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  A portion of all proceeds from the sale of Rescue Road will benefit Greg Mahle’s Rescue Road Trips.

  Copyright © 2015 by Peter Zheutlin

  Cover and internal design © 2015 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover design by Jennifer K. Beal Davis

  Cover image © Martin Barraud/Getty Images

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

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  This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional service. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.—From a Declaration of Principles Jointly Adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Zheutlin, Peter.

  Rescue road : one man, thirty thousand dogs, and a million miles on the last hope highway / Peter Zheutlin.

  pages cm

  1. Dog rescue. 2. Animal welfare. I. Title.

  HV4746.Z44 2015

  636.7’0832092--dc23

  [B]

  2015012970

  For my brother, Michael, with love.

  CONTENTS

  Introduction

  Chapter 1: Dog’s Best Friend

  Chapter 2: On the Road Again

  Chapter 3: All Aboard

  Chapter 4: Saving Dogs

  Chapter 5: Lone Star State of Mind

  Chapter 6: Houston, You Have a Problem

  Chapter 7: Hard Times

  Chapter 8: Acadiana

  Chapter 9: Long Day’s Journey Into Night

  Chapter 10: Gotcha Day

  Epilogue

  Author’s Note

  You Can Help! Support the Rescue Organizations in This Book

  Acknowledgments

  Photo Credits

  About the Author

  INTRODUCTION

  IN 2012 THE BERLIN WALL FELL. OKAY, not that Berlin Wall; the Germans knocked theirs down in 1989. I’m talking about my own wall of opposition to having a dog in the family. That Berlin Wall survived the end of the Cold War by more than twenty years. But when it fell, I fell hard for a dog named Albie.

  For years my wife, Judy, and sons, Danny and Noah, had pleaded with me to consider adopting a dog. I held them at bay with turtles, hamsters, fish, and eventually a cockatiel named Houdini whose messy cage I cleaned every week for ten years and who I secretly hoped would live up to his namesake and escape all on his own. But I insisted: no dog. Too much work. Too much responsibility. You can’t travel with a dog. I have allergies. The dog will shed everywhere. I’ll be the one getting up in the wee hours of those subfreezing February mornings risking life and limb on sheets of ice so the dog can poop. Even though I had a dog growing up, sorry, not going to happen. I used every excuse in the book. Then, I ran out of excuses.

  We’ve had Albie, a yellow Lab mix, for three years now, and he’s the love of my life, the apple of my eye, my best friend, and every other trite cliché you can think of. I’m sixty-one, and we’re going to grow old together. Chances are I will outlive him and I’m already dreading the day we part. Believe me, when I used to hear people talk this way about their dogs, I thought they were slightly daft or had difficulty forming relationships with other people. Now I get it. Completely. I was totally unprepared for the depth of my feelings for this beautiful, trusting, loving creature.

  I can trace my change of heart to the weekend we took care of Reilly, our friends’ black Lab, while they were away. Reilly nudged me in the right direction. I told Judy we could look around, but I wasn’t ready to commit. Around the same time, a guy in Judy’s yoga class brought his dog, Tige, to class. He told her he’d adopted her through Labs4rescue, a Connecticut-based organization that matches families, primarily in the Northeast, with Labs rescued mainly from high-kill shelters in the South.1 Tige, he said, was absolutely the best dog he’d ever had. Judy started looking at pictures and videos online of dogs available through Labs4rescue and filled out an application.

  When Judy first said the words “rescue dog,” I imagined a Saint Bernard with a small barrel of whiskey under its chin, roaming the Alps in search of avalanche survivors. I was completely ignorant. When she explained, my head—like many people’s—filled with preconceived notions about shelter, or rescue dogs. I assumed they were damaged goods, behaviorally unpredictable, susceptible to health problems, and maybe even slightly dangerous. Nothing, I have since learned, could be further from the truth. But at the time I was especially uncertain about adopting a rescue dog.2 Nor was I aware of the enormous number of beautiful, deserving dogs desperately in need of homes, especially in the South.

  A few weeks later, my older son, Danny (then twenty-one), and I took an outdoor grilling class taught by our friend Chef Chris Schlesinger. He brought along his new black Lab, Sal, who was mellow and unobtrusive. A little jolt of envy passed through me, and not just because Chris has talents at the grill I can only dream of. It was his bond with Sal. The dog adored him and vice versa. That, I thought, is a beautiful thing.

  By the time I came home that evening, my reticence had turned into determination. I said to Judy, “Let’s get a dog.”

  • • •

  We quickly learned that the rescue movement was much bigger than we imagined—once we started asking it seemed everyone we ran into with a dog had a “rescue”—and that the matching of dogs and families largely takes place online. The Internet has played a huge role in the growth of the canine rescue movement, especially in pairing and moving thousands of abused, abandoned, and neglected dogs from the South to forever homes in the North. (We’ll come to the question of why there are so many southern dogs later.) Sites such as Petfinder.com, used by many rescue groups including Labs4rescue, are the Match.coms of the canine world. On these websites, eager adoptive families can peruse pictures of countless dogs waiting for their forever homes, read what their temporary caregivers have to say about them, learn what is known about their previous lives—which is usually little—and, in some cases, watch a short video showing the dog interacting with people, fetching a ball, or just generally looking absolutely adorable.

