When
my dog was a year and a half old I discovered
that he needed sex.
Like
a good master, I tried to obtain female
services for him, but my efforts resulted
in failure. My frustration level was
probably growing higher than his, but
it was hard to tell. After all, Pard
didn't look up suddenly
from gnawing a bone and say: ‘Master,
master, this deprivation is killing me.’ In
general, though, our relationship was satisfactory.
Pard followed the basic hygiene rules indoors.
He even allowed me to slip newspaper under
him outdoors, when he squatted for doggie
business. I expressed my appreciation for
not having to carry a cumbersome pooper
scooper, or messy plastic baggies, by liberally
distributing dog yummies whenever he cooperated.
It was an excellent arrangement that benefited
both of us.
Pard was a medium size, brown and white, haphazard mix of terrier and shepherd,
with trace elements of other breeds. He was a clever dog, a valid testimony to
the melting pot theory. I often took him to my drama classes at Gotham University's
School of the Arts. Sometimes I would challenge my well fed student actors to
display more facial expressions than my dog. Once the initial humiliation of
their acting skills being compared to a dog was over, some students showed a
keen zest to prove themselves. If one came close to rivaling Pard’s expressiveness,
he blew them away with the ‘sad look’ of woeful eyes, sagging mouth
and drooping ears. To date, no vanquished young thespian, resentful in defeat,
had complained to the university about my unorthodox teaching assistant. When
I brought Pard to school I always wore sunglasses. If security tried to prevent
our entry, I told them I was blind. The underpaid guards of the sons and daughters
of prosperity, weren’t about to be politically incorrect and deny admission
to a blind man and his faithful seeing eye dog.
I first met Pard in the 6th floor hallway of my east village walk up, one of
the few remaining ungentrified buildings on East 9th Street. The tenants were
under constant pressure from the landlord to vacate the premises. His goal was
to replace them with yuppies. He knew yuppies would eagerly pay seven or eight
times more for the privilege of living in a chic ex-slum. The Olmedos, my neighbors
across the hall, were the current target for eviction. We shared a bathroom in
the hall. Their courteous apologies for its frequent use by their four children
had led to friendship. The Olmedos still believed in the American dream, despite
being persecuted by the landlord. Raul and Elena left the Dominican Republic
to build a better life for their children. Raul worked long hours as an orderly
in the psycho ward at Malvue Hospital. Elena sewed in a sweatshop. I became fond
of the oldest son, Armando, a bright youth who I tutored in English. Armando
got a puppy from a friend and kept it in a cardboard box in the hallway. His
parents wouldn’t allow Perro in their tiny, three room, vastly overcrowded,
but spotlessly clean apartment.
The Olmedos finally tired of the landlord’s harassment and purchased a
house in the South Bronx. It wouldn’t be ready for a few months, so they
temporarily moved in with relatives. Naturally, Perro was unwelcome. Armando
begged me to take care of him for a few days, until he could make other arrangements.
It seemed simple enough to give him food and water, and to change his newspaper
toilet once a day. I agreed and the Olmedos departed, leaving Perro behind. That
night the landlord pounded on my door and demanded to know who owned the dog
in the hall. I told him it was ‘the Olmedos.’ He got furious and
said he would have it removed. I requested a few days' grace, but was refused.
After two lawsuits and one personal confrontation that almost became violent,
we were in the midst of a temporary truce, but it was fragile. I saw no other
alternative, so I gave Perro sanctuary.
My efforts to reunite Perro and Armando were futile. Raul politely but firmly
rejected my request to bring them the dog. “I am sorry, my good friend,
but it is impossible for us to take him. My sister-in-law will not allow it.
I will call the pound and they will take him.” An image flashed into mind
of the tiny cells that held the prisoner dogs and cats, until they went to the
gas chamber at the A.S.P.C.A. I was trapped. “There's no need, Raul.
I’ll see if I can find another home for him.” “Thank you, my
friend. You have been a good neighbor. As soon as we move into our splendid new
house, you must come to dinner.” I promised to come to the housewarming,
although the thought of going to the Bronx was intimidating. All I knew about
the Bronx was from horror stories in the media: fires, drive by shootings, crack
houses. Well, that was in the future. Right now I had to find a good home for
abandoned Perro.
