Dog On It

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Dog On It Page 9

by Spencer Quinn


  My ears perked up.

  “Coyote?”

  I drew back, not in the mood for insults.

  “Nah. Looks like a dog.”

  “Way out here?”

  “Must be hungry.”

  “Hey, pooch—wanna burger?”

  Not long after that, I was sitting around the fire, working on a burger, not my first, and socializing with the bikers. I changed my mind about bikers, or at least these bikers. They were big, the women, too, with lots of tattoos and piercings—the sight of piercings always gave me this unpleasant feeling all over my skin—but friendly.

  “He looks pretty wore out.”

  “Wonder where he came from.”

  “Check his tag.”

  “Got no tag,” a biker lady said, coming closer, giving me a nice pat.

  No tag? Uh-oh. Couldn’t feel my collar. I’d lost it? How did that happen?

  “There’s something on his back,” the biker lady said. “Maybe dried blood.”

  The biggest biker, a huge guy with a huge white beard, leaned over and had a look. “That’s nothin’,” he said. “You should see the other guy.”

  Everybody laughed and laughed.

  “You thirsty, pooch?”

  I was.

  “Like beer?”

  I really didn’t. What I liked was water, but there didn’t seem to be any around. Someone filled an old hubcap with beer. I took a sip. Not bad, not bad at all. I lapped up some more.

  “Dude!” said a biker. He gave me a pat. The biker lady gave a pat. Then the big biker shoved them both away and took over the patting, chugging a beer at the same time. Soon the flames were dancing in all kinds of interesting ways. Another biker lady reached down her T-shirt and pulled out a harmonica. The moon came up. I did some howling at it. So did a biker or two. They were real good howlers, almost in my class. Someone refilled the hubcap.

  In the morning I was first one up, feeling not too good. The bikers were sleeping all over the place, some of them wearing not much. Like other humans, almost every one of them looked better with clothes on. I went behind the falling-down shack and did what I had to do. When I got back, the bikers were stirring. I smelled all kinds of human smells, a few brand-new to me.

  “Hungover again,” one said. “Been hungover every morning of my grown-up life.”

  “That’s not the record,” said another.

  The huge biker with the white beard scratched himself for a while—good idea: I scratched myself, too—and then said, “Let’s roll.”

  “What about the pooch?”

  The huge biker gazed at me. “Can’t just leave ’im here,” he said.

  The huge biker had a huge bike, silver and gleaming. I ended up sitting behind him, strapped in with a bungee cord. First time on a bike! I felt all better right away, alert and rested, even hankering for a little more beer. We roared across the desert, my eyes watering from the wind, my ears blown straight back, weird rock formations whizzing by. The biker turned his head, shouted something to me that I didn’t catch. I barked in his ear.

  “‘Born to be wild,’” he screamed into the wind. “‘Like a true nature’s child.’”

  Couldn’t have agreed more: I barked my head off. We did a few wheelies.

  twelve

  We rode across the desert. Oh, the noise we made! Sometimes the huge biker and I were in the lead, sometimes we dropped back—to pass around a tequila bottle, for example. The mountains came nearer and nearer, and soon we were riding on paved roads, narrow at first, then with lots of lanes and some traffic, but did we slow down? Not a bit! The opposite! Like a true nature’s child, we were born to be wild!

  A little later, we entered the foothills and came to a town. The whole gang stopped outside a bar—I could tell it was a bar from the neon martini glass in the window, but also from the smell of human puke in the air—and everyone went in, everyone except me and the huge guy, my biker buddy. We kept going, around a corner and up a side street lined only by a few buildings, some boarded up. We stopped in front of the last one. My biker buddy got off and unhitched me.

  “Cool ridin’, huh?” he said. “Come on, pooch, let’s go.”

  I jumped down and followed him along a stone path and through a gate that led to the building; he closed the gate after me. Hey! I caught the scent of my guys, lots and lots of them. What kind of place—

  The biker opened the door and we entered the building. We were in a small room with a counter, a woman behind it, and lots more smells, all from members of my nation. That was one of Bernie’s ideas—we were a nation inside of a nation.

