Chapter 4: Obedience Training
After a lengthy court fight, Lisa had finally won out. She was still working on a way to get her poodle costume off, but she was hopeful that she'd eventually find a solution. As a long, stressful day turned to evening, Lisa cut through the park on her way home. Her poodle wig bobbed as she walked down the deserted path. Lisa shivered, both from nerves and the cold. It was dark now, and her fur covered bra and panties didn't provide much warmth. Or much dignity. As she hurried through the empty park, her breasts bouncing with every step, Lisa was painfully aware of how her costume put her body on display...and how vulnerable it made her.
My mistress always kept me safe and warm.
Lisa pushed the thought from her mind. She
couldn't
start thinking like a pet again. Where was she? All of these paths looked the same in the dim light.
I need a leash so I don't get lost.
As she shook her head to clear her thoughts Lisa spotted something in the bushes. She bent down to see that someone had dropped a roll of cash. Lisa smiled, her fears forgotten. Finally her luck was beginning to change.
The only way for her to reach the money was to crawl between two thick bushes. Lisa inched forward on her hands and knees and carefully picked up the wad of bills with her paws.
SNAP!
Lisa jumped at the sound, only to find that she was in some kind of metal container that was too small for her to stand up in. She looked around wildly and saw that she was surrounded by crisscrossed steel bars that had been concealed by the bushes. She was in a humane animal trap! Picking up the money had pulled the trigger, causing the cage door to slam shut. Lisa turned around in the narrow metal cage and tried to free herself, but she couldn't work the latch with her paws. She was trapped - in a device so simple that only a dog would be dumb enough to be caught by it.
Lisa huddled in her cage, frightened and utterly ashamed of herself. How could she have been so
stupid
as to get herself locked in a dog cage on her first day of freedom?
Maybe you're not supposed to be free.
Lisa heard footsteps and looked up to see two figures walking down the path. She strained to see who it was, fully aware that she was at the mercy of whoever found her. As the figures came closer, Lisa sighed with a mixture of relief and resignation. It was Tom and Joan, the couple from the apartment building next to hers. They must have decided to cut through the park on their way home too. Lisa was glad that help was on the way, but she wished that it had been somebody else. Tom and Joan were snobs through and through, and Lisa didn't like the idea of them finding out that she had been dumb enough to get herself caught in a dog trap. The couple stopped in front of Lisa's cage and stared down at her disdainfully.
Lisa smiled nervously at them through the bars. From her position on her hands and knees her neighbors seemed to tower over her, making her feel small and unimportant. "Hi, Tom, Joan...I um, I seem to have gotten stuck, could you please let me out?"
Joan frowned. "Isn't that the stray from our neighborhood?"
Tom laughed. "Yes, it's about time they caught the little mutt. She's been such a nuisance running around loose. She never stops yapping either."
Why didn't Tom and Joan didn't recognize her? She
had
to get out of here. Lisa looked up at them with pleading eyes. "Guys, it's me, Lisa, can you please..."
"She looks so cute. It seems a shame to have her stuck in that tiny cage."
"It's for her own good. You know it isn't safe for a little thing like her to be wandering around on her own."
Lisa groaned in frustration. Her neighbors might be her only chance to get free, but it was as if they couldn't hear anything she said. "Tom, Joan, you know me, I'm not a dog, and I don't belong in a cage. Please let me out."
Joan cooed. "Oh,
look
at her, she's
adorable
. She acts just like a real person! Are you sure we can't keep her?"
Tom smiled down at Lisa. "She
is
cute. But we have a dog already, and you know the apartment building only lets us have one. They'll fix her up with an owner down at the shelter. Lisa might be a little slow, but I'm sure they can find someone who will be patient with her."
As Tom and Joan turned and walked away, Lisa shook the bars of her cage. "No! Wait! Please! You can't just leave me in here!"
But they didn't hear her.
No sooner had Tom and Joan left when Lisa was blinded by a flashlight stabbing out in the darkness. The door to her cage opened, and she felt something drop over her head. The hulking figure of a uniformed workman loomed over her, making Lisa recoil in fear. She tried to pull back farther into her cage, but the loop of the man's dog-catching pole was secured around her neck and she was no match for his strength. The workman laughed as she struggled against him while pawing at her neck in a vain attempt to free herself.