The history of the domestic dog is some 33,000 years long and for no particular reason I can discern, I’ve recently found myself wondering about the first dog whose death caused his owner to cry. If dogs wrote history, that would surely be their eureka moment. From then on, dogs had power. Few people would risk their lives to save a sheep. Most of us would to save our dogs. Dogs know this.
We know it too, which is why historical novelists use dogs so often. A fictional dog is a surefire arrow into the reader’s heart.
In Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall, for example, the very second young Thomas Cromwell hears Bella barking and thinks ‘I’ll miss my dog’, he springs to sympathetic life. It’s a masterly trick, and it’s on page 1. To punch the gut in novels about Mary Queen of Scots, authors use the dismay of the little Skye terrier huddling underneath her skirts as she lays her head on the block. That poor wee creature, we all exclaim. In some history books we're told 'it died soon after', and we immediately infer a broken heart, just like Greyfriars Bobby's. I wonder if anybody told Elizabeth 1 about Mary's dog. Unwise, perhaps, in those times. Causing the monarch to weep might have suddenly become a treasonable offence - the Elizabethan equivalent of the Dangerous Dogs Act.

I don't know about you, but I can’t read anything about Laika, the 1957 dog-astronaut, whose one-way ticket into space ended in incineration as the satellite re-entered Earth’s atmosphere.
The blurb
of Nick Abadzis and Hilary Sycamore’s children’s book is enough. It reads: Some violence. Sad ending. I’m almost crying now.

Dogs creep into my books as Blackberry and Crumble creep into the drawing room: Gryffed, in the de Granville Trilogy; Brees, in Perfect Fire; another Gryffed in Hartslove. They don’t spring out of my head and I don’t base them on my own dogs. Jack Russell terriers shout twentieth century to me.
I find my medieval dogs in tapestries. Brees came from the Burrell Collection. Gryffeds One and Two from La Dame à La Licorn in the Musee de Cluny in Paris.

I expect only their owners cared about them during their lives, but now they’re historical dogs, I hope their appeal has broadened.
I'm sorry to say that Crumble and Blackberry have no interest in historical dogs. Their interests lie entirely in a limited present, comprising things to chase, things to eat and things to sleep in. Or so it appears. But who's really to tell, since although they know all my secrets, I know absolutely none of theirs.