Tag: playful

What the Dog Knows

Nonfiction by Pippa Storey

It’s a sunny midsummer’s day in New Rochelle, on the edge of Long Island Sound. A couple stroll into Hudson Park just ahead of me, their lanky white mutt prancing excitedly around them. They climb the flank of a promontory overlooking the bay, then separate and stand a ball’s throw apart.

Slowly, teasingly, the man draws back his arm, watching the dog quiver with anticipation. He pitches toward the woman, and the dog catapults in her direction. She catches his shot neatly with both hands, barely a pawbeat before the dog reaches her. Then, grinning down fondly, she returns an underarm lob, and the dog bolts off again.

Back and forth they throw, the dog racing eagerly between them. But there’s no ball! It’s all a charade. Nevertheless, the dog is completely enthralled, ears flapping in the wind as he gallops across the grass.

Just a conditioned response, my mother will later surmise. But I can see—from the adoration in the dog’s upturned face, the frenzied wagging of his tail, his rapturous joy in their laughter—that he understands: the game was never about the ball.


Pippa Storey grew up in New Zealand, studied in France, and now lives near Hudson Park in New Rochelle, New York, where this interaction occurred. For more of her writing, digital artwork and videos, please visit pippastorey.com.

A Half-Decent Guy

Poetry by Brian C. Billings

He always went off half-cocked—

left every party halfway through
because he only half knew anybody,

half convinced himself he was a genius
(but half forgot how to prove it),

took the better half of a day to go anywhere
and the worse half of a night to leave,

drank his morning coffee half ready
and his evening drinks half mixed,

never took more than half a chance
when acting on his own behalf,

bought about half of the small lies
while halfheartedly believing the big truth,

tossed away his relationships half done
whenever his love had half begun,

acted like a halfwit more than he should
(while maybe half understanding why),

stayed half on track when the job mattered
and went half astray whenever it didn’t,

ran over half the world to find himself
and half killed himself when he couldn’t,

gave the people who tried half a chance
about half the time he worked with them . . .

They say he was a decent guy,
but they don’t know the half of it.


Brian C. Billings is a professor of drama and English at Texas A&M University-Texarkana. His work has appeared in such journals as Ancient Paths, The Bluebird Word, Confrontation, Evening Street Review, Glacial Hills Review, and Poems and Plays. Publishers for his scripts include Eldridge Publishing and Heuer Publishing.

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