The Shelter Said Take The Dachshund, But The Great Dane Cried Out-chloe

At the shelter, they told me I could take the little one home that same day and leave the giant behind.

That was the practical answer.

That was the easy answer.

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It was also the answer that changed the moment the Dachshund started trembling.

I had driven forty minutes that morning with both hands tight on the steering wheel, the heater blowing dry air over my knuckles, and an old paper coffee cup knocking around in the cup holder every time my SUV hit a pothole.

The road was bright and cold.

The kind of cold that made the windshield squeak when the wipers dragged across it.

The kind of morning where every little sound inside the car seemed louder because there was no one sitting in the passenger seat anymore.

My youngest son had left for college three weeks earlier.

His room still smelled faintly like laundry detergent and old sneakers.

His baseball cap was still hanging on the corner of his desk chair because he said he would grab it at Thanksgiving.

The house had not become sad overnight.

It had become quiet.

That was worse in its own way.

So I told myself I needed one dog.

One small dog.

One quiet dog.

Something simple and manageable.

Something that would curl up near the couch while I folded laundry, follow me into the kitchen while I made coffee, and make the hallway sound less empty after dark.

I did not want a project.

I did not want heartbreak.

I did not want to bring home anything I could not afford to love properly.

By the time I pulled into the county animal shelter parking lot, sunlight was already bouncing off the chain-link fence.

A volunteer in a faded hoodie was carrying a stack of clean towels through the side entrance, holding them against her chest with her chin.

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