Read Strays Online

Authors: Jennifer Caloyeras

Tags: #dog rescue;dogs;young adult;dogs

Strays (16 page)

BOOK: Strays
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“But her parents had a restraining order put on him,” I said, still trying to process everything Oak had just told me.

“It's the other way around. She flipped out when she found out he had a fiancée. He's got a restraining order on
her
.”

I couldn't believe that my new friend had lied to me. I felt completely betrayed.

“I'm sorry to be the one to break it to you, but you should know the truth. I just want you to know what kind of person you're dealing with.”

Like the fairy tales that morphed with each retelling, Talbot's story had shifted. It seemed like everything around me was changing its trajectory, from Talbot's story about Mr. Ettinger to Roman's plight to my declining relationship with my dad.

I wanted everyone and everything to freeze, just for a while, so I could find my bearings. The only absolute truth I could conclude was there was no such thing as an absolute truth.

fourteen

A
side from texting everyone to let them know that Roman had been spared for three more days, I avoided Talbot's calls and texts all weekend until I could figure out how to deal with the situation.

I could barely concentrate in Perry's class on Monday morning. Between the butterflies in my stomach as I replayed kissing Oak and his official declaration of the two of us being together to my nervousness that with each passing second, the likelihood of finding Kite Boy and his dad were dwindling, I was totally unprepared for Perry's pop quiz on Vladimir Propp's formalist approach to a narrative structure. I thought it had been a shorter reading assignment that I could cram in that morning, but it was way long. The content just wasn't sticking.

I wasn't the only one who was having an off day. Two guys in class, Todd and José, had been mouthing off the entire morning, even after Perry asked them to stop and then made them switch seats so they weren't near each other. I could tell she was at her wit's end when she finally lost her temper (it was the first time I'd seen that except for when she had defended me that first day) and made us read an essay on archetypes in our reader for the rest of the period while she graded our quizzes.

Reading was the last thing I could focus on. Every time I came to the end of a sentence, I'd forget what I had just read about and have to start all over. There was just too much on my mind. Finally, after thirty minutes of staring at words that didn't stick, the bell rang and everyone gathered their things.

Perry rose from her desk. “Iris, a word with you, please.”

This wasn't going to be pretty. I knew I had done terribly on that quiz, but I thought I'd at least bought myself until the next class to be confronted about it.

“What's going on?” Perry asked once everyone had cleared the room.

“I'm sorry about that,” I said, looking down at the quiz, full of purple ink marks (Perry thought that red ink was the stigma of smarmy old-school teachers).

“You can do so much better than this,” Perry said. “So tell me what's going on.”

I was disappointed in myself. “The truth?” I asked.

Perry nodded. “Always, please.”

“I forgot about the homework.”

“That much is clear. The question I'm asking is why?”

My instinct was to lie—make up a story about my dad or my bike or say that our house had been robbed and they stole the book, or I had been taking the book everywhere with me and I left it at the market and they finally found it this morning and they were holding it for me. But the last thing Perry was asking for was a fabrication.

So I decided to go with the truth. “The dog, the one I've been working with at my community service—they took him away from me. They think he's too aggressive, but he's really not. It's all just because he's a pit bull and now he's at the pound and he's going to be killed tomorrow and I can't stop it!” I couldn't hold back the tears.

“I'm so sorry, Iris.” She leaned in to hug me.

I continued. “And there's this guy and he's so great and I think he really likes me and he has me so distracted I can't think about anything else but him.”

“You should have just stuck with the first excuse,” said Perry.

I laughed. “I wanted to tell you the whole truth.”

“I know. And I appreciate it. It sounds like you have a lot going on,” she said.

I nodded.

“But you need to find a way to make school a priority. There's a lot riding on this class for you. It can open doors for you or close them. You're an excellent English student. A great critical thinker. I don't want this to be a class strictly about English but also about how to ‘read' people's situations. If you can learn to navigate and negotiate pages in a text—you're set for life! You are doing so well! You don't want to throw away all your hard work by ‘forgetting' about assignments all of a sudden. You need to make this class more important—which means making yourself more important.”

