When I say, “You wanna go?” He don’t ask, “Where you goin’? Goin’ to the game store?” No, he don’t care; he just wants to go.

And did you ever notice it don’t matter whether you’ve been gone five minutes or five days, your dog is so glad to see you. Can you think of a single human being that glad to see you? You’re fixin’ to leave, walk out to the pickup and forget somethin’, so you run back inside. Your dog licks your hand. Your spouse says, “I thought you left.”

I’ve got a neighbor. A good neighbor. And when you live on the outskirts, a good neighbor is someone who lives just the right distance away. Close enough to circle the wagons but far enough away to allow that privacy people like us seem to value. (“I believe those are Kansas plates, mother,” he said, sighting through his binoculars.)

Anyway, she gets home about a quarter after five every day. Goes through the house and comes out the back door wearin’ her coveralls. In her backyard, she has a long line of rabbit hutches and she spends what is to me an inordinate amount of time messin’ with them rabbits ... talkin’ to ’em ... singin’ ’em little rabbit songs.

Now I’m sittin’ out on the back porch one afternoon in my porch swing. It’s about 2:30. I’m done workin’. I’ve already thought up somethin’. I look out in the driveway, and there’s my good dog and he has got a ... and you know how you can tell it ain’t a jackrabbit?

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They aren’t black and white, they don’t have them big floppy ears, and he has got this rabbit between his teeth and he’s thrashin’ him like a shark with a hamhock. There’s dirt and leaves and brush and gravel flyin’ all over. I jumped up and grabbed that rabbit. “Go git in the pickup, you *#@^...!” That rabbit looked bad. Looked like he caught on fire and somebody put him out with the weed eater.

I ran in the house and run the tub full of warm water. Tested it with my elbow. Then I got some of my wife’s good shampoo. She gets it at the Holiday Inn; it ain’t that big a deal. I sudsed him up twice, then moussed him with my daughter’s mousse. Made him sticky.

You could thwack him on the tile, peel him off like Velcro. Then I run upstairs to the laundry and put him in the dryer. When he came out he was fluffy – looked like an electrocuted porcupine.

I carried him to my neighbor’s house. Sure enough, the last hutch on the end was cocked open, and it was empty. I took that rabbit and folded him ... into a rabbit position. Put a smile on his lips. All three of ’em. Gave him a Camel filter and leaned him up against the wire.

I went back to the house and commenced to rockin’. About a quarter after five, I saw my neighbor drive up. She got out, went through the house and came out the back wearin’ her coveralls. She started down that long line of rabbit hutches. Talkin’ to ’em. Singin’ ’em little rabbit songs. “Here comes Peter Cottontail, hoppin’ down the bunny trail ...” All of a sudden, I heard her scream.

I ran over there, bein’ the good neighbor I was, “What’s wrong? What’s wrong?”

“My rabbit,” she cried.

I looked in the cage, and the poor little duffer had fell over. One ear broke off. It didn’t look good.

I stroked him gently and said, “Ma’am, I believe he is dead.” I was a veterinarian; I could tell.

“Yes,” she said, “But what bothers me is I buried him three days ago.”  end mark