Barking and entering
SHERWOOD KIRALY
Patti Jo, Katie and I took off a few weeks ago and were out of the
country for nine days. It was the first time we’d all left home since
we got Booker, our year-old Welshie, so it was quite a joke on him.
Welsh springer spaniels are known as Velcro dogs. When one of us
leaves the house, Booker gets worried. If two of us leave, he gets
depressed. If three of us go to dinner -- well, we don’t know what he
does. But when we come back he’s where we left him, facing the door.
While we were gone, Patti Jo’s assistant Kristen-Paige, a graduate
student, and our friend Fran Finley were tag-team housesitters.
Booker apparently handled the first few days all right, but as time
went on and we didn’t come back, he became increasingly unruly. He
wouldn’t fetch his squeaky ball; he tore up his stuffed animals; he
chewed up a pooper-scooper and a tube of toothpaste, and the day
before our scheduled return, he disappeared.
I had left Kristen-Paige a note indicating when to feed and walk
Booker and I had told her about his tendency to climb out of our
backyard. But I neglected to mention that he might also be able to
wriggle through our neighbors’ cat door and into their house, so when
he got out the back screen and vanished, she could only assume he’d
gone over the hill.
After calling herself hoarse, Kristen-Paige drove around the
neighborhood, looking for Booker. He could have gone in any direction
-- to Alta Laguna Park, to Top of the World ... to the airport, like
a movie dog, to follow us. She had to be picturing our faces when she
told us that Booker was run over or eaten or just plain gone.
As she searched the neighborhood, Booker toured our neighbors’
house -- empty at the time except for their Chihuahua, Twiggy, who
watched Booker as he ate the children’s remaining Easter candy.
Returning to our house, Kristen-Paige went out back and somewhat
hopelessly called Booker once more. And lo, he appeared, having left
Twiggy behind to take the rap for the missing candy. By now his
conscience had closed down altogether and all Kristen-Paige could do
was get him in the house, lock all the doors and wait for relief.
Booker wagged wildly when we came in the door, in that gratifying
way dogs have. To hear him tell it, he’d been a good boy the whole
time. He forgave us completely for going to dinner and not coming
back for nine days.
Kristen-Paige may not forgive us as quickly for failing to mention
the neighbors’ cat door; she may have aged too much on that drive
around the neighborhood. She’s already a published fiction writer, so
perhaps one day we’ll read a book about a family, a seemingly kind,
non-satanic family, that traps a young woman in a house with Cujo Jr.
* SHERWOOD KIRALY is a Laguna Beach resident. He has written four
novels, three of which were critically acclaimed.
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