“I know. I will. I promise.” And I meant it.

“Can I show you something?” she asked.

She leaned down and retrieved her green canvas army bag, pulling out her wallet.

“I want to show you Dante, my baby,” Perry said.

I didn't realize she had kids. She handed me a photo. It was a dog. I smiled.

Finding a fellow dog lover had become a secret code of acknowledgment, like we all instantly understood the love capable between human and dog.

“He's so cute! How old is he?” I asked.

Her face washed over with sadness.

“It's hard for me to talk about him in the past tense. He died last year. I had some friends staying with me. They left the gate open. Dante ran out in the street just as a car was coming.” She stopped talking. I could tell that it was still a difficult subject to broach.

“Chihuahua mix?” I asked.

“You got it! At the pound, they said the mom was a lab and the dad was a Chihuahua. I don't buy it. Could you imagine the logistics?”

I blushed and then handed the photo back to Perry.

“He used to bring me the paper every morning. He had such a little mouth, yet he could still carry that bulky newspaper over to me.”

Then I got an idea.

“I know it might be too soon, but all the dogs we're rehabilitating are up for adoption!” I said, hopeful.

“Iris, I don't know. There will never be another dog like Dante.”

I fantasized about the possibility of Perry adopting Roman, but I had an awful nagging feeling that in a few days he wouldn't even make it to graduation.

“You're probably right about that,” I said, “but there could be a completely different but equally wonderful dog. There's my dog, Roman. He has three legs, but it doesn't slow him down.”

“I'm more of a small dog kinda gal, Iris.”

“We have a Chihuahua,” I said. “Her name is Tinkerbelle. I'm sure you can change her name. She's totally trained, potty trained, everything.”

Perry looked off into the distance. It was time for the icing on the cake.

“She even knows how to retrieve a paper,” I said.

She looked back at me. “Really?”

“Yup. And she's amazingly good at it, too.” I wrote down the name of the Ruff Rehabilitation website so she could check it out later.

“Thanks,” she said, putting the paper in her purse.

“Thank you,” I said, grabbing my failed assignment off her desk. “I promise I'll do better.”

Perry nodded. “Don't make that promise to me. Make it to yourself.”

As I left, I thought about how I'd actually managed to not think about Oak for the last ten minutes.

Then I thought about him the entire way to dog training.

*

Kevin had a new dog, a peppy dalmatian mix on a leash, and handed the leash to me when I got there. “This is Sid.”

I hated Sid immediately, but only because he was a constant reminder that Roman wasn't here. When it came down to it, Sid was a fine dog—young and sprightly and easy to train. Apparently, his owner was an alcoholic and regularly forgot to feed him. But he'd made a lot of progress and, as Kevin put it, wasn't as “damaged” as some of the others. He'd be easy to adopt out, with his floppy ears and bouncy gait.

Oak patted Sid on the head when he came over to hug me. His sweatshirt was off. I smiled.

“Something about him is different,” said Talbot when he left to practice heeling with his dog.

“No hood,” I said.

“Oh, wow!” said Talbot. “What a difference a hood makes!”

I still wasn't sure how I wanted to handle the situation now that I knew the truth about her. I just knew I could no longer trust her.

Everyone else was instructed to go through the entire repertoire with their dogs except for me. Since Sid was new to the program, he needed to catch up, so I was back to
sit
and
stay
. And, just as I finally got him to stay for the first time, his concentration was broken by Talbot, who was all the way across the grass, screaming her head off about something. I tried to ignore her dramatics.

“Bite toy!” I thought I heard her shout, and I wondered when that sort of command would come in handy. Everyone was looking toward her, and when Sid and I moved closer to see what was going on, I deciphered what Talbot been screaming.

“Kite Boy!” It finally came out clearly.

I ran over to the group and saw the boy, Sebastian, with a new kite, and his father, now at the opposite end of the park—as far away from our dogs as possible.

Without thinking I handed Sid's leash over to Kevin and bolted in that direction. Everyone else did the same, and Kevin was left with all five dogs while we ran full speed toward the boy, who had just gotten his kite airborne.

