Not Tonight, Honey: Wait 'til I'm A Size 6. Susan Reinhardt
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Beautiful female miniature dachshund for sale. Unique markings! House-trained; great with children. Wonderful disposition! Yours to love and cherish for only $150.
I called the number and the woman was ready to jump through the phone and hand over her prized miniature dachshund. She went on about Putt-Putt’s beautiful, one-of-a-kind markings and how she was the family’s true treasure. I kept wondering and asking why they were getting rid of her, but the woman continued avoiding the question.
“You ain’t gonna believe this dog,” she said. “I got six people want her right now, but you sound nicer than them and plus you got young’uns and I want Putt to go to just the right person. She does best with young’uns. Only certain people Putt likes and I can tell it will be you.”
After she told me that fate had intervened and Putt was “destined” to come into our home, I agreed to drive an hour down to Hickory, North Carolina, and meet this super dog, this divine canine that put all other dogs to shame.
“Bring cash,” the woman said, voice turning rough and demanding. “I’ve had trouble with my other dogs and people writing me bad checks.”
Other dogs? Lord have mercy.
“You know, I think I better give this some more thought,” I said. “I don’t believe my husband would approve and he can get really—”
“Honey, if you gone deprive them children ’cause you got some mean sumbitch in the house acting like King Hole, what kind of example as a mama you setting? The good Lord meant for children to have dogs. Pardon my language earlier. I just get so passionate about Putt-Putt, and I know this is meant to be. I got that feeling.” She let her voice soften, realizing I’m the stupid sucker type who gives $5 to winos instead of the finger.
“Oh, well, all right,” I said. “Could you give me directions to your house?”
She coughed a couple of times. “It’s best we meet somewhere other than my home. How about the Taco Bell parking lot?”
Why didn’t she want me coming to her house? Things weren’t adding up. Cash, parking lots, beloved dog that was too adorable for words but not adorable enough to keep as a personal pet? Bad checks from other “customers” of her dogs.
The kids were overjoyed, hearing all the dog talk, and my heart soared. Just to see her babies happy, a mother will endure almost anything.
We sang all the way to the ATM, swiped the crisp bills, and then crossed over to Interstate 40 and drove forty-five miles to the Hickory Taco Bell. I pulled in and saw the woman’s van. She was a fleshy-faced lady who glared at us, trying to assess the situation. She puffed her cigarette and then held up the little dog. All I could see was Putt-Putt’s precious face staring out the window. I started to open the door and the woman about had a heart attack.
She rolled down her window and screamed from half a parking lot away.
“Don’t dare come to our car. It will upset Putt. Let me bring her over to you. It’ll be better that way.”
My children were bouncing around in the backseat and overflowing with excitement.
“I love her already,” my boy said.
“Me too,” echoed his little sister.
The big jowly woman jiggled toward our car, preceded by one of those front asses split in half by her red polyester stirrup pants; what my daughter believes is a rare breed of humanity known as a “two-fannied” person. She insists people with front fannies don’t have back fannies. I tell her some have both, but for the most part, she’s a keen observer of the human form.
“Do not under any circumstance say a word about her two fannies,” I warned.
The dog lady got closer to the car, her reddish-colored dachshund pressed against her chest and two children about seven and nine tagging along behind. She had her thighlike arms wrapped around the dog, covering up everything but Putt-Putt’s heartbreakingly cute face.
I rolled down my window. The dog snarled. I saw two tarter-stained fangs.
“Here,” the woman said, “I’ll just toss her back there and let them get acquainted. Don’t get out. That might upset Putt.”
She flung the long red dog toward my children and they fawned over her just the way this conniving bat wanted them to. Oh, she had a plan all right. She knew how to trick a family.
“You bring the cash?” she asked. “I don’t have much time to talk. You don’t want her, eight more do.” It had grown from six to eight overnight. “Three of them seem like great homes, too.”
She had me. No mother likes that much competition.
“Well, I wanted to see first if the children would—”
“Look at that, would ya? The good Lord knows who to pair his pets with, don’t He? I ain’t never seen two happier young’uns.” She held out her meaty hand for the money. I placed it in her palm and she licked her fingers and counted. She kept saying how she’s gonna really miss Putt, the beloved family dog.
“Why was it you’re having to get rid of her?”
“She’s just like a member of our family, but Tuck, my live-in, he’s right allergic to her, you might say. The two of them don’t see eye to eye.”
It was at that point I turned around and got my own eyeful. Oh my God. Oh, please, mother of the good and dear Lord above. I wanted the parking lot to open its mouth and swallow us up.
There, dripping and oozing, were what seemed like a dozen flopping teats, each nearly as big as my own. Poor Putt-Putt looked as if a fresh litter had been yanked off her swollen, achy chest.
“Has she just had puppies?” I asked and the woman’s flab started trembling in the sun’s glare. She squinted her raccoon-rimmed eyes.
“A while back,” she said, the lies curling out with the Virginia Slims smoke.
Well, what about that milk pouring off her like sweat? I wanted to say, but the woman was extremely intimidating with her fake blond hair and front ass.
“How old is the dog?” I asked. “Your ad said she was a year old.” The dog was covered in swirls of gray hair on closer inspection. She had more gray than my granny. Her whiskers were silver, her eyebrows, her paws flecked with gray. She had to be ten or eleven.
“I said all that in the ad. She’s a year, give or take.”
“How many litters has she had?”
“You a smart little thing, ain’t you, with your fancy questions? This was her first.”
Oh, you front-fannied liar, I wanted to shout, but she was digging in her purse for what I thought may have been a gun. Turns out it was a fresh pack of cigarettes.
“I was going to get her spayed, but I’m afraid I waited too late.”
“Too