  The woman looked up. Her smile faded quickly when she saw the biker. “Help you?” she said.

  My biker buddy gestured at me with his thumb. He wore a wide silver thumb ring; the sight distracted me, and I maybe only caught part of what he said next. “. . . picked up a stray.”

  “Wearing any tags?” the woman said.

  “Nope,” said the biker. “Looks like he’s been through a rough stretch, but he’s a good ol’ boy.”

  “Why don’t you adopt him? We could handle the shots right here and—”

  My biker buddy waved his hand. “Nah.”

  “Are you aware that only fifteen percent of dogs left at shelters get reunited with their owners?” the woman said.

  What was this? A shelter? I’d been in a shelter once, but that was undercover, me and Bernie working on a stolen-goods case I never understood too well. But I’d learned about shelters: no space, no running free, and lots of mysterious comings and goings, mostly goings. I turned to the door. Closed, and there was no other way out.

  “Nope,” said the biker.

  “And that only twenty-five percent get adopted?”

  “Didn’t know that, neither.”

  “But you do know what happens to the others?” said the shelter woman. She lowered her voice. “Here, for example, we have a three-day grace period, if you follow.”

  The biker gave me a long look. I wagged my tail but not much: I didn’t understand “grace period,” and even “three days” was a little hazy. I noticed again how big my biker buddy was, all except his eyes. “I’m outta here,” he said.

  He turned and started for the door. I trotted after him, sure of one thing only: I was outta there, too. The woman laughed. “Isn’t he the clever one?” she said. Then somehow she was right behind me, slipping a leash around my neck before I realized what was happening. She didn’t tug hard, just enough for me to feel the pressure. I glanced at her, taken by surprise. When I turned back to the door, it was swinging shut, and biker buddy was gone.

  “Easy, boy,” the woman said. She came around in front of me, knelt down to my level, stroked the top of my head. “You’re the kind of dog someone cares about, I can tell. Where’s your collar?”

  Good question.

  She scratched behind my ear, just perfectly. She was an expert. “What’s your name?”

  Chet. Chet was my name. I lived on Mesquite Road, had an important job and the best partner in the world.

  She sighed. “Hungry? At least we can get you fed.” She rose, led me around the counter to a back door. We went through, and a whole lot of barking started up right away.

  A corridor. Little rooms on both sides, with chain-link fronts and one of my guys in each, small ones, big ones, male, female, purebreds and no-breds, all barking except for a pit bull. She stared at me with her dusty brown eyes. I remembered watching prison movies with Bernie.

  “Knock it off,” the woman said.

  Everyone went silent. Why? I felt like barking myself, so I did. No one joined me. We came to an empty room. The woman led me in, removed the leash.

  “Shh, shh,” she said. “Shh. You’re a good boy.”

  I quieted down. She went away. I paced around the little room. There was no wall at the far end, which opened into an outdoor cage. I went out there. I could smell who had been this way before, and before that. A dachshund lay sleeping in the next cage. Sausages,
Bernie called them. I liked dachshunds—Bernie said Iggy had some dachshund in him. I pawed at the chain link between us. The dachshund didn’t wake up. I turned to the cage on the other side. A spaniel lay there, a fat fly buzzing slowly over her nose. I liked spaniels, too: Bernie said that Iggy was also part spaniel. I went over, pawed at the cage. The spaniel opened her eyes, gazed at me for a moment, and closed them.

  The shelter woman came back with a bowl of kibble and a bowl of water. “Here you go,” she said. She left, closing the chain-link door. I drank water, left the kibble alone, not hungry. I paced some more, then went outside. The dachshund was no longer around. I lay down. The sun moved across the sky. Shadows lengthened. Night fell. Motorcycle sounds came faintly from far away.

  I dreamed about the ocean. I’d actually been to the ocean once, after we’d wrapped up a case I no longer remember, except for the part where I grabbed the bad guy by his pant leg. But I remember the ocean, all right. Those waves! We’d bodysurfed, me and Bernie, rolling and tumbling, so much fun, especially after I’d stopped trying to steer him to shore all the time, and also stopped making myself sick by drinking the water. The surf pounded and pounded. Bernie laughed his head off. He met a woman on the beach and seemed to like her. The whole time he talked, the woman’s eyes never left a long string of snot hanging from his nose; green snot, I thought, but Bernie always said I couldn’t be trusted when it came to color.

