Ghost Dog Secrets (13 page)

Read Ghost Dog Secrets Online

Authors: Peg Kehret

We swept up the glass in the garage and nailed an old tarp over the window. It wouldn't keep a person out, but it would help keep out the cold air.
“I'll call a glass repair place tomorrow,” Mom said.
The door that had been jimmied didn't close properly, so we couldn't lock it, and that worried both of us.
“We're going to have to buy a new door anyway,” I said, “so it doesn't matter if we put a few holes in it. Let's nail it shut.”
I found three short pieces of board left from when we put bookshelves in my room. I nailed one side of each board to the door frame and the other side to the door itself.
“There!” I said. “It will take a bulldozer to get that door open.” We had to use the front or back door and walk around half the house to get to the garage, but it was worth it to feel secure.
After we ate dinner, Mom filled out the application form to be a foster parent for the Humane Society. It was three pages long and asked questions such as
Do you plan to move soon?
and
Where will the foster pet be kept at night?
and
How many hours will the foster pet be alone during the day?
Mom read each question out loud, and we discussed how to answer it.
When we finished, she signed and dated it. “I'll drop this off on my way to work in the morning,” she said.
We were getting ready to take Ra out for his last walk when there was a knock on the door. Both of us gasped. Mom picked up her cell phone before she went quietly to the peephole and looked out. I knew she was prepared to call 911 if she saw Mr. Myers on our doorstep.
I gripped the edge of the table and watched. Mom still had her eye to the peephole. “Who is it?” she called.
“It's Heidi Kellogg.”
I let out my breath and stood up.
Mom unlocked and opened the door. “Come on in. I'm Pat Larson, and this is Rusty.”
“I got your message and I was in the neighborhood, so I decided to come in person instead of calling.”
“Are you still working?” Mom asked. “I didn't expect to hear from you until tomorrow.”
“Unfortunately,” Heidi said, “cruelty investigation is an around-the-clock job.”
She agreed that Mr. Myers might be the one who had broken in. “On Monday, I spoke with the neighbor of Mr. Myers who had filed a cruelty complaint against him last year about the neglected collie. She agreed to let me hide a video camera on her property. It's been taking surveillance video of the black Lab ever since. I picked up the camera a couple of hours ago; we now have proof that nobody gave the dog food or water for thirty-six hours, so I can charge the owner with negligence. I've already taken the puppy; he's at the Humane Society now and he'll go to a foster home tomorrow, as soon as he's been checked by a vet.”
Mom showed her the completed foster parent application. “It says on the application that I'll need to attend an orientation session, and they're only held every two weeks.”
“I'll talk to the Humane Society's director in the morning,” Heidi said, “explain the situation, and have your application approved right away. You'll still need to attend the next orientation but we'll get Ra legally placed with you quickly.”
“Do foster parents ever get to adopt the animals they foster ?” I asked.
“One step at a time, Rusty,” Mom said. “Right now, we need to be sure that Mr. Myers has no claim on Ra.”
“That's right,” Heidi said. “Of course, people like Mr. Myers don't pay attention to what's legal and what isn't. Even if we win a case against him and Ra is no longer his, he might still cause trouble.”
Oh, great,
I thought.
Mean Man Myers is going to be coming after Ra no matter what happens in court.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
M
om took the next afternoon off. She needed to be home when the repairman came to fix the window and install our new door, which was complete with a new dead-bolt lock. After he left, she went to the Humane Society to meet the person in charge of volunteer foster parents.
When I got home after school, Mom said, “It's official. Ra is now our foster dog.”
I pumped both fists in the air and danced around the kitchen. Ra barked, and danced, too.
“I bought an ID tag for his collar,” she said. “The Humane Society requires that all of their foster animals are microchipped. Usually they do it while the animal is at the shelter, before it goes to a foster home, but of course Ra wasn't with me. They said an ID tag is okay until we can bring Ra in to be chipped.”
“Thanks, Mom,” I said. “I know you never wanted a dog and it's nice of you to do this.”
“Oh, Rusty,” she said. “It isn't that I don't want a dog. It's that I worry about our expenses. Ra is a wonderful dog, but he eats a lot and he'll need more veterinary care. I can barely pay our bills as it is.”
“Maybe I can get a part-time job,” I said. “I'm old enough to do babysitting. I can hire out to shovel sidewalks.”
“School is your job,” Mom said. “By the way, Heidi Kellogg called. She's charged Mr. Myers with animal negligence. There'll be a hearing tomorrow afternoon.”
 
