them so that we humans can piss more easily.â
Max laughed a little. âYouâre confusing the gallbladder with the urinary bladder. The gallbladder secretes gall.â
âOK,â Leah said. âWeâre killing them so that we can secrete gall.â
âNot exactly,â Max said. âWeâre killing them for knowledge.â
âAnd itâs worth it?â
âI think so. Eventually. In the long run. Yes.â Then he added, âThese dogs arenât pets, you know. Theyâre not even strays. Theyâre bred for the lab. No one has trained them. Theyâve never lived in a home.â
Leah nodded thoughtfully. âI guess I agree.â
And for some stupid reason, Max had to ruin their little discussion of science and ethics by repeating his cautionary note to her. âItâs not a good idea to befriend them, Leah.â
âNo duh,â she said. Then she asked an odd question that had been on her mind for some time and that seemed both wrong and necessary to ask. âHow much do they cost?â
âNot much,â Max said. âTheyâve been donated to us. The transportation, the food, and your services are our main costs.â
Leah was surprised to learn that she was part of these costs. âTen bucks? Twenty bucks?â she asked.
âMore or less,â Max said.
It was to teach Max a lesson that Leah befriended a dog the next day. It was a medium-sized, long-haired mutt, its white coat spattered with muddy brown spots. Heâd been delivered that morning with two other dogs, and Leah had noticed him immediately. He was the calm one, serene almost, amid his barking companions, who would probably spend the next hour jumping and howling at their cage until they discovered that it would not budge. He looked at her in the same moment she looked at him. And when she walked up to him, his companions becoming more frenzied even as he remained calm, she could not help saying, âSit, boy.â Amazingly, the dog sat. âLie down,â she said, and he obeyed. But what excited her most was when she said next, âRoll over,â and he did absolutely nothing. That decided it: He would be hers for the day.
As soon as he sauntered out of the cage and calmly plopped himself beside her desk, she sensed that sheâd made a mistake. She liked himâliked him a lotâbut she didnât want to like him. He edged closer until he was beneath her chair, resting his head on her feet. He licked the rubber toe of her shoe, then closed his eyes, snorted, and all at once fell asleep. Trying not to disturb him, Leah didnât move for nearly an hour. When she did, he followed her everywhere, as if terrified that she might leave him. He wanted to be close. He was at her side as she watered and fed the sheep, as she swept their cages and replaced the wood shavings; then he trailed her back to her desk. He was hungry for her fingers, licking them, nibbling on them whenever they came near. She tried to stop herself from touching him, but he looked at her with a wide, dopey gaze that pulled her in. She wanted to get him back into his cage, get him away from her, but she couldnât make herself do it.
When Max came by that morning to say hi, the dog was still at her feet. âWhatâs he doing out?â Max was angry, and this made Leah angry in turn.
âHeâs my friend,â she said. Max shook his head and seemed too upset to speak. âHis name is Ten Bucks.â She hadnât intended to name the dog, and as soon as sheâd said those words the dog leapt to its feet, seeming to recognize its name, and once again Leah felt that she was wrong. She was making a mistake. And yet she couldnât stop herself. âWatch,â she said. She made him sit and lie down. âYou said these dogs arenât trained. But he is. Somebody trained him.â
âYouâre playing with him, Leah. Heâs not to be
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