few feet in

      front of the sow. Prudence eyed it impassively for a few moments then

      without haste strolled forward, examined it carefully, and began to eat

      it.

      When she had finished, big Miss Dunn glanced at me conspiratorially and

      threw another biscuit in front of her. The pig again moved on

      unhurriedly and started on the second course. This was gradually leading

      her towards the buildings across the yard but it was going to take a

      long time. I reckoned that each biscuit was advancing her about ten feet

      and the calf house would be all of twenty yards away, so allowing three

      minutes a biscuit it was going to take nearly twenty minutes to get

      there.

      I broke out in a sweat at the thought, and my fears were justified

      because nobody was in the slightest hurry. Especially Prudence who

      slowly munched each titbit then snuffled around picking up every crumb

      while the ladies smiled down at her fondly.

      "Look,' I stammered. "Do you think you could throw the biscuits a bit

      further ahead of her .. . just to save time, I mean?'

      Little Miss Dunn laughed gaily. "Oh we've tried that, but she's such a

      clever old darling. She knows she'll get less that way.'

      To demonstrate she threw the next biscuit about fifteen feet away from

      the pig but the massive animal surveyed it with a cynical expression and

      didn't ~ Gl ill I 1~1 11~3

      budge until it was kicked back to the required spot. Miss Dunn was

      right; Prudence wasn't so daft.

      So I just had to wait, gritting my teeth as I watched the agonising

      progress. I was almost at screaming point at the end though the others

      were thoroughly enjoying themselves. But at last the final biscuit was

      cast into the calf pen, the pig made her leisurely way inside and the

      ladies, with triumphant giggles, closed the door behind her.

      I leapt forward with my needle and suture silk and of course as soon as

      I laid a finger on her skin Prudence set up an almost unbearable nonstop

      squeal of rage. Big Miss Dunn put her hands over her ears and fled in

      terror but her little sister stayed with me bravely and passed me my

      scissors and dusting powder whenever I asked in sign language above the

      din.

      My head was still ringing as I drove away, but that didn't worry me as

      much as the time. It was six o'clock.

      Chapter Thirty-one.

      Tensely I assessed my position. The next and final visit was only a

      couple of miles away - I could make it in ten minutes. Then say twenty

      minutes on the farm, fifteen minutes back to Darrowby, a lightning wash

      and change and I could still be pushing my knees under Mrs Hodgson's

      table by seven o'clock.

      And the next job wasn't a long one; just a bull to ring. Nowadays, since

      the advent of Artificial Insemination, there aren't many bulls about -

      only the big dairy men and pedigree breeders keep them - but in the

      thirties nearly every farmer had one, and inserting rings in their noses

      was a regular job. The rings were put in when they were about a year old

      and were necessary to restrain the big animals when they had to be led

      around.

      I was immensely relieved when I arrived to find the gaunt figure of old

      Ted Buckle the farmer and his two men waiting for me in the yard. A

      classical way for a vet to waste time is to go hollering around the

      empty buildings then do more of the same out in the empty fields, waving

      madly, trying to catch the eye of a dot on the far horizon.

      "Now then, young men,' Tfed said, and even that short phrase took a fair

      time to come out. To me, the old man was a constant delight; speaking

      the real old Yorkshire - which you seldom hear now and which I won't try

      to reproduce here - with slow deliberation as though he were savouring

      every syllable as much as I was enjoying listening to him. "You've come,

      then.'

      "Yes, Mr Buckle, and I'm glad to see you're ready and waiting for me.'

      "Aye, ah doan't like keepin' you fellers hangin' about.' He turned to

      his men. "Now then, lads, go into that box and get haud'n that big

      lubber for Mr Herriot.'

      The 'lads', Ernest and Herbert, who were both in their sixties, shuffled

      into the bull's loose box and closed the door after them. There was a

      few seconds of muffled banging against the wood, a couple of bellows and

      the occasional Anglo-Saxon expression from the men, then silence.

      "Ah think they have 'im now,' Ted murmured and, not for the first time,

      I looked wonderingly at his wearing apparel. I had never seen him in

      anything else but that hat and coat in the time I had known him. With

      regard to the coat, which countless years ago must have been some kind

      of mackintosh, two things puzzled me: why he put it on and how he put it

      on. The long taller of unrelated ribbons tied round the middle with

      binder twine could not possibly afford him any protection from the

      elements and how on earth did he know which were the sleeve holes among

      all the other apertures? And the hat, an almost crownless trilby from

      the early days of the century whose brim drooped vertically in sad folds

      over ears and eyebrows; it seemed incredible that he actually hung the

      thing up on a peg each night and donned it again in the morning.