Andrew didn't come that day to play with Ra. He said he had to clean his room, but I sensed that his room was an excuse, not the real reason. Although I had kept him informed of everything that was happening, I suspected that he felt left out. The situation had changed a lot in the last few days. Before Wendy spilled the beans, Andrew and I had done everything for Ra together. Now Ra lived inside at my house; Mom was Ra's foster parent; Mean Man Myers had come here; Heidi Kellogg kept Mom informed about the investigation; even the collie's ghost appeared to me but not to Andrew. Maybe it seemed to Andrew that he had helped rescue Ra but now he wasn't included any more.
I e-mailed him to tell him what Ra and I were doing, but he didn't reply. Then I e-mailed him the two ghost pictures. If he could see the collie's image, I knew he'd be thrilled. Still no response.
After I'd fed Ra and played fetch until he was worn out, I put him inside with Mom while I rode my bike over to Andrew's house. We had been friends since kindergarten; I couldn't let anything come between us.
He seemed surprised to see me.
“Hi, Exalted Exciting Expert,” I said. “I thought I'd hang out with you for a little while, if that's okay.”
“Sure. I figured you were busy with Ra.”
“He's sleeping.”
“I just made popcorn,” Andrew said, and I followed him to the den.
Wendy sat by the window, knitting. “Hi, Rusty,” she said. “I'm making blankets for the homeless cats.”
I fingered the soft green and tan blanket that dangled from her knitting needles. The large needles made big stitches, so the blanket was loose and porous. I imagined one of the Humane Society cats working his claws in and out of the blanket as he curled up on it.
“It looks as if you're almost finished,” I said.
“Almost done with this one,” she said. “I've already made seven others.”
My jaw dropped. “This is the
eighth
cat blanket you've knit?”
“Yep. I like to make them and I want to help the cats.”
“Here they are,” Andrew said, pointing to a stack of blankets. Some were bright primary reds and yellows. Others were pastel pink and one was blue-and-white striped.
“They're beautiful,” I said. “That's really great, Wendy,” and I meant it. I never thought I'd be offering a sincere compliment to Wendy the Whiner but, as Mrs. Webster would say, Wendy had seen a need and was working hard to meet it.
“Did you get the pictures I e-mailed you? ” I asked Andrew.
“I haven't checked e-mail since I got home from school. What did you send?”
“Let's look.”
Andrew opened his laptop and we waited for the photos. Wendy put down her knitting and gazed over our shoulders.
The two pictures of the collie's ghost appeared side by side on the screen. “What's that dog's name?” Wendy asked.
“It's Ra,” Andrew said. “You know that.”
“No, the other dog,” Wendy said. “The white one.”
Andrew looked at me.
“She sees the collie,” I said.
Andrew squinted at the screen, then shook his head.
“She's a funny-looking dog,” Wendy said. “Are you going to rescue her, too?”
“We can't,” I said. “She isn't a real dog.”
“What do you mean? You took a picture of her.”
“She's a ghost,” I said. “She's a dog's ghost.”
Wendy put her hands on her hips and cocked her head. “Are you trying to scare me?”
“Nope. I see the white dog, too, but I also can see right through her.”
“I see through her, too,” Wendy said. “That's why I said she's funny looking. I can see the yard behind her in one picture and something solid in the other.”
“My bedroom door,” I said.
“The ghost came to your room?”
“She wanted me to follow her. I think Mean Man Myers let her starve to death, and now she's trying to keep that from happening to any other dog. I believe she was trying to protect Ra.”
“Oh.” Wendy returned to her knitting. “Then she's a good ghost, and there's nothing to be scared of.”
“That's what I think, too.”
“Do you want to shoot some hoops? ” Andrew asked. I got the feeling he didn't want to talk about the collie's ghost any longer.
“Okay.”