I put a notice on the school bulletin board: ‘loving puppy seeks adoption.’ No
response. I asked all my friends. They said no. I phoned my ex-girlfriend, Anitra,
a flighty painter who knew every artist in Soho and requested her help. Her suggestion
that I keep the puppy, since it would teach me to be more caring, wasn't
appreciated. I tried animal adoption centers, but they were overpopulated. Meanwhile,
Perro was transferring his affection to me. He followed me around the apartment,
tripping over his large paws, wagging his tail vigorously when I set him on his
feet. He would flop down when I was working at my desk and send ESP messages,
until he attracted my attention. I would look down into those large, soulful
brown eyes and they beamed rays of unmitigated adoration. The ruthless manipulator
worked his way into my heart.
I never had a dog before. Throughout my childhood, my parents had opposed anything
animal, vegetable, or mineral that I brought home. I vaguely knew that dogs had
to be trained, so I visited the Tompkins Square library and browsed the dog book
section. One unexpected side benefit was that I picked up a great looking girl.
She was impressed that I was sheltering a needy puppy and we arranged to get
together later that week. I took two books home, read them carefully and concluded
that it didn’t seem difficult to train a dog. Then we began the next phase
of our relationship. First, a new name. Perro no longer seemed suitable for my
best friend to be. In the back of one of the books there was a list of the twenty
most popular doggie names. They were even more vapid than the twenty most popular
human names. I considered several literary candidates: Patraclos, Horatio, Uncas,
but rejected them. I thought of the old western heroes and their loyal sidekicks,
and came up with Pard. I told Pard his new name and he wagged enthusiastically,
confirming the wisdom of my choice.
Pard’s debut at the Tompkin Square park dog run was less than distinguished.
He was attacked by the male dogs and ignored by the females. He tried everything
in his meager repertoire to make friends; groveling, whining, following, sniffing,
wagging and crying. None of his displays made the other dogs relent. My human
debut wasn’t much better. I was scorned by the males and ignored by the
females. We obviously hadn’t obtained the right passports for the land
of dogwalkers. It was a strange world indeed: pretentious maidens with overbred
companions; macho men with vicious killers; weirdos with surrogate children;
fascists with obedience school compulsives. All of them, human and canine, primped,
preened, posed and role played. This wasn't anything like the dogdom I
imagined. The main dog walking sessions were at three fixed times: before work,
at 7:00 AM; after work, at 6:00 PM; late night, at 10:00 PM. Due to the vagaries
of my schedule, the only regular session I could attend was at night. This was
a coincidental consolation, since the dogs and humans were more relaxed, whether
from combat fatigue after a taxing day, or gentler moods fostered by lunar tides.
It was painfully clear that I had no practical alternative to the Tompkins Square
Park dog run. The only other nearby park, the East River park, necessitated walking
through public housing to get there. It was a hazardous passage past urban pueblos,
mostly inhabited by Hispanics, whose endurance of poverty had been shattered
by yuppie wealth flaunting. If I survived the obstacle course, I would have to
cross a walkway over the East River Drive. My silhouette at night would provide
the murderers, perverts, muggers, junkies and mentally ill homeless with early
warning identification of a high priority target. I had always been a loner,
which partially explained my lack of advancement in my chosen profession, theater,
a networker's orchard. Now I was compelled to become a socializer for my pal
Pard.
When Pard was approximately three months old, we started training sessions in
the park. They were periodically interrupted by bullying dog attacks, which I
had to fend off by myself. The instigating owner of Thor or Fang would accuse
puppy Pard of provocation. What was more obnoxious was that everyone urged their
dog training methods on me, from nazism to Zen. There were two main types of
advice givers: those who sent their dogs to obedience school, and therefore had
no idea how to do it yourself; those who championed the natural system, and whose
dogs were always out of control. This group was the most amusing, since they
invariably had to chase their dogs to take them home. This was always an entertaining
spectacle of impatient vocal exercise and inept pursuit. But Pard and I gained
a modicum of acceptance from the less socially scrupulous night crowd. I did
notice, however, that the dogs of the daytime princesses never had to do doggie
business at night.
