Authors: Margarita Engle
Some stomp and gobble.
Others nibble delicately.
There's oneâGracie's favoriteâ
that lifts the ice and lets it melt
on top of his head, so he can reach
up, up, up
with his trunk
to pluck huge chunks
of mangos and melons
at leisure.
My quiet poem is about waiting.
I write it from Gabe's
energetic dog point of view,
imagining how he feels
when he's eager to work
and anxious to play
even though he's been
commanded to stay.
The teacher says it's good,
and when I ask her to please
never make me read it out loud,
she's nice enough to agree.
After that, school isn't too bad,
but by the time spring break
comes around, I'm ready for time off.
Gabe time. Dog time. Dirty, dusty,
rolling around in grass time.
Laughing, adventurous forest time.
TÃo time. Family time.
Each time I think of my uncle
and his dog as a real family,
I have to correct myself.
Remind myself.
Foster family.
Temporary.
Fragile.
Spring break means riding
around in the truck
from one campground to another,
listening to TÃo as he leads nature hikes
on trails so remote and beautiful
that I hardly even notice
the bear tracks.
We sleep in a tent, Gabe's snorts
and my uncle's snores blending
like a chorus of weird, funny music.
Life in a tent feels so different
that it's easy for me to pretend
I'm on an expedition
in a magical land
where nightmares don't exist
and all the dreams
are peaceful.
During TÃo's nature hikes, I learn
how to recognize rattlesnakes,
poison oak, and wild foods.
If you're lost in the forest,
wilderness lore says you can eat miner's lettuce
and certain lily roots,
but not camas lilies.
You can make fishing line
from stinging-nettle fibers,
ink from pigeon berries,
chewing gum from sugar pine sap.
By the second day of spring break,
I know more about wilderness
than I ever knew about my own
scary home
in the city.
Mountain lion tracks
have a letter
m
at the base
of each paw print.
A snake moving fast
usually makes a zigzag print,
while a slow, relaxed snake
tends to leave a straight line.
A bear's short front feet
leave tracks that look a lot
like a big dog's paw prints,
but the long back feet of a bear
leave eerie shapes that almost
look human.
By the third day of spring break,
I've learned that yellow-bellied marmots
resemble giant squirrels, but they chew wires
under the hoods of cars, leaving campers
stranded and furious.
If a painted lady butterfly lands
on your nose, it's tasting your skin,
drinking salt.
When lightning is about to strike,
wilderness lore says your hair stands up, just like
in old cartoons, so you have to
plant your feet wide apart
and curl your body downward,
and tuck your head so you're not
tall and skinny like a lightning rod.
It's the opposite with mountain lions.
If you see one, reach up and stretchâ
try to look big and brave.
Don't turn your back or run.
Never look like prey.
Each night, in the tent, I review
newly memorized wildflowers.
Fireweed, paintbrush, sky pilot.
Names designed
for dreaming.
By the time spring break ends,
I feel so close to TÃo that I'm afraid
to return to the cabin and break
the wild spell.
But Easter morning at Cowboy Church
feels dreamlike too. The sunrise service
begins with a horseback drill-team dance.
Gracie is in the lead, galloping at full speed
around and around,
performing pirouettes
and figure eights.
I sit on the corral fence,
wondering how long it takes
to learn full-gallop courage.
Gabe is busy with other dogs,
but TÃo and B.B. are nearby,
talking and smiling like they might
turn out to be a lot more
than friends.
The thought makes me cringe.
If TÃo married B.B., would Gracie
be my stepniece?
Luckily, I have better things
to think about, because later that same day,
all of us pack a picnic and drive to a grove
of giant sequoia trees. I stand at the base
of one of the oldest, most enormous
living things in the world,
a tree so huge that one branch
looks as big
as a whole
peaceful
forest.
The calmness I absorb in that grove
stays with me for days, until Mom
suddenly starts calling to apologize
for avoiding my visit.
She claims it's the fault of lifers
who keep trying to lure her
into fights so she'll get in real trouble
and end up with a life sentence
like theirs.
I don't know why she bothers
to dump her prison troubles on me.
She can't be dumb enough to fall
into another fighting trap.
She'll probably get out on time,
and then she'll want me back,
and I'll have to go
but I can't imagine
giving up Gabe.
Maybe I could sneak him away
with me â¦
but then he'd have to
learn how to fight
against pit bulls,
and that would
make me
even more greedy
and selfish
than Mom.
Â
I'd be
a monster
a nightmare
impossible
no.
Â
10
GABE THE DOG
TOGETHERNESS
I don't understand sadness,
but I can smell the way it makes
the boy feel unnaturally heavy,
so that his breath doesn't seem
to be made
of air.
