My Boyfriends' Dogs

Read My Boyfriends' Dogs Online

Authors: Dandi Daley Mackall

Table of Contents
 
 
 
 
DUTTON CHILDREN'S BOOKS
A division of Penguin Young Readers Group
 
Published by the Penguin Group
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
 
Copyright © 2010 by Dandi Daley Mackall
 
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Published in the United States by Dutton Children's Books,
a division of Penguin Young Readers Group
345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014
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eISBN : 978-1-101-19571-0
 

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FOR MY FAMILY:
How blessed with love we are!
thanks
I'm so grateful for my editor and friend, Maureen Sullivan, who has a way of seeing where I want to go and helping me get there. And thanks to Dutton/Penguin for believing in me again.
For my buddy Laurie Knowlton, what can I say? Thanks for encouraging me, for laughing in all the right places, and for praying us both through the process. Tess and Bird, you always come through for me. And Kelsey, thanks for your stories that can't help but spark my imagination.
Special thanks to my wonderful family, headed by Joe, my delightfully crazy boyfriend, who is also my trusty friend and loving husband.
And last—but SO not least—three cheers to all our dogs!
ST. LOUIS—The Present
“MY MOTHER SAYS that falling in love and getting dumped is good for you because it prepares you for the real thing, like it gets you ready for
true
love and all, but I'm thinking it's more like climbing up the St. Louis Arch and falling off twice. Does that first fall really get you ready for the second?” I shiver a little, but it doesn't have anything to do with the idea of jumping off the “Gateway to the West.” I admit I've been pretty depressed for the past twenty-four hours, but not
that
depressed. I'm shivering because apparently rain in St. Louis is colder than rain in rural Missouri. Not to mention the fact that my soaking-wet prom dress—and this dress is a fact I'd rather
not
mention—is sticking to me like wet fur.
On either side of me sit my three dogs, still on leashes. Adam, the restless terrier, wags his tail and tries to break free to greet the three strangers I've joined in this dimly lit downtown café.
I glance toward the door, where the sign facing us says OPEN because it says CLOSED to the rest of the world. All three dogs shook themselves the second we stepped inside. Telltale puddles lead across the black-and-white linoleum floor straight to my table. “Sorry about the mess. I'll clean it up before I go. I promise.”
The man who let us in, the old man who I think owns the place, pulls down one of the upside-down chairs from my tabletop and sits himself across from me. “Climbing up the Arch to fall off,” he repeats in a scratchy voice that sounds like he just woke up, but I'm guessing his voice always sounds like this. “Got to admit I never looked at falling in love in just that way.” He gazes out the rain-streaked window as if he's mulling over how many steps there might be in the Gateway to the West. Maybe on a clear day, which this is not, you can see the Arch from here.
I glance at the other two people inside the café, but they don't seem interested in me or my dogs. The big man behind the counter is scrubbing down the coffee machine, and the younger guy at the back table doesn't look up from his newspaper. It's pretty quiet in here, except for the humming of the fluorescent light overhead and the soft groans from the Dalmatian sleeping at my feet. Rain on the roof sounds like somebody's throwing handfuls of pins at us.
When I turn back to the older man, he's staring at my hair, which is still in its prom-night updo.
I reach for the arsenal of bobby pins holding on bravely. As soon as I touch my hair, I discover that massive hair spray plus rainwater equals sticky glue. Nice.
“Just so you know,” I offer apologetically, “this isn't how I usually wear my hair.” I look over to the counter, but the big guy in a white apron is still cleaning the coffee machine.
I slip the dog leashes off my wrist and start to work un-bobby-pinning my sticky hair. My dogs don't stir, not even Adam. They're pretty worn out from our late-night walk that turned into a run when the downpour started. We must have banged on twelve doors before this one opened.
The rain picks up and batters the large front window, turning the world outside into a blur of light and motion. Wind makes the whole room creak.
The man across from me keeps studying me as if I'm under a microscope, the most fascinating thing he's ever seen. He has an air of quiet kindness, so I'm thinking he'd be a golden retriever if he were a dog. He's older than my grandfather, with skin darker than my coffee, which is thick and black and without a doubt the worst cup of coffee I've ever tasted. I'm not complaining. It's cold outside, and the coffee shop was closed up tighter than a muzzled pit bull when the dogs and I showed up. This man didn't have to let me in.
“Thanks again for opening up for me and pouring me your last dregs of coffee. I don't even know your name.”
“Louie,” he supplies. “Just Louie.” He smiles, and it takes up half of his worn face.
I smile back. “Louie of St. Louie?”
He nods. “That's the name of this place, Louie of St. Louie's.” The way he says it lets me know this café belongs to him and he's proud of it.
He should be proud. Now that I take the time to notice, I can see what a great place this is, old and full of atmosphere. Pockmarked paneled walls, great tables with silver chrome rims right out of the fifties—my mom would go nuts over them—and wooden-backed chairs with round stool seats like you'd see in a classic ice cream parlor.
The guy at the back corner table flips the page of his newspaper, but he doesn't look our way.
I turn back to Louie. “This is a fantastic café, and I'd say that even if you hadn't saved me from being washed away and flushed down the gutters of St. Louis in the middle of the night. What time is it anyway?” I spot a small round clock on the wall by the coatrack. “Wow. After eleven? I've got to bring my mom back here. During regular hours,” I add quickly.
I reach across the table and shake Louie's hand. “I'm Bailey.” I thought my fingers were still numb, but when we shake, I can feel every bone in his hand. “I appreciate you letting my dogs come inside, too. If you can just give me a couple of minutes to warm up, and maybe for the rain to let up a little, we'll all get out of your hair.”
“Louie!” The big guy behind the counter nods like he wants Louie to join him for a secret conference . . . about me.
But Louie isn't going for it. He leans back in his chair and crosses his legs at the ankles. His worn black boots must be at least a size 14. “You got something to say?” Louie asks the counter guy.
Identity-Crisis Guy
. That's what I think when the man at the counter finally faces me. This guy has got to be smack in the middle of an identity crisis. The left side of his head is shaved and beardless. The right half has longish brown hair and a full beard, if you can call half a beard “full.” I can't tell what dog he'd be if he were a dog. Some people are like that.
Louie raises his scratchy voice. “I asked if you got something to say to me, Rune?”
“Rune?” I repeat. Rune is a name I've never heard before, but somehow it fits this man, who's keeping that counter between him and me, guarding his distance.

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