Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Fantasy,
Contemporary,
Action & Adventure,
Juvenile Fiction,
Fantastic fiction,
Pets,
Animals,
Nature,
Dogs,
Lake District (England),
Laboratory animals,
Animal Rights,
Laboratory animals - England,
Animal experimentation,
Animal experimentation - England
himself forward and slowly disappeared from Snitter's view, his hind legs, with tail between, stretching out backwards and dragging behind him in the tunnel.
Snitter, full of frustration, remained running backwards and forwards in front of the open door.
Several times more he jumped up at the opening and fell back, until at length, giving up, he lay down, panting, on the floor.
"Rowf?"
There was no answer from the tunnel.
Snitter got up and backed slowly away from the door, as though trying to get a better view inside.
"Rowf?"
There was still no answer, and beyond the lip he could see nothing.
"Hoop-la sugar lump!" barked Snitter suddenly. Running forward, he took a flying leap at the opening, like a circus dog jumping through a hoop. He felt his hind legs strike hard against the metal lip and gave a single, quick yap of pain; then, realising that his body was more than half into the hole, he rolled on his side as Rowf had done and, being smaller, drew his rump and hind paws in without difficulty. For a few moments he lay gasping as the pain in his legs subsided, then collected himself and smelt ahead.
Rowf's body was blocking the square tunnel in front of him. No draught was coming up it and no smell except the metal water dog-smell of Rowf. Snitter began to feel afraid. In this tunnel he could not turn round, evidently Rowf could not hear him and worst of all, Rowf's body seemed not to be moving.
He crept forward until his head was lying upon Rowf's trailing hind legs. Only now did he perceive that Rowf was in fact moving, but agonisingly slowly—more slowly, thought Snitter, than a slug on a wet gravel path. He could smell Rowf's urine smeared along the metal floor. It was full of fear. Snitter began to tremble and whimper where he lay in the close, ash-powdery, cast-iron passage.
Cramped in that funnelled hole, he found himself, as he tried to stand, forced into a curious posture, half-crouching, his rump pressed tightly against the roof 'of the chute. He could not maintain so unnatural a stance and after a few moments fell forward, so that his head butted sharply against Rowf's rump.
At the impact he felt the body give and move the least fraction—no more, perhaps, than the length of a tooth or claw. In frenzy, he pushed again and again with his head at the black, shaggy rump, which at each impact slid almost imperceptibly forward.
He did not know whether it was possible for Rowf to force his way out of the far end of the chute. All he knew was that Rowf was still alive, for at each push he could feel his pulse and the spasmodic working of his muscles.
For how long he continued in his desperate pushing and thrusting he had no idea. The air in the tunnel grew foetid and his own breath lay condensed and humid on the iron walls. He wondered whether daylight might already have come. Slowly the length of tunnel behind him grew longer, but still there was no sign that Rowf was likely to get clear of it. At last, just as Snitter felt himself exhausted and unable to do more, Rowf's rump slid suddenly forward as smoothly as a turd from a healthy anus, and dropped out of sight. Snitter, drawing in a wonderful breath of cool air, found himself looking at a square of fragrant darkness speckled with rain—an opening in some sort of wall beyond the chute and framed in its mouth. A moment later he himself, dropping over the edge, fell two feet into a drift of powdery ash sprinkled with tiny, sharp bones on an iron grid. They had reached the furnace chamber. Snitter scrambled up and began smelling about him. The place was scarcely bigger than a dog-kennel, so that he and Rowf, lying side by side, covered the entire area of the floor. Yet, despite the dust and powdery ash thrown up by their fall, the air seemed fresher than any he had breathed for days past. Cool currents, carrying more scents than he could recognise, were swirling all about them, not only from below but also from each side. From somewhere beneath him he
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