At six years old, there's not a lot of
life experience to build stories around, so you rely on TV shows and comic
books and stuff your mom and dad read to you when you were younger. That's the
raw material you throw into the air when you go outside and make up your own
adventures with whatever comes down. And, if you're lucky, there's a dog
around, somebody like Boots Prosch, who adds that secret ingredient, that dash
of real world experience, that will become so important later on when you sit
down to write.
He was Cavendish to my Lone Ranger, Joker
to my Batman, roving Hyborian Age monster to my Conan.
He was twice my age with ten times my
wisdom, a friend and first mentor. A border collie whose origins are lost to
obscurity, Boots belonged to my grandma and grandpa and lived on their Nebraska
farm all of his twelve years. Dad thought he was the son of a neighbor's dog, a
big fellar called Shep. Somebody else said Boots showed up as a stray, a pup
barely weaned tumbling in on the gully-washing waves of a spring thunderstorm.
From the very beginning he inspired stories.
In my first memories, he was a working
dog, a responsible farm hand. With Boots around, it was easy enough to buy into
the trained antics of Lassie or Rin Tin Tin. Even Snoopy's imaginary escapades
didn't seem quite so outlandish when compared with the equally improbable
antics of Boots. Every morning he was left by himself to stand watch at an open
yard gate while my grandpa fed silage to two dozen cattle. Doesn't sound so
tough with the cattle more interested in breakfast than rushing the gate? Think
again. Boots didn't watch for escaping beef. His job was keeping in three dozen
feeder pigs that also shared the yard. And brother, he was good at it.
He could climb ladders. He would carry a
thermos of coffee by the handle when Grandma took lunch to the field. He loved
to play fetch. With rocks.
He was a tough ol' guy.
But gentle too. I called him
"Bootie," and he answered to it naturally enough. In after-school
roughhouse, he taught me how to take a punch (a head-butt, really) and how to
duck and weave. My afternoon dodgeball coach, Bootie eventually made me king of
the third-grade playground. Our contests
of "Get That Dog" or "Bootie's a Kitty" were good-natured
if seemingly fierce to friends or relatives who didn't know the score.
He never bit to break the skin, but from a
distance he mauled me. I never hurt him, but always came away with fistfuls of his
shedding black and white coat. We played hard and fought fair, always clear
there were boundaries we shouldn't cross: he wasn't allowed in the house. I
wasn't allowed near his food dish when he was eating.
And he was a trusty sidekick. He loped
along into the woods, trailed me through the corn fields, chased my bike on
dirt roads. And all the while, I talked to him. Sharing hopes, worries,
dreams.
Making up stories.
Boots taught me the difference between the
real character of a dog, and a dog as a character. Watch almost any family
movie or flip through a young reader book and you'll see plenty of the latter.
Dogs penned in as emotional fodder, put through their paces (or killed
outright) by reprehensible hacks with too little understanding of real canine
nature. Boots never saved my life. Neither did he die heroically. Or
tragically. He never foiled a real life crime or tracked down a villain. Unlike
his family friendly counterparts, he didn't molly coddle kittens. Bunnies and
squirrels, he killed.
He was a real dog.
As different from other
dogs as people are different from each other. He was an individual with his own
life.
Through his everyday actions, he taught
friendship. And loyalty. And forgiveness. Watching him guard the cattle gate, I
learned about responsibility. Watching him kill a squirrel, I learned about
nature. We spent a few years together, but I've kept him with me always, and he
shows up in the characters I write. He lives on as an old man who knows all the
hidden truths in "Joe Dokes" and a crusty old saddle pard in HOLT
COUNTY LAW. He's part of a ten year-old kid, Frog Carpenter, in the Jo Harper
young reader novellas, and in "Branham's Due," he's a dog.
After Boots, there were other dogs. Each
of them taught me something. Each of them had personality and quirks that show
up in my writing. There was Tuffy, a German Shepherd feared by most of my
friends, who only bit the people who asked for it first (and I can recall a
half dozen of those, including myself). There's Fred Bogart, a basset hound who
was the most self-willed of them all. And Moses McGee, another basset, as
different from Fred as could be, who taught me real patience. They all show up,
and will continue to show up, in the writing.
But it began with Boots, and I can't
imagine writers who never had a similar companion. Thinking about it, maybe
it's why the witches and wizards and magicians of folklore and fairy tales
always have cats or birds or some sort of familiar. It's with just such a
companion where the magic begins.
In my Holt County stories, Deputy Sheriff Whit Branham is friended by a dog named Leonard. This story, Leonard in Jail, was directly inspired by Boots Prosch. Read it here, and please let me know what you think.
After growing up on a Nebraska farm, Richard Prosch
worked as a professional writer, artist, and teacher in Wyoming, South
Carolina, and Missouri. His western crime fiction captures the fleeting history
and lonely frontier stories of his youth where characters aren’t always what
they seem, and the windburned landscapes are filled with swift, deadly danger.
In 2016, Richard roped the Spur Award for short fiction given by Western
Writers of America. Read more at
www.RichardProsch.com