Authors: Margarita Engle
splintered
stinky
spiderwebby
nightmarish
hard
wooden
doghouses.
This place is different,
even though it's not a real
house, just a two-room cabin,
with one whole room
for me.
The knotty pine walls
are filled with pictures of trees
and animalsâno family photos, no
pictures of Mom when she was little.
I wonder what she was like.
Was she already fierce, or did she
look shy and scared
like me?
TÃo's brown dog claims my bed,
dropping his weight over my ankles,
as if to keep me from sprinting
away
in my dreams.â¦
Life is so weird. Gabe is a happy,
almost-as-smart-as-any-human
creature, while I feel like a worn-out
zoo beast.
I lie awake for a long time,
gazing out the cabin window at stars
that seem to be cradled by branches.
Our drive up the mountain
was so long and dizzying
that I can't even begin to imagine
how far away
from my other life
I am now.
When I finally sleep, I dream
of a funny future. No fangs
or claws. Just me and Gabe,
only he's a serious human,
and I'm the playful pup.
Then it's morning, and Gabe
starts begging to go outside,
but when I glance out the window,
my view of a forest is so unfamiliar
that I stay where I am, motionless
and silent.
Pretty soon, my uncle is up
and breakfast is ready, the morning
already a flurry of surprises.
No one has ever cooked for me.
Not once. Oatmeal might not be
my favorite, but today it tastes
warm and comforting.
TÃo says his cabin is so remote,
so high in the Sierra Nevadas,
that I'll have to go to an old-style
three-room mountain schoolâ
grades six through eight together
in one class. I'll be with big kids,
and even though I'm tall, I'm only eleven
and a half. How am I going to survive
around twelve and thirteen-year-olds?
The worst part of picturing myself
at a new school is those moments
at the board, showing everyone
that I can't ever
do any
of the math.
I'm nervous around fractions
and percentages, but word problems
about money are the ones
that really terrify me.
The social worker says it's because
at home, when I showed that I knew
how to count, Mom made me keep track
of greedy bets
at the growling, snarling,
bloodthirsty dogfights.
So instead of practicing numbers,
I just learned letters, and then
I figured out how to keep my words
to myself.
Now, right after breakfast, TÃo invites me
to help him take Gabe for a rambling walk
in the woods, where wild pine trees
smell like Christmas, even though
it's springtime.
The forest is shadowy green,
with spiky red flowers sprouting
from bright patches of snow.
My first snow.
My first mountain.
My first off-leash dog.
No chain.
No muzzle.
No scars
or scabs.
Gabe follows a scent, nose to the ground,
nose in the air, back and forth, tracing
a pattern as he follows a smell
toward its source.
He's so thrilled that I soon share
his excitement, racing to catch a sniff
and a glimpse
of the deer or squirrel
that left this mysterious trail
of drifting air.
I wish my stupid human nose
understood all the invisible clues
that Gabe can follow! Dogs inhale
the scents of sweat, breath, skin,
poop, and pee, but they can smell
emotions, tooâanger, sadness, fear,
happiness, love, hope.â¦
Dogs can even smell a tricky lie
or the soothing truth.
Gabe bounces along the trail
of mystery scent, leading me
from a scared-of-life mood
to one that feels
like music.
TÃo runs and laughs with us,
but the next day, on our morning walk,
when I sit on a tree stump to rest,
he suddenly turns serious,
reassuring me that he really is
Mom's uncleâmy great-uncleâ
a true relative. He says he cares
what happens to me.
He tells me what happened to him.
He came to this country on a raft,
just like Mom, but years earlier,
when she was still a child.
His raft drifted, then washed ashore
and crashed on rocks, leaving him alone
and stranded on a tiny, nameless isle
for weeks, a castaway, marooned,
just like Robinson Crusoe.
He had to learn how to survive
by eating seaweed, drinking rain,
and breathing hope.â¦
I wonder if he remembers my mother
when she was tiny. I hope she was gentle,
sweet, and kind. I hope she loved animals,
and liked everybody,
and was too young to know
that life can be dangerous.
