What’s Love Got To Do With It

The subject of love comes up a lot, but not necessarily where you think it might. For instance, when people discuss cultural shifts and political issues, they surprisingly include ‘love’ in their comments. In the words of one of my favorite book/movie characters, “You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means”.

People say that if you criticize someone you are not loving, and since the Bible tells us to love, we shouldn’t criticize. Some even say that if you point out something wrong you are the opposite of loving; in contemporary vernacular, a ‘hater’.

The Bible, indeed, tells us to love. It also encourages wisdom, discernment, and warns of judgment. The Jesus who loved and laughed also used a whip and turned over the money changer’s tables in the synagogue. He used the rather offensive comparison “whitewashed tomb” and “son of hell”. He predicted that Sodom (fire and brimstone, anyone?) would have it easier than some towns on judgment day. Those are just samples. There are others. Look them up. We wouldn’t call Him unloving, would we?

We’re supposed to speak the truth in love. That’s not the same as making everybody comfortable (though I and I’ll bet you, too, prefer it). The love part is important. So is the truth part. In fact, if you try to show love by ignoring or believing a lie, I would venture to say oh so gently, it’s not loving. People need truth to be set free. Covering up truth with feel good comments will kill them.

The struggle, of course, is the how and when. Telling the truth doesn’t confuse truth with your favorite opinions. Telling the truth doesn’t mean being obnoxious, but it also doesn’t mean blending into the crowd and thinking something real hard, hoping dreamstime royalty free stock image - cup of coffee and beans 22977266someone will telepathically hear you. It is loving and approachable, but clear about certain boundaries, unwilling to roll over on our backs to the Father of Lies, regardless of the form he takes.

New Testament scripture encourages us to overcome evil with good. That phrase is one of my personal mantras. But overcoming evil with good doesn’t preclude shining light on the truth. We can all agree that opinions abound, even about what the Bible says. Hearsay doesn’t cut it in the courts, and it shouldn’t cut it with any thinking person. It starts with reading your Bible, not just repeating what you’ve read somewhere or heard elsewhere. Read the Old Testament. Read the New Testament. Biblical literacy cannot be overstated nor over-rated.

That, perhaps, is the seed of this post. I’m not speaking to – probably – most of you who are doing your best to represent Christ. But there are a growing number of Christians who are falling into the culture’s belief system and calling it Christian. It isn’t.

Look, we don’t want to walk around disagreeing with everyone. If you’re convinced I should run the Christmas program your way or wear my hair differently, I invite you to keep that truth to yourself. But when a lie – big and bold and anti-scriptural – is staring us in the face, how are we going to explain our cowardice to God? I’m pretty sure we can’t make pretty excuses at that point. Telling the truth doesn’t mean prevailing or even arguing. It just means putting it out there. God does the rest.

We’re all pretty disgusting sometimes. And weak. And forgiven. We don’t want to be the guy that criticizes others and doesn’t see his own faults. That was more of a problem a number of years ago. Now we have the opposite, but just as serious problem. We need to love people enough to tell them the truth. Please consider: When someone dismisses important tenants of scripture, preferring to wrap everything up in a pretty bow called love, it’s not loving. It’s lazy.

Quotes: Inigo Montoya in The Princess Bride by William Goldman, John 2:15,  Matthew 23:27, Matthew 23:15, Luke 10:12, John 8:44, Romans 12:21; Photo: dreamstime-royalty-free-stock-image-cup-of-coffee-and-beans-22977266.jpg

On A Golden Afternoon (conclusion)

As the solid cement of the building resupplied my courage, he was suddenly in front of me, and the muted gray of dusk turned charcoal.

“Why do you chase me?” he asked.

“I . . . I . . . you . . .”

His intensity took my breath away. I wiped my clammy palms on my jeans. So what if he could hear my heart beat like the tell-tale heart? I was on the offense, not the defense, wasn’t I? I would not let him intimidate me. I WOULD NOT.

