<h2 class="nobreak">I</h2></div>
<p>The children called him Pierrot from the
first. That is, of course, no proper name
for a Flemish dog, but you see Mère Marie
had come from Dinant, where almost everybody
speaks French, and she had been
taught French in school. Besides, she had
French friends in Brussels and was very fond
of everything French and warm and southern.
So she had often told the children
stories about Harlequin and Columbine and
Pierrot; and when they saw what a comical,
clumsy little fellow the puppy was, and how
much he looked as though he wore big, baggy
breeches, Henri called him “drôle Pierrot,”
and wee Lisa clapped her fat little hands and
laughed shrilly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</SPAN></span>Jean Van Huyk had brought Pierrot home
in his arms one spring evening and had
tumbled him out upon the floor of the cottage
to startle Henri and Lisa. But they
refused to be frightened, for Henri was learning
the rules of courage and Lisa thought
at first that the puppy was a baby lamb.
Straightway she fell upon him and sought to
hug him to her plump little bosom, but Pierrot
only bit her ear and made her squeal with delight,
and then wriggled out of her arms and
hurriedly waddled over to Henri, who rolled
him over on his back and tickled his round little
stomach. Whereat Père Jean roared loudly
and old Gran’père cackled from his chair.</p>
<p>Then shaggy old Luppe, who had pulled
Mère Marie’s milk-cart for seven years,
yawned tremendously, dragged himself laboriously
to his feet, stalked over from the
doorway and sniffed at Pierrot, and then
turned back with a look of dignified boredom.
By this ceremony Pierrot was constituted
an accepted member of the household.</p>
<div class="figleft"><ANTIMG src="images/i_012.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</SPAN></span>It was Luppe’s advancing years, in fact,
that explained the coming of Pierrot. It
was sad to think of the day when the old
fellow would no longer be able to trot into
town with the milk and cheese, but Providence
has set narrow boundaries to a dog’s
life, and Mère Marie would soon need a
younger and stronger steed.</p>
<p>So one Sunday morning Père Jean had
bade Henri dress himself in his best clothes,
for they were to drive into Brussels to the
dog market, and half the world would be
there. The Belgians do not think it strange
to go to market on Sunday, for it is an entirely
different kind of market from those
conducted on week days, and they put on
their gay clothes and make a holiday of
it.</p>
<p>When Père Jean and Henri arrived, the
city was already alive with people and they
made a pleasant sight in the bright sunshine.
Père Jean found a place to tie his horse and
then they hastened directly to the Grande<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</SPAN></span>
Place. This was a great paved square with
imposing buildings on all sides such as the
Hôtel de Ville and the Maison du Roi. There
were a great many people in the square and
they were all very lively and busy and jolly.</p>
<p>One side of the square looked like a great
garden, for here was the flower market, and
the florists vied with each other in their
displays of plants and cut flowers. It was
very beautiful, also it smelled wonderfully
sweet, so that Henri fell under a sort of
enchantment and Père Jean had to drag
him away.</p>
<p>On another side of the square were parrots
and cockatoos and canaries and birds
of all kinds in little wooden cages. Some of
the parrots were making comical efforts to
talk like people, the song birds were whistling
and trilling, and all was gay and colourful,
which delighted Henri. But they had a
bird of their own at home, and it was not
birds that Père Jean had come to see.</p>
<p>At length they came to the dog market.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span>
Four or five hundred dogs of all ages and
sizes and colours lay dozing or stood pulling
at their leashes. There were big, strong
dogs like Luppe; alert black Schipperkes;
Brussels Griffons, with faces like those of
little bearded old men; Belgian sheep dogs
with erect, pointed ears, short-haired brown
fellows and beautiful long-haired black ones;
all sorts of dogs from Great Danes to ridiculous
little Dachshunds. There were
capable-looking work dogs; mournful-eyed
mothers; swaggering young bloods proclaiming
loudly their desire for battle; awkward,
blundering, adorable four-month-olds,
and fuzzy little babies that wabbled on their
sprawling legs as though made of jelly.
