A GREYHOUND'S
STORY
It wasn't all that long
ago
I ran the dusty track
for show,
Devoted and driven my
face pierced the wind
As race after race I
fought to contend.
Slow at the turn and
lacking in grace
I did what I could but
I never placed.
I loved to run hard and
hear the crowd roar
Yet those cheers turned
to boos when I didn't score.
Folks lost their money
when they bet on me
They tagged me a loser,
said "Retire number three!".
I had no idea what I
was likely to find
As I walked from the
track for the very last time.
My person was waiting,
eyes teared and face so long
I sensed inside the sadness
that this time I'd not go home.
I tried to change my
person's mind and wagged my mighty tail
But I knew deep down,
without a doubt, like racing I had failed.
We drove along the country
roads till we came upon a town
Where erected off the
main drag was a place known as the pound.
A pretty woman came outside
and took me from my crate
My person signed the
papers and with one look at my face
said "I'm sorry that
I have to go and leave you here to sleep".
I felt my heart break
into bits and walked with head bent low
I knew that it was over
and I had no place to go.
Inside the dingy building
I was checked and tagged and weighed,
A voice said, "We will
put him down tomorrow, if not today".
I heard the pretty woman
state, "Don't look him in the eyes,
He has that Greyhound
gaze that says 'I do not want to die'."
They put me in a kennel
with the others on death row,
I lay down on the concrete
and moaned so soft and low.
Morning filtered through
the glass, I stretched my weary bones
The pretty woman came
to me and said "It's time to go".
The hall was long and
stark and cold, I did not cry or weep
I used my eyes and face
and soul to halt eternal sleep.
She tried her best to
use defense and look away from me,
She seemed to know how
wrong it was to do this deadly deed.
She bent down close and
held my face against her silken cheek,
The needle entered my
front leg and quickly I felt weak.
I heard the pretty woman
sob as she lay me on the floor,
I saw a last glimpse
of her face and then I saw no more.
I may not have been the
fastest dog to ever run the track,
But I just wish someone
had loved me so I could have loved them back.
~ Author Unknown ~