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Walter the Farting Dog

William Kotzwinkle



  Copyright © 2001 by William Kotzwinkle and Glenn Murray. Illustrations © 2001 by Audrey Colman.

  All rights reserved. No portion of this book, except for brief review, may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without written permission of the publisher. For information contact Frog Books c/o North Atlantic Books.

  Published by Frog Books

  Frog Books’ publications are distributed by North Atlantic Books, P.O. Box 12327, Berkeley, California 94712

  eISBN: 978-1-58394-399-1

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 2001033450

  v3.1

  For everyone who’s ever felt misjudged or misunderstood.

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  First Page

  Betty and Billy brought Walter home from the dog pound. “Nobody wanted him,” said Billy.

  “But we love him,” said Betty.

  “Well, he smells awful,” said their mother. “I think you’d better give him a bath.”

  Mother walked in and said, “He still smells awful.”

  And that’s when they got the first clue. The tell-tale bubbles in the water.

  “He’s probably just a little nervous,” said Mother, hopefully. “His stomach must be upset.”

  But Walter’s stomach wasn’t upset. Walter’s stomach was fine. He felt perfectly normal. He just farted a lot.

  He did it when he bathed. He did it when he played with Betty and Billy. He did it when he walked around the house.

  He did it in the dining room. He did it in the kitchen. And he did it in his sleep.

  “That dog farts morning, noon, and night,” said Father.

  “He can’t help it, Daddy,” said Betty and Billy.

  They didn’t mind Walter’s farts.

  “So what if he farts,” Billy said to Betty when they were alone in their room with Walter.

  Betty agreed. Walter agreed too. He sat there, looking innocently around, farting.

  “Take him to the vet,” said Father.

  “Farting,” said the vet, “or rectal flatulence, as we say in the medical profession,” and prescribed a change in diet.

  They gave Walter every kind of dog food. He farted. They tried him on cat food. They gave him hot dogs, hamburgers, and lettuce and tomato sandwiches.

  They gave him fried chicken. They gave him rabbit food. They made him a vegetarian.

  “No matter what that dog eats, he turns it into farts,” roared Father.

  Walter got the blame for everybody else’s farts too. If Uncle Irv let one slip, he just went and stood near Walter.

  Then all he had to say was, “Walter!”

  And everyone would look at poor Walter.

  “He has to go back to the pound,” said Father.

  “No, Daddy, please,” begged Betty and Billy. “Don’t send Walter away.”

  “He goes tomorrow,” said Father.

  They pleaded. Walter farted.

  It was all over. That night, Betty and Billy cried in their beds, and Walter looked at them unhappily.

  “Oh Walter,” said Betty, “you’ve got to stop farting.”

  “Because Father is going to send you back to the pound tomorrow,” said Billy.

  Walter knew how serious the situation was. He’d never see Betty and Billy again. He resolved to hold in his farts forever. When Betty and Billy fell asleep, he walked down to the kitchen to see if there was anything around to eat. He managed to open the cupboard door with his nose and found the 25-pound bag of low-fart dog biscuits the vet had prescribed for him, which had made him fart more. Even though he knew they made him fart more, he couldn’t resist. He ate the entire bag. “Very tasty,” said Walter to himself.

  And then he went and lay down on the sofa. A gigantic gas bubble began to build inside him. “This is going to be trouble,” he said to himself, nervously. He was afraid of what might happen if he let it go. He thought maybe the house would explode. So he kept it in. It wasn’t easy. In fact, it was torture. But he had resolved never to fart again. His future depended on it. As he lay there, with his tail wrapped tightly between his legs, he heard a noise at the window.

  He watched it slowly open.

  A pair of burglars came through.

  They dropped silently into the kitchen.

  “Watch out for the dog,” said one of the burglars.

  “He won’t bite,” said the other. “He’s a wimp.” Walter might have bitten them, except he was so filled with gas he couldn’t move. They tied a rag around his snout so he couldn’t bark.

  “Okay,” whispered the first burglar, “let’s clear the place out.”

  They took everything they could get their hands on. Walter wanted to stop them but he was having unbearable gas pains. He rolled on his back, and waved his paws in the air. He gnashed his teeth.

  “We’ve got it all,” said the second burglar.

  “Let’s go.”

  That’s when Walter let it fly. It was the worst fart of his life. It made a tremendous noise and shot him across the room. A hideous cloud filled the air. The burglars clutched their throats, unable to breathe.

  With tears in their eyes, they raced for the window. They tried to grab their bag with all the valuables in it, but their arms were too weak. “Let’s … get … out … of … here …”

  They jumped out the window and ran up the block, choking and gasping for air. Still blinded by Walter’s attack, they stepped into the headlights of an approaching police car.

  “Hold it right there!” said the policeman.

  When Father and Mother came down in the morning, they found the open window. And they saw the bag with their valuables in it. And Walter was sitting beside it. He still had the rag tied around his snout. You’d have to say he looked heroic.

  “He saved the silverware!” cried Mother.

  “He saved the VCR!” cried Father. “Good dog, Walter! You’re our dog, even if you do fart all the time.”

  And so the family learned to live with Walter, the hero dog.

  And that’s the end of our tail.

 

 

  William Kotzwinkle, Walter the Farting Dog

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