The Adventures of Peter Gray chapter 9: Joseph's News
Chapter
9
Joseph's
News
I could remember the first day I met Joseph
Kinnick like it were me first memory. Back then, me arms and legs were brittle
as bone, and fur more matted and patched than an old rug. It had only been only
a few months since the Incident, a few months since the orphanage, and me days
were spent wandering New York all alone.
I knew Edward and Hansel had to be somewhere
by then, seeing how they just got off the ferry to start a new life in the
city, but after the Incident, I didn't wanna get them hurt. I couldn't be greedy of their kindness when
they had to look out for themselves and each other like brothers.
I walked along Henry Street with nothing but
me papa's pocket watch, an old newsie's cap I found in the trash a week prior,
and torn clothes even a burlesque dancer wouldn't wear. I didn't know what the
pretty vixens did, but I saw plenty of 'em in alleys to guess at age eight. The
smell of the city already ingrained itself in me by then, and me nose was
awestruck by the smell of fresh bread. And what smelled like the same cookies
'good cubs' earned at the orphanage.
I remember turning around a corner and seeing
a two-story building with words me eight year-old mind saw read 'Bakery', and
the amazing smells me mind couldn't process took over. I ran over to the glass
and stared inside at the marvelous foods,, my tail wagging as I went inside
from the rain. It was so warm.
Behind the counter was an older wolf wearing
an apron, he had very gray fur and was reading a newspaper about something
called the 'Homestead Strike' and it 'escalating further with workers'. I could
not recall much, other than the look in the wolf's eyes as I tried to grab a
bagel.
"It costs two cents," he spoke in a low
rumble. "Ya got anything?" Speechless, I shook me muzzle, and I felt my paws
tremble at how much I was starving. As I turned, me right eye caught the wolf's
ears perking and me ears heard a low sigh. "Hey, you look awful, kid. How about
I start a small tab, and ya can pay fer it over time?"
With nothing but the pitter patter of the
rain outside, I slowly turned to the guy behind the counter and saw a hint of
concern in his eyes, and I nodded before he tossed me a fresh muffin. And when
the food slid down me throat, I attempted to purr in delight like those cats
did. Instead, I got meself a low burp, that made him chuckle.
"I'll take that as a 'thank you' then," He
placed the newspaper down and looked to me curiously. "Ya got a name, boy?
Mine's Joseph. Joseph Kinnick." A smile formed over his muzzle, and I saw his
tail wagging behind the counter.
I looked, and simply said, "Peter, sir. Peter
Gray."
Now, instead of the kind gentlewolf, I was
facing the annoyed gentlewolf.
Now, me and Joseph were facing each other in
a table in the Bakery. Lance was sitting with James nearby eating some
complementary bagels while Joseph towered over me as in sat in the most creaky
and wooden chair of the bunch. Fursons and gentlewolfs walked by the place
uninterested, the smell of freshly baked bagels and bread overwhelming the
dining room like a whiff of perfume.
As Joseph looked down at me, me muzzle went
from side to side, and I saw the window of the bakery. Why hasn't Joseph turned the 'closed' sign to 'open' yet? I
wondered.
"How many times have I told you not to get
into fights, Peter?" Joseph spoke to me in a rough whisper. From how his wife
Rose scurried up and down the stairs, I guessed little Johnny was sleeping or
something. The thought of him sleeping and cuddling in his cradle formed a
small smile on me muzzle, but it was short-lived when Joseph asked me again,
"Are you listening, boy?"
I jumped. "Too many times if ya asked me," I
sighed with crossed arms and a curled tail. Me gray fur bristled when Joseph
groaned. "And besides, why should ya care if I get into fights anyway?"
The old wolf looked to me blankly. "Ya knew
if you and yer friends came over here, I'd be your Lincoln against the
Confederacy with that coyote, didn't ya?" he asked loudly. I heard footsteps
above me ears and a crying noise, which caused a frown to appear under his
crossed eyes.