He logged off. We got his basketball and went out to the driveway, where Andrew had a basketball hoop over the garage door. He dribbled the ball for a few seconds, then stopped and said, “It really bugs me that you and Wendy can see that collie, but I can't.”
“It would bug me, too, if things were reversed, and I was the one who couldn't see the ghost. Maybe you're trying too hard. I'm never looking for her when I see her. She just appears.”
Andrew shrugged. “Could be,” he said.
“I was going to print the ghost pictures, to see if she'd show in them, but my printer's out of ink and I'm out of money. I'm a poor, penniless pauper.”
Instead of responding, Andrew shot the basketball through the hoop. We played one-on-one for a while, but it wasn't as much fun as usual. Andrew didn't make up any threesomes and I felt as if we were only going through the motions of the game, without either of us caring if we played or not. I was relieved when Mrs. Pinella told Andrew he should get ready for dinner.
When I got home, I found a note from Mom: “Mrs. Gardiner needed a ride to her daughter's house. Back in twenty minutes.”
Mrs. Gardiner has lived at the end of our block for fifty years. She can't drive anymore because her eyesight is too bad, so she sometimes asks Mom or one of the other neighbors for a ride.
Ra stood by the door, looking at me. I knew he wanted to go out. “We have to wait until Mom gets back,” I told him.
He whined, and scratched at the door.
Mom hadn't put a time on the note so I didn't know when she'd be back.
Ra barked. He only did that when he really needed to go.
When I got the leash out of the drawer he came trotting over, wagging his tail. I snapped the leash on, and he tugged toward the door. He barely made it to the grass. “What'd you do,” I asked, “drink the whole bowl of water?”
I turned to take him back inside, but he pulled toward the sidewalk.
Maybe he needs to go some more
, I thought, and decided to walk a short ways. As we walked, I thought about Wendy. When she told her mom about Ra, I was so angry at her that I had vowed never to talk to her again.
Now I had to admit it was a good thing that Mom and Andrew's parents had found out about Ra. He could be inside with me instead of being shut alone in the fort, and because of Mom, Ms. Kellogg was investigating possible cruelty charges against Mr. Myers. Mom was not only a foster parent for the Humane Society but she seemed to genuinely like Ra. None of that would have happened if Wendy hadn't told Mrs. Pinella that Andrew and I secretly had a dog.
Until now I had Wendy pegged as the most selfish kid in the world but here she was, knitting as fast as she could to help the homeless cats be more comfortable. Maybe I'd relent and tell Andrew that Wendy could come bowling with us the next time we went. If Wendy could change and become a kid who helped homeless animals, I could change my mind about letting her hang out with Andrew and me. Assuming, that is, that Andrew wanted to keep hanging out with me.
With my thoughts focused on Wendy, I wasn't paying attention to how far I'd gone, and I didn't hear the car approach. It wasn't until it stopped beside me that I glanced from the sidewalk to the curb and saw the mottled blue clunker.
Mean Man Myers sat behind the wheel.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
I
pulled in the leash so Ra was right beside me as I turned around. I walked faster, watching the car out of the corner of my eye. It rolled slowly down the street, keeping even with Ra and me.
I started to jog.
The car kept pace. Every few steps, I glanced at it, making sure the driver stayed inside. I had intended to stay in my own yard. How could I have come so far?
Mean Man Myers leaned toward the open window and said, “I came for my watchdog. You can put him in the backseat.”
Ra growled when he heard the voice.
I kicked into gear and sprinted toward home as fast as I could run.
The car drove along beside me, belching exhaust fumes. Mr. Myers hollered, “You can't get away from me, boy. You stole my watchdog and if you don't give him back, I'll do more than ask politely. I'll take him!”

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