The Accidental Tourist - Anne Tyler [39]
“Hold on a minute.”
He waited, braced against a cabinet. (He was using the pantry telephone.) He heard two women discussing Fluffball Cohen’s rabies shot. Then Muriel picked up the receiver. “Hello?”
“Yes, this is Macon Leary. I don’t know if you remember me or—”
“Oh, Macon! Hi there! How’s Edward doing?”
“Well, he’s getting worse.”
She tsk-tsked.
“He’s been attacking right and left. Snarling, biting, chewing things—”
“Did your neighbor tell you I came looking for you?”
“What? Yes, he did.”
“I was right on your street, running an errand. I make a little extra money running errands. George, it’s called. Don’t you think that’s cute?”
“Excuse me?”
“George. It’s the name of my company. I stuck a flyer under your door. Let George do it, it says, and then it lists all the prices: meeting planes, chauffeuring, courier service, shopping . . . Gift shopping’s most expensive because for that I have to use my own taste. Didn’t you get my flyer? I really stopped by just to visit, though. But your neighbor said you hadn’t been around.”
“No, I broke my leg,” Macon said.
“Oh, that’s too bad.”
“And I couldn’t manage alone of course, so—”
“You should have called George.”
“George who?”
“George my company! The one I was just telling you about.”
“Oh, yes.”
“Then you wouldn’t have had to leave that nice house. I liked your house. Is that where you lived when you were married, too?”
“Well, yes.”
“I’m surprised she agreed to give it up.”
“The point is,” Macon said, “I’m really at the end of my rope with Edward here, and I was wondering if you might be able to help me.”
“Sure I can help!”
“Oh, that’s wonderful,” Macon said.
“I can do anything,” Muriel told him. “Search and alert, search and rescue, bombs, narcotics—”
“Narcotics?”
“Guard training, attack training, poison-proofing, kennelosis—”
“Wait, I don’t even know what some of those things are,” Macon said.
“I can even teach split personality.”
“What’s split personality?”
“Where your dog is, like, nice to you but kills all others.”
“You know, I think I may be over my head here,” Macon said.
“No, no! Don’t say that!”
“But this is just the simplest problem. His only fault is, he wants to protect me.”
“You can take protection too far,” Muriel told him.
Macon tried a little joke. “ ‘It’s a jungle out there,’ he’s saying. That’s what he’s trying to say. ‘I know better than you do, Macon.’ ”
“Oh?” Muriel said. “You let him call you by your first name?”
“Well—”
“He needs to learn respect,” she said. “Five or six times a week I’ll come out, for however long it takes. I’ll start with the basics; you always do that: sitting, heeling . . . My charge is five dollars a lesson. You’re getting a bargain. Most I charge ten.”
Macon tightened his hold on the receiver. “Then why not ten for me?” he asked.
“Oh, no! You’re a friend.”
He felt confused. He gave her his address and arranged a time with the nagging sense that something was slipping out of his control. “But look,” he said, “about the fee, now—”
“See you tomorrow!” she said. She hung up.
At supper that night when he told the others, he thought they did a kind of double take. Porter said, “You actually called?” Macon said, “Yes, why not?”—acting very offhand—and so the others took their cue and dropped the subject at once.
seven
When I was a little girl,” Muriel said, “I didn’t like dogs at all or any other kinds of animals either. I thought they could read my mind. My folks gave me a puppy for my birthday and he would, like, cock his head, you know how they do? Cock his head and fix me with these bright round eyes and I said, ‘Ooh! Get him away from me! You know I can’t stand to be stared at.’ ”
She had a voice that wandered too far in all directions. It screeched upward; then it dropped to a raspy growl. “They had to take him back. Had to give him to a neighbor boy and buy me a whole different present, a beauty-parlor permanent which is what I’d set my heart on all along.”
She and Macon were standing in the entrance hall. She still had her coat on—a bulky-shouldered, three-quarter length, nubby