I Went Looking For A Quiet Kitten, But A Shelter Dog Read My Panic First-yumihong

The first night I brought him home, I stood in the middle of my apartment holding his leash like I had borrowed someone else’s life.

He sat beside my left shoe and looked around without pulling.

No barking.

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No racing from room to room.

Just those long brown-and-white ears, one paw resting slightly ahead of the other, and his nose moving as he studied the quiet I had spent months building around myself.

The receipt from the shelter was still in my jacket pocket. $75. Printed at 11:08 a.m. My name under his. His new tag clicked softly against his collar every time he turned his head.

I had bought a dog bed on the way home because I didn’t know what else a person did after accidentally choosing a dog.

It was blue. Too big for the corner by the couch. Still folded on the floor with the price sticker stuck to the side.

He sniffed it once, sneezed, and walked away.

I almost laughed.

The apartment smelled like cardboard, laundry soap, and the takeout coffee I had forgotten on the counter that morning. Outside, tires hissed over wet pavement. The refrigerator hummed at its usual volume, steady and flat, the sound that used to fill every evening.

He changed that first.

Not loudly.

With breathing.

With paws.

With the soft thump of his tail against the floor whenever I moved.

At 7:40 p.m., the time I usually sat down with dinner and the television low, he followed me to the kitchen. I opened a can of soup. He watched the cabinet. I opened the silverware drawer. He watched my hand. A spoon hit the counter with a sharp little ring, and he tilted his head like every ordinary sound mattered.

I whispered, “You really do notice everything.”

His tail swept once.

That night, he did not sleep in the bed I bought.

He slept outside my bedroom door.

At 2:13 a.m., I woke to one soft sound.

Not a bark.

A sigh.

I opened my eyes in the dark and saw him lying across the doorway, his body stretched like a warm brown-and-white line between me and the rest of the apartment.

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