Doggie Day Care Murder (2 page)

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Authors: Laurien Berenson

BOOK: Doggie Day Care Murder
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Sad to say, that's the story of my life. People always seem to bring their problems to me.
“I need to find something to do with Berkley. If I'm going to be gone all day, I can't just leave him sitting home by himself.”
Berkley was the Brickmans' eighteen-month-old Golden Retriever. Though he'd been purchased as a pet for Joey and Carly, predictably the bulk of his care had fallen to Alice. He was a beautiful, smart, rambunctious, teenage dog; and as long as he had company, he mostly managed to stay out of trouble. Bored and left to his own devices, however, I could see how he might be tempted to entertain himself by tearing the place apart.
“That's where you come in,” said Alice.
I opened my mouth, but she hurried on before I could speak.
“Don't worry, with a new baby and all, I wouldn't dream of asking you to look after him. So I found a place in town that offers doggie day care.”
Now, she paused. Like it was my turn to say something. For a moment, I couldn't think what that should be.

Doggie
day care?” I managed finally.
Despite the subject matter, none of my Poodles even looked up. Though they understand most things I say, the Poodles possessed far too much dignity to ever think of themselves as doggies.
“Don't make fun,” said Alice. “Apparently it's a very successful facility. And hard to get into. There's a waiting list.”
“A waiting list,” I echoed faintly. It was all I could do to keep a straight face.
“The place is called Pine Ridge Canine Care Center. And you know I'm hopeless when it comes to things like this. I wouldn't have the slightest idea what to look for. But you know all that important dog-type stuff. So I was wondering if you could go and check it out for me. You know, see if it's the kind of place where Berkley would be happy.”
She'd played the flattery card, and no surprise, it was working. Besides, while I was delighted that I have the chance to stay at home and take care of Kevin, Alice wasn't the only one who'd spent some time recently looking around the house and wondering what to do next. A job like this sounded like it would be right up my alley.
“Sure,” I said. “I can do that. No problem.”
You'd think I'd know better than to make predictions like that.
2
S
am and Davey arrived home right after Alice left. I walked out to the garage and helped them carry in several bags of groceries.
The five Poodles—reunited after a mere two-hour separation—behaved as though they were greeting long-lost relatives from the Old Country. They barked, and jumped, and chased each other around our legs.
For Sam and me, getting married had involved merging not only the human element of our lives, but also the canine. Davey and I had had two Standard Poodles: Faith and Eve, who were a mother and daughter pair. Sam had added three Standard Poodles of his own. His two bitches were named Raven and Casey. The third was a young dog named Tar.
In the beginning, the newly blended canine household had existed in a state of wary détente. Now however, more than a year later, the Poodles were all the best of friends. They played and functioned like a tight-knit team, and I imagine I wasn't the only one who realized that they outnumbered us.
“How's my boy doing?” asked Sam.
He juggled two bags of groceries to one side and swooped in to give me a quick kiss. If the honeymoon was over, neither one of us had noticed yet.
“Yeah,” Davey echoed. “How's my boy?”
No longer the youngest member of the family, Davey was feeling very grown-up. His actions, however, were often at odds with his words. Now he came spilling out the side door of the SUV. Mid-descent, he tripped over a passing Poodle, dropped the half-eaten apple he was holding in his hand, yet still somehow managed to land on his feet.
“We were gone forever,” he said, without missing a beat. “Did Kevin miss me?”
“Every minute,” I replied. “He's awake in the kitchen and waiting for you to come and play with him.”
Davey whooped with delight and raced into the house. Predictably, he didn't bother to take a bag of groceries with him.
“He really loves having a little brother,” said Sam.
