Authors: Margarita Engle
a candy bar. He'd get convulsions.
He could die. Writing about danger
makes me worryâwhat would I do
if anything ever
happened to Gabe?
He sniffs my hand, as if he can smell
the invisible fingerprint
of my thoughts.
I wish we could both smell
the future.
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22
GABE THE DOG
CHASING THE MOON
Tony talks about a future,
but I don't know what he means,
so we go outdoors, where he throws
a yellow glow-in-the-dark ball.
When a foolish squirrel runs
right in front of me, I don't chase it
very far, because my teeth are already
biting
the brightness
of my light-catching
moon wish.
I can't imagine ever needing
to do anything but play, right here,
right now, together.
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23
TONY THE BOY
DANCING ELEPHANTS
Gracie sends a note of approval
all the way from India, shouting
an all-caps BRAVO! for my bear-
and-berry entry in the Dog Nose blog.
She adds an animal note of her own,
a poem called “Elephant Step Dance,”
about the way the soles of huge feet
can hear the drummed vibrations
of elephant messages
made by stomping
boom boom
on dry
hard
earth.
The poem is funny, but is it true?
I rush to find out, and my research
tells me that yes, elephant feet
really do act like extra ears,
absorbing sounds.
I picture loud Gracie
on the other side of the world,
making sure that her own
booming voice
is heard
in verse.
A few days later, there's another
useless phone call from Mom.
Gracie's poetic drum rhythm
helps me think about my own
pounding fury
each time I have to hear
the lies.
The last time I went to the prison,
I was
the silent
sullen
one
but now
I'm noisy
and vicious.
Anger is like a disease.
You can catch it.
You can give it.
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24
GABE THE DOG
THE SMELL OF A VOICE
When Tony yells into the phone,
I run and hide
in a dark
closetâ
my cave.â¦
I won't come out. I won't.
Yelling isn't like thunder, far away in high sky.
Screaming is close. A shouting voice hurts.
I feel the slap of each word
as it spills
the bitter odor
of danger
into my nose.
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25
TONY THE BOY
FOUND AND LOST
Loser, loser, loser! I feel so terrible
about scaring Gabe by yelling at Mom
over the phone. I feel so horrible,
so awful, so lost!
But Gabe forgives me right away.
He always forgives everyone.
If TÃo gets mad at him for breaking
the No Chasing Squirrels rule,
they make up quickly, but I never
seem to get over things
swiftly
and easily
like a trusting dog
or a really smart
grown-up.
Why does 50 percent of my mind
always seem to be stuck
in unhappy mode?
There's only one way
to take my thoughts away from
Mom's prison cell of rage.
Searches. Finding the lost. Helping.
My uncle tells me that before
the invention of GPS gadgets,
there were searches almost every day.
Hardly anyone knew what to do
with a compass and map, or how
to navigate by the stars.
Now, with GPS and fancy new
satellite phones that can get a signal
anywhereâeven in the most remote
wild placesâlost hikers often call
forest rangers
to ask which trail to choose
at a crossroads.
With all the modern technology,
wilderness searches are needed
only once in awhile, but they're
still just as urgent as before.
Life or death. All or nothing.
One night, an autistic teenager
wanders away from a cabin.
The next week, two fishermen
fail to find the trail back downhill
from a high mountain lake.
A Swiss thru-hiker is rescued
when he gets disoriented
from dehydration.
There are crime scenes, too,
searches so gross that TÃo won't
let me hang out at base camp.
All I know is what I hear later,
when he and B.B. talk,
holding hands.
As soon as I see
how their fingers
touch
I start to wonder
what will happen to me
if they
get married.
My uncle's cabin is too small
for all of us.
How long will it be
until he sends me away?
Every time I start believing
in safety,
something happens
that makes me feel
like an old toothbrush
in the lost-
and-found
box
at school.
Nobody wants someone else's
trash.
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26
GABE THE DOG
SHARING
Tony smells
so lonely
that I try
to share
my food
my water
my toys
but all he wants is company
so I take him outside and we run
round and round in dizzy circles
until finally, we fall down
and laugh
together.
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27
TONY THE BOY
SHORELINES
Summer turns into a season
of mysterious migrations.
One morning, there are thousands
of bright red ladybugs.
The next day, it's shiny blue dragonflies,
swooping across soft green meadows.
Suddenly, only the tiniest spiders
float overhead, each one dangling
from a natural parachute
of silky white web.
Roaming wild creatures
don't worry about where
they'll end up, but I do,
I really do worry, so when TÃo
invites me on a vacation road trip
to a distant beach, I'm excited,
but I'm also not sure how I feel
about leaving the comforting
mountains.