“What mindlessness draws people like you to chase me? You’re the same ones who would be most dismayed to catch up with me.”

I gulped and he was gone. The conversation that had taken less than a minute seemed as though it had lasted an eternity.

I ran back home, knowing he would be able to tell where I lived if he followed. At this point I didn’t care. I just wanted to be somewhere familiar, somewhere safe. I slammed the door behind me, locked the deadbolt with trembling hands, and watched as my dog took one whiff of me and hid under the couch.

Later, when my breathing had returned to normal and the sirens of the evening blended with street sounds of my city block, I sat with my cup of tea and thought about what he had said. Chasing him? Well, sure, but only because I wanted to prove I – what was it I had thought at the time? Trifled with? Yes, couldn’t be trifled with.

Maybe I did prove it. I’d caught up with him, after all. But to be perfectly honest, it didn’t feel like I’d proven anything. I turned to one of my favorite shows on the television, but the evening’s murder investigation started me thinking things that hadn’t before occurred to me. I switched it off. I grabbed a book I had been reading, and slammed it shut after a paragraph. I switched on the T.V. again and listened as a political ad droned on about someone who thought that I deserved to get what I wanted, not what I worked for. I thought for a minute about what I deserved and threw my shoe at the T.V. It went black.

I switched on a lamp. Who was he anyway, this immoveable, intense man who sent shivers straight to my gut; who I’d never seen before, but who seemed slightly familiar? Not familiar like an old acquaintance. Familiar, maybe like an old textbook. Like that.

No. Impossible.

What if it was him? Whether I was correct about his identity or not, there was one thing I did know. Loathe to admit it though I was, he was right. I had been chasing him without a thought of what that meant other than my immediate desire to prove something. I hadn’t thought of the peripheral, the fall out. And if he was who I now thought he might be, my mind had already revealed that I had been chasing him long before he confronted me on this golden day. When I inhaled the golden light of fall, I thought of tombs and pirates, not warmth and light. I really was playing that lottery that had flitted through my brain like a sudden breeze.800px-Light_In_The_Dark_(2886931703) wikimedia commons

There are many things I chase in life, some more worthwhile than others. But on a golden afternoon that knocked the breath out of me with fright I wonder. Should Death really be one of them?

 

Photo: 800px-Light_In_The_Dark_2886931703-wikimedia-commons.jpg

On A Golden Afternoon

I could just see the shadow slanting slightly like some willow bending toward the water. It turned toward me then, and I pulled back behind the corner of the building which I told myself hid me. What was I doing? The evening’s mystery had begun as an afternoon stroll through the park by my house. Isn’t that the way all trouble begins: Innocence pulled gradually by some subtle power until you’re standing behind a building a mile from where you should be, trying to breathe noiselessly though you’re sorrowfully certain your heartbeat can be heard a block away?

I had begun my walk to see the trees. They were golden this year. Maples splashed red here and there, but the air itself seemed mostly – well, like I said – golden. King Tut’s tomb. Pieces-of-eight. The lottery that changed things of value to a thin, printed paper of possibility. I digress, of course, to avoid the obvious.

You see, I was looking up as I walked, the better to take in the fire and shine of the lamp post, pinterestseason, when I bumped into something. At least that’s what I had immediately thought since it was immoveable, like a lamp-post. My abrupt stop and reverted sight line, however, showed me a person I would guess to be around 6 feet, 3 inches of mostly muscle knit together with intensity. He looked into my eyes for a split second while I stood fixed to the spot wondering how I would explain my disappearance to my dog who I had left at home as punishment for whining into the wee hours of the early morning. Then he was gone and I was shivering in the balmy air of the autumn afternoon.

