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Groomed For Love

Page 2

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“Not nut loaf, I hope,” he remarks and breaks out into a sarcastic belly laugh he shares all to himself for a second before standing up and coming over to me.

“You better sit over here, miss. Lemee check you out too for a second. You’ve had quite a shock yourself,” he adds calmly and makes sure I’m okay before his partner announces that Sasha is stable and ready to be taken to the hospital.

Hospital?

Jesus Christ.

The other first responders nod and agree to move on to their next crisis, gradually emptying the dog parlor and shooing away the rubberneckers until it’s just me and Sasha with her saviors, wheeling her out to the waiting ambulance.

She grips my arm suddenly, and I’m sure she’s gonna fire me, or worse.

But Sasha being Sasha, it’s all about her clients.

Her real clients.

The pooches.

“Moose was supposed to come home with me for the weekend after his treatment,” she rasps, and I lean in closer to hear her better through her oxygen mask.

“Officer Parker… He’s out of town… You’ll have to babysit Moose ‘til Monday,” she says, struggling for breath still but not looking so puffy now.

“Don’t lose that dog before Monday and for god’s sake, close the store … and don’t do anything else today,” she adds feverishly, trying to sound calm, but her eyes roll back as she moans before I’m held back by the medic.

The cop from the front door overhears us, stepping forward and blocking me from seeing Sasha into the ambulance.

“I know Officer Parker, and Moose,” he says with a frown. “Buddy of mine works the K9 unit. Used to be a detective,” he adds matter of fact. As though I should be impressed to even hear the guy’s name.

My blank expression leaves a dozen questions I have open.

“I can let him know you have his K9, is what I mean,” he explains as if he’s talking to a simpleton.

After what’s just happened I can’t blame him.

“Moose is picky though,” he says. “Doesn’t take to anyone except Parker, usually. If you get in trouble, give me a call,” he adds as he hands me a card and cocks his head.

Radio chatter and the fresh blast of sirens mean that the show’s over.

The shift goes on for the first responders, but my day, my job most likely is well and truly over.

I swivel the sign to ‘closed’ and lock the front door once they’ve left.

Puffing air out through my cheeks before I sink down into the nearest chair and proceed to start to cry.

I can hear Moose whining from the back and stepping over the broken coffee mug to get a broom and a mop to clean this mess up, I notice him looking at me intently before he lets out a loud bark which makes me jump.

“Don’t take to strangers kindly, huh?” I ask him, sniffing back my tears.

“Me neither,” I hear myself agreeing with my own question.

I clean up the smashed cup, along with the whole salon floor before I realize a dog the size of Moose isn’t going to like being cooped up too much longer.

He’ll need a walk.

Feeding.

And then somewhere to stay until Monday.

Not to mention all the Moose-sized bombs that will need picking up.

I groan loudly.

My pigeonhole apartment is no place for a dog his size, and my landlord is already on my case about missing two weeks’ rent.

Then there’s the delicate issue of strictly no pets allowed…

I groan louder, wishing I had someone I could call to help.

You could call Chet. He’d have an answer for you, although it wouldn’t be the one you like.

Uh. No thanks, pass.

Chet is my big brother. He looked out for us both since my dad left us when we were kids, but his way of looking out for me was keeping me under his thumb. Until I turned twenty last year and told him where to stick his legal guardianship before moving to the city.

Moose is looking at me with searching eyes, whining that he wants out of the cage I know is too small to hold him much longer.

Once the floor’s dry, I let him out, and to my surprise, he nuzzles up against me straight away.

I’ve always been easy around animals, but by his size, plus what that cop said, I figured Moose was a hard case.

Strict police training and all that stuff.

Not true.

He really is just like a huge baby.

In no time at all, we’re like old pals, with his huge tongue lolling about happily as I feed him one treat snack after the other as I sit in the salon, pretending I know what I’ll do next.

Thumbing the card the cop gave me, I gnaw at my lip.

Sasha told me to do one thing, look after Moose until Monday.

How hard could that be?

“Where’s your dad, Moose?” I ask him hopelessly. “Maybe he can come to rescue us both?” I suggest.



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