I used the K-9 obedience training system and Pard quickly learned ‘sit,’ ‘come,’ and ‘heel.’ It
took longer for ‘stay,’ since he got nervous when he saw me walk
away. We got over his insecurity, added several more commands and by his sixth
month he was a reasonably well trained animal. It was during this training period
that he began to reveal his true nature, that of a hedonist pig who wanted his
pleasures. Whenever I left the apartment he scorned the comfortable doggie mat
that I had purchased for him, climbed onto the bed, pulled the covers into a
nest and snoozed underneath. I never caught him because he always met me at the
door, wagging a loving greeting for my safe return. He countered all my attempts
to break this habit, including liberal admonitions of ‘no’, ‘bad
dog’ and ‘disgusting swine’, with looks of innocence, confusion,
or hurt. I resolved to catch him in the act. After I left one day, I waited,
then quietly snuck up the stairs and threw open the door. Pard was sitting there,
wagging cheerfully. I went to the bed and it was still warm where he had been
nesting. In this struggle between man and beast he was as stubborn as the Viet
Cong.
Many dog owners warned me about psychos who went around the city poisoning dogs.
I could believe almost anything in this shared habitat. I trained Pard not to
take food from others and not to eat anything on the ground. Pard complied willingly,
but compensated by helping himself to food in the refrigerator and the cabinets
at home. He would gorge on delectables like roast beef, breakfast cereals, cooked
vegetables, baked goods, fresh fruit and any leftovers. He developed a fondness
for Chinese food, especially tofu and shitake mushrooms, in garlic sauce. Fortunately
for both of us, Pard had a cast iron stomach and digested these non-traditional
dog foods without the inevitable belching, burping, gaseous emissions, nausea,
vomiting, diarrhea or unscheduled bowel movements. I figured out how he opened
the refrigerator and cabinets. He hadn’t figured out how to clean up the
spill from the ravaged containers. This was becoming a growing issue between
us, until his heroism earned him full dining room privileges.
We were leaving the park a little later than usual one night. I had indulgently
left Pard off the leash until we crossed Avenue B. Two junkies darted out from
behind a tree and demanded my wallet. One of them waved a knife in my face. I
was terrified. My entire body started shaking, but a portion of my mind still
functioned. I said soothingly: “Sure. Sure. Be cool, man. I’ll give
it to you.” Before I could even reach for my pocket, Pard came out of the
darkness, growling ominously, looking twice his size. He lunged at the surprised
muggers and one of them turned and ran. The knife wielder threatened Pard, but
then saw large fangs snapping menacingly and fled. The barely out of puppyhood
Pard had saved me. I petted and praised him lavishly. When I stopped shaking
we went home. I couldn’t find a suitable commendation plaque, so I gave
him all the leftover roast pork lo mein. I decided to rethink my bodyguard’s
household rights.
Pard made his first friend, Boris Yeltsin, when he was nine months old. Boris
was a devilish mix of labrador and coyote. He and his master had been exiled
from the day sessions because Boris nipped the little lapdogs. Boris appointed
himself Pard’s mentor and began to teach him adult dog values. Pard was
a quick study and a bond rapidly formed between them. When they met, they would
exchange formal stretch bows, then run and frolic. Pard couldn’t keep up
with the nimble Boris at first, and he would trip over his big paws trying to
wheel and turn. As Pard grew stronger and more agile, they would play fight.
Soon it was all out combat training. They would duel as they ran, slashing and
parrying, stop abruptly, reverse direction and continue the running battle, attacking
and defending. They would take turns lying down, while the other practiced the
coup de grace. They growled, snarled, snapped and foamed ferociously. People
would scream for us to stop them. When the demand for intervention reached its
peak, the two dogs would get up, shake off and trot off happily together, leaving
the agitated spectators completely confused. But dog friendship is even more
ephemeral than human friendship. Boris moved, Pard was on his own again and he
couldn't e-mail.
