THE HUNDRED & SECOND DAY . . .
 
(Monday, September 21, a clear morning)
 
MACK:
 
Me and Boo are spooning in the bed. He’s snoring to shake the world, his bad breath all up in my face, and I can’t let him go. His tail, man. He wags it in his sleep.
They’re taking him to the vet first, to get him all checked out, but he’ll be with them tonight, the Vaccuccias. By about dinnertime, Wash said. His first dinner inside a real home.
I wonder if he’ll remember me. Better he doesn’t. Nothing cuts you worse than a slow fade. I wake him up, and he strips my foot of its sock and gets me to chase him. We go out to the rooftop. The sky’s clean blue on the other side of the cage. We play Frisbee wrestling till Thompkins and Wash show with Thompkins’s assistant, the nice woman who came that first day. I put on my tough face and clip the leash to Boo’s harness. I point to the door. “Go on now, Boo. Go.”
Boo cocks his head, gives his paw.
I tell him again, and he gives me his other paw, and then I remember, I never taught him that command, go. I make my face hard. “Git.”
Boo cocks his head.
Thompkins’s assistant takes the leash, gives it a gentle tug. Boo looks over his shoulder at me while the assistant leads him out. When the dog hits the door he trots off, tail whirling. He doesn’t look back.
Thompkins hurries out after the assistant. Wash hangs back for a sec. “You all right?” he says.
“Psh, yeah, man. This ain’t nothing. I’m cool.”
“You want me to get you a nice cold Sprite?”
“Nah, thanks, I’m not so thirsty, Wash.”
Wash nods and follows after Thompkins.
I wait till I hear the barred door crank shut, and everything is quiet. I slump down the wall and cop a squat in the corner, and I can’t think of anything to do but hurt.
That nervous guard peeks in. “Morse?”
“Uh-huh?”
“You got a visitor.”