Mentioning when I burned my house makes me remember the different reactions of different beings (the dogs) to the same event.
It was just past mid-night when I was awoken by a neighbour beating on the door. The back section of my house was ablaze. It was more than I could take in; the flames, the alarm of needing to do something, the horror that my house had been burning while I slept.
The neighbour rang the fire-brigade, who rushed to the scene to quench the flames. There was mayhem, people were trying to help, it was the who firemen took control and stomped through the house, while I stood, clutching my dressing gown around me, open mouthed with disbelief.
I watched, horrified, as Wally bravely ran out towards the flames, and burned his paws, singed his eyebrow and whiskers. He was so courageous and protective, considering the scaredy-dog he was at heart. I scooped him up to console myself and he shivered in my arms, exuding the acrid smell of burning hair. I clung to Wally and watched the firemen douse the flames and investigate the damage and cause.
In the melee I didn’t notice Shortbread was missing. She had run, in the opposite direction to Wally, out of the front door and into my neighbour’s home. There she jumped up onto the couch and went to sleep. The neighbours told me that story later on, after the firemen left and everything quietened down.
Two dogs and two different instinctive reactions to the drama. Both good, each was simply being themselves. Each of us reacts to an emergency as best we can.




