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Breath & Shadow

A Journal of Disability Culture and Literature

Summer 2012

Volume 9 Issue 3

 

 
Breath & Shadow

Summer 2012

Volume 9 Issue 3

Strays

By Raud Kennedy

It was a good day to fleece treats off the customers coming out of the

7-11. The hot weather brought them in for beer and chips, and I sat outside pretending

to be someone’s pet. Sitting calmly, looking like I was waiting for my master to return

from inside the store with a six-pack for him and a bone for me. Pet dogs were safe to

feed. Moms didn’t have to worry about their kids trying to talk them into bringing home

the stray. Don’t feed the stray, they’d say, he’ll follow us home. I’d heard that one a lot.

So I put on my act of belonging to someone and it worked for me.

This section of Burnside was on the east side strip where gentrification hadn’t been

able to take hold. The soup kitchen and the strip club kept it firmly anchored in reality.

It wasn’t a usual stop for the west side whites, unless they got lost or the husbands got

horny. You’d be surprised at the number of hookers who bought Ho Hos, but they were

the best at sharing those Ho Hos and Ding Dongs. They saw me there often enough

that they were on to my scam and knew I was nothing but a stray working my thing.

I’d tried to be a pet dog once. I even still wore the old collar my first family bought me,

but the life didn’t take. According to the trainer my owners had brought in it was due

to my lack of impulse control. What a load. It took more impulse control than he could

ever muster to sit through his long-winded spiel about finding the right kind of treat to

motivate me and him clicking that damn training clicker. Hey, click this! Find the right

treat? What did they think I was trying to tell them by stealing all the food bits off the

counter tops? How dense could they be when I’m stealing everything except the dry

little biscuits they’re trying to “motivate” me with? My life might have turned out entirely

different if those first owners of mine had shared their Triscuits and cheese instead of

just stuffing their own mouths with them.

After a point, I couldn’t make the effort anymore. One day they left the gate in the

backyard open, and I took myself for a walk and never went back. Sure, I’ve been

through the system a few times since and there’s been attempts to re-home me, but this

is the life for me, eating Ho Hos and scamming strangers. I know the drill when it comes

to domestic life. Do this, do that, sit here, lie down over there. Oh, don’t do that! And

after all that nonsense they trap you inside all day long with nothing new to do, day after

day until your life has passed by and you’re off to the vet for the big shot. It isn’t worth

the dry biscuits they try to give you in trade. Give me your love, they say. Give me your

loyalty. In exchange, I’ll give you this dry biscuit bought in bulk at Costco made in China

of carcinogenic wood shavings and lock you inside all day long. And oh yeah, if I’m

feeling energetic when I get home from work, I might walk you around the block. What a

load. I was given the opportunity to be free and took it in an instant.

“Hey, Pimpster, want some Ho Hos?” asked one of the girls who was a regular on

the strip.

She shared every day, like she was buying the Ho Hos as much for me as for herself. I

wagged my tail and started to drool. Who knew I was such a sucker for sugary cakes?

She broke one in half and held it out to me.

“Here you go, little man.”

I gobbled it in a second. She ate her half slowly and I waited for her to take the second

one out of the package. When she did, she broke it in half, too. “More?”

She didn’t need to ask. I gobbled it, too.

“You know what? You’re looking kind of skinny.”

She reached down and petted my sides.

“I can feel your ribs through that mangy fur of yours. I tell you what, baby. If

you’re still here later I’ll buy you a can of dog food.”

A car pulled up and she leaned in through the open passenger-side window to talk to

the driver, then got in and they drove off. I went back to pretending to be someone’s

pet, but eventually fell asleep. Later, her voice woke me.

“They didn’t have any dog food, except in the bag and I’m not feeding you a

whole bag at once. You’d eat yourself to death.” She held a can in her hand. “But they

had chili, and believe me, it looks just like dog food. Maybe even tastes the same. But

my can opener is at home. You can follow me and I’ll get this opened for you.”

Once we got a block away from the strip the night was quiet and cool. It’s funny how

when things are busy around you, like me running my scam in front of 7-11, you think

the whole world is like that. But then you walk a few blocks and it’s entirely different. We

walked four blocks down a side street and then she opened the door to a basement

apartment in an old house that smelled like the rhododendrons in front of it. I followed

her inside and she opened the can, put it in a bowl and set it on the floor. It wasn’t bad,

but I knew it would give me gas. She also put a bowl of water next to the chili and it

tasted best of all after a long day in the sun.

