A Very Bad Thing
The key turned in the lock. JR’s ears twitched.
Normally, when George arrived home from work, JR would leap out of his bed and skid across the living room to greet him at the door. Today, however, he stayed put.
“What’s the matter, boy?” George called, slipping off his shiny leather shoes and carefully lining them up on the top shelf of the closet, where JR couldn’t reach them. “You ready for walkies?”
Sometimes JR wished he could speak Human just so he could tell George how ridiculous he sounded when he said “walkies.” He buried his nose in his red flannel bed—the one Moira had bought him in Dublin. If he breathed in deeply enough, he could still smell the peat she burned to heat her little weekend cottage by the sea. The thought of Moira made him feel both very sad and slightly better about the Very Bad Thing he’d done while George was at work.
“You sick, boy?” George walked over to JR’s spot near the fireplace that wasn’t really a fireplace but only looked like one, which was sorely disappointing. He squatted and placed a warm hand on JR’s head. George had very soft hands. This was because he worked in an office and moisturized daily. “You don’t look sick.” JR tried to avoid eye contact and not think about what George would do when he found out. He would yell, that was a given. And he’d probably put JR on biscuit rations. Possibly for life.
“I know what’s wrong,” said George. “You’re still upset about the plane, aren’t you?” He paused, as if waiting for JR to agree. “I’m sorry, boy. But there was nothing I could do.”
JR had actually forgotten about the plane, but now the memory—awful though it was—made him feel even better about the Very Bad Thing he’d done. There was nothing worse than being forced to travel in the Hold.
This hadn’t been the first time he’d had to do it, either. After seven years of moving around, he’d known what was coming when George had announced that they were leaving Dublin for Moscow. Some airlines allowed dogs to travel with their owners in the cabin if they weighed under eight kilograms, which JR, an average-sized Jack Russell terrier, did. The time they’d flown from Helsinki to Kuala Lumpur, he’d been able to sit right on George’s lap and charm the flight attendant into giving him extra pretzels. But most airlines had a six-kilogram limit. Any dog that weighed more had to go in the Hold.
During their last few weeks in Dublin, he’d even tried to lose weight, only nibbling at his dinner and valiantly resisting the stray chips and sandwich crusts he came across in St. Stephen’s Green, the park they visited every day. But darn George and his pastry habit—how could anyone say no to a daily bite of Danish or croissant? It was George’s fault that JR had to travel to Kuala Lumpur in a freezing-cold compartment underneath a thundering plane, his only companions a whiny dachshund and a disgruntled Doberman with bad breath.
Yes, George deserved the Very Bad Thing he had done.
“Look, I’ll get changed, and we’ll go out exploring, okay?” George said, standing up and shrugging off his pinstriped suit jacket. “We’ll go to the park, and maybe find a bakery. I could really go for a croissant.” George checked his hair in the mirror over the fireplace, tousling it to make it look like he hadn’t spent half an hour styling it that morning. “I wonder if they do croissants in Moscow. Or those buttery things filled with custard we had in Paris. Remember? What were those called?” He wandered off to his bedroom, weaving his way around the piles of boxes he had yet to unpack.
JR held his breath, waiting for the scream. But the only sound from the bedroom was George humming, off-key.
He obviously hadn’t looked under the bed.
JR leaped up and raced for the door, grabbing the leash in his mouth on the way. The faster he could get George out of the apartment, the better.
Although they’d lived in Moscow for only five days, JR was fairly certain it would never feel like home. Some parts of their neighbourhood, which George called the Arbat, felt familiar. The old, off-white buildings, for instance, reminded him of their neighbourhood in Paris, which George had called the République. The busy sidewalks, packed with women in high heels and men in shiny leather shoes, felt a bit like Paris, too. And the smell of the mould under the melting snow brought him right back to Helsinki. It was an almost-spring smell that made him want to leap into a mud puddle and have a good roll. George would hate that. Which made him want to do it even more.
But there were new, unfamiliar things in Moscow, too—things he wasn’t sure he’d ever feel comfortable with. Like the taxis that came whipping around street corners, sending George sprinting for the sidewalk, his long limbs flailing. And the buildings that butted right up against the sidewalk, without even a sliver of grass between the two. And the sour smell of exhaust that hung in the air, sometimes so thick that JR could barely discern the almost-spring smells of mud and snow mould. He’d lived in plenty of cities, but never had he lived in a city quite so cityish.
