CHAPTER XX - WHERE BOWSER WAS
When things are at their very
worst,
As bad, you think, as they
can be,
Just lay aside your feelings
sad;
The road ahead may turn, you
see.
Bowser the Hound.
You remember that Blacky the Crow
led poor Bowser to an old road and there left him.
Blacky reasoned that if Bowser had any sense at all,
he would know that that road must lead somewhere and
would follow it. If he didn’t have sense
enough to do this, he deserved to starve or freeze,
was the way Blacky reasoned it out. Of course
Blacky knew exactly where the road would lead.
Now Bowser did have sense. Of
course he did. The minute he found that road,
a great load was taken from his mind. He no longer
felt wholly lost. He was certain that all he
had to do was to keep in that road, and sooner or
later he would come to a house. The thing that
worried him most was whether or not he would have
strength enough to keep going until he reached that
house. You remember that he was weak from lack
of food, lame, and half frozen.
Poor old Bowser! He certainly
was the picture of misery as he limped along that
road. His tail hung down as if he hadn’t
strength enough to hold it up. His head also
hung low. He walked on three legs and limped
with one of these. In his eyes was such a look
of pain and suffering as would have touched the hardest
heart. He whined and whimpered as he limped along.
It seemed to him that he had gone
a terribly long distance, though really it was not
far at all, when something tickled his nose, that
wonderful nose which can smell the tracks of others
long after they have passed. But this time it
wasn’t the smell of a track that tickled his
nose; it was something in the air. Bowser lifted
his head and sniffed long and hard. What he smelled
was smoke. He knew what that meant. Somewhere
not very far ahead of him was a house.
With new hope and courage Bowser tried
to hurry on. Presently around a turn of the road
he saw a farmyard. The smell of the smoke from
the chimney of the farmhouse was stronger now, and
with it was mingled an appetizing smell of things
cooking. Into Bowser’s whimper there now
crept a little note of eagerness as he dragged himself
across the farmyard and up to the back door.
There his strength quite left him. He didn’t
have enough left to even bark. All he could do
was whine. After what seemed a long, long time
the door opened, and a motherly woman stood looking
down at him. Two minutes later Bowser lay on a
mat close by the kitchen stove.