Chapter 7 – Sandwich Making Supervisors

Fleegle and Franny watch me make a sandwich for lunch. “The key is to get him to put so much mayonnaise on his sandwich that when he bites into the bread, the mayonnaise is squeezed out and drips onto the floor. Anything on the floor is ours,” Fleegle says. “Raud eats off of a plate, so think of the floor as our big plate.”

I look over my shoulder at him. “You do realize I can hear what you’re saying?”

“No you can’t. I was talking to her.”

“Oh, is that how it works?”

“Raud, focus, don’t let your petty anxieties distract you from your work,” Fleegle says, then begins to imitate the voice from one of my meditation CDs. “Listen to your Zen master and be one with your work. Apply the mayonnaise with long, even strokes of the butter knife. Actually, put the knife down and use a big soup spoon. Now switch hands and apply again. Feel the balance. Now pick up a second spoon and apply with both hands. Immerse yourself in the balance of dual handed mayonnaise application. Become one with your sandwich. Feel the mayonnaise flow across the bread like waves of creamy goodness.”

More like a mayo tsunami, I think.

Franny tilts her head to the side at Fleegle. “Why are you speaking so weird?”

“I’m telling him what his higher-self would tell him.”

“His higher-self must really like mayonnaise,” she says.

“Yes, but Raud doesn’t know that, he’s never met him.”

Next chapter – Soap

Previous chapter – Ham & Cheese To Go

First chapter – The Puppy

Chapter 5 – In Training

As Fleegle walks over to where I’m sitting in the backyard, I close the book in my lap and say, “Well, Fleegle, I just finished reading a book on the afterlife by a guy who travels there in out of body experiences.”

“Really? I just finished sniffing Franny’s pee on that rock over there.”

“Not interested, eh?”

“Oh, I’m interested alright. Her pee tells me she’s been getting more treats than me, and some have been hot dogs, the cheap greasy kind I love.”

“I meant in hearing about the afterlife?”

“If you ever find your higher-self I’m sure he’ll be real interested in talking to you about that sort of stuff to your heart’s content, but I’d rather discuss pee. Pee never lies.”

“Franny is getting more treats than you because she’s in training.”

He tilts his head to the side. “In training for what? I bet it’s some sort of hot dog eating contest and if it is you’re betting on the wrong dog for that. I can eat a lot of hot dogs, you watch me, way more than her. A little bowl of kibble makes her belly drag on the ground. No capacity. A single bun will fill her up.”

Franny looks up from the stick she’s been chewing on. “What about the before-life? Have you read a book on that too? Is it some sort of trilogy? Before, present and afterlife? I want to hear about the before part because I’d like to know where I came from. I distinctly remember being able to fly, but now I can barely get this fat belly of mine off the ground when I walk, let alone fly.”

Fleegle eyes Franny’s stick. “You’re confusing flying with the ride the stork gave you to deliver you to Suzie’s house, our breeder.”

Franny sees Fleegle eyeballing her stick. “Stork rides and tales of the afterlife, I’m going to need something more than a stick to chew on to get used to the two of you. Where are the shoes at? A real stinky one will get me through this.”

Next chapter – Ham & Cheese To Go

Previous chapter – Bedtime, Or Not

First chapter – The Puppy

Chapter 4 – Bedtime, Or Not

I finish brushing my teeth, then climb under the bed’s covers. Fleegle is curled up on his pillow next to mine and Franny sits at the end of the bed mouthing the old rope toy she’s found. She stops chewing on it to watch me get comfortable and warm. It’s a cold night and I turned the heat off an hour ago.

“Whatcha doing?” she asks.

“Going to bed to sleep.”

“For how long?”

“Until morning.”

She stand up. “Do I get a biscuit if I pee on the bed while you’re sleeping?”

“No.”

“What if I wake you up and show you where I peed? Do I get one then?”

“Pee only gets you biscuits when you do it outside.”

The way she’s standing makes her look like she’s thinking of squatting. “That’s not fair,” she says. “I saw you give yourself a biscuit after you peed inside. You peed in your water bowl then went into the kitchen ad gave yourself a little round black biscuit.”

Fleegle lifts his head from his pillow. “She’s got you there. I saw it too. You had an Oreo biscuit. It is kind of unfair, Raud.”

“You too, eh?” I say to him.

Franny wiggles her butt and looks at Fleegle. “It seems to me he’s asking us to live by higher standards than he’s willing to live by himself. What’s this called again?”

“Housetraining.”

“So I’m being housetrained by someone who isn’t? Where’s that shoe? I need to chew.”

I tighten the comforter under my chin, finally getting warm. “It’s not time to chew. It’s time to sleep.”