All I know about her is that
after growing up and floating away
from her island, she reached a rough city
where she met mean people
who used drugs and dogfights
as cruel ways to make money.
TÃo swears that if he'd known
where she was, he would have tried
to help her, he would have struggled
to help me.
When he's finished talking,
I shake off the tears, and he asks
if I want to sing.
That makes me grin, but he's not joking,
so we pile into the truck with Gabe,
and we whirl around mountain curves,
until the steep road ends at a jumble
of barns and corrals
beyond a crooked wooden sign
that announces
   COWBOY CHURCH
   DOGS & HORSES WELCOME
I've never been to any church at all before,
and I've certainly never imagined a God
who likes horses and dogs.
Gabe treats the place like a feast
of scent, sniffing boots, jeans, hoofs,
and manure. Even the yucky smells
make him smile. He turns out to be
the kind of dog that loves to laugh
and howl.
When the cowboys and forest rangers
start to sing, Gabe joins in, off-key,
and everyone ends up chuckling,
especially me. I never thought
I could have so much fun
so soon after trading
my tough-pit-bull
real life
for this temporary
foster home
in a wild forest
that somehow feels
so much more gentle
than the city.
Â
4
GABE THE DOG
WORD SMELLS
After horse smells and howling, we run, race, leap, noses open, eyes open, mouths open, until the floaty aroma of a passing hawk almost disappears.
Low flying. Foresty. Swoop. Chase. Hunt. Hawks leave winged trails of hunger in midair.
Snow. We're tired. We flop, dance, flap, flutter, flip. We make shapes in the softness. Tony's patterns of snow are four limbed, just like mine when I roll from side to side. Only my shape is bigger and more wispy, because it has a tail.
Snow angels. I love it when the boy shouts words with cold, clear meanings that I can smell and taste!
I twitch my nostrils, inhale deeply, swallow meanings. I make the sound, smell, and taste of each new word my own, filling my hunger for friendship. I breathe the bumpy surface of words that rhyme with the scent of humans, the aroma of happiness.
Â
5
TONY THE BOY
TRAIL ANGELS
I'm afraid to sleep, terrified
that the same old nightmares
of fangs
and claws
will keep coming back â¦
but beside me, Gabe woofs,
then drifts
into a running-dog
dream
that leads my tired mind
toward a race
where I am four legged
and fast
so swift that I can
almost
fly!
It's not a real dream,
just a half-awake
fantasy,
but it helps me feel
safe enough
to doze.
In the morning, I wonder
why people always assume that dogs
just want food. Walks are the reward
they really craveâmovement,
adventure, new smells.
So I get up and take Gabe out
to sniff the forest while I wish
for a way to avoid my first day
at a new school, and a way
to visit Mom without seeing her
in a prison uniform.
An hour later, my wishing ends.
Small yellow school bus.
Tiny, splintered-wood school.
So how come it seems like a ton
of huge, scary faces?
The old-fashioned building
is plopped in a rocky patch
of flowers that smell like wildness.
Right away, a loud girl shouts
that she saw me at Cowboy Church.
Good dog, she yells, and even though
I know she must mean Gabe,
I feel strangely praised.
Mom knew what she was doing
when she trained me to obey.
So I tell myself to concentrate
on this new-school reality.
My future. My torment.
Which boy will be the first
to trip me? Which girls
can't wait to laugh?
I avoid eye contact.
If there are bullies here,
they'll take a bold gaze
as a challenge.
I've been through it so many times
that I have a reputation for battles,
even though fighting
is the last thing
I've ever
wanted
to do.
The teacher is old and friendly.
The students are young and curious.
I don't even try to learn names.
Why bother? As soon as Mom gets out
of prison, I'll have to move back
to my pit-bull life, the place
where I've always felt
muzzled
and caged.
By the end of that first long day,
all the kids know that I live
with my uncle, who has a search-
and-rescue dog. The loud girl
doesn't keep secrets.
She claims she's a reporter
for the school paper.
She wants me to join her staff,
get a press pass, help her write
stories about four-footed
trail angels.
I don't know what she means.
Are trail angels like snow angels?
Do people lie down and wave
their arms and legs