The tutorial months with Boris had built skills and confidence. Though just a
yearling, he tolerated no more bullying from other dogs. The masters reluctantly
accepted this emancipation and sought easier victims. One vicious obsessive stalked
us for a while, egging his dog to attack, but we learned to avoid him. Then Pard
started training me. When he wanted dog biscuits, he would suddenly raise his
hackles, growl, run to the door and bark. If his reward for defending the castle
wasn't forthcoming, he would come to me, poke me with his paw to get my attention,
look me in the eye, then turn and stare at the cabinet with the biscuits. I generally
gave in first. He used different expressions to fulfill his needs. My favorite
became the forlorn look of dejection when I left him at home. I finally realized
the range of his talent and I trained him to show happy, sad, angry, perplexed,
loving and other expressions. One day in class, exasperated with a student as
emotive as a middle class zombie, I said: “My dog is more expressive than
you.” My challenge was accepted, Pard appeared on the field of honor and
vanquished his opponent with the poignant ears of ‘sad.’
Pard’s excursions to school entertained both of us and dog/human relations
were at an all time high. Then something changed. He reacted strangely to my
selections of female companionship. One night I was making love with the current
girlfriend in my apartment. He lay down nearby and watched. When he heard the
animal sounds of our sexual encounter, he jumped on the bed, mock growling and
demanded to play. He scratched the girl with his pawnails and she departed in
a huff. A little later, I was standing near the window and Pard stood on his
hind legs, wrapped his front paws around my leg and began to push against me.
I didn’t feel like playing so I started to push him down. He growled, held
on tighter and rhythmically pumped my leg. I noticed that his red, shiny thing
had emerged from its sheath and I realized that I was being sexually abused.
I don’t know whether it was because of my example, or normal hormonal stirrings,
but doggie sex had reared its head.
I went back to the Tompkins Square library, but none of the dog books discussed
sex. I went online, assuming I would find the ubiquitous know-it-all, whose moment
had finally come on the World Wide Web. The only response was from a disgusting
degenerate, who wanted to do vile things to my innocent dog. I browsed newspapers,
magazines, periodicals, but there was no helpful information. I tried radio call
in shows. One host called me a pervert and disconnected me. Another thought I
was cleverly disguising my need by pretending it was for a dog. She requested
explicit sexual details and I disconnected her. I phoned my ex-girlfriend, Anitra,
the flighty painter who knew everything about anything, without ever studying.
Her suggestion that we both practice abstinence, since it would teach us self-control,
wasn't appreciated. I thought wistfully that if Boris had only stayed long
enough to lead Pard through this vital coming of age ceremony, things might be
less stressful.
I spent hours thinking of schemes to relieve Pard's tension. I considered
adopting a comely female dog at Bide-a-Way, letting her service Pard for a few
days, then returning her to her cell. But the cruel deception of her feeling
rescued, then being subjected to sexual exploitation, deterred me. But it was
a tempting idea. I knew there was a time honored philosophy of love them and
leave them. There were ample historical precedents for abduction and rape. Sexual
predation has become a recognized, contemporary urban activity, especially near
bus terminals. The thought entered my mind that Pard and I could lurk at Port
Authority, swoop down on some country bitch right off the bus, abduct her, let
Pard have his way, then abandon her on the street. I didn’t feel comfortable
with that plan, but it started a new trend. For a few days I got caught up in
a fantasy about a doggie cathouse. The girl dogs lounged around in provocative
garments, while the doggie madam, a blowsy old Irish setter, negotiated with
the customers. I began to think I was losing it.
I learned one critical fact about canine sex from a wolf documentary: the only
time bitches respond to sexual overtures is when they’re in heat. The rest
of the time it’s tough nuts for the guys. I spent hours comparing bitches
to human females, who did not come into heat. Did this explain why human females
were always, never, often, seldom, sometimes responsive to sexual overtures?
I was getting confused. When wolf bitches put out it was only to mate. They didn’t
engage in casual sex. They didn’t require a wedding ceremony. It was man
who went rim-ram, thank you ma'am and departed. Did that mean that the
only way to provide Pard with sex would be for him to get married? Would that
make me a beastial procurer? Would I be up to my ass in puppies, since I didn’t
think Pard could use a condom? I kept coming back to the fantasy of the doggie
cathouse. I staffed it with working girl dogs from the Tompkins Square Park dog
run. There was this beautiful, standard size, black French poodle. I visualized
her in red lingerie… I definitely had to get things under control.
