I did a manic, happy Snoopy dance and Toby watched me from under the dining room table. 'We did it, Toby!' I squealed. Now I hoped a publisher would buy the book! My first publisher of choice was Candlewick. I'd talked to a couple of editors there in the previous year about another manuscript. So Ginger sent the book to them. And I waited.
Summer had come to Maine. Unfortunately our lovely dog, Lita, had passed away in the spring. Toby missed her a lot. His behaviour had regressed a little, but we put no pressure on him. We also had a dilemma. In fall we were due to go on holiday. Our previous dog sitter was no longer available. We looked for a kennel. Oh, if I could have that moment back again, I would! I found what I thought was a good kennel, about 25 minutes drive from us. I went over to meet the owner, who wasn't there. But the kennels looked clean and well kept, not too big. Mike talked to the owner on the phone. We booked Toby in for a daycare visit. Just to see how he would react. The owner said she would be there to meet us.
That morning Toby knew something was up. He let us put his harness on, but he wasn't happy. In the car he sat wrapped in his blanket, shaking. Cars are not his favorite thing. He was not walking on leash, but would let us carry him around. When we arrived at the kennel, the owner wasn't there again. Right then I should have turned around and left. The young girl who took Toby from us put him in his cage. 'I don't want him to go outside,'I said, trying to explain to the girl about Toby's issues, (which I really needed the kennel owner to understand). Too late, she put Toby through the kennel door into the outside enclosure and shut it behind him. 'I'll let him in shortly, we are just cleaning,' she said. I nodded reluctantly. I should have gone and got him and driven home. I should of. Toby didn't even go out in the garden at that time! We went outside. Toby was in the kennel, he seemed ok, looking out at the world, other dogs either side. 'He'll be ok for a few hours', I thought. Wrong!
We got in the car and drove away. All I could see was Toby's sad face gazing at us as we went down the drive. We drove towards home. The mobile rang. Just ten minutes after we'd left. I saw Mike's face drain of colour. Every cliche came into play. All he said when he rang off was 'He's out!' All hell let loose. I've never been one for hysterics, but I found out what they meant right then. Mike broke the speed limit getting back to the kennels. The young girl was frantic. Apparently she'd gone into the outside enclosure to put Toby's blanket and toys in the kennel and he jumped through the open gate. There was an outside fence. Toby would have been fine, if at one side of the boundary fence there hadn't been a gap of about 8" between the fence and building. A very easy space to fit through, if you're a small poodle. I ran into the tree line calling frantically, knowing it was hopeless already. I always knew if Toby got out he'd run. He'd no recall. He'd never been out in the world. Here he was in the middle of miles and miles of farmland and woods. He would avoid people and cars and everything that might help him. Suddenly I knew how people who lose a child feel.
The days were a blur. Toby had been there and then suddenly - Toby was gone. My heart felt like it'd been taken out and nailed to a post. We searched. All day and into the evening, we searched. We called, we shouted, we squeaked the squeaky toys.
I posted the bad news on Facebook. Within hours it seemed to go viral. People from all over Maine spread the news, in days it seemed the world was rooting for Toby, from San Diego Zoo, to the UK to Australia. Kindness and hope poured in from all sides. In the locality of the kennels a search sprang up. Everyday we met people searching on foot, with their own dogs, on bikes, in cars, in kayaks. A kernel of helpers got together organizing posters, house calls, newspaper articles, radio, social media ... anything they could do to help. My belief in humanity was strengthened.