According to all the literature, you weren't supposed to make any big changes in the first year of recovery. That might be all fine and good in the world she came from, Pamela thinks, but with the way the island is...well, it's bullshit. People come and go, there's snow, she's heard you can wake up as a dude. Those are some pretty major changes. So
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"Cujo?" she asks, as she stops in front of the dog, holding a hand out to let him sniff her. "Ye sure ye aren't tempting fate with that one?"
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Terry. That's right. From AA. Even though she'd been there mostly against her will, she'd paid attention.
"I didn't name him," she says lightly. "He was just there when I woke up and it's the name he came with. He doesn't feel like a St. Bernard, so I think it's probably cool."
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She crouches down a little, giving Cujo a good scratch behind his ears. "It seems like everyone I know's gettin' a dog these days."
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Although, not that she'll admit it, but that cane has been a good friend. But, she thinks, Cujo won't lead her to the bars as well as that stick can.
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The name sounded familiar, and Henry racked his brain for a few moments before he remembered where he'd heard it. It had been all over the news, back in high school - the rabid St. Bernard that had terrorized that mother and son, trapped them in their car over in Castle Rock. Henry thought he remembered something about the kid dying. The four of them had talked about that for days afterward, though never around Duddits. They hadn't wanted to upset him; he loved dogs.
He saw that it was a service dog, so he didn't try to pet it, instead addressing the woman. "Interesting name," he commented. At least it wasn't a St. Bernard. "Have you had him long?"
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"Maybe an hour," she says warmly. "He was waiting for me when I woke up. There was a card with my name on it. And his. I heard people just get shit sometimes, but I never thought I'd get a seeing eye dog."
With the question answered, she holds out her hand to him, only a little bit off from where he's actually at.
"I'm Pamela. I don't recognize your voice."
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"I was thinking about seeing if he could get me to the beach, but now I'm thinking a cup of coffee and some water for him might not be a bad idea. You weren't heading to the kitchen, were you?" she asks in a roundabout invitation.
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"That is one helluva dog you got there," he tells her as he catches up with her. He's seen German Shepherds before, and he's only heard good things about them where he's from.
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"He was in my new place when I woke up and he had a note card in his little harness thing. Cojo, this is Walt. Walt, I guess this is my new best buddy. Cujo, can you say hi?"
The German Shepherd sits at attention, an air of business surrounding him. But at her command his tongue lolls out and he lifts one paw and holds it there, offering it in his way to the man.
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Shit, he's wanted a dog for ages; had actually told himself he'd get one after coming back from Iraq. Turns out this probably won't happen anytime soon.
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What really struck him wasn't the kind of dog or even Glue Boy's wary fascination with it-- it was what the woman was saying to it. She kept repeating the word cujo, a word in the High Speech, and even that wouldn't have given him pause, really--- there were plenty of soundalikes that he'd come across ( ... )
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"Thanks, Bert," she says, stone sober now for over two weeks. She's still feeling that void and missing her gift like crazy, but there's something about being clear that's so good that it defies explanation.
"He turned up this morning with a note card," she continues. "He's mine, and I doubt anyone else here wants or needs a seeing eye dog. Right Cujo?" She puts down her free hand and the Shepherd rises his muzzle and gives her fingers a lick.
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He walked over and crouched down, offering his knuckles tentatively to the dog, the smile sticking persistently to his face as he heard her say the name again. Her name for it was funny, too: seeing-eye dog. Made sense, but gave Bert an unpleasantly comic mental image of a mutie pooch with 20/20/20/20/20 vision ( ... )
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Then she stops abruptly. High Speech. That sounds really fucking familiar, but she sure as hell can't remember why. Kinda the way he says 'sai'. Ultimately, she shrugs it off. It'll come to her or it won't, either way it doesn't matter right now.
"...It's from a book where I'm from. A book about a dog who gets sick from a bat bite and winds up killing a fuck-ton of people. If you ask me, it sounds just like one of the jokes this place lays on people. But he doesn't seem sick. He seems pretty damned smart."
She pauses, then smiles.
"What's it mean? Where you're from, what's Cujo mean?"
Because anything's got to be better than 'scary giant rabid motherfuckin' monster dog'.
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"That's a nifty name -- sounds like a professional fuckin' wrestler," Lloyd said wonderingly as he approached them, picturing Cujo, the Vicious Undertaker. The dog looked pretty harmless, all in all, despite being the drug-sniffing champion of the world. "What's it mean?"
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"Nah, I'm just messin' with you. I don't think it means anything. It's the name of a dog in a book. He gets rabies and kills a bunch of people and has this chick and her kid trapped in their car. It's a good book. Shitty movie."
Cujo just sits still as she talks. He looks ready to get back to work at a moment's notice, but for now he's sitting peacefully. There's a strange look of knowing in his eyes, the kind that only well trained, disciplined dogs have. Service dogs. Police dogs. Drug dogs.
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He got a funny feeling all of the sudden, like he was being watched. He looked down, puzzled, and after a few long seconds of looking at the dog, he started to get a little nervous. He wanted to say 'good boy' or something nice and neutral like that, but his mouth was drying up, and suddenly, Lloyd thought that he would have preferred the rabid zombie dog to this.
"He's looking at me kind of funny," he complained, finally breaking down. "Jesus, like he wants to bust me or somethin'."
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"Don't worry about it. I've got his lead. You're...you're Lloyd, right? The bartender at the titty bar? I'm Pamela."
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