He knows when I am sad
before I do.
I don’t know how.
Maybe it’s the way I come through the door,
or something in the air around me
that I can’t smell but he can.

He just comes and puts his head
on whatever part of me is closest
and stays there,
heavy and warm,
until feeling changes.
Nobody else does that.
We lie here most afternoons,
his paw across my arm like he forgot it,
like it landed there by accident
and neither of us moved.
I whisper things to him
I wouldn’t say out loud —
not secrets exactly,
just the true version of things.
He doesn’t tell anyone.
He doesn’t look at me differently after.
He just blinks his slow blink
and breathes.
I think he knows about the dream I have sometimes.
The one I don’t tell Mum.
Where he is very still
and I am calling him
and he doesn’t come.
I always wake up
and put my hand on his side
just to feel it rise and fall.
He is always there.
So far, he is always there.
The vet said he is healthy.
I heard them say it.
But I also heard the word years
used in a way that made me
count quietly on my fingers
and then stop counting.
I don’t think about it for long.
You can’t, not really,
when he is right here
smelling of outside and himself,
when he is chewing the corner of something
he absolutely should not have,
when he runs at the field
like running is the whole point of having a body.
He taught me that, I think.
To be where I am.
I am still learning most things.
What is fair. What is kind.
When to speak and when to just be there.
He already knows all of it.
He has always known.
I watch him sleep sometimes,
his legs moving slightly,
chasing something in a dream,
and I think:
he has his own life inside him
that I will never see.
That used to make me sad.
Now I think it’s just true,
and true things don’t have to be sad,
they just have to be respected.
Mum says I’m growing up.
I think this is part of it —
learning that the ones you love
have whole worlds
you cannot follow them into,
and loving them anyway,
completely,
without needing to go everywhere they go.
He is waking up now.
He stretches so hard his whole body shakes.
He looks at me.
Let’s go, his eyes say.
I don’t know where.
It doesn’t matter.
I get up.
I always get up.





