I didn’t know how cold I would be in my chair without your back to keep me warm. You were my little hot water bottle on long days of writing. I didn’t know how quiet this house would be until your toenails stopped touching the floor. I didn’t know how distressing two perfectly matched shoes were when found just where I left them. I didn’t know how someone so small would leave a hole so big.
I didn’t know windshield wipers really needed to be watched closely from the inside of my car and are worth a bark or two to keep them at a distance. I didn’t know that eating ice cream would be so lonely. I didn’t know that vizslas come best in sets of three, one always available to give another a rest from catching sticks or chasing rabbits, but not from eating ice cream. That’s a group event.
I didn’t know how glistening your eyes were, the way they sparkled in green and gold, until I closed them for you, lifted you from the pavement, and carried you home.
It’s funny, isn’t it, how hard I fought against us? First I tried to keep you from being conceived, visiting the woman who bred you, looking at your father tied to a stake, reeling and wild. I knew when I left, we would meet.
You were nine months old when your first owner returned you. We spent the summer together, running, playing, making you “ready.” I didn’t know the tears that flowed when I left you in your new home would be the ones I long for now.
You were two when you came back. And remember the other couple who kept you just one night before I found you again in my kennel, confused, shaking? I didn’t know how many people could turn you in, like you were nothing. I didn’t know, because to me, you were the farthest thing from that. There wasn’t a day that you didn’t look at me wondering when I would get it. You kept coming back because there was only one place you belonged.
I didn’t know not to let you out of my sight that morning. Of course, now, I do. It was warm. The scents of a rabbit or a coyote, whoever our visitor was, must have been fresh. It’s the only reason you would leave me.
I didn’t know how beautiful you were. It wasn’t just your face; it was your energy and boundless love, love you rained on me every hour of every day. If I left you, even briefly, I could tell you were in mourning.
I didn’t know how beautiful you were. It wasn’t just your face; it was your energy and boundless love, love you rained on me every hour of every day. If I left you, even briefly, I could tell you were in mourning.
I know the feeling.
I didn’t know I would know the feeling.
I didn’t know I would know the feeling.
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