Kev? Buddy. What did you do?
As I’m writing at the kitchen table, I intermittently glance out the window – enjoying flashes of flora and fauna in our backyard. The Engleman’s Ivy lushly embraces the pergola, the grass is green, there are birds and squirrels, and… a… fox? As I lean to the side of my computer screen, desperate to catch a glimpse of the suspected fox, I almost fall off my chair. I see a fluffy orangey tail disappear around the bushes at the bottom of our yard.
Two thoughts immediately dance around my frontal lobe:
DID I JUST SEE A FOX?!?
HOW CAN I MAKE FRIENDS WITH IT?!?
I’m up on my feet and out the back door. Taking a calm breath, I nonchalantly make my way towards the bushes. I pause at the edge of greenery. I do not want to startle the fox. Our friendship should be predicated on trust and respect. Plus, if a fox is comfortable in our backyard, who’s to say that there won’t also be a deer, a family of racoons and maybe a couple of porcupines? All living together, like a John Lewis Christmas advert!!
THIS IS THE BEST DAY EVER!!!
I peer around the bushes.
There, not 20 feet away from me, in my very own backyard… huddling against the shed is… a… dog. A mixed-breed-tail-like-a-fox-probably-a-longhaired-chihuahua-crossed-with-a-corgi kinda dog. I register a moment of slight disappointment before bright-siding that I’m still pretty frickin’ psyched to have the opportunity to befriend a new dog.
“Hey buddy! How are you?” I make no sudden movements.
Now that I’m close enough to look at it properly, I’m pretty sure the wee beastie belongs to the alleged “Pharmaceutical Rep” from across the street. When I’ve seen it in the past, it’s usually tied to the front stoop. It softly growls at me.
“It’s okay buddy. You’re okay.” I take a slow step towards him. More growls.
I reverse my step. “No worries, bud. You are O-KAY.” I hunker down and make the typical “tch-tch-tch-tch” noises that one uses when one is desperate to attract an animal. The dog neither growls, nor does it scamper over to leap into my arms.
“Dude,” I say. “Hold on a sec!” I run to the house where I have emergency dog biscuits.
I grab a large-breed biscuit and snap it into three smaller pieces as I make my way down the yard once more.
“Hey bud,” I say, holding out a piece of biscuit 10 feet away from the dog. “Do you want a cookie?”
It cocks an eyebrow at me.
“Cookie?”
The dog take two small steps towards me, wagging its tail. I take a step towards the dog and it backs up and growls.
“No worries. No worries.” I step back and toss a cookie. The dog grabs it in mid-air, a canine pro. “Good dog!!”
I start moving towards the front yard. “Okay, bud, come with me. I’ll walk you home.” I toss another cookie, which is immediately scarfed up. “Good dog!” I hunker down and offer another cookie. The dog moves towards me, tail wagging and takes the cookie from my hand. “Good dog!! What a good dog!!”
I walk to the driveway. “Let’s get you home.” The dog refuses to set foot on the driveway. It looks at the driveway – past the gravel to the road – and then back to me with sad, frightened eyes before booting it to the back yard where it hides behind the bushes again.
Well, now it really seems like the dog doesn’t want to go home. Which means that the alleged ‘Pharmaceutical Rep’ is probably a terrible owner. So I’m going to have to adopt the dog. OBVIOUSLY. Which might be a little awkward for walking the dog, on account of the fact that we share the street with the alleged “Pharmaceutical Rep.” So that means that I will either have to spray paint the dog with Just for Men hair colour to disguise it… or dye its fur. Dying the fur will probably be a better long-term solution. First, though, I need to look at its dog tags so that I can use its proper name. For that I will need more cookies. I grab supplies from the house and head to the back yard.
“Hey bud,” I say, crouching down to offer a cookie. The dog comes right up to me. We are now friends. I hold the cookie in my left hand and reach very slowly with my right hand to take a gander at the dog’s tags. And that is when the dog takes umbrage at my forwardness and bites me. Twice. Because it didn’t have the right angle the first time.
I cross the street. I’m about to knock on the door when I hear voices in the backyard.
“Oh, hey! Hi,” I say, giving a jaunty wave with my non-wounded hand. There are two men in the backyard. One is standing and looks like he’s visiting his alleged “Pharmaceutical Rep.” The other is sitting and looks like he is the alleged “Pharmaceutical Rep.” Not that I should be making any assumptions about anyone.
“Is anyone here missing a dog?”
“I am!” says the seated gent. “Where is he?”