Rose hurried down with little Johnny in her
cradling arms and scowled at me and Joseph like we stole Governor Roosevelt's own
glasses. "Honey, I thought I told you to please keep it down?" the she-wolf
softly growled at us, her arms still cradling the cub. She craned her neck and
whispered something soothing.
"I am truly sorry Rose," Joseph eyed me while
scratching the back of his head. "I was just telling Peter that I've told him
not to bring fights near the bakery. And not involve his friends in those
fights with Flint's son."
I heard Rose gasp and saw she was looking at
me oddly. "You have a bruise, Peter. Are you alright?" she asked.
Rose was talking about the one Gavin gave me
on the left side of me muzzle, and it tingled whenever I pressed one of me
fingers to it. "Ah it's fine, Rose. Ain't like I jumped offa Brooklyn Bridge
right?"
Joseph glared at me shortly, and I folded me
ears in silence. Even Lance and James paused in uneasiness, with Lance's tail
flicking uncertainly with his expression. I didn't know what to expect either.
"Peter, all of that roughhousing, me rescuing
ya from trouble With Mr. Flint's son, it...it..." Joseph stumbled with words and
placed his mighty right paw on the table, and me fur trembled at what he was
gonna say. "...it's unacceptable and..." He erupted a very low growl, soon
surprising me when it turned in chuckling.
"...it makes me wonder about Johnny when he's
yer age."
Like that, a smile bigger than the city shone
through me canines, and me tail wagged deviously. Joseph was sometimes harsh to
me with me tab, telling me lesson after lesson, but the one thing I always
forgot from the baker was that he could be more generous than a Brooklyn nun on
Christmas.
"Ah, for a split second I thought ya was
gonna skin me alive, Joseph," I chuckled with perked ears. "Guess I
underestimated your kindness, Joseph."
"I
hope Gavin didn't rough ya up too much though, Peter?" Rose asked while sitting
next to Lance and James with little Johnny in her arms. "You have a bruise on
your right cheek."
"Eh he'll be fine, honey," Joseph sighed
while sitting down with a smile of nostalgia. "When I was his age, I got meself
into some fights worse than him."
"That's cause you lived in Harlem," the
she-wolf mumbled with a soothing tone. "And the boys you fought weren't related
to Francis Flint."
Francis Flint was known to be what some
called 'a pain in the...', followed by a dozen words that caused mothers to cover
their cub's ears. I hadn't met the older and (some say towering) coyote, but I knew he worked in the same factory that James'
father worked at. Mr. Lawton once told me that he once met Francis, and the
coyote sneered so much that it was his permanent expression.
No wonder Gavin's
afraid of him,
I giggled to meself.
I turned to see James asking if he could hold
Johnny in his arms, and to Joseph's slight reluctance, she gently handed the
small cub to him from her paws. "Now be careful, hold him softly by the head
and lower back. Don't place your palm on the base of his tail either...there you
go dear..."
I slowly walked over to them and couldn't
keep meself from smiling at the young human holding the adorable wolf cub in
his small and blue blanket. Johnny got most of his cute cheeks from Joseph,
while God gave him Rose's emerald eyes and lighter fur. The young cub wasn't
even half a year old and I knew he'd go on to do great things with his
playfulness. And that playfulness was shown when Johnny started nibbling on James'
thumb like it were made o' sugar.
He looked at the baby with a soothing smile. "E-Easy
there little buddy..." James chuckled. I inched meself closer and smiled at the
giggling in the young cub as me friend held him. "Ain't he a young tyke, Mrs.
Kinnick? He kinda reminds me of Annabelle, save for the ears, the tail..."
Suddenly he made a foul face and quickly handed Johnny over to Rose. One whiff
of the scent gave me a hint. "...and whatever you're feeding him."
"Yeesh! Forgive me, but what do you feed him, ma'am?" Lance flinched
at the smell like I was and covered his nose with a curled tail. "He smells
awful."
I covered me own muzzle, and sneezed at the
smell of corn and mashed beef. "Woah! Excuse me boys," Rose carried the
squirming little Joseph in her arms (a good distance from his smelly tail) and
brought him to the base of the wooden and creaky stairs, but stopped a moment
to look at Joseph. "Frankly honey, I dunno if I'll be able to handle his
brother or sister."
