Monday, December 9, 2019

Merryweather Unleashed, Part II

But soon enough, as the very first needle rays of sunlight shone through the dark branches of the skeletal trees that fended the parking lot from the park, Andreas Stackenwalter saw come forth from the gates of the wildlife refuge a bizarre trio of beings, maybe the last of the nocturnal creatures caught on the Tlasiwapsit't Wildlife webcam.  (5 new subscribers daily, on average.)

Striding into the parking lot came a stirringly upright, tall, and well-groomed male figure who looked neither to the left nor to the right, a figure of frost, not merely because the pale rising sun made a halo about his head (defended against the biting morning chill by a muffed cap) but because he wore an immaculate lab coat, glittering with frost like diamond dust over we hope something warmer.  His hands, however, were fat with gloves and about his neck hung like the head of an enemy a strange horny black device.  Flanking this fellow loped a pair of copper-colored mastiffs panting clouds of frozen breath, their drool all-but phosphorescent in the Nordic dawn and freezing into blunt icicles as they stomped along.


The threesome stopped a few feet from Herr Stackenwalter.  The newborn sun shone on the newcomer's round, owl-eye glasses and showing up the red of his faultlessly trimmed beard and mustache.


Andreas took a hand from a glove and offered it the stranger.  "Phineas," he grunted.

"Herr Trainer," Phineas said, his greeting hidden in a white cloud of sub-freezing breath, and shook the extended hand.


"Und how is your iron cross?" asked the older man.


"Es läuft gut," said Phineas, exercising his Plattdeutsch.

"Gut," answered Andreas and rubbed the head of one of the unneutered behemoths.  "Which one is this one?  I always am forgetting."

"Sangreal."


The German nodded at the other one.

"Siege Perilous, since none may sit on him."



(Herr Stackenwalter, although a true knight, was never trained in the classics, and should be forgiven for not catching the Arthurian references, but Phineas--or Dr. Phineas Fairfax to the cognoscenti--had yet to find college graduates of French, English, and Celtic descent who appreciated the beasts' names, either.)  Sangreal gave a communicative shake of his enormous noggin and sent balls of freezing drool flying. 

The niceties at an end, Stackenwalter asked, "You saw him?"

"One of them," Phineas said and rested a hand on the night-vision goggles about his neck.

"Greek manufacturing?"

"German," he said, finding a chance to impress the old man again. "The Polyphemus Monocular."  (Indeed the device possessed a single eye.)  "Sicht mit Night Vision Technologie."

Andreas grunted again, grimly happy to hear a normal language, if only in an advertising slogan.  "Und what did you see in the forest?"

"He had something, but what, I couldn't tell."

"The dogs, they did not attack?"

"Yes.  And he ran.  But I saw enough.  He knows that someone's on to him."

"Someone.  Let him think 'someone.' Well, this is good enough.  Now to home and the kitchen.  We must be thankful.  You brought it?"

Phineas nodded and strode on to the far end of the parking, Sangreal and Siege Perilous tramping along in his wake.  The trio arrived at an ancient SUV, black, nondescript and faceless, and all-but camouflaged before the leafless thickets of red-hipped wild roses.  Here Phineas opened the back hatch for the beasts which put up a rather pathetic fight against gravity, then crawled within.  Phineas himself was making a search through a cooler and soon was bringing Andreas an insulated bundle.

"They uncovered it outside Irkutsk where they were putting in a luxury condo village."

"Oligarchs..." Andreas muttered, but taking the bundle added, "Sehr gut.  Danke," He gave Phineas another quick shake of the hand and turned back for his own car.

But then a new vehicle entered the lot: a pistachio green van blazoned in mulberry purple Doogle's Doodles.  "Speak of the devil," said Andreas. 

 "Time to go," whispered Phineas.

"Ja," said Andreas.  "He will not come out until we go.  But the other one has told him of our hunt." The old man said, a smile of appreciation thawing as the sun rose another micron, "Danke, Phineas," and patted the bundle again.

Andreas went to his little kingfisher blue speedster.  Once within he found that his own beasts only wanted to get within the bundle, Olga and Una scenting no doubt ancient smells, smells lingering in their minds from their ancestors hunting across the steppes of prehistoric Asia.  But the old German gave a "Nein," drove forth from the Tlasiwapsit't Wildlife Refuge, and made for home and kitchen, even as he eyed the parking lot through the side mirror.  The devil was there, in a chariot of pistachio green.

