Morning Walks

In the morning, I walked the dog. The sun was low and the air was cool. She trotted ahead, ears flopping, nose down in the grass. She was good at finding smells. She found the scent of another dog and followed it to the corner, where she stopped and looked back at me. I gave her slack in the leash. She was a good dog. A steady dog. She knew her work. We passed the house with the red door and the bougainvillea. The woman who lives there was watering her plants. She waved. I nodded. The dog sniffed the base of her mailbox and sneezed. There were other dogs that had been there. She could smell them all. A whole world in the dirt and on the concrete. I could not see it, but she could. She was made for it. I let her work. We walked until the sun was higher. The streets were quiet except for a crow on a telephone wire. The dog stopped to scratch her ear. I watched her and thought of nothing. That was the good part. There was no talk, no thinking, just the walk and the dog and the street and the smell of warm earth. We turned back. She was tired now, but not too tired. A good dog knows when to stop.

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