Henri saw a dozen dogs that would have
suited him perfectly, but Père Jean was
apparently more difficult to please, for he
went from group to group without making a
selection. At last he told Henri that he
could not find the sort of dog he wanted
and that it was better to go home without<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span>
any than take one that would not turn out
well.</p>
<p>Henri looked down the row of assuredly
desirable dogs and his lip began to tremble
a little. So Père Jean, instead of taking
Henri home at once, bought some cakes for
their dinner and told him he should remain
to hear the grand concert in the afternoon,
which pleased Henri so much that he forgot
his disappointment.</p>
<p>At noon there was a great hubbub and
bustle in the Grande Place, for the market
was over and all the vendors must be out of
there at once. In the afternoon the Regimental
Band came in its wonderful uniforms
and played stirring music in the kiosk until
the shadows began to lengthen and Henri
grew very weary.</p>
<p>It had been a wonderful day and Henri
fell asleep that night with gay pictures
dancing before his eyes and music sounding
in his ears. This was happiness enough for
little Henri, but Père Jean had not found the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span>
dog he was after. He knew the value of the
right kind of dog and he would have nothing
else.</p>
<p>So Père Jean made a journey one day to
fat Auguste Naets, the butcher of Vilvorde,
who was famous for the dogs he bred.
Auguste bragged much about these dogs.
Their blood, he said, ran away back into the
Middle Ages to the boarhounds of the Dukes
of Brabant. Matins, he called them; and
it is true that for a hundred years, when
other men had grown careless of their breeding,
Auguste’s father and grandfather and
great-grandfather had kept the breed pure,
so that when the National Federation for
the Breeding of Draft Dogs was founded a
dozen years ago they deemed the Naets strain
worthy of a certificate of merit with five red
seals attached, which Auguste proudly had
framed and hung in his shop.</p>
<p>Of the hundred thousand or more dogs
that are used in Belgium as <i>chiens de trait</i>,
none were finer than those which Père Jean<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>
found in the kennels of Auguste Naets.
They were large dogs, with something of the
look of the St. Bernard about them, but
with smaller heads and more lithe and rangy
bodies. In colour they were all sorts of combinations
of black, white, and tawny; Auguste
held that colour meant nothing to a
cart-dog. Their ears were long and drooping
and their tails were docked when they
were puppies to avoid interference with the
harness. They would have been handsomer
with long tails, but Auguste was breeding
for utility rather than for beauty. There
was a time when the dog-owners of Belgium
cropped their dogs’ ears to make them stand
erect and pointed, but it was found that
during their steady work outdoors in winter
rain and snow beat into their ears and caused
sores and deafness, so that the practice of
depriving them of their natural protection
was abandoned.</p>
<p>Auguste’s dogs, like others of their breed,
were tireless and powerful. They could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span>
easily draw a load of 400 pounds, though
200 pounds was usually considered a one-dog
load. Three dogs hitched to a 400-pound
load could run with it at a steady,
rapid trot for miles without apparent weariness.</p>
<p>Père Jean loved dogs, and he could have
stayed all day with Auguste in his kennels,
but to Auguste business was business, and he
at length persuaded Père Jean to pay a good
price for a likely looking beggar from the
latest litter. That was Pierrot.</p>
<p>“He has the big feet and the large bones,”
said Auguste. “That means he will grow
large and strong and live for many years,
like my Jacques,” and he pointed to the
superb sire that headed his kennels.</p>
<p>So Père Jean took the fuzzy, awkward
little puppy back to the little tile-roofed
cottage he had built for his bride ten years
before, and where Henri and wee Lisa had
been born.</p>
<p>They were sober, industrious, thrifty folk,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span>
the Van Huyks, and prosperous among their
neighbours. In Belgium a peasant is always
a peasant, and there is a wide gulf fixed between
the rich and the poor, but Père Jean
owned his little dairy farm six miles out from
Brussels on the Waterloo Road, beyond the
Forest of Soignies, and they were very comfortable
and happy.</p>
<p>It was a pleasant country, with green
pastures and meadows, nodding wheat and
rye fields, and trim, orderly market gardens
on every hand, and with straight, smooth,
hard roads all leading to town between tall
rows of poplar trees. Père Jean tilled the
little farm and he and Gran’père milked the
cows and made the cheese, while Mère Marie
took the milk in to Brussels every morning
in big brass and copper cans which she kept
very clean and shiny.</p>
<p>Farther back from the city, where the
farms were poorer and the market not so
near, the peasants wore rough smocks and
clumsy wooden shoes and lived mostly on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span>
coarse rye bread and bacon and potatoes,
with milk and rice and dried herring on
Fridays. But Père Jean and Mère Marie
always wore leather shoes when they went to
town, and only the children clumped around
in yellow sabots to save their Sunday shoes,
and Gran’père because he preferred them.</p>
<p>Mère Marie was a plump, fresh-faced
young woman with a beautiful, heavy crown
of golden brown hair which was always
neatly dressed, no matter how much of a
hurry she was in. She went bareheaded,
winter and summer, except when it rained;
then she drew her shawl over her head. She
wore a trim short skirt and a clean white
apron.</p>
<div class="figright"><ANTIMG src="images/i_021.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p>On Sundays the family went regularly to
mass, dressed in their finest clothes, and then
feasted on hare and eggs and butter and
cheese and many kinds of vegetables. In
the afternoon Père Jean took his cornet and
went to practise with the band, and sometimes
he took Henri with him. It was a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>
wonderful band, for all Belgians love to
make music, and little Henri could hardly
wait for the time when his father would teach
him to play, too. But when the band
played the martial music, ah, then little
Henri’s bosom swelled almost to bursting,
and he determined to be a soldier when he
grew up. That would be grand, indeed!
