The Shelter Dog Kept Dragging Him To One Porch For A Reason-ginny

From the very first walk, the old shelter dog I had adopted two weeks earlier pulled me the same direction every time.

Two miles across town.

Past the gas station.

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Over the train tracks.

Through an older neighborhood where the trees leaned over the road and small houses sat close to the sidewalk.

He always stopped at the same small white house.

He always sat at the foot of the porch steps.

And he always waited.

At first, I thought it was just one of those strange dog things people laugh about because they do not know what else to call it.

I was thirty-eight then, living alone outside Knoxville, Tennessee, in a house that had gotten too quiet.

Not quiet in a peaceful way.

Quiet in the way that made the refrigerator sound too loud at night.

Quiet in the way that made the mailbox feel like company.

I had spent a couple of years telling myself I was fine because nothing was technically wrong.

I paid my bills.

I went to work.

I kept the grass cut badly enough that nobody could call it neglected.

I bought groceries, came home, put them away, and ate standing at the counter more often than I wanted to admit.

The shelter was not supposed to change my life.

It was just a Saturday morning errand I had talked myself into after seeing one too many posts about older dogs needing homes.

When I walked into the kennel area, the puppies got all the attention.

They jumped.

They barked.

They pressed their paws through the wire like little salesmen.

Rocky did none of that.

He sat in the back of the last kennel with his white muzzle going gray, one ear lower than the other, and eyes so patient they made me feel ashamed of every excuse I had ever made for waiting too long.

The volunteer at the desk said he was a beagle mix, probably eight or nine.

She said his name was Rocky because that was what was written on the shelter paperwork.

She also said he had “been through a few homes.”

People say things like that gently when the truth is ugly.

It means somebody loved him and lost him, or somebody never loved him enough to keep him.

Maybe both.

I signed the adoption form at 11:26 a.m.

I clipped the shelter collar around his neck.

I took the packet with the intake number, vaccination record, and county rabies tag, and I brought him home.

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