We ride with open windows,
Gabe and I both sniffing the breeze
as we zoom right past the prison,
turning west, then driving, gliding,
until we finally reach the bright,
endless ocean, and the warm,
sun-gold sand.
When Gabe chases shore birds
into frothy waves, I follow, running
and splashing, even though I know
I'll never be able to catch any creature
with wings.
I don't even want to catch birds,
but it feels so great to act like a tiny
kid again, romping with new puppies
that have never
been hurt.
Pelicans slide across the bright sky.
Sea otters roll around on blue water.
Everything is so peaceful
that I wonder if it's possible
to feel sad and scared
on any beach
anywhere
in the huge world.
That night, under brilliant stars,
I ask my uncle a question
that I've wondered about
for a long time.
How did he feel when he floated away
from his home island? What was it like,
drifting on a raft in a storm,
then wrecking, being washed ashore
in a nameless place, without food
or a dog.â¦
I can't picture my uncle before Gabe.
They belong togetherâhow did TÃo survive?
After a long, quiet moment, he speaks
of his childhood on the troubled island
where he had to be careful about rules.
Strange rules. Censored books.
Rationed food. Secret police.
Neighborhood spies.
By the time he was a teenager,
he was in trouble with the authorities
for buying bread on the black market
and for reading forbidden stories
and listening to outlawed radio stations
that played illegal foreign music.
Illegal music? No wonder my uncle
and Mom both fled their homeland.
Did she listen to the wrong songs too?
Was she always a rule breaker?
Was there a time when she knew
which rules deserved breaking?
TÃo goes on to describe his parentsâ
my grandparents. They aren't alive
anymore, but when I ask, my uncle says
maybe someday he'll be able to take me
back to the island, to meet all my cousins.
The story of TÃo's youth ends
with his escape from the secret police,
on a homemade raft, in hurricane season.
Then the sea, the wreck, being stranded
on that nameless spit of sand, and finally,
surviving on rainwater, shellfish,
and seaweed. After a fisherman
found him, rescue became TÃo's passion.
Nature had fed him, God and people
helped him. He was determined to do
the same for someone else.
He received asylum in Florida,
learned English, studied forestry,
then worked in the Everglades,
Yellowstone, and Yosemite,
before choosing to patrol
the most remote places
along the Pacific Crest Trail,
places that seemed almost
as vast and perilous
as an ocean.
Wherever he went, he always
experimented with wild foods
and survival skills. He experimented
with wild feelings, too, trying out
different emotions
the way people in cities
try on clothes.
He had to decide which feelings
could be trusted
and which ones would poison
his mind.
Anger was useless, fear deadly,
and despair was the most dangerous
emotion of all. He realized that hope
was the only feeling strong enough
to keep him alive.
When TÃo falls silent, I gaze up
at beach stars, gather my courage,
and ask about Mom.
What was she like when she was little?
Did she fight, was she cruel, did she care
about people and puppies?
My uncle's answer makes me feel
as clear and limitless
as the starry sky.
Mom was ordinary.
Something changed her.
But she could change back.
And I'm not like her.
I'll always be free
to be myself.
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28
GABE THE DOG
BEACH DREAMS
Sleeping in a tent on the moon-bright sand
I dream
swim-run-swim
and in the morning
I can still smell the dreams
of my Leo and Tony
because they were swimming with me
so that even alone on the water
I was never
alone.
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29
TONY THE BOY
WHEN ELEPHANTS JUMP
By the time we drive back
from our cool beach vacation,
I've collected a few experimental
feelings of my own
along with sand dollars
and seashells
and a gooey bag of chewy
saltwater taffy for Gracie,
who's due back from India.
She arrives in a loud burst
of hilarious jungle poem-stories
about elephant sunscreen (mud)
elephant pizza (squashed trees)
and elephant dreams (jumping,
because when they're awake,
elephants are the only mammals
that can't leap).
After her welcome-home
nonelephant pizza party,
all I expect to do is sleep,
but a call-out comes at midnight,
and TÃo takes me with him.
I wait restlessly at base camp,
wondering if I'll ever master
the frustrating art
of patience.
The lost person is a teenage boy
with a homemade bow and arrow.
There is no place last seenâso Gabe
has to search a huge area, off leash
and eager, as he races against time,
because the boy is diabetic, and if he
doesn't get his medicine,
he'll die.
His family brings candles, food,
flowers, and a makeshift altar.
They pray in a language I can't identify.