No matter what pooch I end up with, I know one thing with
certainty: the dog will like me.

The dog will like me because I will make sure weโ€™re
compatible (duh), but also because dogs always like me. Always. Cats, not so
much, but dogsโ€ฆ

Always.

With one exception.

When I was living in Brooklyn
a few years back, I rented a room in a converted brownstone. My room was on the
ground floor and faced a backyard that was about 20โ€™ x 20โ€™โ€”a far cry from the
acreage my family lived on at home. Still, it was better than looking into
someone elseโ€™s room (which one of my roommates did, and after seeing someโ€ฆprivate
things, she kept her blinds closed on a permanent basis).

There was also Spirit. Spirit was a husky who belonged to my
landlords and who called the backyard home. Upon first seeing him, I thought I
was beginning an ideal relationship with a dog: I got to look at, pet and maybe
even walk a very pretty creature, but I didnโ€™t have any real responsibility towards
it. Magnifique!

That is, until I actually started trying to befriend Spirit.
It was winter, and my landlords had tied the poor dog to a stake in the
backyard. One night early on I was watching Spirit circle his post during a
particularly heavy snowfall. He looked distressed. I felt sorry for him, so I
went outside to undo his chain and let him in. Now, up to this point, Spirit
and I had passed in the hallway, and I had given him a small pat or two as my
landlord walked by with him on leash (he always seemed to be on leash).

Now in the yard, I reached toward him to unfasten the chain
from the spike. Spirit immediately leapt back in fear. I tried to speak calmly,
coax him nearer. I went inside and fetched a piece of cheese (there was nary a
dog treat to be found in this house). He still wouldnโ€™t come. I tried being
playful. Dominant. Submissive. He still wouldnโ€™t come near me.

Months passed, and winter became spring. Still, Spirit was
weird and skittish; I started to think he was being mistreated, or at least had
been in the past. But my landlords didnโ€™t seem abusive, at least not where
Spirit was concerned. With each other, on the other hand, they were a little
more aggressive. One day they got in a horrendous fight regarding another
tenant, which I heard in all its glory through my bedroom door. Marco, the
husband, promptly moved out, and around the same time, Spirit disappeared. I
assumed heโ€™d gone with his male companion to a new home. To tell the truth, I
was a bit relieved.

A few weeks later, Marco returned to get some things. I happened
to pass him on the corner by the house, and we struck up a bit of a
conversation. I asked after Spirit.

โ€œOh,โ€ Marco said, looking surprised. โ€œSpiritโ€™s gone.โ€

Goneโ€”a weird verb. I considered its different iterations.
Ran away? Dead? Marco saw my expression and guessed at the path my brain was
taking.

โ€œHeโ€™s at a wildlife preserve in Alaska.โ€

โ€œOh,โ€ I said. Then I thought about it. โ€œWait, what?โ€

Marco looked surprised. โ€œSpirit was 100% Timber Wolf. When
we kicked out David [the tenant over whom the fight had occurred], he called
animal control and got Spirit picked up. It was in the paper and everything. I
thought you knew.โ€

I just stood there on the corner, mouth agape. I had lived
next to, attempted to pet and befriend and even fedโ€ฆa wolf. Not husky. Wolf.

โ€œIโ€™m still mad,โ€ said Marco, finally. โ€œThat wolf cost me
$4000.โ€ (Priorities much? I moved out shortly thereafter.)

New York is a strange and
beautiful place, particularly Brooklyn. When I
think about it, I think about waking up to that wolf staring at me through a
pane of glass.

So I guess my record is still cleanโ€”no dog has ever disliked
me. Just wolves.