It was easier said than done. Pard’s urges were occurring more frequently.
I approached the late shift female dog owners with various proposals. I tried
simple requests for sexual accommodation, pleas for compassion for a sex-starved
pooch, offered to share his talented dog genes and reminded all and sundry that
females had obligations to fulfill male needs. My entreaties were rebuffed with
scorn. However, I didn’t let my personal discomfort deter my efforts for
my best friend. I offered cash for services rendered, but was refused with complete
contempt. I wasn’t even allowed to raise the offer. The owners were not
simpatico. Out of discretion, I avoided the dog run for the next two weeks. Pard’s
attempts to satisfy himself on my leg were becoming more demanding. He had already
torn one pair of my pants and scratched my leg twice in his progressively more
urgent sexual assaults. I don’t know why he made my leg a love object.
Perhaps he was confused about his needs, but it was becoming more difficult to
fight off his advances. I was getting desperate.
During my self-imposed exile from Tompkins Square Park, I took Pard to other
neighborhood dog runs. We went south to the Mercer Street run in Noho, where
I surveyed the new prospects like Kublai Khan, seeking a suitable concubine for
the crown prince. But the dog walkers at Mercer Street were more pretentious
than the Tompkins Square crowd. They had even better radar for possible threats
to their dogs. I didn’t conclude that it was class snobbery, pedigrees
looking down on mutts, though I harbored my suspicions. There was just something
about the quest for doggie sex that immediately alerted all owners to danger,
as if by ESP. We went north to Madison Square Park, where we lurked in the shadows
of trees, waiting to spring on the unwary bitch who might wander too far from
the protective eye of the master. We never got lucky. I filibustered to approachable
dog owners, hoping to distract the custodian, while Pard would snatch the booty.
We both failed dismally.
Months passed in fruitless endeavors. My life was unraveling. My students were
feeling neglected. My department head, who I nicknamed ‘Ernest the emoter,’ reminded
me nastily that ‘Adjunct instructors can't slack off.’ My latest
girlfriend left me because she felt I was more concerned with Pard’s sex
needs than hers. Pard was growing increasingly impatient and had nocturnal emissions
that I had to clean. He howled during the day when I was out. This annoyed the
landlord, who was already yearning for my departure and the subsequent gentrification
of my apartment. I had temporarily exhausted all resources while I reassessed
the problem. I succumbed to fantasy again. There were hundreds of dog owners
out there with horny dogs. Maybe thousands. We were victims of a pernicious system
that denied sex to male dogs. This was an issue that should concern others. I
imagined filing a class action suit against the A.S.P.C.A., on behalf of the
horny dog class. It would compel the A.S.P.C.A. to provide requesting dogs with
sex partners, selected from their female prisoners who were confined on death
row. Perhaps the females who serviced a certain number of males could win a pardon.
The legal procedures were becoming too tedious, so I pictured Pard as the Scarlet
Pimpernel, rescuing condemned bitches who would gratefully reward him with their
favors…. I was in trouble.
We went back to the after work session at Tompkins Square Park and managed to
conceal our crass motives for a few days. Our subterfuge went up in smoke when
Pard mounted a pampered fluff ball a fraction of his size, the spoiled pet of
an indulgent princess. His extended member rubbed her head and he ejaculated
all over her well groomed coat. The shrieks of moral indignation and disgust
were deafening. The howls of accusation were daunting. It looked as if a lynch
mob was forming. I had a dreadful vision of Pard and me dangling side by side,
at the end of a rope, on a shabby sycamore tree. I pleaded innocence, endured
the threats and abuse, collected the lugubrious culprit and dejectedly headed
out of the park. I petted Pard reassuringly. “Don’t worry. I won’t
give up trying.” One righteous defender of the violated fluff, currying
favor with the pretentious princess, called after me: “You should keep
that mutt away from purebreds. We don’t want his kind here.” If I
kept my big mouth shut, we probably could have returned to the after work session
in a week or two. Instead, I had to be a smartass. “You wuss. What do you
want him to do, say it with flowers?” As we crossed Avenue B, I looked
back at the scene of our debacle and rededicated myself to finding a solution
to Pard’s sex problem. My only consolation was that at least this time
I didn't have to clean up after him.
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