A Dog Gave His Dying Best Friend One Gift Every Morning-ginny

Every single morning for the last two months of Bella’s life, Buddy carried the same ruined blue rabbit across the house.

He did not carry it the way he carried it when we came home from work.

He did not prance with it.

He did not shake it, toss it, squeak it, or try to make anybody laugh.

He carried it carefully.

Like it mattered.

Like he knew where it belonged.

I still remember the first morning I noticed it because the house was cold and quiet in that hour before a family wakes up all the way.

The coffee maker was sputtering on the counter.

The furnace had just kicked on with that tired metallic click old houses seem to make in winter and early spring.

A thin blue light sat over the living room floor.

I was standing in the kitchen, barefoot, trying to read the dosage instructions on Bella’s medication bottle before my eyes had fully adjusted to the morning.

Then I heard Buddy’s nails on the hardwood.

Not the usual gallop.

Not the reckless, full-body scramble of a two-year-old dog who had never learned that furniture existed.

This was slow.

Careful.

One step, then another.

I looked up and saw him cross the living room with his blue rabbit in his mouth.

It was the most ridiculous toy in the world.

It had once been a stuffed rabbit, technically.

By then it had no ears, barely any stuffing, and one plastic eye that looked permanently surprised.

Buddy had loved it since he was a puppy.

He slept with it.

He carried it when someone knocked at the door.

He brought it to visitors like a badge of honor.

If we had ever had to evacuate the house, Buddy would have saved that rabbit before he saved himself.

He walked past me without looking up.

He went straight to Bella’s crate.

Bella was lying on the blankets inside, her head low, her brindle face thinner than it had been even two weeks before.

Buddy stepped close to the open door and lowered his head.

Then he placed the rabbit next to her front paw.

Softly.

So softly I almost missed the movement.

Then he backed away and lay down a few feet from the crate.

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