As I was drinking a cup of water to get rid
of the foul taste from me mouth, I choked a gulp and perked me ears at Joseph.
"What did she say?" I turned to the stairs, but she was gone. "Did she just say
what I think she said?"
Joseph, sitting himself down on the chair
across from me with a wagging tail, gave me an early Christmas smile. "That's
right, Peter Gray," he clapped his paws together in a happy laugh. "Rose is
pregnant!"
I felt a spray of water erupt from Lance's
mouth, covering me in his spit. As I shook the moisture offa me fur and wiped
the water from me paws onto the table, I gave him a lasting stare at his smug
muzzle. "Did ya really have to do
that, ya raccoon?" I asked.
"Nope, but I couldn't resist."
After James stopped giggling, he turned to
Joseph next to me. "So you're gonna be a father again, Mr. Kinnick, sir?" he asked
while taking another bite of his bagel. Shrugging, I took one for meself. "Is
this the reason you're in a good mood today?"
"Yep."
I widened me eyes in a huge expression at
Lance, who gave it back. We both looked each other dumbfounded, like we
silently asked, "That's his 'good mood'?"
"What do you think it is? A boy or a girl?"
Lance asked Joseph curiously. I saw the hint of annoyance from his next
question, and prayed for the exact same answer. "Or maybe twins like my
brothers?"
Joseph flicked his tail and flinched.
"Honestly," he jutted out to us. "I hope that he, or she, is the last one." I
noticed the wolf lifting his muzzle to look behind him and all around the four
walls. "If I get another young cub after this one, I dunno if I'll be able to
afford getting me wife pregnant again."
James suddenly asked, "How are they made, Mr.
Kinnick?"
I choked on a piece of bagel and
laughed at the embarrassing look on Joseph's muzzle. "W-Well James," I cleared
me throat and began with, "A baby is made when-ow!"
Joseph stomped me footpaw under the table and
spoke, "Say one word and we'll see if Gavin'll be the only furson nearby to
give ya a blinker." He even showed his
canines in a smirk.
"But I was just saying that when two fursons
get together, the man-" he stomped on me footpaw again, and I winced. "Ow!"
While Lancie giggled like a loon
nibbling on a bagel, but James tilted his hairy round head confused. "Mr.
Kinnick, what's he talking about?"
Joseph looked at the young human boy
and nervously smiled. "He ain't talking about anything, James," he said in a
forced tone, tail flicking like a piece of furry rope in the wind. "If he was,
Peter Gray here will have to pay me a dollar per bad word he said in..." I perked
me ears and widened me eyes.
"So how's Rose feeling with the baby
anyways Joseph?" I cheekily asked with a wagging tail. Whenever he did that,
the wolf was as serious as police officer after an urchin stealing food.
Without hiding his grin, Joseph nodded
delightfully. "Why yes, young Peter," he said. "She's a tad nervous for having
a second cub, but it'll be nice for little Johnny to have a brother or sister."
With a slight shrug and wiping some settling dust from the ceiling, he
continued, "especially since these times are so-"
"The time!" Lance suddenly sprung from
his chair, green eyes wide. "Peter, what time is it? Hurry!" I reached into me
right pocket and took out me father's pocket watch, telling the crazy raccoon
that it was half past four. "Dang it! Dang it! Dang it! Mum wanted me back half
an hour ago! She's gonna kill me and skin me like a sheep!"
Me and James sprung up like
jack-in-the-boxes. "Then it's time for me to go too!" James chirped in. "Thank
you so much, Mr. Kinnick; the bagels are wonderful." He smiled at the wolf and
joined Lance as I saw his tail walk outta the door in a hurry.
"No problem!" he shouted back. As I
was about to eat the last bagel, Joseph said something that made me wanna throw
him in the oven on the other side of the room. "After all, the bagels go onto your tab."
And it wasn't the bruises on me that
were sore.