It was a round trip of five hours to see a dog I didn't
think I'd like. The whippet rescue woman had rung me to tell me about him, and
to ask if I was interested. "He's a big boy," she told me, "but
the foster carer who's looking after him said he's a lovely person." He
was nearly 5 years old, black, kind and gentle. He had been loved, that was
certain, and very well looked after. Why was he being rescued then, I wanted to know. But apparently nobody
ever tells the truth about these things. Seemingly his owners were moving
somewhere they couldn't take him. Hmmmm. I agreed to go because he sounded so
nice, but I didn't like the sound of 'big'. I was as nervous as someone on a
blind date. Well, I met him, he put his head on my lap and looked up at me, and
I was hooked. Beautiful, darling boy. Four days later I went and got him,
terrified that I was making a mistake and I'd regret it. All the way home in
the car he howled, two and a half hours of howls. It was truly awful. Poor
little terrified boy. Twice I stopped
and walked him a little and gave him water, and on the third lap he was more
settled, just whimpering a little. Once home I took him into the field which
seemed to amaze him, he peed and pooed, and I brought him indoors to show him
his new home. Oh, is he ever a lovely person. He's steady, calm, quiet, gentle,
compliant, loving, sweet, funny and easy, so easy. He has the best manners
imaginable. Upstairs as I led him from room to room and looked out of each
window, he delicately, so sensitively, raised himself up on exquisitely soft
feet to peer out beside me. Every time I've left the kitchen he's followed me,
so silently I sometimes don't realise he's there. He is a peach of a dog, a
class act. He's called Hugo, and he's my best boy.
Remember your kitten called Knickers?
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