“I know,” I agreed happily. “I'm only sorry he had to wait so long.”
Sam cocked a brow. “And whose fault was that?”
We both knew the answer. I was the one who had dragged my feet. My first marriage had ended in divorce, and the second time around I'd wanted everything to be perfect before I made another commitment that would dramatically change both Davey's and my lives.
So I'd waffled, and procrastinated, and made excuses. And along the way I'd learned that perfection was an unattainable goal in anybody's life. I'd also learned that Sam was right. Just like he'd been telling me all along, he and I were meant to be together for the long haul.
“Have you ever noticed?” I asked. “Mothers always get the blame.”
“I can't imagine why,” Sam said, deadpan.
I scooped up the last bag and we headed into the kitchen. Davey was leaning down over the side of the playpen, dangling his fingers just above Kevin's reach. The baby batted the air with his hands and laughed at the game.
Tar, who'd followed Davey inside, was sitting on the floor beside the enclosure. His nose was pressed up against the mesh, and he cocked his head to one side as he watched the two boys play together.
Most Poodles are smarter than the average second-grader. Unfortunately, Tar, beautiful and kindhearted as he was, was utterly lacking in that department. It was clear he'd been baffled by Kevin's sudden appearance in our lives, and nothing that had happened in the intervening months had made the situation any clearer to him.
While Eve had quickly appointed herself Kevin's canine guardian—coming to fetch me at the first sound of the baby's cries and picking up toys that had fallen beyond his reach—Tar was still somewhat wary of the tiny interloper. A small, chubby hand waved in his direction could send the big, black Poodle skidding back across the room in frantic retreat.
“He hasn't grown any,” said Davey.
“You were only gone a couple of hours.”
“No, I meant since yesterday. I heard you tell Bertie on the phone that he looks bigger every day.”
Bertie was my sister-in-law, married to my brother, Frank. She was also a new mother herself. Her daughter, Maggie, had turned a year old right before Christmas.
“That's a figure of speech,” said Sam. “It only seems like he's growing that fast because none of his clothes fit for more than a week.”
“The same used to be true of you,” I told Davey. “It seemed like I was always buying new sneakers.”
“Speaking of which, we stopped at the sporting goods store and Sam-Dad got me new cleats and shin guards for soccer camp.”
“Great.” Cross one more item off the to-do list.
Idly I wondered if anyone actually ever got to the end of their lists. If they did, they probably weren't mothers.
“Anything interesting happen while we were gone?” asked Sam.
I paused from unpacking the groceries. “Actually, yes. Alice stopped by.”
Davey looked up. “Did she bring Joey?”
“No, she came by herself.”
“Everything all right?” asked Sam.
“I think so. She's getting a job.”
“Hard thing to do after so much time off.”
“Yes, although that part is already accomplished. She's going to be working at Joe's law firm.”
“Paralegal work?” asked Sam.
I stopped and stared. “Am I the only one who didn't know about that?”
“Apparently so,” he said with a wink. “Maybe you don't ask the right questions.”
It looked that way.
“Anyway, she's thinking about putting Berkley in doggie day care.”
“You're kidding.”
“Would I joke about something like that?”
“Doggie day care? Like in that song,
git along little doggie
?”
“I think those doggies were cows,” I pointed out.
“That's stupid,” Davey said from his spot on the floor. “Nobody would put a cow in day care.”
Sam was chuckling as I went on to explain. “The place is called Pine Ridge, and it's right here in Stamford. Have you ever heard of it?”
“No, but that doesn't mean anything. Day care for dogs isn't something I've given much thought to. In fact, none is probably closer to the mark.”
“Me too,” I agreed. “But after lunch, I'm going to go have a look. Alice asked me to check the place out. She wants to know if Berkley would be happy there.”
“Give Berkley a soft bed and a rawhide bone, and he'd be happy anywhere,” said Davey.
Wisdom from the mouths of babes.
“Good,” I said. “Then that should make my job easy.”
 