But Père Jean only smiled and told him that
being a soldier wasn’t all bands and fine
uniforms.</p>
<p>Some of the peasants used dogs to harrow
and cultivate their vegetable gardens, but
Père Jean owned a big black horse named
Medard, so that Luppe’s only duty was to
draw the milk-cart and to bark at night if
strangers approached. When Pierrot grew
old enough Luppe taught him to wake up
and bark at strange noises and to keep quiet
at other times, for a good watchdog does
not waste his breath on the moon. When
the huntsmen rode by with their <i>chiens de
chasse</i> Pierrot would become very much excited<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
and wanted to follow them, but Luppe
explained to him that their vocation was a
very foolish and frivolous one, and beneath
the dignity of a <i>chien de trait</i>, though Luppe
himself would often lose his head over the
warm scent of a hare, or even of a rat or mole.</p>
<p>Old Luppe was, as you see, a very wise
and experienced dog. He knew all the roads
like a book and most of the streets of Brussels.
He knew how to bring his cart safely across
crowded thoroughfares without guidance,
and to stop without instructions before the
houses of Mère Marie’s customers in the
city. Also he knew how to pull his load
with the least possible expenditure of strength
and wind, and to lie down and rest in his harness
whenever he stopped for a minute.</p>
<p>All these things he would one day teach
to Pierrot, but meanwhile the puppy’s education
was chiefly in the fundamentals.
When Luppe was away on his business
Pierrot would romp and play for hours with
the children, and as his first teeth dropped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>
out and his second set came, white and
strong, he learned just how hard it is fitting
to bite a soft hand or plump ankle in play or
in love. Sometimes he would follow Père
Jean and Gran’père about the farm or dairy,
and they taught him to come at a call and to
lie down and wait until he was wanted.
This was a very hard lesson to master, you
may believe. Also it was hard to learn that
Sunday shoes are not meant to be chewed
like a broth bone.</p>
<p>So Pierrot lived happily through his baby
days on the dairy farm on the Waterloo Road.
There was plenty of skim milk and other
things for him to eat, and after he had overcome
a slight predisposition to colic he began
to grow very fast. His feet persisted in
keeping ahead of him in growth, and he was
still awkward when he ran fast, but his bones
were getting big and strong and he was growing
solid and heavy. As the cold weather
came on his bark grew deeper and less
squeaky and the stiff hairs began to show<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>
through the soft puppy coat. Pierrot was
fast growing into a fine big dog, black and
white with spots of tan above his eyes and on
his muzzle and forelegs.</p>
<p>Pierrot could not yet carry wee Lisa on his
back as old Luppe could so easily, but to
Henri he seemed large enough for anything,
and the boy was very impatient to see
Pierrot’s serious training begun. So Gran’père,
in his leisure hours, built a little toy
cart and harness for Pierrot, and he and
Henri began the lessons.</p>
<p>At first Pierrot was very unmanageable
and seemed anxious to get into the cart himself,
but after a while Gran’père made him
understand that he was to go straight ahead
when given the word and not stop until
so ordered. Finally they taught him to
turn when he felt the tug of a rein on his
collar.</p>
<div class="figright"><ANTIMG src="images/i_025.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p>When at last Gran’père felt sure that
Pierrot had learned his lessons, Henri was
allowed to take him out upon the road with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span>
wee Lisa in the cart, to the huge delight of
that small, merry person.</p>
<p>One day, as they passed solemnly along the
road, Henri marching sturdily alongside and
wee Lisa sitting like a proud lady in her
carriage, they met a Belgian soldier in a queer
little bonnet and a dark blue uniform with
red stripes on his trousers. Henri saluted
as Gran’père had taught him to do, and the
soldier came to a halt.</p>
<p>“Where are you going, monsieur and
mademoiselle?” asked the soldier pleasantly.</p>
<p>“Just for a drive,” replied Henri, a little bewildered
at being thus formally addressed.</p>
<p>The grenadier, who was not much of a
talker, stood regarding them with a quizzical
smile. Then Henri plucked up courage:</p>
<p>“My father wears a blue coat with brass
buttons, too,” said he.</p>
<p>“Is he a soldier?” asked the man.</p>
<p>“N-no,” replied Henri. “But he plays in
the band.”</p>
<p>“Ah, so! And shall you play in the band<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
and wear a blue coat with brass buttons?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps. And perhaps I shall be a
grenadier or a trooper.”</p>
<p>“And mademoiselle, what will then become
of her?”</p>
<p>“Lisa? Oh, she will marry a burgomaster,”
replied Henri; whereat the soldier
laughed heartily, for he had a simple wit, and
passed on.</p>
<p>Père Jean also laughed, in his big, hearty
way, when Henri told of the encounter, but
Gran’père shook his head and looked very
thoughtful.</p>
<p>“It may all be,” said he. “Who knows?”</p>
<p>And so the winter passed with many small
adventures, but on the whole tranquilly.