  I woke up, hungry but rested, feeling good, ready to start the day. Then I saw where I was. My tail sank right down. I made it stand up, left the room, went to the outdoor cage. The spaniel lay where she’d been the last time I’d seen her, eyes open. This time she flicked the end of her tail the tiniest bit. I wagged back. Flies buzzed around her.

  I turned to the cage on the other side, the dachshund side, only the dachshund wasn’t there. Instead, a mixed breed, about my size, was pacing back and forth. He saw me and charged right away, not even hesitating a moment. Maybe he hadn’t seen the fence. He bounced off it, landed skidding on his side, scrambled up with a twisting motion, and stared at me, saliva dripping from his mouth. I went back inside my room, turned a few times in a tight circle, and lay down. I didn’t like this place.

  Food came—it tasted all right. My water bowl got topped up. Someone took me for a walk on a treeless patch out back, gave me plenty of time to do what I had to. Everyone at the shelter was nice, so: no complaints. I still didn’t like it.

  A man came by with a clipboard, looked in on me. “Hey,” he called to someone. “Does that first day count?”

  “Yup,” someone called back.

  “Even though it wasn’t a full twenty-four-hour day?”

  “New protocol.”

  “So that leaves him with . . .” The man made a mark with his pen and went away. He left behind a smell that made me uneasy. I closed my eyes and dozed off, not a good sleep, but the kind I hate, sleeping because there was nothing else to do.

  “What about this one?”

  I opened my eyes. Some people stood in the corridor outside my room, gazing in at me through the fencing: the shelter woman, plus what looked like a family—mom, dad, two kids.

  “Too big. Think of what it would cost to feed him.”

  “I think he’s cute. Look at his funny ears.”

  “I’ll pay the extra food out of my allowance. Please, Daddy, can we take him, please?”

  “I’ll think about it.”

  “You have until tomorrow,” said the shelter woman. “Nine A.M.”

  I don’t do much in the way of planning, but a plan began to form in my mind. Step one was leaving with this nice little family. Then came lots of hazy steps, and after that the last one, running home to Bernie. I got up and went closer to them, wagging my tail and trying not to look like a big eater.

  “See how friendly he is, Daddy? Oh, please. Mom, make Daddy say yes.”

  The plan was working, working well. I wagged harder, rose up on my back legs, pawed at the chain link in my friendliest way. But uh-oh—what was this? The nice little family jumping back in alarm?

  “He looks too aggressive,” the mom said.

  Me? I backed off, found myself pawing air.

  “We’ve got another possibility down at the end,” said the shelter woman. “Part Australian terrier, I think.”

  “I’ve always wanted to go there,” said the mom.

  “This one’s very gentle and much, much smaller. His name appears to be Boomerang, but you can change it to whatever you like.”

  They moved away, out of sight.

  I came down on all fours.

  Time passed very slowly, but I lost track of it anyway. Mostly I lay down, either in the room or in the outside cage. The big mixed breed next door stayed inside; I could smell him. Once I opened my eyes and saw a man in a white coat opening the cage on the other side. The spaniel rose slowly and followed him out, across the hard-packed dirt yard and into a small building with a metal door and a tall brick chimney. Her tail wasn’t down or up, just sticking straight out in a way I liked: I knew she’d be a good pal.

  I slept for a while, woke up to the smell of smoke. This wasn’t a nice smoky smell, like burgers on an open fire. I looked out, noticed a thin white plume rising above the brick chimney across the way. I went back inside, lay in the farthest corner of my room, but couldn’t get away from that smell.

  When I woke again, it was morning. I felt hungry but pretty good, ready to start the day. Then I saw where I was. I went out to the cage. The big mixed breed was lying down, facing away from me, not moving; on the other side, the spaniel side, there was now a puppy. He raced to the fencing the moment he spotted me and stuck his nose through—most of his face, actually: He was very small. I went over and gave him a little push with my paw. He tumbled backward, bounced up, stuck his nose back through, ready to do the whole thing again. But at that moment I heard a woman’s voice out in the yard, a voice I knew.