 
Pine Ridge Canine Care Center was located just off of Long Ridge Road. The area had once been entirely residential, but the northward expansion of Stamford's business district, combined with a change in zoning and rising land values, had caused most home owners to sell out. The street was now mostly commercial in nature. I passed a gas station and a little strip mall before coming to a tall white gate that marked the entrance to PRCCC.
It looked a little pretentious to me, but what did I know? In my world, doggie day care was a foreign concept. Obviously the facility was meant to cater to an upscale clientele. But hopefully most dog owners would realize that the frills and embellishments that they found appealing wouldn't mean a thing to their canine companions.
I turned in the driveway and drove a hundred yards to a white clapboard building. There was a sign reading OFFICE out front, and I parked nearby in the shade. As I got out of my car, I was still trying to reserve judgment.
Chimes jingled in the air as I pushed open the office door. The reception area was a spacious room, decorated to look bright, cheerful, and welcoming. Eyelet curtains hung on the windows. A grouping of wicker furniture with plump, flower-sprigged cushions formed a waiting area. Poster-sized pictures of happy-looking dogs covered the walls.
The room smelled of air freshener, and I found the scent cloyingly sweet. I could only imagine what the dogs, with their much more sensitive noses, thought of it.
A teenage girl was sitting behind a high white counter opposite the door. Her neatly pressed white polo shirt looked at odds with her long, spiky bangs and the ring pierced through her eyebrow. She was thumbing through a magazine but looked up with a perky smile as I entered.
“Dropping off?” she asked brightly.
“No, I—”
“Picking up?”
“No.” This time I kept it short. No use trying to talk if she was going to interrupt.
I glanced down at the open page she'd been reading and saw that it appeared to be part of a gun catalog. Interesting choice.
She folded the magazine closed and tucked it away in a desk drawer. “May I help you?”
“I'd like some information about your facility. And maybe a tour of the premises.”
“Do you have an appointment?”
“Do I need one?”
“We prefer that our customers call in advance. We don't want people just showing up whenever they feel like it.”
Well, that was a red flag, wasn't it? If I was going to leave a dog or a child in someone's care, I'd certainly like to know what was going on when they weren't expecting to see me.
“I'm not a customer yet,” I said. “I'm shopping for day care for my dog, and before I make any decisions about which facility I'm going to entrust him to, I need to investigate all the possibilities.”
“Well, then, that's easy.” The girl smiled again. “Pine Ridge Canine Care Center is the only full-care, fully accredited, doggie day care center in all of Stamford. We offer nothing but the best. All our people are screened for knowledge and compatibility, and we have a nutritionist and a certified play therapist on staff—”
“Certified by whom?” I asked.
It seemed like a reasonable question. If play therapy was something one could genuinely get certified in, I figured a lot of mothers were due advanced degrees.
“Pardon me?”
She stopped. Blinked. I'd interrupted her spiel. Now she wasn't sure how to get started again.
She reached across the counter. There was a stack of glossy pamphlets in a clear plastic stand, right next to a bowl containing dog biscuits.
“Let me give you a brochure. I'm sure it will answer any questions you might have.”
“That's a start,” I said. “But I'd also like to see some dogs.”
She was blinking again. Maybe it was a nervous tic.
For the second time, I'd baffled her, and it hadn't even been that hard to accomplish. The teacher in me was shaking her head ruefully.
She handed me the brochure, and said, “What?”
“You know, four legs, one tail, wet nose? Woof?”
“Yes, but—”
“Reading about your facility won't do me nearly as much good as walking around and seeing what it looks like and how it runs. I need to know that Berkley will be happy here. So that's what I'd like to see . . . you know, happy dogs? Unless, of course, you don't have any of those here. Which would be a problem for both of us, I would think.”
I was aiming for mild sarcasm, but the comment went right over her head. I hoped for the teenager's sake that this was a summer job and she'd be going back to school in the fall.
“You can't just go walking around by yourself,” she said. “It's not allowed.”
“No problem.” I leaned down on the counter. Close to her, like we were friends. “You can come with me.”
“No, I can't. I have to stay here and do my job.”
“Reading magazines?”
“Greeting customers.” She shot me a dirty look. “Real ones.”
“I might become a real customer, how do you know I won't? All I need is more information to help me make the decision.”
“We're not set up to do that,” she said stubbornly.
“Seems like a funny way to run a business. How do you get new clients?”
“We do advertising.” The girl seemed relieved to be asked a question she could answer. “And we have great word of mouth.”
“And then what?”
“What do you mean?”
“People must want to come and visit. Surely they'd like to see where their dogs are going to be staying while they're gone.”
“You'd be surprised,” she said. “Most people aren't that curious.”

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