Brute Strength

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Authors: Susan Conant

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Recent Titles in the Holly Winter Dog Lover
Mystery Series by Susan Conant
CREATURE DISCOMFORTS
THE WICKED FLEA
THE DOGFATHER
BRIDE AND GROOM
GAITS OF HEAVEN
ALL SHOTS
BRUTE STRENGTH
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available from Severn House
BRUTE STRENGTH
A Dog Lover's Mystery
Susan Conant
This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author's and publisher's rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
 
This First world edition published 2011
in Great Britain and in the USA by
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9–15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
Copyright © 2011 by Susan Conant.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Conant, Susan, 1946-
Brute strength.
1. Winter, Holly (Fictitious character)–Fiction. 2. Dog trainers–United States–Fiction. 3. Detective and mystery stories.
I. Title
813.6-dc22
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-077-7 (ePub)
ISBN-13: 978-0-7278-8067-3 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-84751-351-9 (trade paper)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
To Jessica, Bill, and Nicholas in loving memory of Samantha (1993–2008), who was half Labrador retriever, half heaven knows what, and total perfection.
Acknowledgments
Many thanks to Rob Rabouin, Steve Rabouin, and Kenneth Clifton for technical advice. I am also grateful to Jean Berman, Roseann Mandell, Lillian Sober-Ain, Geoff Stern, Anya Wittenborg, and Corinne Zipps, and my editor, Anna Telfer.
ONE
O
ne rainy Saturday morning in April, I was grooming dogs and making enemies when a fight broke out in the little hallway outside my kitchen door. If the combatants had been dogs, I'd have transformed myself into whatever larger-than-life figure the conflict demanded. Shazam! Billy Batson becomes Captain Marvel! Or in my case, Holly Winter, dog trainer and dog writer, turns into . . . Gandhi! He's a useful alter ego, but strictly for resolving minor canine quibbles and tiffs. I haven't had to become General Patton in ages. When I do, I'm ferocious:
Listen, you dogs of war! This is Old Blood and Guts telling you to cut it out before the entire Third Army moves in and takes no prisoners!
But that's a lie. First of all, the closest I've ever come to serving in the military is attending dog-training classes at the Cambridge Armory. Second, I do take prisoners: miscreants get locked in their crates until I've metamorphosed back into Ms Sangfroid. The surest way to lose a dog's respect is to blow your cool.
So, over the years, I've learned to replace brute strength with a sneaky non-violence that owes more to Machiavelli than to the Mahatma. I am, however, a dog trainer. I don't do people. Hence my hesitation.
‘ . . . not to be where I don't belong, Rita, and I don't—'
The voice belonged to Quinn Youngman, the man in the life of my friend and tenant Rita, who cut him off. ‘Don't you Dylan me, Quinn! The only Bob Dylan you heard until you'd finished medical school was some easy-listening Muzak version ofBlowin' in the Wind
, if that, so don't play Dr Hip with me, because I know better. If Willie bit you – and it's a mega
if
– it was because
you
stepped on his paw.'
So, the fight was a dog fight after all. Rita's Scottish terrier, Willie, was a handsome, spunky, stylish fellow with flashing eyes and, on occasion, flashing teeth. The worst of Quinn's claim was thus its credibility. I'd cured Willie of flying at my ankles, but he hadn't necessarily generalized from my ankles to other people's. Never before, though, had Willie ever even nipped. Had he wanted to? Oh, yes. But he had superb self-control. Bite inhibition. He was a dog who understood never to put his teeth on flesh. Or so I'd believed, anyway. But as any dog expert will tell you, if the circumstances are perfectly wrong, any dog will bite. Lassie. Benji. Rin Tin Tin.
‘With one of your big, heavy, affected, and totally unnecessary hiking boots! Here we are, a fifteen-minute walk from Harvard Square, which is the only place you're ever likely to hike to, and for that, you couldn't just wear ordinary shoes?'
‘Suddenly you're a fitness expert, Rita? You? She of the bound feet?'
‘I like high heels. So did you until five minutes ago.'
‘When your goddamned dog bit me.'
That was when Rita really started hollering. ‘
You
stomped on Willie's foot. And he did
not
break the skin. In fact, I am far from sure that he
bit
you at all.'
‘Rita, I am bleeding,' Quinn shouted back. ‘Bleeding!'
As Rita had mentioned, Quinn was a doctor, but he was a psychiatrist whose specialty was psychopharmacology. According to Rita, Quinn was a clinical genius when it came to prescribing anti-anxiety agents, antidepressant medications, antipsychotic drugs, and anti-so-forth-and-so-ons, presumably including pills, capsules, liquids, and miscellaneous other elixirs that helped patients to become calm, cheery, or compos mentis enough to benefit from talking to Rita, who is a clinical psychologist. Still, Quinn presumably remembered enough from medical school to recognize blood when he saw it.
Rita, however, responded by lowering her voice and delivering a shrink's version of a low blow. ‘Hysteria is not helping. And it's very unbecoming.'
‘I am not hysterical!' he shrieked. ‘I am never hysterical!'
