It was a winter’s morning in Bardon, crisp enough to freeze
last night’s leftovers. I was driving the big red car down to Discount Dave’s
Emporium to pick up some of the good stuff: premium potting mix and composted manure with an aroma
on it that’d knock out Jeff Horn in one hit. I’d thrown a right onto Rosalie
when I saw a suspicious-looking black mutt sniffing his way along a nature
strip. He was all alone in the big city and I didn’t like the look of things.
Where were his folks? Who was looking out for him? I pulled over, sprang the
door and sauntered over, smooth-like so as not to startle him. It was then I
noticed he had only three legs.
‘Hey there, tripod, where’s your folks? Whatcha up to?’
But he wasn’t talking, so I gave him a little pat on the back, real gentle and friendly. He jumped like a skateboarder at a speedbump, which made me think he must be challenged in the earhole department as well. I fingered his collar to make sure he wasn’t going to bolt, and picked him up ― no easy task. He was shaped like a barrel and must have weighed 30 kilos. He coulda been a contender for a Canine Biggest Loser.
‘Hey there, tripod, where’s your folks? Whatcha up to?’
But he wasn’t talking, so I gave him a little pat on the back, real gentle and friendly. He jumped like a skateboarder at a speedbump, which made me think he must be challenged in the earhole department as well. I fingered his collar to make sure he wasn’t going to bolt, and picked him up ― no easy task. He was shaped like a barrel and must have weighed 30 kilos. He coulda been a contender for a Canine Biggest Loser.
I looked him in the eyes but he didn’t look back. Those peepers of his were whiter than a debutante’s gown. He’d won the trifecta: deaf, blind and amputeed. Heck, it broke your heart just to think about it. But I’m a tough old broad, and I like to play my cards close to my chest, so I started working out a plan.
I checked the mutt for tags but there was no little anodised plate with a handy local address on his collar, no sir ― just some crazy bit of plastic that said findyurpetz.com and a 1-800 number. I looked around at the nearby houses. Maybe he lived in one. It was worth a try.
‘Let’s bowl into one of these joints, Furball. Maybe your owner lives in this one.’ With all the grace and agility of a toddler with a bowling ball, I carried him into the nearest yard, fronted up to the door and rang the bell. Behind the flyscreen, a blonde appeared with one kid on her hip and another at her heels.
‘Is this your dog, ma’am?’ I asked.
She looked at me like I was carrying a pet rat with bubonic plague, and I can’t say I blamed her. She had her hands full with small fry and would sooner open that flyscreen to Ivan Milat than take in a stray dog. We stood there chewin’ the fat about Furball’s pedigree and domicile for a while but we were getting nowhere, so I cut and ran.
I’d left my mobile back at headquarters, so it looked like my only option was to take old Furball back with me and make some calls to findyurpetz.com from there. I didn’t relish the prospect.
‘Boots aint gonna like it, Furball,’ I said. ‘Deaf and blind and three-legged won’t count for nothin’ with her. She’ll take one look at you and give you a close-up of her pearly whites ― and that’s if she’s in a good mood.’
Bootsy. The toughest mutt in Bardon |
Old Bootsy is my 10-year-old cavoodle, and she's meaner than a junkyard dog when it comes to waifs and strays. If Furball was coming back to headquarters, he’d have to stay on the gated front verandah and mind his manners while Bootsy snarled at him from behind the French doors.
I hoisted my three-legged friend over to the rear of the big red car, lifted the hatch and dropped him in. He was lurching around in there like a drunken sailor on shore leave but there was nothing I could do about that. I executed the slowest U-turn on record to avoid putting him off balance, and stopped at the T-intersect. Headquarters were left, but as I looked right I clocked a barefoot brunette clambering up the hill like she was summiting the Matterhorn.
Now grown-up women around this town don’t go barefoot on gravelly bitumen unless they’re in too much of a rush to slip on their Dunlops, so I put two and two together and came up with five.
‘Furball, you might just be in luck, little guy,’ I said. I punched the passenger-side window button like I was playing the pokies at the Broncos Leagues Club, and drove towards the brunette.
‘Excuse me, is this your-’ But she was moving on up that slope like Tenzing Norgay on speed. I drove on a bit.
‘Are you looking for a-’ Again, she just kept on climbing. I was starting to wonder if she was hard of hearing, like her pooch.
Finally, I stopped right alongside her like a hoon at a drag race and yelled, ‘HAVE YOU LOST A DOG?’
She pulled up real fast and looked at me with eyes full of H2O.
‘He’s in the back!’ I shouted, gesturing like Marcel Marceau. I leapt out, popped the boot, picked up Furball and dumped him in his mama’s arms. He sat there all cool and collected, like Stevie Wonder at a hen’s night, while his owner burbled incoherently.
‘Someone left the gate open… I didn’t know where he’d … I thought he’d gone up to the main road and… Oh my god I was so worried…’ she sobbed.
We chatted for a bit and then I left her to cuddle him and make a big old fuss while he just kicked back and lapped up the filet mignon and attention. Furball knew when he was onto a good thing.
‘So long amigo. Stay outta trouble,’ I said, and drove off. I still had time to make it to Discount Dave’s before the hard stuff sold out.
As for the culprit behind Furball’s escape, my money’s on a tradie. Don’t get me wrong; they’re a great buncha guys, and Brisbane would grind to a tyre-scorching Hilux halt without them. But some of your tradesmen look at a gate like it’s an encumbrance to easy egress; a plug in the handbasin of progress; a greenies blockade at a clearfell logging site. They breeze through your home like they’re more accustomed to living in a tepee on the plains of Nebraska or a Coleman’s tent on the beach at Straddy. I’ve lost count of the times I’ve had to hare off down the road in hot pursuit of Bootsy, who’s all set to rock ’n roll in a dead possum in the gutter outside number 99 - all because a tradie left the side gate swingin' in the breeze.
So if you’re a plumber or a sparky with a hazy recollection of a job at the house of a blind three-legged dog, keep an eye out for an old dame with a bag of manure next time you’re strolling down the mean streets of the Westside. I'll want a word in your ear.
Case closed.