Authors: Margarita Engle
So many emotions churn
through my head that I feel
like a baby elephant
trying to learn how to use
its long
clumsy nose.
On my birthday, I never
would have guessed that twelve
could feel so young
and small
and complicated.
Anger. At myself. At Mom.
Terror. Of being lost forever.
Or getting found, and then
punished. Sent far away
to live with strangers.
Shame too.
How could I be so selfish?
Searchers who should be focused
on finding the hunter and his hound
will have to waste time
looking for me.
Or will they? Has anyone
even noticed
that I'm gone?
Sitting still with these thoughts
becomes impossible, so I lurch
to my feet, and stumble back
the way I came. Or at least I hope
it's the way. Panic makes the world
shaky. Things seen from a distance
change shape as I move closerâ
a loping coyote turns out to be
a motionless slab of granite.
That soaring pterodactyl
is just a crow.
Tall
skinny
ancient
people
wearing
flowing
robes
are
only
brown
tree
trunks.
I race, then trudge, knowing I can't
even trust my own eyesight â¦
but at least the night is over.
Daytime strikes like lightning.
I've been lost for hours and hours.â¦
I run, walk, run again
until I'm so exhausted
that all I can do
is stop and rest,
wish, hope, pray,
and think of Gabe's
smart nose
warm fur
happy grin
loyalty
courage.
But the weather is turning.
Blue sky goes cloudy.
A cold wind shrieks
like the spirits
in one of TÃo's spooky
campfire stories.
I close my eyes, hoping that when
I open them, I'll discover that I've been
dreaming.
Is that musky scent
a bear's?
Am I touching
fur?
When I open my eyes, instead of dreams,
I discover a reddish dog who whines
as he greets me, nuzzles my arm,
and shows me his trusting eyes,
filled with joy and hope, because now
that he's found a human, he assumes
everything will be fine.
It's not Gabe or another SAR dog,
so it must be the hunter's hound.
He's lean and bony.
How long has he been out here?
Two days? Three? I've lost
track of time. I'm hungry,
so the poor dog must be
starving.
I can't believe that while I was
searching for him, he's the one
who ended up finding me.
I feel like a cave boy.
This is how it must have been.
TÃo has told me about coevolution,
like when hummingbird beaks
gradually changed shape, just to fit
certain flowers. Dogs and man
learned to need each other
thousands of years ago.
No wonder I suddenly feel
like I'm home,
even though I'm still
out in the woods,
lost and cold.
Scared.
The hound is weak, but he talks
to me in his dog-language
of movement and touch.
B.B. has told me that wild animals
don't make eye contact, because
they don't need to understand
human faces, but dogs do need
to know us. They can't live
alone.
This hound is so friendly,
and he must have a name.
I try out a few, but he wiggles
happily, no matter what I say.
Angel, Magic, Wizard.
I make my voice high
and squeaky
so it sounds excited.
My approval is the dog's
reward.
Suddenly, I feel hopeful. Ever since
I learned about trail names,
I've wondered what I'd call myself
if I'm ever brave enough
to be a thru-hiker.
Rescue Beast. NoâTrail Beast!
That's what I'd be, part Trail Angel
and part mysterious,
ferociously dedicated,
educated, scientific,
magical.â¦
Â
34
GABE THE DOG
SEARCH!
I'm tired, but we have a place where Tony was last seen, and we have a scent objectâhis backpackâso I plunge my nose in, sniffing his boy-life of games, paper, ink, and sweet treat snacks.â¦
Then I tug the long leash to keep my Leo close behind me as I inhale shoe prints, nose to the ground, following tracks, so I can
find
find
find
our Tony.
Nothing else matters.
Â
35
TONY THE BOY
RESCUED!
The hound is too weak
to walk, and too heavy to carry,
so I stay still, hugging him,
even though I desperately
want to run and search for berries and a stream.
Hunger.
Thirst.
Fear.
Now I know how TÃo felt
when his raft
was drifting.
How long can a dog live
without any food and water?
If it gets colder, my fingers
and toes will be numb.
If only TÃo or B.B. would find us.
They both know all sorts
of human and canine first aid.
Sounds in the forest grow
eerily loud
when you're lost.
The wing beat of a raven
is like thunder
or a monstrous roar
so when I hear a collar bell
that tinkles like Christmas
and I see the orange flash
of a SAR dog's happy vest,
and I feel the familiar warmth
of Gabe's panting breath,
I feel so relieved
and so safe
that I finally crumple up
and cry.
Gabe licks me, TÃo hugs me,
and the hunter's hound rolls over
to show Gabe that he's
not a fighter. The two dogs
sniff each other curiously.
It's some sort of diplomacy,
like when the presidents of countries
shake hands on TV.
If I'm going to be a veterinarian,
I'll have to learn as much as I can
about the sign language dogs use
to talk to each otherâthis joyful
dance of wagging tails,
lolling tongues, thrashing legs,
and wiggly bellies.
After that, my mind is a blur.