But he would forget for today, the American Thanksgiving.  He must bring the bundle home to start the marinade for the horly de filets de rhinocéros laineux (known on the streets as fried woolly rhinoceros steaks).  (The h was silent, just like the 't in Tlasiwapsit't.  Herr Stackenwalter knew that undisciplined moderns spelled it orly de &c., but on his kitchen shelf sat a luxury reprint of Le Cuisinier parisien, Deuxième édition, revue, corrigée et augmentée.  If orly was good enough for Carême, it was good enough for Andreas Stackenwalter.)  He would be serving his woolly rhinoceros with steamed potatoes with quail gravy, corn, squash, and a pumpkin-cranberry mousse.  Ja, it would be a good dinner.










Monday, December 2, 2019

Merryweather Unleashed, Part I

The most dangerous people in Merryweather the Thanksgiving morn just past were the antisocial scofflaws who secretly loaded their dogs into the caged-off cargo spaces of their hybrid offroad sedans (whose manufacturers posed as sponsors on the fauxmercials between PBS programs on Saturday night) and with their unwitting, only-want-to-love-you hostages in tow, headed off in the frosty hours before dawn to the bleak and empty Tlasiwapsit't Wildlife Refuge, there to let the beasts run around as dogs are meant to--and maybe stir up a flock of snow geese or sandhill cranes.  (This gave the amateur wildlife photographers a chance at a nice action shot.) 

And this feast of lawlessness had to be on this day at this hour, since only then was there a good chance of avoiding a Parks and Rec deputy ready to hand out a ticket for allowing one's dog run free without a leash.


The Tlasiwapsit't Wildlife Refuge used to be just a muddy maze of pot-hole-pocked gravel roads running through a dystopian paradise of invasive weed species, all of it kept from the public by a couple of miles worth of chain link fencing.  In ye olden times, middle-aged bachelors would bring the pooches thither to run in the cool of the evening and while they shot a rabbit or two.  But as we learned, the ancient mothers of Merryweather had (after gerrymandering the boundaries to include key neighborhoods in the college town about twenty miles away) pushed through a measure to buy up the land, complete with its brackish ponds and sloughs full of waterbirds, and so was born the Tlasiwapsit't Wildlife Refuge.  (The eggheads in the college town said that they had to include the 't on the end of Tlasiwapsit't, otherwise they would be pronouncing it all wrong.)  The site was gussied up, given a paved parking lot, cedar walkways through the fens and reed beds, a guilt-inducing informational kiosk about the Tlasiwapsit people (the writer of the blurb in the kiosk did not care about the 't), and a gleaming sign declaring that dogs were forbidden, in order to preserve the native habitat.


So, this Thanksgiving morn, in the weak illumination in the chill fifteen minutes or so before actual sunrise, a few intrepid parties were disembarking from their hybrid adventure cars to throw into chaos their little corner of the world.

Through the main gates the drivers creptin one hand drive-through mocha-mint lattes, but in the other no dog leash, for Lexi, Sasha, Bruno, Egon, and/or Shasta had already shot out of the vehicles like torpedoes, away into the frozen fog, with uninhibited, feral joy, eager after rabbits and voles.

But a few of canines this morning were not so enthused.  Squatting on the October-Revolution-red-leather front seats of a small, scarabesque foreign sports car sat a pair of Pekingese: Una and Olga, the wheezy reasons for the spendy veterinary and grooming bills accrued by Mssrs. Geoffrey Durant-Dupont, Esq. and Andreas Stackenwalter.  It was the latter gentleman, an elderly German in a National Volksarmee winter hat (ear flaps down) and 1989 army parka, who was in attendance on the palace dogs this morning.  But he had not come to this morning for a crepuscular jaunt over the hoar-becrusted mud trails.  Instead, leaving the golden beasts in the car (it was only 28 degrees...) Andreas Stackenwalter stationed himself outside of the driver's side door and stood there immobile, his breath like Hyperborean cigarette smoke.  To any eye catching sight of him that dawn, he was more forbidding than any pooch-precluding sign.  But no eyes were on him and his own gaze, aged but clear, was fixed like the sight of a rifle upon the gates of the refuge, where many a fleece-jacketed Merryweatherites with a Malinois mix was now quietly entering.
 
But no one had come out of the gate.  Yet.  Andreas Stackenwalter knew, though, that he would.  He would wait.