Cruisin’ for a bruisin’
Sue Clark
“Cruiser’s missing,” my friend Dave said. He is usually the calm,
collected type, but today he sounded distraught. Dave and I both have
small, well-behaved rescue dogs from the Huntington Beach Shelter.
Weelo, Dave’s dog, is a small, feisty, spotted rat-terrier type, and
my Wilson looks like a mix of terrier with a Chihuahua head. Cruiser,
however, is a different story. He belongs to Dave’s son, Matt, and is
the antithesis of our dogs.
Upon first glance, the 85-pound Cruiser looks like a large,
black-and-white pit bull. He has that same blocky head and muscular
body. But upon further investigation, you’ll find that he’s an
English cattle dog, just an overgrown pup who wants you to play
tug-a-rope with him 24 hours a day. If you accept the slime-covered
rope and start to tug gingerly on it, he will love you. But since
Cruiser is so good-hearted, he will love you anyway. It’s like having
a 2-year-old without the temper tantrums.
Our two small dogs, Weelo and Wilson, took awhile to warm up to
Cruiser. The first thing Cruiser did was grab Wilson’s leash in his
scary-looking teeth and attempt to drag the little 13-pounder around
the yard. Wilson would take one look at him and dart me a
long-suffering look. Then he’d race behind Dave’s computer chair or
assume guard-dog position on the top of Dave’s couch. You can run,
but you cannot hide from Cruiser, who thought he was small and would
leap up to join Wilson on top of the couch.
Weelo who had the task of training Cruiser, and is the alpha dog
of the group, would grab onto Cruiser’s large, spotted jowls and hang
there, growling. Cruiser loved this and pestered Weelo relentlessly
to continue biting him and hanging like an ornament from his lower
lip. Did I mention Cruiser has eaten things made of wood and steel
and is impervious to pain? If you have anything you would like for
Cruiser to test out, just throw it in Dave’s backyard, and if Cruiser
cannot eat it, it is unbreakable.
But I digress. On the day Dave reported Cruiser missing, I had
actually become somewhat fond of the big lug, and Dave admitted he
loved him. His story was of the escape apparently planned by Weelo
and Cruiser. (It had to be masterminded by Weelo, because we are not
sure of the depth of Cruiser’s intellect.)
At any rate, they both lurked by the back gate, and when a friend
of Dave’s opened it, they rushed out into the street. Now Santa Ana
Boulevard is a pretty busy street, but they both made it across
before Dave came running after them. They are very speedy dogs, and
Dave’s son got in his car and drove out looking for them.
Dave returned from an unsuccessful attempt to find the two and
noticed Weelo standing sheepishly by the gate, as if to say “just
kidding, Boss.” Cruiser was still missing.
Later that day, Dave got a call from a woman name Violet. “I have
your dog at Shiffer Park,” she said. “I called my office and someone
is bringing a rope, so I can tie him to a tree. I hope you come and
get him, because I have to make a deposit at the bank.” Violet also
called later and repeated the information.
By the time Dave got to the park, Cruiser had apparently escaped
again. The mood was somber at Dave and Matt’s house. Even I, who
usually cursed at Cruiser when he would knock me down in his
exuberance, felt sad.
A few hours later, Dave’s phone rang again. This time it was the
Newport Beach Animal Shelter. “We have Cruiser,” they told Dave, who
went to pick him up. Cruiser was unabashed and still smiling that
doofus grin he always had.
If there is a moral to this narrative, I guess it’s that all of
our dogs had ID collars on. But also, I think it’s a tribute to our
Newport-Mesa community that people cared enough to take time out of
their days to rescue Cruiser.
Hardly a changed dog, Cruiser is now teaching Wilson how to hold
his own lash in his teeth. Wilson is, in turn, learning how to growl
in an alpha sort of way (maybe alpha-minus) at the big dog and back
him down. And now and then, they all look furtively at the back
fence.
* SUE CLARK is a Newport Beach resident and a high school guidance
counselor at Creekside High School in Irvine.
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