      Maybe the answer was to be found in the utterly serene humorous eyes

      which looked out from the skeleton-thin face. Nothing changed for Ted

      and the passage of a decade was a fleeting thing. I remember him showing

      me the old-fashioned 'reckon' which held the pans and kettles over the

      fire on his farm kitchen. He pointed out the row of holes where you

      could adjust it for large pans or small as though it were some modern

      invention.

      "Aye, it's a wonderful thing, and t'lad that put it in for me made a

      grand job!'

      "When was that, Mr Buckle?'

      "It were eighteen ninety-seven. Ah remember it well. He was a right good

      workman was t'lad.'

      But the men had reappeared with the young bull on a halter and they soon

      had him held in the accepted position for ringing.

      There was a ritual about this job, a set pattern as unvarying as a

      classical ballet. Ernest and Herbert pulled the bull's head over the

      half door and held it there by pulling on a shank on either side of the

      halter. The portable crush had not yet been invented and this

      arrangement with the bull inside the box and the men outside was adopted

      for safety's sake. The next step was to make a hole through the tough


      tissue at the extremity of the nasal septum with the special punch which

      I had ready in its box.

      But first there was a little refinement which I had introduced myself.

      Though it was the general custom to punch the hole without any

      preliminaries I always had the feeling that the bull might not like it

      very much; so I used to inject a couple of c.c.'s of local anaesthetic

      into the nose before I started. I poised my syringe now and Ernest,

      holding the left shank, huddled back apprehensively against the door.

      "The's standin' middlin' to t'side, Ernest,' Ted drawled. "Doesta think

      he's going' to jump on top o' the?'

      "New, new.' The man grinned sheepishly and took a shorter hold of the

      rope.

      But he jumped back to his former position when I pushed the needle into

      the gristle just inside the nostril because the bull let loose a sudden

      deep-throated bellow of anger and reared up above the door. Ted had

      delayed ringing this animal; he was nearly eighteen months and very big.

      "Haud 'im, lads,' Ted murmured as the two men clung to the ropes.

      "That's right - he'll settle down shortly.'

      And he did. With his chin resting on the top of the door, held by the

      ropes on either side, he was ready for the next act. I pushed my punch

      into the nose, gripped the handles and squeezed. I never felt much like

      a professional gentleman when I did this, but at least my local had

      worked and the big animal didn't stir as the jaws of the instrument

      clicked together, puncturing a small round hole in the hard tissue.

      The next stage in the solemn rite was unfolded as I unwrapped the bronze

      ring from its paper covering, took out the screw and opened the ring

      wide on its hinge. I waited for the inevitable words.

      Ted supplied them. "Take the cap off, Herbert. Tha woan't catch caud

      just for a minute.'

      It was always a cap. A big bucket, a basin would have been more

      practical to hold that stupid, tiny screw and equally foolish little

      screwdriver, but it was always a cap. And a greasy old cap such as

      Herbert now removed from his polished pate.

      My next step would be to slip the ring through the hole I had made,

      close it, insert the screw and tighten it up. That was where the cap

      came in; it was held under the ring to guard against sudden movements,

      because if the screw fell and was lost in the dirt and straw then all

      was lost. Then Ted would hand me the long rasp or file which every

      farmer had around somewhere and I would carefully smooth off the rim of

      the screw whether it needed it or not But this time there was to be a

      modification of the stereotyped little drama. As I stepped forward with

      my ring the young bull and I stood face to face and for a moment the

      wide set eyes under the stubby horns looked into mine. And as I reached

      out he must have moved slightly because the sharp end of the ring

      pricked him a little on the muzzle; the merest touch, but he seemed to

      take it as a personal insult because his mouth opened in an exasperated

      bawl and again he reared on his hind legs.

      He was a well grown animal and in that position he looked very large

      indeed; and when his fore feet clumped down on the half door and the

      great rib cage loomed above us he was definitely formidable.

      "The bugger's comin' over!' Ernest gasped and released his hold on the

      halter shank. He had never had much enthusiasm for the job and he

      abandoned it now without regret. Herbert was made of sterner stuff and

      he hung on grimly to his end as the bull thrashed above him, but after a

      cloven hoof had whizzed past his ear and another whistled just over his

      gleaming dome he too let go and fled.

      Ted, untroubled as always, was well out of range and there remained only

      myself dancing in front of the door and gesticulating frantically at the

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025