When Sebastian's dad recognized us, he started frantically reeling in the kite, apparently thinking we were out for vengeance.

“Wait!” I shouted as the father took his son by the hand and started heading toward the parking lot. “We want to talk to you!”

“If this is about the dog, I don't want to talk about it.”

“Listen, you jerk!” said Talbot.

I shot her a look that said, “Shut up!” and approached the boy's dad.

“Sir, I understand why Roman spooked you.” I spoke clearly, with confidence, so he'd take me seriously.

“Thank you,” he said, sincerely appreciative of the acknowledgment.

“I was scared, too, the first time I met him,” I admitted.

“And the second time!” added Oak.

“And the third,” said Randy.

“It's true,” I said. “I was totally afraid that he was going to rip my face off. That's what I thought pit bulls did. But not Roman. He was abused for over seven years. They raised him to be a killer fighting dog, and he was a champion. They also left him tied to a chain for weeks on end and didn't feed him or even give him water, and they left him in the blistering sun. What kind of caregiver does that?”

We both looked over to the boy, who was trying to get a knot out of the kite string.

I continued, “He wasn't after your kid. He saw the awkward movement of the kite. When it hovered and then swooped down suddenly—he thought he was being attacked.”

The dad looked sympathetic. “Look, I'm sorry about what happened. But I'm a dad and my number one priority is Sebastian, not your dog. He shouldn't have run over to us. It's probably better for him to be contained somewhere, in someone's yard, where he can't go around scaring people like that.”

“Oh, he's contained all right,” said Talbot.

“They're putting him to sleep tomorrow,” I said.

The boy approached us with his tangled kite in hand. “Daddy, what does that mean?” he asked, looking up at his father with his big brown eyes. I hadn't even realized he had been listening.

“It means they're going to kill him!” said Talbot, unable to control herself. I let her speak. She was telling the truth. The kid had a right to know, however harsh it sounded.

“Daddy! You can't let them kill the dog!” Tears streamed down the boy's face.

I wanted to scoop the boy up and hug him for his innocent empathy.

The dad looked at his son. “What happens to that dog is
not
my concern,” he said.

Sebastian was now crying, not even letting his father console him. His dad sighed a deep sigh. “What can I do?”

I explained the plan. “You can go to the pound today, right now, and revise the statement you made that got him into that place. Talk them into releasing him back to Ruff Rehabilitation. You're a lawyer. You must be able to produce a convincing argument.”

I had him there. Either he was a good enough lawyer to convince them, or he would fail and prove himself a bad lawyer. His pride was at stake.

“Will you save the dog, Daddy?” asked Sebastian.

The father looked at his son, then at us. “Like I said, I'd do anything for my kid.”

We all erupted in hugs and smiles, and when I finally came up for air from a big, seven-person bear hug, I noticed Kevin, flanked by our dogs, beaming proudly.

*

According to Kevin, it didn't take long for Sebastian's dad to write down his retraction and clear it with Ruff Rehabilitation. Kevin then buzzed down to the pound to release Roman. We didn't tell Kevin about how Oak hacked into the system, thereby actually saving Roman from certain death. We were pretty sure that despite our best intentions, he wouldn't have approved of Oak breaking the law.

I'd still have to wait until the following Monday to be reunited with Roman. Kevin wanted to keep an eye on him before bringing him back to the group. I tried plunging myself into schoolwork. Oak was away on a camping trip, which was probably a good thing, so I could try to focus all of my attention on my final paper for Perry's class.

She had loved it when I had shared with her my idea for my final paper: “Little Red Goes Rogue: Wolf-Alice Redefines the Female Hero in Fairy Tales.” My argument would be that “Little Red Riding Hood” works to victimize the female character. She is punished for trying to choose her own destiny. She is misled, manipulated, eaten, and then rescued, whereas Wolf-Alice begins as a misunderstood and wild creature who cannot be tamed by others. Instead she changes from within once she learns about compassion. Wolf-Alice is responsible for her own journey, mistakes and all. This was definitely a topic that I could personally relate to.

BOOK: Strays
8.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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