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Havoc:Mayhem Series #4(50)

By:Jamie Shaw


"What do you think?" she asks, and honestly, I think I want to cry.

Danica turns us both toward the gold-rimmed mirror at the end of the  hallway, and I see just how ridiculous I look standing next to her. She  looks like a runway model born for this catwalk of a store, and I look  like a beggar child who snuck in to try on her clothes.

"I think you found the perfect dress," she praises as she watches  herself walk toward the mirror and away from it again. She beams as she  closes the distance between us, her lips turning up and her eyes  sparking prettily. "Mike is going to die when he sees me in this."

She bends down to hug me tightly before disappearing back inside her  fitting room, and behind my own closed door, I try not to tear the dress  as I rush to pull it over my head.                       
       
           



       

I know Mike will think it's beautiful, but pretty dresses like this weren't made for girls like me.

They were made for girls like Danica.





Chapter 40




"She's not thriving. She's losing weight," my boss says two days after  my hellish shopping trip with Danica. I hook my fingers into the  chain-link cage as I frown at the mutt balled up in the corner. She  looks like a golden Chow mix, but her ice-blue eyes make me think part  Border collie or Siberian husky.

"Was she one of the bait dogs from the fighting ring?" I ask, and Barb  nods solemnly. Along with the pit bulls we seized a week and a half ago,  we rescued a few bait animals-animals that would have been used to help  train the pits to fight and kill. The rabbits and kittens went to other  facilities, but the puppies and our golden Chow mix stayed here.

"When she got here, her snout was duct-taped shut, but they didn't break  her teeth or anything, so she can eat . . . She just won't."

"Who's been her primary caretaker?" I ask, since all of the volunteers  were assigned their own group of new arrivals. The plan was for the dogs  to bond with one new person before we started switching things around  to get them properly socialized.

"Gabe," Barb answers. "He has to carry the poor baby outside just to get  her to use the bathroom. Otherwise, she just pees on herself. She's too  scared to leave her cage."

"How old is she?" I wonder through the emotion in my throat, and Barb shakes her head.

"Two, maybe three. She's a little old for a bait dog. We thought maybe  she was stolen from someone, but she's not chipped, and no one has  reported a dog like this missing." Barb sighs heavily over the sound of  other dogs barking throughout the shelter. Their noise echoes off the  walls, terrifying our poor golden. "My guess is she was a stray they  picked up and decided to use."

I crouch down as I stare into the cage, wishing the dog would stop  tucking her head under her body. If she doesn't adjust, she's never  going to get adopted. "Can't anyone foster her?" I ask, even though I  already know the answer.

"Beth tried," Barb says. "But she has other dogs, so it wasn't working.  Goldie here wasn't aggressive or anything-she was just terrified. She  ended up urinating and defecating in the house just like she does in her  cage. Beth and her husband tried kennel training her, but then she  wouldn't come out of the kennel. It was just too much."

I nod in understanding. Beth is almost as tiny as I am, and I can't  imagine her trying to pick up a urine-soaked golden Chow and carrying  her outside for every single bathroom trip.

"How is she on walks?" I ask softly, still holding out hope that the golden will at least glance in my direction.

"She just balls up until Gabe brings her back inside," Barb says. "He's  doing his best with her . . . but we don't call you the dog whisperer  for nothing, Hailey."

I glance up at Barb from where I'm still crouched in front of the cage, and she gives me a weak smile.

"What do you want me to do?" I ask.

"I don't know. But I know you'll figure it out."



That night, after ordering the meatiest, greasiest, grossest thing on  McDonald's menu, I sleep in a cage. With a McDouble unwrapped and  resting on my lap, I sit at the opposite corner of the cage from the  golden Chow, and I try coaxing her out of her shell.

I had tried offering her a piece of warm burger, but she only shivered  in fear. Then I tried simply sitting next to her, but when I realized  she wasn't going to stop shaking, I moved to the opposite corner.