Pierrot—he was getting to be big Pierrot
now—was very much one of the family,
more so than Luppe had ever been. Luppe
was a fine, wise, able dog, but very businesslike
and unemotional. All the family loved
Luppe and hated to see him grow old, for he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
had been a faithful and willing servant, but
it was Pierrot who really found a place deep
in their hearts. There had been no children
to play with when Luppe was a puppy, and
that makes a great difference. He had early
found his allotted place between the shafts,
and his greatest joy was in the day’s work.
But Henri and wee Lisa had made a comrade
of Pierrot, and so he grew up very warm-hearted
and with a broader, deeper, more
varied outlook on life than Luppe’s. Luppe
served a kind master and mistress and was
content, but Pierrot needed love—given and
received.</p>
<p>The winter was cold and a hard one for
old Luppe, and he became a little rheumatic
and stiff in his hind legs. He accepted more
promptly every opportunity to rest, and rose
with less alacrity than of old. Père Jean and
Mère Marie both noticed this and began to
turn their thoughts toward the further training
of Pierrot.</p>
<p>When warm June weather came again,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
Luppe improved, but it was evident that
Pierrot must soon take his place. The youngster
was only fifteen months old, and his
body, which had grown with extraordinary
rapidity, still needed filling out, but already
he seemed nearly as big and strong as Luppe.
He had a tremendous appetite, and it seemed
to Père Jean that he should be earning his
board.</p>
<p>One day Père Jean had a heavy hogshead
in the dairy which he wished to move, and he
and Gran’père could scarcely budge it. Medard,
the horse, had been loaned to Joseph
Verbeeck, the market gardener, to help plough
a field for late cabbages. So Père Jean pried
up the hogshead with a bar while Gran’père
slipped rollers beneath it, and when Luppe
returned from town with Mère Marie they
hitched him to a chain fastened around the
hogshead. Père Jean and small Henri pushed
from behind, Gran’père stood ready with
more rollers, and Mère Marie urged Luppe
to pull. With great effort they moved the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
heavy load a few inches, and Luppe began to
pant painfully.</p>
<p>“It is too hard for him,” said Mère Marie.
“He is no longer young. He will hurt himself.”</p>
<p>Then Gran’père thought of young Pierrot
and sent Henri and Lisa to find him. They
hitched him to the chain beside Luppe and
Mère Marie gave the word to start.</p>
<p>Pierrot hurled himself forward mightily
and fell back upon his haunches. Old Luppe
looked at him disgustedly. That was no way
to start a load.</p>
<p>Pierrot got up again and settled forward
into his collar, his nails scratching the dairy
floor in an effort to get a foothold, and before
the rest were ready the big hogshead started
to move. Then Luppe threw his weight
forward, and Père Jean and Henri put their
shoulders to it, and the hogshead began to
gather momentum.</p>
<p>At first Pierrot pulled jerkily, with his
forefeet scratching and his tongue hanging<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
out; he wanted to run with it. But Luppe
growled at him and soon he settled down to
the steady pull that counts. Gran’père began
thrusting the rollers beneath the hogshead,
Mère Marie spoke shrill words of encouragement,
and foot by foot the two big
dogs dragged the ponderous load to the other
side of the dairy.</p>
<p>Pierrot was panting and his tongue was
dripping when the work was done, but he
looked up very proudly at Mère Marie, as
Gran’père unharnessed him, and wagged his
stump tail violently as she spoke the expected
word of praise. Old Luppe said nothing, but
stalked off stolidly to his piece of carpet and
lay down with a thump.</p>
<p>Then Père Jean went over to Pierrot and
felt up and down his legs and pinched his back
and shoulders.</p>
<p>“He’ll do,” said Père Jean. “I think you
might take him to town to-morrow with
Luppe.”</p>
<p>Pierrot had grown up.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />