Authors: Margarita Engle
The women wear colorful dresses,
and somehow, the worried men
manage to look strong
and helpless
at the same time.
The search goes on and on,
but this time, Gabe isn't the hero.
A helicopter pilot makes the find,
spotting the lost boy from midair.
Exhausted but happy, TÃo assures me
that search and rescue is teamwork,
not individual
glory.
Still, as I think about how hard
Gabe tried, I can't help but wonder
if SAR dogs ever feel
discouraged.
Lately, my mind is so full
of questions
that there doesn't seem to be room
for answers.
Wondering and wishing are all
I can manage at Cowboy Church,
where I try and try to pray
for Mom â¦
but end up feeling
like wondering and wishing
are better than seeing her
or opening her hopelessly
angry letters.
Now I know
how elephants must feel
in between their lively
jumping dreams
while they're awake
and limited
to plodding.
Â
30
GABE THE DOG
MY WISHFUL NOSE
I'm not discouraged, just tired
and restful.
My nose has wishful moods
when the nostrils imagine sniffing
adventurous smells that I can't quite name
with my dog-words.
Tony, you look wishful too.
Does your boy nose dream
of exploring wild scent trails
in unknown air?
Â
31
TONY THE BOY
DOG YEARS
Summer is the best cure
for worries. I'm so tired and relaxed
from swimming, hiking, playing
dog games, and learning bear facts
that I can almost sleep
straight through one whole
nightmare-free night.
Maybe that's why my dog nose blog
grows more confident
and number-rich
each day,
as I learn that people shed 40,000
skin cells per hour, creating a trail
of scent that a long dog nose
can follow, using all 230 million
scent receptorsâ100,000 times more
sniffing ability than the amount
of smell-skill in a short human nose.
It sounds like magic,
but it's science.
If I want to study wildlife biology,
or forestry, or veterinary medicine,
I'll need plenty of courage
to explore the tangled
wilderness of math.
So I try to copy Gabe's way of facing
each day with the energy of a dog's
excitement about work-play.
When I hide for SAR dog practice,
I notice the way all dogs love
adventure, but they also need to know
what to expect. Border collies
try to herd me, German shepherds
guard me, and Labs like Gabe
just love to fetch me.
I'm still trying to figure out how
playful dogs turn into such fiercely
loyal Rescue Beasts
while having so much fun.
Is there a mathematical formula
to explain generosity?
TÃo and the other volunteer
SAR dog handlers are just as amazing.
They have normal jobs in forests, shops,
and offices, but as soon as they reach
a place last seen, they start to seem
like people from a different centuryâ
a time when anyone could get lost
in the wild, and everyone always
joined the search posse.
I want to be just like them.
I crave that brave combination
of beastly toughness
and rugged kindness.
It's like moss on a boulder,
hard and soft at the same time,
the same blend I'll need if I'm ever
going to be a smart animal doctor
who knows how to cure
wounded dogs.
With thoughts of college and vet school,
I start seeing regular school
as important.
The new semester is a challenge
I almost feel ready to face.
Same classroom, same teacher,
same friendly students,
but I hardly recognize the girls.
They look a lot older, and they act
all gigglyâeven Gracie, who has grown
supertall, weirdly shy, and surprisingly
pretty.
But girls aren't my only confusion.
On September 15, the first day
of Hispanic Heritage Month,
the teacher asks me to speak
to the whole class about my family
and their origins.
But I wasn't born on the island.
I'm American.
I barely know any Spanish.
How can I tell quaint, folksy tales
about fiestas, feasts, cousins,
and grandmas.â¦
I won't do it.
I don't belong.
Not here.
Or anywhere.
I can't belong.
Ever.
When I refuse to speak,
the teacher says she understands,
but then Gracie jumps in
and invites TÃo to talk in my place.
He agrees, but only after asking me
if it's okay. I do mind. I mind a lot,
but I don't want to hurt his feelings,
so I keep my anxiety
secret.
I find myself listening with laser-sharp ears
as TÃo tells the whole class about his life.
My eyes feel blurry, and my mind
has left the room. All I can think about
is Mom hungry, Mom scared,
Mom on a raft, drifting.â¦
Why didn't I ever ask about
her childhood?
If I ask now, will she answer
and if she does, will her answers
be honest?
My birthday is coming soonâmaybe
that will be the perfect chance to try
to get to know more
about Mom's weird past â¦
but on the day when I finally
turn twelve, there's no card or call,
no proof that I ever had a mother.
No prison visit either,
but that's my choice.
