A Woman Shielded Her Old Dog In An Alley. Then The Engines Came-xurixuri

The rain started before dinner and never really stopped.

By the time I left the little corner grocery with Buster tugging gently at the leash, it had turned into the kind of freezing rain that makes a city feel sharper than it already is.

I had been in Chicago for three months.

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Three months was long enough to know which bus stop had the broken light, which laundromat took quarters and which one pretended to, and which blocks I should avoid when the sky went dark early.

It was not long enough to feel like I belonged anywhere.

Buster was the only familiar thing I had brought with me.

He was twelve years old, a Golden Retriever with a graying muzzle, soft brown eyes, and a way of leaning against my leg whenever I tried too hard to pretend I was fine.

He had crossed state lines with me in the back seat of my old SUV, his head on a folded blanket, his favorite tennis ball tucked under his chin.

He had watched me cry in motel rooms.

He had sat on the floor while I signed my apartment lease with hands that shook from exhaustion and relief.

He had learned the sound of the radiator in my new place before I did.

That night, he was limping badly.

The vet had warned me that cold rain could make his arthritis flare, but warning and watching are two different things.

His front paw dragged slightly every few steps, and every time he stopped, he looked up at me with that patient old-dog expression that somehow made me feel both loved and guilty.

“Almost home,” I told him.

My voice disappeared under the hiss of tires on wet pavement.

The normal route would have taken us around the block, past the busier street and the diner with the blue neon sign.

The shortcut behind the old cannery was only a few minutes faster.

A few minutes felt important when your old dog was shivering.

That was how I talked myself into it.

The alley was narrow and ugly, boxed in by brick walls darkened with rain and years of exhaust.

A row of dumpsters leaned along one side.

Flattened cardboard sagged in the puddles.

Somewhere behind a metal door, a vent groaned, and the air smelled like stale oil, wet paper, and old smoke.

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