“He’s uh…” I glance down at my hand, which I am keeping surreptitiously down at my side. There is now a fairly steady stream of blood coming from the bite. “He’s in my backyard. Does he have his…” I look at my hand again. “Shots?”
“Yeah! Yeah, he does! Did he bite you?”
“Oh, just a wee nip,” I say.
“I’m so sorry! He ran away last night during the thunder storm and he wouldn’t come back.”
“Awwwww, poor guy! No worries, no worries. Yeah, he’s uh… he’s in my backyard – he didn’t want to cross the road with me.”
We walk over to my house and head back towards the shed. There’s the dog, looking very apologetic for having bitten me.
“Kev,” the alleged “Pharmaceutical Rep” says. “Kev. Buddy. What did you do?”
Okay. The dog’s name is Kevin. Can we just marvel at that for a moment?
The guy scoops up Kevin, who lolls in his arms, looking like a fox-tailed, teddy bear now. My new neighbour thanks me profusely for my help.
“Any time!” I say. I then walk into the house to deal with the fallout from my morning adventures.
“David? Can you help me upstairs for a second ?” Upstairs is where all the First Aid supplies live.
“Sure! What’s up?”
“I just have a minor dog bite,” I say.
I’m in the bathroom rinsing my wound when David appears Kramer-esque in the doorway. “You have a what?”
“A very small dog bite,” I say, gently applying soap to the wound. Now that the adrenaline of having saved Kevin has worn off, I recognize that I am feeling a wee bit of pain.
“Jesus! Heather that’s a BITE.” He peers closer. “That’s actually two bites.”
“Two relatively small bites.” I give him the scoop on the action he’s missed. Once I finish recounting my Choose-Your-Own-Adventure, I proudly exclaim, “This is the first time that I’ve ever been bitten by a dog.”
“Which, given how often you approach animals, is a fucking miracle,” says David, grabbing antibiotic ointment and some gauze. He looks at the expiry date. “November 2012? Seriously?”
“The good thing is that we don’t need antibiotic ointment that often,” I say.
David is now in full-on trauma physician mode. He finds another tube of non-expired antibiotic ointment, then pulls my hand from under the water to generously apply it to Kevin’s love bite. It immediately starts bleeding again. He cuts off 6 feet of gauze and wraps my hand. I now have a club for a hand. David looks manic.
“Did Kevin have his shots?” he asks.
“Yep. That’s what his owner said.”
“The drug dealer from across the street? That owner?”
“Alleged!” I say. “We don’t know for sure why he has so many visitors come to his door at all hours who only stay for 2 minutes at a time.”
After I’m bandaged up, I call my doctor’s office and confirm that I’ve had a tetanus shot recently. (You know, just in case the bites get infected by all those Kevin mouth germs.) BOO YEAH! 2019 BABY!! Then, Dr. Google tells me that I should keep an eye on the wound and look out for signs of infection. Check. Doing that right now.
When I tell my friend Meaghan about the incident, she stops me when I get to the part about going to find the dog’s owner.
“Excuse me? Instead of going inside to give yourself much needed First Aid for dog bites…”
“Just two small ones!”
She rolls her eyes at me. “Instead of taking care of your BLEEDING DOG BITES, you cross the street to the DRUG DEALER’S…”
“Alleged!”
She snorts. “You go to the ALLEGED drug dealer’s house, whom you have NEVER met and you make sure that the DOG’S okay??”
“Kevin was really traumatized. I scared him.”
“Did it ever occur to you that you should go inside and get David to go to the drug dealer and you should have gone to do First Aid?”
“No.”
“You’re out of your fucking mind.”
***
One month later… it strikes me that I never did have proof of Kevin’s rabies vaccine. It also strikes me that I haven’t seen Kevin out on his front stoop in the last month. There is a small part of me wondering if Kevin has perished from rabies.
I walk across the road and knock on the door. No answer. I knock again. Maybe they’re out back. I walk up the driveway. The alleged “Pharmaceutical Rep” is talking on his phone with his back to me.
“Excuse me?” I say. He doesn’t hear me. “Excuse me?” Still nothing.
Then, I see Kevin. He is neither foaming at the mouth, nor staggering wildly. He’s just walking by the deck, looking pretty unconcerned with the world at large. He doesn’t see me. I don’t want to stress him out, so I back down the driveway. Very pleased that I won’t have rabies.
***
20 minutes later… You know how sometimes a thought just gets stuck in your head? I suspect that I’ll be wanting to catch a glimpse of Kevin in another month’s time.
***
2 weeks later… I’ve seen Kevin outside again – pleased to report that he is still not foaming at the mouth.