Read The Trouble with Chickens Online
Authors: Doreen Cronin
C
hicken Mom crashed through the doggie door looking for a fight. For once, I was actually grateful for the funnel. It saved my ears from some nasty pecks.
“Relax, Mom,” I said. “They're all here. We've been expecting you.” I nodded toward the couch. I couldn't tell the chicks apart unless they opened their mouths, which they did now, peeping like crazy. I told them to keep their mouths shut.
“I'm not leaving here without them,” she said.
“I don't want you or your chicks,” I said. “I want your big, dumb friend, outside.”
“J.J.?” asked Chicken Mom. “What for?”
I got as close to her face as I could.
“What do you care?”
She didn't flinch.
She was one tough bird.
She just wanted her chicks back and wanted out. I had to get her to trust me.
Before I could say another word, I heard Hero Dog coming up the back steps.
“If I were you, Chicken Mom,” I warned, “I'd get out of the way.”
V
ince was going to be on Moosh's tail the moment she got inside.
And she was too big to fit under the couch.
This wasn't a search anymore.
It was a rescue.
Rescue is where I belong.
Sometimes there's a plan, sometimes there's only adrenaline.
Sometimes adrenaline is all you need.
It was just a short sprint over the damp yard to get to the back door.
The grass was slippery and cool under my feet.
I was off so fast, I couldn't have changed my mind if I'd wanted to.
Dirt held on to my collar as I barreled across the yard, up the steps, and straight through the doggie door.
A bad feeling went through me like a shiver.
The walls were a dingy blur as we slid down the long corridor.
I cleared the couch, but the room was too short.
I dug my nails into the small, flowery carpet.
The rug carried me like a sled.
Dirt was as good as scrambled egg if she slammed into that wall.
I flipped my head back and threw her off.
At that moment, I realized what the bad shiver was all about.
Vince should have been barking the moment Moosh set foot through the door.
But I hadn't heard a bark out of Vince for hours.
It was the last thing I remembered before everything went black.
H
ero Dog knocked himself out. I hadn't planned on it, but it was a nice touch.
As for the chickens, everything went almost exactly as rehearsed. The smallest one seemed to have second thoughts, but a nudge of plastic cone moved her along.
Hero Dog was exactly where I wanted him, and the chicks didn't have a clue.
Chicken Mom was my only problem.
She was pretty uptight about the whole thing.
I had to buy some time.
“Hey, you.” I pointed to one of the chicks. “Run outside and get your Mom a nice chicken-feed snack.”
Chicken Mom eyed me suspiciously while the smallest one ran out the doggie door.
“See? Nothing to worry about, Mom. You can leave anytime you like,” I lied.
The rain had started up again, with thunder and lightning to boot.
The smallest chick was back with the feed in a flash.
“Have a snack and stay dry,” I said.
I put on the TV to sweeten the deal.
Chicken Mom and her brood were warm, dry, and staying put.
Five chickens in here is five too many. I was looking forward to the peace and quiet that nightfall would bring.
I'm going to get rid of all of them and I don't even have to leave the house.
Unlike our Hero Dog, I didn't need years of trainingâI was born brilliant.
I
woke up behind bars.
Either something had gone terribly wrong, or I was back in Detroit.
I jumped to my feet and tried to get my bearings.
It was dark outside.
A clock ticked.
A faucet leaked.
Plop.
Tick.
Plop.
Tock.
Plop.
Tick.
I was locked inside a dog crate in the kitchen.
Vince was outside the crate.
Inside dog
.
Outside dog
.
Interesting twist.
He had a chick on either side, like a set of dusty bookends.
The rest of the flock was behind him.
“It's about time,” said one of the bookends.
“Poppy and Sweetie, I presume,” I snarled.
My mind was spinning, but my eyes were steady.
I set them on Moosh.
She met my eyes.
I knew there wasn't a single chicken in that room I could trust.
“It was a trick. He used us to lure you . . .” she stammered.
“I'm done with you, Millicent,” I interrupted.
She winced when I called her by her real name.
I took my eyes off Moosh and planted them on Vince.
“It doesn't seem like anybody here needs rescuing,” I said.
Poppy and Sweetie giggled nervously.
“They got themselves in here; they can get themselves out,” answered Vince.
“That's more than I can say for you,” added Poppy.
I bared my teeth.
Poppy backed away from the bars.
But he was right.
The door of the cage was locked with a sliding bolt.
I had no idea how I was going to get out.
Moosh gathered up her chicks and left the room without a word.
Vince sauntered over to his water bowl by the refrigerator.
Now that his giant funnel was out of the way, I could see the note hanging on the fridge:
Dog Walker,
Please take Vince to his vet appointment at 2
P.M.
Monday. He will be getting ear tubes and staying at the animal hospital. Thank you.
Barb
I was on my way to the vet for ear tubes!
I had to get out of that cage.
I've pulled people out of all kinds of placesâcars, caves, crevices, and sewer pipes.
But not once have I come across a lock.
I needed a plan. But my head still hurt.
Plop.
Tick.
Plop.
Tock.
Plop.
Tick.
I needed a nap.
Chapter 18
Encyclopedia Chickannia
“Y
ou okay?” came a tiny voice.
I saw a pretty pair of wings.
Unless my fairy godmother was a chicken, it was nobody I wanted to talk to.
“You okay?” she repeated.
It was Sugar.
I didn't answer her.
I turned my back and closed my eyes.
When I opened them, the sun was setting.
Sugar was still there.
“Shouldn't you be long gone by now?” I asked.
“Vince said it's safer if we wait until dark,” she said.
“Safer for whom?” I asked.
She didn't answer.
I had no idea why I was even talking to her.
But when you're in a cage, you can't be picky about your company.
“How did I get in here?” I asked.
“You jumped over the couch, landed against the wall, and knocked yourself out cold,” she answered.
“But how did I get in the cage?” I asked.
“Vince made us line up the recycle bottles and we rolled you in,” she said.
Vince wasn't as dumb as he looked.
We didn't speak for a minute.
Then I continued my line of questioning.
“Who grabbed you off the birdbath?” I asked.
“I got myself off the birdbath.”
“How?” I asked. “Chickens can't fly.”
“Sure we can. Not very well, but enough to get off a birdbath.”
“I don't believe you.”
“You should read more,” she said.
I turned my back on her again.
“Maybe if you read a book, you would know that we actually can fly short distances. Sometimes we fly to rendezvous with other chickens, usually to flee danger.”
My ears perked up.
“You don't say. . . .”
She came right up to the cage.
“Sometimes it behooves breeders to have our wings clipped.”
“You don't say. . . .”
For all I cared, she had just recited the small print off the bottom of a mattress tag.
All I had heard from her rant was “Blah, blah, blah,
rendezvous
, blah, blah, blah,
behoove
.”