TÃo bakes a carrot cake, and gives me
a brand-new laptop, and the warmest
hug
of my life.
Then B.B. gives me a grinning
photo of Gabe, a picture that brings tears
of happiness to my eyes, but I don't
actually cry, because Gracie chooses
that moment to give me a silly poem
about the clumsy way
baby elephants play
while they're learning
how to control all 40,000
clunky muscles
in their trunkies.
After that, we sing and howl off-key.
It's the first time anyone has ever
called my birthday
happy.
This story of turning twelve will be great,
when I tell it on my dog nose blog,
with my new laptop, using plenty
of numbers that no longer remind me
of winners and losers
in long-ago fights.
When I sit down to write,
I say that Gabe is exactly half my age,
but he's also 6 times 7
=
42,
old and wise
in dog yearsâalmost ancientâ
but age doesn't stop him
from celebrating. All through
my whole birthday, he's the one
who helps me laugh
by grinning
as we gobble
messy frosting.
If only birthdays could last
forever. But they don't last.
Nothing lasts. Suddenly,
the forest
is no longer
peaceful.
Â
32
GABE THE DOG
EXPLOSIONS
Each boom rhymes
with the smell
of danger.
Worse than thunder.
Worse than yelling.
I would hide in the closet
forever
if my Leo didn't keep patting me
and reminding me
that it's just the same
mean noise
we hear
every year.
Â
33
TONY THE BOY
TRAIL NAMES
Hunting season opens
with gunfire at dawn.
Frightened deer hide
in our vegetable garden.
A desperate bear scratches
at the cabin door.
At first Gabe hides, but then
he goes crazy with fear, barking
and growling. He sounds like
a pit bull. He sounds
like Mom.
Gunshots and snarls
bring old nightmares
rushing back.
Why do I always
have to start over
again
and again
struggling
to be free
of the past?
TÃo shakes me awake to say
that he's leaving, and at first
I assume he means forever â¦
but it's just another call-out
for a search.
As usual, I go with my uncle
to a safe base camp at a trailhead,
even though this time, the forest
is scary.
Hunting season means danger
for searchers, who have to keep
their dogs close, and make noise
with whistles, to warn hunters
who might otherwise mistake
any movement
for a deer
or a bear.
When I find out that TÃo and Gabe
have to search for a lost hunter
who went out with six hounds,
I'm furious. Hunting doesn't
seem fair, to either the dogs
or the bear.
Bear hounds are trained to follow
a scent, running so fast and so far
that they often get lost. Even dogs
get mixed up when a chase is swift
and frenzied. Dog noses are smart,
but not perfect.
Bear hounds are supposed to chase
a bear up a tree, where it's easy
to shoot. This time, one of the hounds
got lost, and then the frantic hunter
lost his way too, running around,
trying to find his missing dog.
Now, the hunter's wife
is at base camp, crying
and complaining
about his dangerous
way of enjoying
the outdoors.
I look around at B.B., Gracie,
the sheriffs, and volunteers.
Everyone looks busy and useful
except me.
All I can think about is the hound.
I feel a lot more troubled by the thought
of a helpless dog than by the image
of a lost hunter
who still has his gun.
Instead of waiting by the crowded
base camp table, I start wandering
with a flashlight, hoping to see
canine paw prints.
Still hoping, I roam farther
and farther, first on the main trail,
then narrower paths that fade
until suddenly, I know
I've messed up.
Now I'm lost too.
There's no trail at all.
I'm surrounded by wildness.
That's how it happensâ
one path leads to another.
So you choose, you walk,
you choose again,
and pretty soon,
there's no
turning back.
I don't have a GPS, or even a map
and compass. I hardly know anything
about navigation by starlight.
I don't have a two-way radio
or my cell phone, which probably
wouldn't even get a signal
way out here.
So I can't call for help.
I'm stuck waiting. I know the rules.
A lost person should stay in one place,
hug a tree, avoid wandering
in wider and wider
aimless
circles.â¦
Instead, I panic and run
until I'm sliding down
a long, steep
s
  l
   o
     p
      e
scrambling
to keep from falling
over a cliff.
This is stupid.
I should know better.
I might not always listen
to every boring grown-up rule,
but I am old enough to have
common sense.
So I make myself stop.
I stand motionless,
waiting.
The forest is crowded with SAR dogs
and searchers. If B.B. and the other
ground pounders don't find me,
then Gabe and TÃo surely will.
Won't they?
I sit with my back against
an incense cedar tree,
where the red bark smells
like the smoky air
around those praying women
in the prison yardâthick air
clouded with incense
and gloom.