Название: Claude’s Christmas Adventure: The must-read Christmas dog book of 2018!
Автор: Sophie Pembroke
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Домашние Животные
isbn: 9780008202064
isbn:
‘Um, thanks.’ Now what? Did she compliment him on his postbag? What would a normal, non-craft crazy loner, do? Holly could do normal, she was almost certain. Look at the icicles!
The awkward moment stretched out between them, as Holly tried to figure out how to break eye contact. Until a sudden crash in the kitchen startled her into spinning around.
‘What on earth …?’ Leaving the door open, Holly dashed towards the kitchen. Maybe Perdita had found that blasted staple already. Except she hadn’t heard a yowl. Perdita had a very distinctive yowl …
‘Careful,’ Jack said sharply, and when she glanced back Holly realised he’d followed her in. His post bag was slung over his back, and his fists were up, as if he were spoiling for a fight. ‘It could be a—’ They reached the kitchen, and stared at the unlikely sight before them. ‘Dog?’ Jack finished.
‘Dog,’ Holly agreed. Not just any dog. A compact, bat-eared dog that was sprawled on her kitchen floor, looking up at her with very sad and sorry eyes. The bulk of his body was white, but those oversized ears, the patches over his eyes and one or two spots over his back were black. ‘He must have wriggled through the cat flap.’
‘Tight squeeze,’ Jack commented, eyeing the dog, then the cat flap. ‘Especially with those shoulders. And that stomach.’
‘And the ears …’ They stood straight up, adding a good couple of inches to the dog’s height, lined in a pale, velvety pink. ‘What sort of dog is he, do you think?’ With his wrinkled face, non-existent tail, and powerful legs, he looked like no dog Holly had ever seen before. Except, now that she thought about it … didn’t the house across the road have some sort of dog? She’d never really paid much attention. She was, after all, a firmly declared cat person. Still, she was sure she’d seen the husband or the daughter walking a smallish dog from her front window, from time to time. She’d just never studied the details. Like the ears …
‘French Bulldog, I think.’ Jack crouched down in front of the creature, who was returning Holly’s stare with equal bafflement. ‘Hang on. He’s wearing a collar. Hey there, boy.’ That last was to the dog, Holly assumed, as Jack reached out, slowly, cautiously, and lifted the tag hanging from the animal’s collar. ‘Claude, apparently. What a name.’
‘Claude,’ Holly repeated. ‘He doesn’t look like a Claude.’
‘He looks like a thug,’ Jack agreed. ‘Except for the ears.’
‘And the eyes.’ Holly frowned a little as she looked closer. ‘His eyes are … gentle. And a bit sad.’ With almost the same shadows she saw in Jack’s actually. The poor creature seemed to vibrate with a sense of misery. Of loneliness.
Holly could sympathise with that. Maybe she could crochet Claude a Christmas hat, or something.
‘Is there an address? Or a phone number?’ she asked, shaking off the strange connection with the dog.
‘The McCawleys, at number 11.’ Jack let the tag fall and stood up. ‘So, just across the road. I think they’re out though. Do you have a number for them?’
Holly shook her head. She didn’t have numbers for any of her neighbours, now she thought about it. Really, they were right there, next door. That was sort of the point of them. Why would she need their phone numbers?
Besides, when she’d moved in with Sebastian, shortly after they’d decided to ‘merge their lives’ as he put it, she’d been too loved up and deep in their new engagement to worry about other people. There’d been decorating to do, and wedding planning, and dreaming about her future and … and she wasn’t thinking about Sebastian. Not at all.
Even if tomorrow was supposed to be her wedding day.
No. Back to the dog.
‘I guess we could put a note through their door?’ Holly said. What was the proper etiquette for dealing with house-breaking dogs, anyway?
‘As long as they’re not away over Christmas.’ Jack straightened up and stood, leaving Claude staring up at him pleadingly.
‘Do you think he’s hungry?’ That might explain the oversized eyes. He looked like a creature in a Disney movie. ‘Do French Bulldogs like cat food, do you think? It’s all I have.’
Jack shrugged. ‘It’s worth a try. I get the feeling this guy might eat anything you put in front of him.’
Holly got that idea too, although she couldn’t imagine where from. It wasn’t like she was a dog whisperer, or anything. In her experience, animals had as much a mind of their own as humans. And God knew she’d never had much luck getting her own species to do what she wanted.
Still, she dug out a spare food bowl from Perdita’s cupboard and tipped some dry food into it, laying it on the floor in front of Claude. Then, as an afterthought, she added a bowl of water. When she stepped back she realised that not only was the postman still standing in her kitchen, he was also surveying her kitchen table. Or, at least, what used to be her kitchen table. These days it was more like Christmas Craft Central.
‘You’ve been busy,’ he observed, reaching out to touch a string of red, gold and green bunting lying across the end of the table. The fabric shifted slightly, pulling the strings buried under the rest of the stuff on the table. Holly held her breath, waiting to see if the tower of decorations, the tangle of fairy lights or the cooling racks laden with the pieces of her gingerbread house, waiting to be assembled, would topple over at his touch. Thankfully they didn’t. That was all she needed – to bury the postman in biscuits and sequins in her kitchen. ‘Is this what’s in all the parcels, then? Craft stuff?’
‘Mostly,’ Holly admitted. ‘I like, well, making things. And keeping busy. Christmas is sort of the season for homemade stuff, don’t you think?’
‘I’d never really thought about it.’ Jack tilted his head slightly as he looked at her, and Holly got the uncomfortable feeling that he was taking this new information and adding it to what he already knew about her. She just wished she knew what conclusions he was drawing. Talented amateur crafts-person or crazy Pinterest addict? Was it too much to want to know which? ‘So, what was today’s order? Fabric? Sequins? At least I know it wasn’t more of that incredibly heavy stuff you had last week.’
‘Air drying clay. Sorry.’ Holly felt her cheeks warm up and knew she was blushing. ‘Actually, today’s wasn’t craft stuff. I suspect it’s Perdita’s Christmas jumper.’
‘Perdita?’ Jack’s eyebrows were raised so high they’d almost disappeared under the short, dark hair just starting to curl over his forehead.
‘My cat.’ Great. With two words she’d crystallised his opinion of her as a crazy cat lady. So much for trying to appear normal. Too late now, though. Holly opened the package and held up the fluffy red outfit, with brown pompoms sewn on to look like Christmas puddings.
‘Ah.’ Jack stared at the jumper for a moment then averted his gaze, apparently horrified. ‘And does she, uh, like dressing up?’
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