Victorian San Francisco Stories

Victorian San Francisco Stories by M. Louisa Locke Page A

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Authors: M. Louisa Locke
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outside, she noticed that, despite the late hour, there was a light on across the way. I bet I am not the only person who is finding it hard to sleep in this heat, she thought. Then she saw a man, she assumed it was Mr. Francis, move into view, his back to the window. He was shirtless, his suspenders over bare skin, and he seemed to be staring at his feet. Dandy struggled in her arms and began to bark. The man swung around to peer out the window, and Barbara scuttled backwards, her heart again pounding, Dandy now silent in her arms.
    Surely he couldn't see me. I'm standing in the dark. He just heard Dandy , she thought. Nevertheless, when she crept back to the window, she approached from the side and peeked out again. The light had gone out, and the texture of the square of darkness at the window suggested that the man had pulled the curtains as well. She stared out for a moment, seeing nothing else stirring in the still night air.
    "Mother, what's wrong?" Jamie called.
    "Nothing, dear. Dandy just heard something, but everything is fine. Probably some cat," she said, hoping this was true. She felt Dandy's hot breath on her cheek, but he was no longer trembling, so she set him down and heard the sharp click, click, click of his toenails as he made his way across to Jamie's bed. As she climbed back into her own bed, she heard the soft murmurs of her son talking to his dog, and she smiled and unexpectedly went to sleep.
    *****
    " Mother, I told you, he isn't a mongrel. Georgie's Uncle Sean said he saw a dog just like Dandy back east, and he was a special new kind of dog. Part English bulldog, part English terrier, and part French bull dog." Jamie trotted in front of her, holding Dandy's leash.
    Barbara replied, "Well, Jamie, if that isn't a mongrel, I don't know what is. Be careful, don't let him! Oh dear, too late." Dandy, who had been weaving back and forth, his minute black nose snuffling up smells from the wooden planks of the sidewalk, had suddenly swerved right and lifted his leg on a barrel of shoes outside a cobbler’s. At least the dark stain on the barrel attested to Dandy not being the first dog to anoint it. But really, did he have to lift his leg every few feet?
    " Mother, I'm telling you, they gave this mixture a name! That makes it a pure breed. Least that's what Georgie's Uncle Sean says, and he's an expert on dogs, Georgie says. His Uncle Sean says that they call dogs like Dandy Boston terriers cause they were made in Boston. But seems to me if Dandy was born in San Francisco, he should be called a San Francisco terrier, don't you think?"
    "Well, if you ask me, since he is of English and French heritage but made in America, I think that they should call them American terriers. But it doesn't matter what he is. Dandy's a f ine dog." Barbara smiled at her son. Whatever kind of dog Dandy was, he was a blessing. They had had to move so often in the first four years after they left Kansas that Jamie had become quiet and withdrawn. Moving last year to San Francisco was even harder on him. San Francisco was such a big city. The papers said when the 1880 census was taken next year, the city might turn out to have as many as 400,000 people! So much noise and bustle, Jamie had seemed afraid to go outside. Moving to Mrs. Fuller's boarding house last January had helped; everyone was so nice to him. But in the last month since he had rescued Dandy, he had become a new boy. He was making friends, and he had begun to roam the neighborhood on his walks with his dog. She was so relieved, and she felt as long as he had Dandy with him, he would be all right.
    "Jamie, wait, let that wagon get past before we cross Jones." Barbara moved to the end of the wooden sidewalk to stand by her son, watching to make sure he had a tight grip on Dandy's leash. It was early Saturday morning, a week since she had run into Mrs. Francis, and they were on their way to visit the resale shop, hoping to find her alone.
    "Now I know you aren't very

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