It's an odor that rhymes
with the weight of aloneness,
so I press my head against the palm
of his hand, hoping to help him feel
the floating lightness
of never-lonely.
Â
11
TONY THE BOY
THE RESCUE BEAST
TÃo notices my mood.
He invites me to talk, but I don't feel
ready, so he takes me with him
out to the woods, where I help him
by hiding for his search-and-rescue team
of volunteer handlers and their dogs.
Hiding offers me a strange escape
from feeling cheated by life,
even though the dog handlers call me
a volunteer victim.
The way they say it, victim sounds so useful,
because it means that when I hide
in the forest, all the dogs have a chance
to practice finding a real victim.
There are all sorts of complicated
training exercises, but the simplest
is the first one every SAR dog learns:
a runaway.
All I have to do is race away
from a dog as it watches me.
The handler holds on to its collar
so it can't follow until I've vanished
behind a tree or a boulder.
Once I'm out of sight, the dog
is turned loose, and the handler
shouts, Find!
The eager dog rushes
to do his playful
hide-and-seek work,
running to my hiding place
so that he can receive
two rewardsâhis handler's praise
and a treat, or a toy.
Even the most experienced dogs
love to do runaways
just for fun,
but they also need
more difficult problems.
It's like they're doing math,
and they already know fractions,
percentages, and word problems,
so now they have to move on
and try to master
prealgebra.
Dogs don't separate reality
from fantasy. It's all the same,
all work, all play. Imagine a world
where homework is fun. That's
a dog's world. Just thinking about it
encourages me. Maybe there's hope
for a kid who hates numbers.
Research for an online article
about SAR dogs
calms me too.
It helps me feel safe to know
that search-and-rescue volunteers
practice all year, just in case
someone gets lost.
Even a stranger.
Especially a stranger.
TÃo risks his life each time he goes out
in wild weather, at night, in rough terrain,
to search for a child or a thru-hiker.
My uncle claims
he's not brave.
He says there's a fierceness
that takes over his mind, giving him
endurance and strength. He insists
that anyone who has ever
searched for the lost
knows how it feels
to be transformed
into a Rescue Beast
thinking of others
instead of himself.
Rescue Beasts are the opposite
of werewolves. They're people
who turn into wilderness heroes
instead of villains.
There's so much to know.
Where do I start? TÃo advises me
to study the dogs, not the Beast.
He shows me how there are two kinds
of searches, area and trailing.
Gabe is one of the few dogs trained
to do both. When he zigzagged
all over the apple grove, his nose
was up in the air, searching for any
human scent, any human at all.
That's called area work.
Trailing work is different.
It can only be done when there's
a PLSâa place last seenâa spot
where someone saw the lost person
right before she vanished.
A trailing dog sniffs any object
that carries the victim's scentâa pillow,
a jacket, a hat. Whenever there's a PLS,
Gabe searches on a long leash,
like a bloodhound in a manhunt movie,
nose to the ground, following only one
set of footprints as he sniffs to match
the smell of those tracks
to the scent of the pillow.
It's eerie, thinking how easily we
can get lost and how little of ourselves
we leave behind. Sunglasses. A backpack.
Winter gloves. After a week or two,
even the unique smell of a person
is gone. The place last seen is only
fragrant and useful for a few days,
or at most, a few weeks.â¦
Thinking of lost people
reminds me of Mom, but instead
of letting me focus on loss,
TÃo goes into Rescue Beast mode,
showing me how to concentrate
on helping others. On SAR training days,
a bunch of us gather in the forest, and I
have my chance to help the dogs
by hiding.
First, I'm escorted to a hiding place
by TÃo, who gives me a two-way radio
so I can call him for help
if I get scared.
He marks the spot on his GPSâ
a Global Positioning System gadget
that uses beams from satellites
out in spaceâto show him exactly
where I am at all times, so that even
if the most experienced dogs
and their handlers
happen to have a bad day,
I'll be found.
So I'm safe, and the forest sounds
are soothing, and there are squirrels
and birds to keep me from feeling
completely alone
and I know that no matter how long
I have to wait to be found, Gabe
and the other dogs will take turns
and while they're searching,
they'll learn how to find
real victims.
Even though I enjoy all that oddly
comforting quiet time, alone
and relaxed in the wild,
wondrous woods,
I'm always relieved to hear
the eager pop-pop-pop
of a panting dog's breath
as it races toward me,
helping me feel
like such an important
part of the heroic
Rescue Beast
team.
Â
12
GABE THE DOG
TEAMWORK
All I need are my energetic nostrils
so I can follow
the hiding boy's
scent trail.
As soon as I find Tony, I run back to alert my Leo,