My animals are unused to raised voices. My cat, Tracker, was in my office, which is her abode. India and Lady, the two dogs who'd have reacted strongly, were with my husband, Steve, as was one of our three malamutes, Rowdy, who was having his teeth cleaned. Let me hasten to explain that Steve is not a dentist. He's a veterinarian. Anyway, when the ruckus started, I'd been in the kitchen grooming our other two mala-mutes, Kimi and Sammy. If India, our German shepherd dog, had been there, she'd have interpreted the shouting as a threat to our household. Lady, our timid pointer, would've been frightened silly. Our King of the Castle, Rowdy the Unflappable, would've assumed that no matter what the nature of the dispute, he'd have the brawn and brains to come out on top. In fact, Kimi is even more brilliant than Rowdy. Furthermore, she is fearless. As to Sammy, even I, a dog professional, am baffled by him. Rowdy's son, Sammy, too, is a dark gray and white intact male Alaskan malamute and a successful show dog. Furthermore, Sammy is immensely strong, ridiculously friendly, obsessed with food, and otherwise absolutely typical of his breed. There is, however, a naivety about Sammy's open-hearted innocence that always amazes me. If Sammy encounters a snarling dog, he looks at me with wide-eyed surprise, as if he can't believe that there's a creature on earth who doesn't love him. In some previous existence, perhaps he was a flower child.
All this is to say that Kimi needed no protection from the ugly sounds of Rita and Quinn's fight, whereas Sammy, who was on the grooming table, leaned into me and trained those trusting brown eyes on my presumably all-knowing face. ‘Nothing to worry about, Mr Handsome,' I said. Even so, I got him off the table and into the wire crate that lives in the kitchen, and I put Kimi in a down-stay.
Then I opened the back door. When Quinn was at his best, he wasn't the sort of person to whom you could say, ‘Cut that out! You're upsetting my dog!' That's a damning comment on his character. But my opinion of Quinn didn't matter. Rita's did. So, instead of blurting out the raw truth, I said, ‘I couldn't help overhearing. Quinn, if you've been bitten, you should wash the wound. I have first-aid stuff.'
I'll concede that Quinn was not bad looking. He was tall and had the kind of distinguished air that appeals to Rita. As she'd said, he had on heavy hiking boots. They hadn't left bloody tracks on the floor or on the stairs that run up to her third-floor apartment. Blood would've soaked right through the fabric of his khakis. I saw no sign of blood on him at all. The person who looked wounded was Rita: her pretty face was so bloodless that her careful make-up was identifiable as such, and her artfully streaked cap of dark hair was mussed, as if she'd been running her manicured hands through it. Although she was dressed in her New Yorker's idea of an informal outfit – a beige linen jacket and pants, a white shell, and relatively low-heeled leather shoes – her distress made her look almost childlike, especially by comparison with Quinn, who was twenty years her senior.
‘I'm on my way to Mount Auburn,' he snapped.
The glorious red hair that runs in my family bypassed me, but I have traces of the quick temper. I said, ‘Mount Auburn Hospital, I presume. Not Mount Auburn Cemetery.' Civility kicked in, as did loyalty to Rita, whose view of this pompous SOB was different from mine. ‘Sorry,' I said. ‘Do you want a ride to the ER?'
‘I have my Lexus,' he said. Typical! Since Quinn owned only one vehicle, a simple ‘I have my car' would've been unambiguous. If fate presented my husband, Steve, with a Rolls, he'd call it ‘my car'. Actually, Steve would be so embarrassed by the evidence of conspicuous consumption that he'd get rid of the Rolls before he had time to call it anything.
Without saying goodbye to either Rita or me, Quinn left.
‘Do we need to check Willie out?' I asked. ‘His paw?'
‘That was the first thing I did. Quinn felt slighted. But Willie is fine.'
‘Steve can take a look later. Come in. If you don't mind . . .'
‘ . . . dog hair,' she said.
‘Everyone's shedding. I'm not exactly grooming. I'm just doing preventive housework. Kimi and Sammy. The other dogs are with Steve.'
The kitchen was less hairy than you might expect, mainly because I'd been taking breaks to vacuum up undercoat. I shoved the grooming table out of the way, stowed the forced-air dryer and the Dyson canister vac under it, gave the dogs free run of the kitchen, and started making coffee.
‘I keep reminding myself that Quinn is in good therapy,' said Rita, for whom psychotherapy is a religious vocation. From her priestly viewpoint, those fifty-minute hours are sacred rites. She believes in the power of her chosen form of prayer. For once, I refrained from saying anything about dog worship, the Sacred Animal, God's woofing, furry proof of celestial design and thus of boundless, bounding, leaping, panting love in this otherwise bleak universe; nor did I point out the mundane and obvious, namely that Quinn's accusation against a representative of the above mentioned Sacred Animal was a sign of bad character. And if the particular representative, Willie, had never liked Quinn? Well, Willie's dislike had been a premonitory sign of Quinn's deficiencies as a human being, hadn't it? But I was married, and Rita was once again without a human partner, or so I suspected. Consequently, I kept my beliefs and opinions to myself and let Kimi and Sammy minister to Rita. Kimi, who is preternaturally sensitive, licked Rita's hands as if they were ailing puppies, and Sammy put on a distracting show by dropping to the floor at Rita's feet, rolling onto his back, displaying his white tummy, and foolishly waving his big paws in the air.

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