I talk to her about how much I miss my boyfriend. I tell her about his  tour, about the pictures he's sent me from Canada and China and Korea,  about the food he's eaten in those places and how I really hope I get to  try kimchi someday. The burger grows cold as I tell her how pretty she  is, as I make up fictional stories about the life she's going to live  once she gets adopted (beloved dog of a movie star, furbaby of a  billionaire, spoiled pet of a sausage heiress), as I tell her about all  the animals I miss back on my parents' farm. We chat about Teacup the  pig and Harley the horse and Moose the bull, and eventually, I give the  dog a name: Phoenix, since I pray she rises from the ashes.                       
       
           



       

I don't normally give the dogs names, since I'm always afraid of getting  too attached, but Phoenix deserves a name, and a strong one. She  eventually untucks her head from her body, watching me with her chin on  her front paws as I talk. And when I run out of things to say, I offer  her more burger, and I sing. She doesn't come to me, but her tail wags  ever so slightly, so I lower the burger and continue singing. And when I  run out of songs, I hum songs I make up myself.

I'm sleeping when I feel something wet on my hand, and my eyelids sneak  open to see Phoenix sniffing at me. Her cold nose pokes at my knuckles,  and I stay still as a statue as she inspects me. I don't even know what  time it is, but the sharp ache in my back tells me that I've spent more  than a couple hours sitting on the concrete floor.

I ignore the pain in my spine as I continue watching Phoenix check me  out. She sniffs the burger but ignores it, smelling my shirt, my pants,  my hand again. She nuzzles her nose under my palm, and I hold my breath.  She nuzzles her nose under further, and I gently move my fingers  against her fur.

Phoenix lets out a sharp cry at the movement, and I jerk my hand away,  fearing I hurt her still-patchy snout, which just a week and a half ago  had still been wrapped in duct tape. But as soon as I pull away, she  pushes against me again, crying even louder when I try to yank my hand  away again. Eventually, I realize she's crying because she's scared,  because she wants me to protect her, and I pull her big body into my lap  as she yelps and whimpers and cries.

"It's okay," I croon, trying to soothe her. "It's okay, pretty girl.  I've got you. I've got you. Good girl. You're such a good girl."

I hold her as she trembles in my arms and tries to push herself even  further into the circle of my body, and I don't know when I start  crying, but at the back of that kennel, I cry along with her. My tears  drip onto her golden fur as she leans on me for support, as she gives me  her trust, and I try to show her a lifetime's worth of love in the way I  squeeze her against me, the way I pet my hands over her precious face.

I hold her for hours like that, letting her lick my face and my arms and  my hands as I pet her. I continue talking to her-about the meaning of  her name, about the importance of eating, about the fact that I'm a  vegetarian. She eventually falls asleep in my arms, and I don't leave  until the following morning, when Barb arrives back at the shelter and  orders me to go home. She smiles in spite of the sternness in her voice,  thanking me for staying overnight but insisting I can't live there, and  I cry on my drive home about the panicked look in Phoenix's eyes when I  left her at the shelter.

For the next few days, I spend absolutely all of my free time there. If  I'm not at school, sleeping, or taking care of necessary things like  homework or personal hygiene, I'm working with Phoenix. On the third  day, I get her to let me walk her the whole way outside, and it's such a  huge step, I call Mike to celebrate as soon as I get the chance.

"This is Mike," his voice mail says. "Leave a message."

"Hey," I start, shouldering my phone as I rush onto campus to try to  make my first class on time. I'm speed-walking down a sidewalk with a  messenger bag slipping from my shoulder and a rock wiggling around  inside my shoe. "I know you're probably onstage right now, but I just  wanted to tell you I finally got that dog I told you about to go outside  today. All on her own!" I smile and try to shrug the messenger bag back  up onto my shoulder. "She still won't let anyone else touch her, but . .  . I'm just really excited, and I wanted to tell you."