She left the door open to air out the musky smell of cigarettes and sex, and I could

leave anytime after I finished, but I didn’t particularly feel like going anywhere. That can

of chili was like a lead brick in my gut, so I put my head down and closed my eyes for a

moment. It felt good to rest in a quiet spot without any traffic sounds around, a little

confining, but I was too tired for it to bother me. I must’ve nodded off, because again her

voice woke me.

“Okay, Pimpster, I’m going to shut this door now.” She had her hand on the faded

brass knob. “Are you staying or going? I don’t want you waking me up because you

want to take off night-crawling with your buddies.”

I’d been having a dream where I was chasing this cat down an alley. It was a recurring

dream, and I’d gotten to the part where the cat disappeared amongst the overflowing

dumpsters leaking restaurant grease and I had to search him out with my nose, so I

was eager to get back to sleep, back to my dream, and back after that cat. That cat was

a mean piece of work, and the natural order of things drove me to take him down, so I

just closed my eyes and let her close the door.

She slept late and so did I, and as soon as she opened that door, I went outside and got

rid of some of that canned chili and marked the trees out in front of the old house. When

I heard her making noise in her kitchen, I went inside and was treated to a bowl of

scrambled eggs, something I’d never had before, and they were a big improvement on

the chili. A while later, we walked back to the 7-11 and she got in a car with some guy

and they took off. I fell into my routine of hustling the 7-11 customers for some of their

chips, though I wasn’t quite as motivated since I’d just eaten a bunch of eggs, and

eventually I curled up and took a nap. The cat had returned in my dream and I’d

discovered which dumpster he was hiding behind, when the fat man from animal

services woke me by slipping a noose collar around my neck, and I was tethered to the

end of the long pole he held firmly with both hands.

All I could think was that I was on my way back into the system again, and this time it

wouldn’t be so easy to get out. My puppy cuteness was gone, and I had the physical

and emotional scars from living on the street. At least I knew not to bite the rubber hand

they used to temperament test the dogs being processed into the pound, even though

its rubber skin smelled just like a chew toy I’d had in my first home as a puppy.

I was being led to the back of the truck when I heard her shouting. “Hey, you! Asshole!

Where the fuck you think you’re going with my dog?” The car she’d just gotten out of

drove off behind her and she was waiving her arms and marching right at the fat man

holding the noose-pole.

“This isn’t your dog,” he said.

“Like hell he isn’t.”

“Well, he doesn’t have a license and you don’t have him on a leash.”

“Look around, man. Do you think anyone gives a damn about leashes and

licenses around here? Get real.”

Then a big man carrying an eighteen-pack came out of the 7-11, stopped and stood

very still, staring at the fat man. When another dog did that to me, they meant

trouble. “If she says he’s her dog, man, he’s her dog,” he said.

The fat man shifted his weight uneasily under the intensity of his stare. “I’m going to cite

you for failure to license your dog and having him off-leash. It’s a pretty hefty fine. Are

you sure this is still your dog?”

The big man with the beer set his eighteen-pack down, squatted down next to me and

gave me a pat. Before the fat man knew what to say, the big man had loosened the

noose and I was free.

“There you go, boy,” he said and thumped me on the rump.

“Sir, you can’t do that.”

The big man stood to his full height.

“It’s already done.”

He tucked a few bills into the fat man’s shirtfront pocket.

“You look like you could use a break. Why don’t you go on inside and get yourself

a couple of those chili dogs they sell here.”

He picked up his beer and opened the door to a big car.

“Come on, babe,” he said to my friend. “Get your dog and get in. I feel like having

a party.”

As she hustled me onto the car seat in front of her, she whispered to me, “You

owe me one, Pimpster.”

“Pimpster, huh?” the big man said and chuckled. “That’s my kind of dog.”

Raud Kennedy is a writer and dog trainer in Portland, Oregon. To learn more
about his latest work, ‘Gnawing the Bone’, a collection of dog fiction, visit
www.raudkennedy.com



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