When I came to Sato Hill; or
actually, the day I was unceremoniously dumped, I cried, curled in a corner
waiting for my people to return for me.
Lost, mourning, I worried
what they would do without me. Would they be scared in the night without me to alert
them to danger? Would they miss the scent of my presence the way I missed
theirs?
I gave myself credit for
being a spectacular intruder alarm. From my tiny room I could hear a leaf fall.
Strange sounds deserve an all out panic bark! Suppose something bad happens! My
barks alerted them to danger!
From my very first night on
the street the neighbors where I landed received the benefit of my alarm services.
They rewarded me with leftovers.
Mourning my world lost,
without a clue to go home, I brooded, but the neighborhood Satos/street dogs stuck
their noses up my butt. Until you die, you’re just part of someone else’s show.
I had to stand up to these Satos to show them I wouldn’t be cast as their
victim or whipping girl. They nosed me around some, but then they liked me.
I thought about my family,
my life in the room, how happy I’d be when they came in to see me. Outdoors is
a big scary place; my mind felt turned inside out.
The two neighbor ladies fed
me well, when Blondie and Stormy, who died, weren’t around, but never gave me
water. Stormy showed me where to go for water and how to hunt mice to
supplement sometimes meager leftovers. I came to the road a fat little animal.
Stormy taught me about life in the neighborhood, but I stayed close to where I
got dropped believing they loved me and would come back for me.
One day just when my tail
was beginning to wag again, the woman up the hill threw a towel over me. I did
my best to bite her, but the towel got in my way. The next thing I knew a man
held me on his lap. In a warm, kind voice he said, “Good Girl, you’re going for
a car ride.”
I wanted to tell about the
fiasco my last car ride was, but instead I nestled down onto his big hands,
staring at the woman who grabbed me.
After that everything
blurred. Blondie said that they fixed me. Huh? Back on the street I prowled my
neighborhood with Blondie; until one night Blondie and I were taken away from
the island.
My introduction to a pet
carrier, followed by a weigh in at the airport and I flew to New Orleans
chewing my way through the fabric until she shoved something for motion
sickness down my throat.
From then on we walked city streets tied to the woman. People, who knew
there were so many, people with dogs tied like we were. Blondie barked and
barked, but none told her why people were tied to us. Great packs of children
played baseball or football across the street from where we lived. We could
smell strange creatures living in sewers and squirrels chattered, mocking us
from above.
I didn't like being tied or behind a fence,
so one day I snuck past dad, the man with the loving voice. The woman, who grabbed me in the towel, called
me; was she kidding?
Wandering where I pleased, I allowed her to
follow a couple of feet behind me, like she could ever catch me, hah!
A lovely lady I hadn't seen before called me
by my new name, “Good Girl!”
I ran to her, she scooped me into her arms. I
felt safe again. She handed me over to mom, who put me on the leash to walk home.
A few months later we were back in the
airport on our way home. People admired how well I walked on leash with my head
held high and my erect tail slicing the air.
Men outside the Aguadilla Airport doors
greeted me, “Boriqua dog, that’s a Boriqua dog. Welcome home Boriqua dog.”
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