Their apartments, however, were always the same: small, plain, and on the first floor, since heights made George nervous. They came furnished with a bed, tables, couch, and desk, for as George always said, “Globetrotting George can’t own furniture. It would only weigh him down.”
Sometimes JR wished he could find the bonehead who came up with the name “Globetrotting George” and give him a good, hard bite on the ankle.
He tugged George out the front lobby and into the mild afternoon. The flat, off-white sky matched the flat, off-white buildings perfectly. Hopefully, the park would be more interesting. Maybe there would be something small and furry or feathered to chase. Or better yet, something squeaky. He picked up the pace.
“Hey, slow down, boy! What’s the hurry?” George tugged on the leash, but JR ignored him. His paws were itching for a run on the grass. If only George would let him off-leash, like he used to at Moira’s cottage. JR would race along the beach, chasing seagulls or sandpipers or nothing at all, his tongue flapping in the salty air.
But George never let him off-leash in the city. He seemed to think that if JR spotted something small and squeaky, he’d take off after it and never look back. Which was true. But it still didn’t seem fair.
They turned right at the corner, passed another row of off-white apartments, then hung a left at the corner store that smelled like cigarettes and sausages. Its window was stacked with bottles of water and rolls of toilet paper, and judging by a whiff that tickled JR’s nostrils, there were some half-stale loaves of rye bread in there, too.
A bearded man—probably the owner—was standing at the door, arms folded over his big, round belly, watching people pass. George nodded politely and offered a “Dobryj utro,” one of the only phrases in Russian he knew. It meant “Good morning.”
The store owner raised an eyebrow and looked purposefully at his watch. George didn’t notice. “Maybe we’ll find a bakery down this way,” he said, turning toward a street they hadn’t yet explored.
But just as JR was turning to look, something caught his eye. Something dark and shadowy, moving in the narrow space between the corner store and the building next to it. He ground to a halt.
“Aw, c’mon, boy.” George tugged on the leash. “You want a pastry, don’t you? Something chocolatey? Oh wait, you can’t eat chocolate. Maybe something—”
JR ignored him again, staring at the spot where he’d seen something move, until sure enough, the shadow slipped out into the light.
It was a dog. A big dog, nearly three times as tall as JR and possibly twice as old. He had matted brown hair, mud-caked paws, and a nasty scar over his right eye. And he definitely needed a good bath; even where JR stood, about twenty feet away, the smell made him wince. It was like George’s gym shoes stuffed with that awful blue cheese he liked so much. It also made him suddenly thankful for the cramped, boring apartment they’d just left. At least he had a place to live. This dog obviously didn’t.
Then the dog turned toward him and gave him the oddest look. It took JR a moment to realize that it was a look of pity—probably the same look JR had been giving him. This dog—this homeless, dirty dog—felt sorry for him!
But why? Naturally, JR was smaller, but probably just as fast. And sure, he had a human who said stupid things like “walkies” and moisturized far more often than necessary, but at least he had a human. So what was there to pity? What did this stray have that he didn’t?
Suddenly, the store owner started hollering and waving his arms. The stray looked over at him, and when he looked back at JR, the look of pity had disappeared, replaced by one of mischief—a look that said, “Watch this!” And he took off. But instead of running away from the store owner, he ran straight for him! As JR and George watched, open-mouthed, the stray ducked between the owner’s legs and ran right into the shop, emerging moments later with an entire sausage ring in his mouth. He raced off, the hollering owner hot on his heels, but not before giving JR one last look—a look that said clearly, “Bet you wish you could do that!”
Never had JR wanted anything more.
“Wow. Didja see that, boy? Sneaky thing. I think he was a stray,” George remarked as he watched the owner and dog disappear around a corner. “I hear there’s a lot of them in Moscow. We’ll have to watch out. Wouldn’t want you getting rabies or anything.” He leaned down and stroked JR’s head. “But don’t worry. I’ll always keep you on the leash.”
JR closed his eyes and forced himself not to bite George’s well-moisturized hand. It made him feel much better about the Very Bad Thing awaiting George back at home.