Base camp, then the truck, a clinic,
good news: the bear hound
will survive, and the hunter
was found by one of the dogs
that has practiced finding me
over and over, when I was just
a volunteer victim
pretending
to be lost.
The rest of that first day at home
is so peaceful and cozy
that I can't imagine
ever going outdoors again.
All I want is soup
cookies
hot cocoa
and sleep.
The next day, I feel strong enough
to accept TÃo's after-breakfast lecture
without any arguments. He's right.
I should have stayed at base camp.
I should have listened
and cooperated.
We spend the rest of the morning
relaxing, and then, after lunch,
we go online together, and we order
a fancy new satellite phone
so that I'll never again be stranded
in any rugged, remote area
where old-style cell phones
can't get a signal.
But the biggest gift
my uncle gives me
is the calm, patient feeling
that I still have plenty of time
to learn
common sense.
It's just like math, he promises.
Just learn one formula at a time.
The first is such a simple rule
that you'll never forget:
DON'T HIKE ALONE.
My lost-and-found mood
of grateful relief
lasts until Halloween.
That's when everything
suddenly
turns mean and scary.
One final prison visit.
Mom is a no-show.
The nightmares come back
with such hurricane force
that I know I'm facing
a decision.
This is my life.
My chance.
My only hope.
I'm at a crossroads, a place
where two paths meet.
There aren't any road signs
telling me which trail
will lead toward a future
and which could carry me back
into my past.
I can choose to continue
feeling like one of Mom's
doomed puppies
or I can let my mind
take that first step
toward safety.
So I tell the social worker
to stop scheduling me for prison visits.,
and I tell TÃo that I'm tired of waiting
for Mom
to grow up.
I'm ready for my own turn to grow.
I'm tired of feeling tired, and worried,
and secretly
scarily
furious.
That night, as I paint my face
in a snarling bear design, it feels natural
to be someone else for a change.
Gabe wears my magician's hat
with a stuffed toy rabbit
hidden inside.
Even though he can't see the toy,
Gabe knows it's there, because
his genius-nose always shows him
invisible secrets.
Gracie wears a red and gold sari
from India, and the spotted horse
is dressed as a funny elephant,
with a floppy trunk
made of braided hay
that keeps vanishing
into a horse-mouth.
I'm too shy to say it out loud
but Gracie looks pretty
and she's starting to act
as if she likes me
in a teenage way
that makes me
feel dizzy.
The cabins are too far apart
for trick-or-treating, so we play
all sorts of hilarious games
at a Cowboy Church Carnival
where Gabe and I ride perched
on top of a giant pumpkin
in a decorated wagon
pulled by Gracie's
elephant-horse.
I imagine it's the last time I'll feel
young enough to enjoy acting silly,
but it's also the first time I've ever
been old enough to laugh
at people
in monster suits.
In my other life, Halloween
meant guarding the pit bulls
from drunk, costumed thieves.
In my other life
all the monstrous nightmares
were real.
But everything isn't always
easy now. Instead, the hours flip
back and forth between hopeful
and sad.
There's an ugly surprise waiting for me
at the end of my life's first happy
Halloween. It comes in the form
of a call that makes Mom's
phone voice
sound as poisonous
as deadly nightshade berries.
Mom's in trouble. She's been fighting.
A guard was hurt. Time will be added
to her sentence. Years will be added
to my foster care.
TÃo doesn't make me wonder
what will happen next.
He tells me right away
that he wants to raise me,
one way or another, either
as my foster dadâor if Mom
and the family court judge
can agreeâas my really, truly
adopted dad
forever!
But it's not just him, B.B. wants me too.
When they talk about OUR family,
TÃo calls her Beatrice, or Bee,
and suddenly, I realize that she
has a name of her own.
She's not just Gracie's grandma
or a bear biologist. She's herself,
helping me figure out how
to be myself.
Best of all, she'll soon be
my foster mom, or maybe even
my adopted mom,
because beautifully brave
Beatrice and my hero-uncle
are getting married!
With Gracie's parents due
to come home soon,
I won't even have to worry
about becoming anything weird
like my best friend's stepbrother.
Being part of the family seems
so complicated and exciting
that I feel like a dog
in a pack of strays,
trying to understand
glances and gestures
because I don't have
enough words
to express
my wildly
wondrously
mixed-up
feelings.
Â
36
GABE THE DOG
WINNERS
I don't know what all
his fast human words
mean
but I love the sound of Tony's
happiest voice
so I listen
and I sniff his hands
until I'm sure his mood rhymes
with winning a shared
hide-and-seek
game.
Â
37
TONY THE BOY
PUPPY TESTING
Gracie's parents are back just in time
for an engagement party.
Gabe and I will both be the best men
at a wedding in the spring,
but for now, I don't have to dress up.
I just wear regular clothes,
and watch grown-ups dancing
half-festive island salsa,
and half-calm, cool, old-folks
American.
Everything's changing
so fast
that I feel
like I'm sliding
down
     down