Bad to the Bone:. Bo Hoefinger
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I admit this brush with love, and the subsequent loss of it, had me thinking of ending things in this world. I had heard the stories of the different ways to get to rainbow bridge, but I knew that if I were going to get there, there was only one canine to whom I could turn.
His given name was Charlemagne Brutus the IV, but he was better known in the big house as the Candyman. His studded dog collar betrayed an otherwise noble and tame appearance. He was well connected, and his lifestyle was proof of that. C’man slept on the best blankets, drank from the shiniest bowls, and rarely took to begging for human food.
I approached Candyman during exercise time in the yard. While the other dogs were working on their begging routines, he let on to me that he had a shipment of Hershey’s dark chocolate candy bars on the way. For the right price he would let me have them. I knew, as did he, chocolate will kill a canine quicker than a game of “chase the cat” in traffic. Yeah, that quickly.
Death by chocolate, as it is commonly referred to in the restaurant business, was only two Hershey’s bars away for me. Once ingested, I would soon be patrolling the pearly gates of heaven, looking, of course, for a place to dig out. Paradise awaited me.
But the price was steep; a greenie and a peanut butter–filled Kong for the candy bars. I had no money and I was unemployed, so I resigned myself to the situation at hand. At least death would come seven times faster than it does for others on this lonely, desolate planet.
I lowered my already slouched body onto the well worn blanket covering the cage’s tin floor. Surely there was another way out of this situation.
I lay there, thinking about my options. Maybe during exercise time I could climb the fence and escape? I would be free again. The trouble was the shelter workers were on high alert ever since Hairy Houdini, the border-collie mix, escaped last month. Maybe I could steal the German shepherd’s treats. Surely, once Ruger found out, he’d give me the business end of a chewy shiv. Hmmm, that sounds a little too painful.
Maybe if I…
I lay there for hours, searching for a solution. When I finally fell asleep, the perfect escape was still out of my paws’ grasp.
Upon awakening, an angel stood over me. The very same blond angel that had visited me earlier in the day. Next to her was a very handsome young man. So handsome you might think he was gay, but let me assure the reader he is not. He looked at me and said, “He’s cute. Let’s get him.”
“I want you to look at this one over here, too,” the angel countered.
What? Another dog? She’s betraying me all over again. It was Christmas season, and I felt just like a Douglas fir being picked up, manhandled, and then tossed aside in favor of a bigger, better tree.
Fortunately the man had his wits about him. “No, I like this one, he’s so dopey looking. We don’t need to look at any of the others. He’s the one.” I didn’t much care for his attitude but his decision-making capability was flawless.
The attendant, known as Nurse Ratchet by the inmates, lingered nearby. She was eager to get rid of me after my failed attempt at unionizing the locals to get better victuals. “Would you like to take him out for a walk, just to make sure you like him?” she offered, knowing full well that once prospective parents take a dog for a “test” walk, they will adopt the pet 98 percent of the time.
Once outside, I made a beeline for my potential owner’s car. It was easy to pick out; my sense of smell is incredible. In a show of respect I immediately peed on the front driver’s side tire. The couple tried to fawn all over me, but I ignored them. Once you have them this far, you show them you don’t want them and they’ll want you more.
Remember, don’t hate the player; hate the game.
The ploy worked like a charm; while they informed Ratchet they wanted me, I pranced back toward my former home to pack my belongings.
“Not so fast my friend,” Ratchet cackled. “We need to make sure you get all your required shots before we can release you to these fine folks.”
What do you mean I can’t leave yet? What a shot in the nads, which by the way were already gone. My new parents were told to come pick me up later in the week.
As they went to put me back in my cage, I abandoned my “good boy” act and did my best to stop this course of action. I sat down and refused to move, forcing two, it might have been three, of the staff’s goons to drag me across the floor and into lockdown. As they dragged me away, I got one last look at my new owners, who stared at the commotion with shocked looks that said, “What have we gotten ourselves into?”
It’s a look they would share many times in our future together.
My Favorite Quotes
(As Written by the Author’s Dog)
Never worry about the size of your Christmas tree. In the eyes of your dogs, they are all 30 feet tall fire hydrants.
—Wee Willy Wilde; Larry Wilde’s heavy-drinking Lab
Whatever the mind can conceive and believe, the mind can achieve. Now, watch as I make my father say no to that last meatball and give it to me.
—Slacker, Dr. Napoleon Hill’s overachieving coon hound
Neither a lofty degree of intelligence nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. Love, love, love, that is the soul of genius. And I love, love, love the Iams Savory Sauce on my food. Now that’s genius.
—Tone Deaf, Mozart’s collie, great-great-great-uncle of Tone Loc
You can have everything in life that you want if you just give enough other people what they want. I’ve given plenty of people more than enough attitude to get me everything I want, even an iPhone with a two-year contract.
—Stingy, Zig Ziglar’s tight-pawed Yorkie
Great works are performed, not by strength, but by perseverance. That’s how one is able to knock over the garbage pail, eat its contents, and leave the remnants all over the house.
—Hercules, Samuel Johnson’s diminutive Chihuahua
Whether you think you can or whether you think you can’t, you’re right! Evidence that proves canines are never wrong.
—Pinto, Henry Ford’s wise but explosive bull terrier
You see things; and you say “Why?” But I dream of things that never were; and I say “Why not?” and I wonder “Why not