  And this is exactly what we did once our Cold War over canines finally ended. When Judy came across Albie online, she thought she’d met the One. In the short video, his eyes were soulful, his tail was always wagging, and he seemed to be pleading for someone to love him. She hurried into my office with her laptop so I could see for myself. Somewhere between two and thre
e years old, he’d been found wandering, frightened and alone, by a country road in central Louisiana. Now, he was in a high-kill shelter in Alexandria, Louisiana.

  My heart also jumped as I watched Albie, confined in a small, fenced grassy area, chase a ball and trot back proudly to someone who was off camera, his tail wagging a mile a minute. He was so earnest, so eager to please, and so obviously sweet tempered. Thirty short seconds and I could already feel myself attaching to this lovable creature twelve hundred miles away. Even though I knew it was a huge leap of faith to commit to a dog you only know from watching a video (after all, the video isn’t going to show the dog at his worst, just his best), I was smitten.

  Judy and I immediately emailed Albie’s Labs4rescue adoption coordinator, Keri Bullock Toth of the Humane Society of Central Louisiana (who, as you’ll see in later chapters, is one of the true unsung heroes of the rescue movement), and asked a few questions to reassure ourselves that Albie was as he appeared in the video. “He has manners,” she replied and verified everything was as it seemed. Thus assured, we set the process in motion, which included a home visit by a local Labs4rescue volunteer in Massachusetts to ensure we were as responsible as we appeared as well. Reputable rescue groups go to great lengths to try and assure successful adoptions. Some of these dogs have been the victims of unspeakable neglect or abuse; many have just been the victims of plain old bad luck. When they place a dog, unless it’s a temporary foster to get them to a safe place, they are truly looking for a forever home. That’s why they also carefully screen the dogs for adoptability and prepare them for their new lives; they assess temperament, and they do everything they can to make sure the dogs are healthy, current on all immunizations and other preventatives, and, importantly, spayed or neutered.

  Once the preliminaries were out of the way, Albie was ours. Now the only question was when Keri could find a space on the transport that Labs4rescue relies on to bring many of their dogs north from Louisiana.

  The wait was excruciating. Albie, of course, had no idea he was going anywhere or that he had a forever family already in love and waiting for him. But we couldn’t wait a minute longer to open our home to Albie. We kept watching the thirty-second video over and over, our attachment growing each time, until we caught a break a few days later. There was room for one more dog on that week’s transport.

  Most people who do canine rescue work will move heaven and earth to save a single dog. Keri drove more than two hours from her home in the wee hours of the morning to Lafayette, Louisiana, to meet a man named Greg Mahle (“May-lee”), who runs an organization called Rescue Road Trips, and get Albie onto his truck. (At the time, Greg wasn’t picking up dogs in Alexandria, where Keri is based.) When Keri told me this, the whole operation reminded me of that image of the last helicopter out of Saigon before South Vietnam fell to the North. All I could do was admire and be grateful for her extraordinary effort to get our beloved Albie to us.

  I didn’t know Greg’s name then, nor had I heard of his transport service. In fact, I had no concept of what “transport” was or how it worked. And I definitely had no clue how much Greg Mahle would change my life. I only knew that Albie would arrive in three days and would have to spend forty-eight hours in quarantine at a facility a couple of towns over from ours before we could pick him up.3

  • • •

  Knowing Albie was safely on board, Judy started following Greg’s progress online. Greg documents every trip he makes on Facebook, posting pictures and short updates about where he is and how the dogs are faring. On the second day, she came running into my office again and practically dumped her open laptop onto my desk. “Look! It’s Albie!” she exclaimed.

  There, on Greg’s Rescue Road Trips Facebook page was a picture of Albie, a little red kerchief around his neck, sitting upright with his paws in Greg’s hands, his head turned directly toward the camera. Under the picture, Greg had written this:

  “The stress of everything got to be a little much. Had to breathe. Labs4rescue Albie suggested he and I take a walk and try to relax me a bit. As we were walking, he told me how excited for me he was. I told him how excited for him I was. We hugged and then sat and talked a while longer. Then he suggested we hop back in the truck and get this journey finished up, because we both have our ‘happily ever afters’ waiting for us at the end of this run. And neither of us wants to be late.

  “We just crossed the Mason–Dixon. We are in the North. I hope you are as excited as we are. It won’t be long now. Get Ready! The wait is almost over. We are almost home.”

  Judy and I both teared up. He was now not just legally ours but ours—to love and protect and provide for.

