З життя
Walking Home from the Market with Mum, I Was the First to Notice Something Was Wrong
When Mother and I were walking home from the market, I spotted him first.
He wasnt crouched beneath the bench as stray dogs usually do when theyre tired or lost. Instead, he sat right on the bus stop seatcalm, poised, watching. The frosty air made him squint as he stared down the road, occasionally lifting his head to scan the passersby, as if searching for someone. He didnt dart about or beg for scrapsjust sat and waited. It was strange almost human.
*”Mum, look!”* I tugged her sleeve. *”A puppy!”*
He was small, scrawny, with ears too big for his head and limbs still uncoordinated, like a gangly boy not yet grown into himself. But it was his eyes that held metired yet bright, with a quiet depth no words could capture.
Mother gave him a glance and sighed.
*”Dont touch him. Hes probably flea-ridden, unvaccinated. We cant take him on the bus. Leave himhell wander off on his own.”*
But the bus came and went, then anotherand still, he stayed. He shifted from paw to paw, glancing around, yet never leaving his spot. As if waiting. As if choosing. And when his gaze settled on meI swear I heard: *”You came for me, didnt you?”*
*”Mum, please”* I wasnt old enough to plead properly. I just stared, my throat tight. *”Hell freeze out here.”*
She bit her lip, glanced up at the grey sky, then back at him. Finally, she exhaled.
*”If no one takes him by evening, we will. But hes your responsibility. If your father fusses, youll explain.”*
I nodded like a life depended on it. Rushing back, I wrapped my scarf around him like a blanket. He didnt resistjust sighed, soft as a child, and tucked his nose into my coat.
At home, he ate silently, desperately, like each bite might be his last. Then he curled on an old jumper and sleptas if, for the first time, he could simply rest.
*”What shall we call our hero?”* Mum asked, clearing the bowl.
I thought a moment.
*”Todays the twelfth of April.”*
*”And?”*
*”Winston,”* I said.
She raised a brow. *”After the war leader?”*
*”After the first. Because hes mine.”*
She smiled, but the name stuck. Winston he remained.
At first, it wasnt easy. The cat hissed from the doorway before vanishing under the wardrobe. Gran declared the house now *”smelled of dog.”* Father, away on business, rang to grumble about allergies and madness. I listened, noddedand held firm.
Winston behaved nearly perfectly. He seldom barked, never begged, didnt chew shoes. He just stayed near me. Constantly. Peacefully. As if knowing we were there was enough.
He grew. His ears got even larger, his legs stretched long and awkward, endearingly so. When I came home from school, hed wait by the doornot jumping, just looking up as if to ask: *”How was your day?”*
He knew my moods. If I was ill, he lay beside me, unmoving. If I cried, he brought his ball*”Dont grieve, play.”* If I argued with someone, hed press his head into my lap. Just there.
Winter then was real winter. Heavy drifts, biting frosts, the river behind the school frozen solidchildren and adults skated daily. Winston and I went often. Id toss snowballs; hed chase, skidding on the ice. It was glorious.
That day, I went alone. My friend was feverish, Mum late from work. Snow fell thickly, muffling the world. Only my footsteps crunched.
Winston trotted ahead, weaving through bushes. I edged toward the river. The ice looked smooth, beautiful, slightly crackedbut strong.
One step. Another. Then*crack.*
No time to scream.
Everything gave way. Water swallowed me. Cold stabbed my chest. Panic. My hands slipped; nothing to grip. Ice shattered. My mind screamed.
Thena tug.
My coat was being pulled.
I turned my head. Winston.
Hed clenched my sleeve in his teeth, yanking with all his might. He slid, faltered, but held on. Dragged, jerked. Barked, whinedbut didnt let go.
How we got out, I dont recall. Only the ice below, my bloody elbows, my shaking bodyand him beside me. Soaked, shivering, wrapping himself around me.
He lay atop me, as if fearing Id vanish.
Then came the ambulance, Mother, doctors. I went to hospital; he to the vet. Mild frostbite for me. For himinfection, wounds, exhaustion.
We were saved.
A week later, I returned. Winston met me at the door. Quietly, he pressed his nose to my stomachthen lay beside me. Wordless. Everything understood.
Since thenhes not just a dog. Hes my cosmos. My Winston.
A year passed. We moved. A new house, a new door with a sign: *”Bewarehero within.”*
He wont let me near the river now. Not in winter, not in summer. If I try, he blocks me. Stares. Not angryjust firm.
Sometimes he sits on the balcony, gazing at the sky. For hours. As if searching.
*”Counting stars, Winston?”* I tease.
He doesnt answer. Just rests his head against mine.
And its warm.
Very.
Forever.
If you have a story of your own Winston, share it below. And dont miss the next talestay with us. More heart stirrers await.