  “. . . and our readers love stories about dogs, so we turned it into a whole series.” I knew that voice, but who was it?

  “And one of the stories is going to be about shelters?” said the shelter woman.

  I went to the end of the cage, looked out, and saw, down at the end of the yard, the shelter woman talking to someone else, my view of whoever it was blocked by a shed.

  “Exactly,” said this person, this woman whose voice I knew. “And you were highly recommended.”

  “Really? That’s nice. Where do you want to start?”

  “Maybe with some stats first, to get an overview. After that, I’d like to see the dogs, get a few pictures if I could.”

  “No problem.” The shelter woman stepped behind the shed, and I couldn’t see her, either. “We’ll start in the office,” she said, her voice growing fainter as they moved away.

  “And don’t let me forget,” said the other woman, almost out of my hearing range, “I’ve brought some treats.”

  “Treats?”

  And then, at the very edge of what I could pick up, maybe even beyond, the other woman said, “Dog biscuits. I’ve got a whole box in my car.”

  Dog biscuits? A whole box in her car? Suzie! Suzie Sanchez! I started barking, barking and barking with all my might, hurling myself against the cage, again and again.

  But they didn’t come. Instead, the metal door opened across the way. A man and a woman walked out, both in white coats. “What’s with him?” the man said.

  “I think some of them just know,” said the woman.

  “Get serious.”

  They moved toward my cage. I went still.

  “I mean it,” the woman said. “They know more than we give them credit for.”

  The man shook his head. “I like dogs as much as anybody,” he said, “but that’s sentimental crap.”

  The woman gave him an annoyed look, which he didn’t catch because he was opening my door. “Hey, boy,” he said, “Let’s—”

  I bolted out before he finished his proposal, bolted out to freedom
and Suzie San—

  But not quite. The woman slipped a loop of rope over my head as I went by, and now held on as I pulled her across the yard. The man grabbed on, too, and I came to a dead stop.

  “Wow,” the woman said. “He’s so strong.” She reached out to give me a pat. I tried to bite her. She flinched and drew back, eyes wide. They led me—dragged me, actually—to the metal door, and through. It was very cold inside.

  thirteen

  A cold place, with lights that were much too bright shining on machines I didn’t understand. Don’t get me started on machines. The lawn mower is one of the worst, and these, not much like lawn mowers, somehow looked as bad. I turned back toward the metal door: closed.

  “Here you go, big fella,” said the man. “Hop right up.”

  Up there? On the metal table? Why would I want to do that? I stayed where I was, four paws planted on the floor. The woman reached out, patted me. Like the other woman, the one at the front desk, she was an expert patter.

  “Everything’s all right,” she said. Pat pat.

  “Just need to take a quick look at you,” said the man. “Then we’ll be all done.”

  Their voices were gentle. And their hands, too: They lifted me up onto the table. It was cold, that metal table.

  “Lie down, there’s a good fella.”

  I stayed where I was, standing up, panting a little despite the cold.

  “Lie down, you’ll feel much better,” the woman said.

  “Have you out of here in no time,” said the man.

  The woman glared at him again. I didn’t know why, didn’t care. My mind was on something else: Did he mean have me out of this room or out of the whole place, the shelter? Getting out of the shelter: That was what I wanted. I was so busy thinking about getting out of the shelter that I didn’t pay much attention to them nudging me over onto my side, oh so gently. Every move was gentle. They knew how to handle my sort of guy.

  Then came more patting, and I was hardly aware of some kind of clamps, maybe made of rubber, swinging down over me and locking me into place on the tabletop; hardly aware until it was too late. I tried to struggle, get up, thrash around, just move my body somewhere, somehow, but I couldn’t. I barked. All I could do, so I did it. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw the man wheeling a machine closer, a machine with a long tube that ended in a sharp needle. I barked with all my might, so loud I missed the sound of the door opening, almost missed the voice of the shelter woman.

 

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