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From My Heart To You
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Mark's Shep
Shep looked big as a car to a four-year-old. He belonged
to the people across the street from the Clarks who
lived three houses down from us towards Oak Park. They
didn't really own him. The way we looked at it, he was
the property of all us little brats that lived on
Oak Park Avenue during the war. My mother said he was a
German Police Dog and anything German or Japanese was
bad back then. I would always bring it up that we were
German and she would say, "Go on outside and play."
Looking back, Shep was a pretty smart dog. He could
chisel you out of most of your sandwich, cookies, or
whatever you had, but he couldn't get much of our
Fleer’s Double Bubble gum. It had just been invented
and sold for a penny a piece. When Plemon’s store had
it, they would only allow one piece per person from a
shipment. I guess sugar rationing was still on. We
brats in the neighborhood -- guess there were ten or
more of us -- remind me today of Our Gang, with me
playing Spanky. I was always into deep doo for
something, however good or bad it might be.
Most of us had Radio Flyer wagons that we could pull
around. They were all in different stages of
disrepair, but we had figured out how to jam a stick
into the spot where the handle joined the front wheel
yoke and the handle would stick up about the height of
Shep's back. We would tie a rope to this, then put a
loop around Shep's body and he would pull us around like
the stagecoach horses in the movies. We would all take
turns riding when we would go to Oak Park. Each of
us would get to be pulled five or so house lengths then
another would get in for their turn. Seemed like this
went on for the longest till one day we brats found out
that the neighbors that owned him were moving and we
inquired if they had kids where they were moving to for
Shep to play with. They said that they wouldn't be
able to take him with them and were going to give him to
the pound. Talk about a bunch of unhappy kids, but
when we found out that they kill dogs that are there for
a few days and aren't adopted, a bowl of of Prozac for
breakfast wouldn't have made our spirits any better.
A new family was moving in down the street. I had seen
them for a few days now, going back and forth in and
out of the house carrying stuff from a little trailer
behind their car. They had a little girl and I noticed
that she was always sitting on the porch or in the
shade of a tree in the front yard and her mother carried
her everywhere. Being the nosy type, I went and started
asking questions, introducing myself and the rest of
the gang. Then I asked if the little girl – she must
have been my age – could go to the park and play with
us. We all had permission to go and the mothers between
here and the park watched as we made our journey to
play, then returned. She told us that she had to carry
Gloria everywhere because she had had polio and that
she couldn't carry her that far. Bingo! We went and got
a wagon, hooked it up to Shep, and rode up like Roy
Rogers to save the day. We took her to the park every
day, put her in the swings, pushed her on the merry-go-
round, and did doubles on the seesaws because she
couldn't use her legs.
Then the dark day loomed, the folks were moving the
next day and we didn't know what to do. We just sat
around moping, sometimes crying because we were going
to lose Shep. Holy Cow, they were going to kill him. We
all begged our parents till they threatened us with
our lives to let us adopt Shep, all to no avail.
We were all sitting on the curb in front of my house,
in total tears and runny noses, watching the people
loading the last of their stuff when I had this
brainstorm. "Let’s go sneak a bunch of groceries
from our houses, put them in a wagon, hook Shep up to
the wagon and take them to Gloria’s house, then tell her
mom that if she will adopt Shep, we can keep playing
with her in the park and we will furnish all his food.”
Her mother looked us over in silence; I guess looking
at our dusty, tear-streaked faces from our sitting by
the street all morning crying. I could see tears
starting to well up in her eyes as she looked at the
wagon piled up high with food. Cans of everything
imaginable, Spam, spinach, corn, packages of bologna,
loaves of bread, just everything. Shep just stood there,
waiting for a command to do something. I finally
said, "They are going to kill him if you don't.”
“Then we won't be able to take Gloria to the park and
play with her either,” someone else chimed in.
She said, and the words hung like a dark cold cloud
over us as she paused, "I guess we'll just have to keep
him then.” Hooray! We all started dancing around,
shouting and carrying on. She finally said for us to
take the food back home, that she would get regular
dog food for Shep. Several of us said we didn't want to
because we didn't like the stuff anyway, but she
insisted.
Well, time rocked on when , lo and behold, Gloria's
father came home with a puppy that looked like a
little Shep. He said that older dogs train younger ones
to do things easier than people do and they have a
better attitude toward their work when they learn from
other dogs. It must be true because it wasn't long
before "Miss Doogey" and Shep were competing to get
hooked up to pull Gloria or any of us in the wagon.
Mr. Sullivan built a miniature buggy in his garage,
just like in the movies, to fit on a sidewalk. It had
two poles and traces to hook up Shep and Miss Doogey,
and they would bring Gloria everywhere we went so she
could play with us.
I have some pictures of that somewhere, probably in
my mother's old cedar chest. I think I'll get one out
and frame it. Might remind me from time to time why I
always take food and stuff to P.A.L.S. where they save
animals instead of killing them.
Reflections by Mark Crider
Copyrighted 1998
Please click on Mark's name above
and visit his site for more animal stories.
Midi playing ~ My Buddy ~

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