Franny looks at me, her eyes gleaming bright in the light from the lamp on the nightstand. “No it’s not,” she says as she squats. “It’s time to pee.”

Next chapter – In Training

Previous chapter – What’s In A Name?

First chapter – The Puppy

Chapter 2 – Fleegle’s Help Arrives

As I’m rinsing dishes in the kitchen sink, out of the corner of my eye I see the puppy squat to pee. I drop the plate with a loud thunk, spin around, sweep the puppy up into my arms and rush her outside into the backyard, where I plop her down in the middle of the lawn.

“Here, this is where you go pee,” I say, pointing at the lawn. “Not on my kitchen floor.”

Fleegle ambles out into the backyard, following the excitement. He starts sniffing the grass near the puppy, her rump now parked firmly on the ground as she stares up at me with an annoyed look in her eyes.

“Ooo, over here,” Fleegle says. “Here’s a good spot. Pee right on top of this weed.”

The puppy looks over at Fleegle. “Who is this that’s looming over me and why does he grab me every time I squat?”

“That’s Raud, my pet human, but you can call him the Biscuit Man.”

“Does he pick you up and carry you around every time you need to pee? It sure isn’t very comfortable having him put all that pressure on my bladder when he lifts me up.”

“No, I’m far too big for him to pick up. I’m as big as Timber Jack and his mate.”

“Who’s Timber Jack.”

“A dire wolf who lives in the woods at the end of the street.”

I clear my throat. “I’m standing right here, you know. Timber Jack is only a coyote, and I can still pick you up.” I reach down and scoop up Fleegle, all 85 pounds of him.

The puppy chirps a bark. “He must think you have to pee.”

Fleegle squirms out of my arms. “Not in front of my friend, please. You’re embarrassing me.”

“Oh, alright, but you’re still a big baby to me, no matter how grown up you are.”

Fleegle turns his back to me and pretends I’m not there.

The puppy cocks her head at me. “He speaks. How’s he do that?”

“I taught him to. He even makes sense some of the time, unless he starts going on about meditation and contacting his higher self, then you should just start watching the sky in case something falls out of it.”

“Higher self? What’s that?”

“Exactly. Makes no sense at all,” Fleegle says. “If it weren’t for me, he’d get lost the moment he went out the front the door.”

The puppy looks up at me. “Why is he staring at me like that? He better not think I’m something for him to eat. I have to pee but his staring is freaking me out too much to go. Does he stare at you when you have to pee?”

“I can hear you just fine, you know,” I say to the puppy. “I’m waiting for you to pee.”

The puppy looks at Fleegle. “Who’s he talking to? Did he just say he has to pee too?”

Fleegle jerks his chin at the back of the yard. “See those bamboo plants over there? No one can watch you pee in there.”

“Ah, so you need to hide when you go pee. Like behind that big couch in the living room. I left a present back there.” The puppy ambles into the bamboo and out of sight.

Moments later when she emerges, I say good girl in a cooing voice and stick a treat in front of her snout.

She sniffs it. “What’s this? Smells good.”

Fleegle thumps his tail against the ground where he’s sitting. “That’s why he’s called the Biscuit Man. It’s like magic. I’ll be walking along and thinking about how nice it would be to have a biscuit right about now and I’ll look up at him and there one is, in his hand in front of my mouth. It’s almost like he came trained that way. He’s the best human I’ve ever had.”

The puppy gobbles up the biscuit. “That was good.”

Fleegle thumps his tail some more. “Here’s the good part. He’ll give you a biscuit every time you pee outside.”

“No kidding? What about if I pee inside?”

“Nah, I could never quite get him trained well enough to do that.”

“Maybe you didn’t try hard enough,” the puppy says.

“I tried everything. Raud just isn’t that smart. You can only do so much with the material you’re given. I mean, seriously, he still poops in his water bowl.”

“Gross, one of my litter mates did that. He was a dirty puppy,” the puppy says. “Maybe I can help you train your dirty puppy.”

“I’ll take any help I can get. He’s a lot of work and it takes dedication. You let one thing slide and the next thing you know, he’s no longer living in your house but you’re living in his,” Fleegle says, glancing at me over his shoulder.

“Let’s start now. You distract him while I go inside and poop behind that big couch.”

“Ah, but if you do that, he won’t give you a biscuit.”

“Oh, so he gives biscuits for poop, too?” she asks. “If I’d known they were worth something, I’d have been saving them.”

“Just wait until he starts following you around with the baggies at the park.”

Feeling outnumbered, I loudly clear my throat again for some attention. “Raud’s higher self is going inside to polish the dog bowls and measure kibble portions.”

“And clean behind the couch,” Fleegle adds.

“Yes, that too.”

Next chapter – What’s In A Name?

First chapter – The Puppy