The Dog-Biscuit Miracle
by
David Bond
Silverminers.com
Wallace,
Idaho – To those in search of miracles, I give you this:
Without
fail, every morning, give or take 5 minutes depending on the weather,
at 0530 our newspaper appears on the front porch. Not in the weeds
or the snow. On the front porch, right by the door, so a be-slippered
old geezer can reach out for it without embarrassing his neighbours
or getting frostbite on his toes, even in the dark.
The
impeccable and predictable timing would be enough to remark upon.
Except that, winter or summer, tucked into the newspaper is a dog
biscuit. Whoever throws the paper on our porch has never met Chase,
our dog, because he is inside the house at this dark hour. But Robert
has heard a grump or a woof and figures somebody inside would like
a treat.
Comes
out of his own pocket, this newspaper-carrier's milk bone. Now,
milk bones are not the most expensive of things, unless you buy
them 365 days a year for the hundreds of dogs who live along his
route. And I know that our paper-guy does this, because at 3:30
a.m., throwing papers way up in Mullan, he is doing the same thing
for the dog-people there. I have witnesses.
Now,
come to find out, this individual lives in Smelterville. Smelterville
is 20 miles west of Mullan. So in the damned cold and dark (winter
or summer, take your pick) he departs the comfort of his feathers,
picks up his newspapers in Kellogg, and by 0300 is in Mullan, throwing
the day's news and doggie goodies, and by 0530 or so is tossing
the newspaper and the milk bone onto our front porch. This round-trip
is about the distance between Seattle and Olympia.
And
to top all of that, a couple of days ago, he dropped a Christmas
card into the mix, strapped into the same rubber band as the newspaper
and the milk bone. It was there on the front porch, at 0 Dark 30.
The return address was, simply: The Newspaper Guy. Chase ate the
milk bone and spared the card. Who says dogs are unsentimental?
I've
caught the newspaper guy two or three times on the front porch,
his beater breathing exhaust, thanked him for the good work he does
every day. He respects my thanks, but he has a route to deliver,
he is on his way. By looks he is an old hippie, like me, like most
of my orbit. Just doing what he needs to do, except with a flair.
I wonder, was he growing pot in California in 1965, or maybe just
bugging out of the orange smoke at LZ Crystal on the last Huey before
Charlie shot guys out from under him. Maybe, like me during those
turbulent times, he was just passing through. I don't know and I
don't care. Sacrifice is sacrifice and redemption is redemption.
We all muddle through.
What
I do know is that a guy gets up in the misery of the night, and
goes beyond the minimum. He makes Chase, our dog, happy. And once
a year thanks me for his business with a Christmas card.
If
there is an America to be saved, it will not be trillions to U.S.
and foreign banks. It will not be the Fed. It will not be a hideously
powerful military steaming through the Straits of Formosa into the
maw of an Exocet missile. Salvation will come from a guy waking
up 30 miles to my West in the middle of the night, and in addition
to doing his job, gives a damn about my dog. Without complaint,
but with a great deal of grace.
David
Bond [send him mail] worked
30 years in the newspaper business as a general assignment and political
reporter and editor, on both coasts, Alaska and Canada, garnering
numerous national awards for his work. He now covers precious metals
equities.
Copyright
© 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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