  • • •

  When the wait ended at last, Judy and Noah drove to the quarantine facility in nearby Medfield, Massachusetts, to bring Albie home. It seemed to them as though he had never ridden in a car before. He didn’t seem to know how to get in and stood nervously the entire ride home. When they pulled up in front of our house, he jumped out, but it was clear he had no idea he had reached his forever home and his forever people. He was excited but confused, running a few steps this way, then that, unsure of what would happen next. He didn’t seem afraid, just a bit like an unguided missile. We were simply strangers to him, and he wasn’t sure whether to come in the house with us or wander around the yard, sniffing his surroundings.

  For two weeks, we couldn’t coax Albie upstairs at nighttime. We surmised he’d never lived in a house with stairs, but really, we had no idea what his previous life had been. We could only speculate. He slept under the coffee table in the living room. When he finally screwed up enough courage to come upstairs (to this day he’s never descended the stairs to the basement), he slept under our bed for weeks. Something about being under furniture made him feel secure.

  Then he made what I call his leap of faith. My Berlin Wall had fallen, but I had one last red line: no dogs sleeping in bed with us. But one day, I came upstairs at bedtime, and there was Albie in our bed, curled up, his head resting on the pillow. He looked at me plaintively, clearly unsure if this was acceptable and perhaps expecting to be reprimanded. But as we eyed each other, I realized this was Albie’s sign he had arrived in full. It was time for me to make another leap of faith as well, and he’s been sleeping with us ever since.

  As the bonds tightened between us—as Albie became an indispensable and joyous part of our lives, as we learned to trust him off leash in the woods along the Charles River and in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts where we spend a lot of time—I started following Greg Mahle on Facebook. There were so many heartwarming stories, a welcome respite from the onslaught of dreadful news that bombards us every day. One post particularly struck me: “As the miles melt away, so do a lifetime of bad memories,” Greg wrote. “Lives of neglect, abuse, disease, kill shelters, starvation, and unspeakable cruelties. They are throwaways. They were unwanted, unloved, and about to die. But now they are getting a second chance. The promise of love, a family to call their own, and a warm bed to sleep in are ahead of us. Some of them have eyes filled with excitement, others have eyes filled with hope, and some are even filled with dreams. Gotcha Day [the day when dogs and families are united] and Forever Families are just over our horizon. It’s a new beginning. Their time to be unloved and unwanted nevermore.”

  After reading that, I felt I wanted to know more about Greg Mahle. These, I thought, are the musings of a man who has found a deep contentment that eludes most people in their lifetimes. He seemed born to the job he was doing. We should all do work so meaningful.

  But I also wanted to know more about Albie. He’d brought so much joy in the short time he’d been with us, and I wanted to know how he’d gone from being a random stray found by the side of a Louisiana roadway to a deeply loved member of our family. I knew there were some questions I might never be able to answer: Who had he lived with, and why did they let him go? Or, did he run away and leave some poor family to wonder about his fate? How long had he been alon
e? How had he survived?

  But I also thought there were questions I could answer that would help me understand not only Albie’s plight, but also that of countless other loving dogs without a place to call home. Where do all the dogs Greg drives north come from? Why are there so many southern dogs in need of homes, more than any other part of the country? Who walks the streets and the halls of the shelters and saves their lives? Who are the people who extend their hands, and their hearts, to help Albie and thousands of others like him make the journey from central Louisiana or Texas or Mississippi to homes more than twelve hundred miles away? And why do so many people care so much that they will strain their marriages, their personal relationships, and their finances to help save dogs?

  Those are the questions that drove me to find out more about Greg and the rescue movement—and, eventually, to write this book. I wanted not only to shed light on the plight of these dogs, but also to celebrate the unsung heroes of the rescue world and the families that give rescue dogs a second chance. And there was one man I knew who could help answer the questions I had: Greg Mahle.

  So over the course of a year, I would join Greg for all or part of several rescue road trips, logging roughly seven thousand miles with him, cleaning kennels, walking and comforting dogs, and sleeping, with mixed success, on the trailer floor at night. But even if I hadn’t wanted to do all this, Greg would have insisted because he knew it was the only way I could truly understand his life, his work, and what it takes to save a dog. Before he would trust me with his story, he needed to test my mettle and make sure I could do it justice.

  I also spent time in four communities where many of the dogs Greg transports come from, getting to know some of the rescuers, the fosters, the veterinarians, and the volunteers who make each of Greg’s rescue road trips possible. And, sadly, I walked through neighborhoods like Houston’s neglected and impoverished Fifth Ward, where thousands of emaciated, flea-infested, mangy strays loiter, suffer, and often die in rubbish-filled ditches, boarded-up homes, and under the wheels of speeding cars. I also went to the shelters where dogs like Albie wait, usually in vain, for someone to fall in love with and adopt them; shelters where as many as 80 to 90 percent—even if healthy and of fine temperament—will be put to death due to overcrowding and lack of resources.