You're like a little wild thing
that was never sent to school.
[mary oliver]
You turned sixteen today. The only person in my life who does not know this is you.
When we walk to the park, people pause to pet you, and I blurt out She's sixteen! I bring it up out of nowhere with coworkers, with people standing next to me in the line at the coffee shop, with family at brunch.
I texted it to the friend group chat, I wrote it in my journal, I whispered it to my eleven-month-old daughter when she tried to pull your ears. I say it mostly just to hear it said out loud. It shocks me every time.
I remember the day we met. I needed some volunteer hours for my job at the time, so I went to the Coconino Humane Association with my now-husband but then-friend. When we walked through the doors, it smelled like ammonia, dog food, distress. I made him swear not to let me leave with an animal of any kind.
Then, I saw you. First cage to the right.
How is it possible that the thread tying our futures together was that thin? I could have just as easily not gone. The thought makes me shiver.
The file pinned to the front of your kennel just said you were a rez dog, that your name was Claire. But when I bent to reach into your cage and you laid your head in my hand, your name came to me clear as day. When Mom was young, she had Eleanor. And now I had you. Your real name was Norah, and your real life was going to be with me.
On the car ride home, you were so afraid you peed in the passenger seat. When we got to the apartment, everything was so quiet. During the hubbub earlier in the day this hadn't seemed to matter, but all the sudden it was obvious that you didn't know me, and I didn't know you, and yet, now we lived together.
I knew that things had happened that only you would ever know about. That one of your ribs felt like it had been broken, then healed, jutting out at a strange angle. That you were terrified of men, of trash cans, of people laughing or running. You wouldn't eat from your bowl unless I was in front of you with my back turned, so you could watch my every move without me watching you.
That night, I fluffed up your bed while you circled three times and slowly lowered yourself to the ground across the room, warily watching me until I turned out the light. I could see the streetlamps reflected in your eyes. When the train keened its long lonely whistle, I heard you get up and stand still, listening.
In my room, I sat cross-legged in my bed with my head in my hands. What had I done? I knew nothing about what my life would look like in a month, let alone in a year, five years, ten. All I now knew was that whatever happened, you would be there too. I will still have this dog when I am in my mid-thirties! I remember thinking wildly. I couldn't fathom such a thing.
And somehow, here we are. You and me.
Now, we're like an old married couple. I know how you like your breakfast, which paths through the park are your favorite, that you prefer chin scratches to back strokes. Do you think she loves me? I asked my husband once. He thought for a moment, then said, I think she'd be lost without you.
You are the one who taught me how to nurture someone who depends on me. The futility of trying to control one that you love. How to live in the moment and let time pass without forever looking over my shoulder, watching it unspool.
But most of all, you are the truest friend I've known. Part wild thing, part home. We know how each other smells in the morning. We don't flinch when we touch accidentally. You have witnessed such private despair, so many small joys. You have definitely seen me naked more than anyone else.
And the best times in your life- I remember them, store them up against the long years when you won't be here. The time we lived in Boulder with a woman who had a stable, how you loved to fling horse manure straight up in the air and snap at the clods as they broke apart and rained on your head. Hikes where you blew past me, ran like the wind, mouth wide open in a dog laugh. The white flag of your tail bobbing before me just at the edge of my headlamp as we scouted for a campsite in the dark. The time you found that dead bird on the Oregon coast and I thought your small sturdy heart would explode from the sheer joy of it.
What a singular intimacy. My mother, my husband, my sister, even these people have been close or far at different times since I was twenty-one, but not you. We have been together, no matter what. Arizona, Texas, Colorado, Oregon. Young, then young-ish, then older. Then older still.
The best things in my life have all come to me by chance, I heard a woman say once, and what I thought about was you. Little mystery, little stranger, who knows me better than anyone.
Happy birthday, old friend. I'd be lost without you.