I’m not being dramatic. He really was gone. I turned to look and there was nothing there. Any sane person would have cut her stroll short and gone home, but I told myself that I wasn’t going to allow anyone, even if they were a disappearing man, rob me of my afternoon stroll. So I kept walking until I got to the other end of the park. Then I thought what if I didn’t see him because he had hidden? That makes sense, right? Maybe I should go home like the sane person I wasn’t and lock my door. But then (I reasoned) if he was, in fact, following me, maybe I shouldn’t go straight home. Maybe I should take a divergent path to shake his trail. OR, and this is where the trouble really began, maybe I should try to find him, follow him, and prove to us both I wasn’t anyone to be trifled with.

At that point, I turned and started back the way I’d come, eyes darting behind every bush and tree. I kept walking beyond the park then because I thought I spotted him, and that’s when I noticed the golden light had turned to muted gray. Dark would follow in a matter of half an hour, fall being what it is, and I was a mile of crooked sidewalks from home.

to be continued . . .

Photo: Pinterest

Three Truths and Some Lies

Contests always have a little chatter on the side. People talk about who they think is the better contestant and why they will win. We do this in sports, battle of the bands scenarios, and politics. Even the most likeminded of us are bound to disagree sometimes. Even the most deeply divided opponents might agree on something. Look hard, really hard for it.

When we talk about who should prevail in a contest, often feelings muddle truth; half-truths are thrown around, incidents get twisted out of context, well you know how it goes. But if truth sets us free, then what do the untruths do?

I’ll admit, I think little things spoken to spare feelings are a lubricant to help people keep going. Yes, the dress makes me look like a box, but it’s a mercy for my son to say it looks nice since it’s one of my few options. However, those little things are an exception to the rule that honesty is the best policy. I used to think that if someone was asked a question, they would answer as truthfully as the situation allowed. That is to say, that if they are campaigning, they might leave something out to make themselves appear better; but they wouldn’t outright lie. That’s changed. I will always be stunned by people who lie outright. If you do or say or believe something, you must do so with good conscience. Why would you lie about it? The disconnect from belief to action to speech is beyond understanding. It is beyond understanding unless the person lying is 1. a pathological liar, 2. a sociopath, 3. wants our approval so badly, they will say anything to get it (in that case, see #2), or 4. trying to pull something over on us.

Election day being two weeks away, and knowing that what I read in the paper or on the computer or see on T.V. gives me a slight and slanted picture, I went the websites of each political party to read their platforms. There are quite a few parties, so I narrowed it to the three most likely to get votes. Those platforms seem less than basic. Maybe they need to use a lot of words to explain themselves, but I’m willing to wager that most people are like me and won’t read them through due to their length. I found something that seemed a little more helpful. It is a website, www.ontheissues.org, that listed quotes said and things done by candidates gleaned from news sources. Again, probably not the clearest picture, but better than those commercials you watch.

fall 2014 003If the website doesn’t help us, maybe we should consider another quote from a wise source: By their fruit you will know them.

Vote November 4.

 

 

 

Quotes: John 8:32, Benjamin Franklin, Matthew 7:16

The Best Dog on the Block

Some animals are so good at touching the hidden places in our hearts that it’s as if God, Himself, put them there. Maybe He does. There is a love, not easily articulated, that finds its way into our lives through a special pet; a love that, while not greater than one person for another, rivals our own with its purity. People tend to hold something back, perhaps to protect self; perhaps because if they fully expressed the love they sometimes feel or encounter, it would leave them in a puddle on the floor. Deep feelings are inadequately expressed through words. People rarely do the careless, unselfconscious, in-your-face thing. Dogs, on the other hand. . . A dog’s love is open and effusive and immoveable. It’s irreplaceable, and it pricks our hearts with a lifelong tenderness and a lump in the throat. You might have that special encounter in your life or life’s past. Here is a snapshot of mine.

Our dog arrived on a July day to a house of four children and a dog-loving mom. My 003husband made the 60 mile trip to pick her from the litter. She, he said, was the prettiest of her brothers and sisters and a little shy; an unaggressive puppy for an unaggressive family. I’m probably the most competitive of the bunch, and I’m – attempting a second career as a writer (though maybe a few family members are just better at hiding that trait under cover of innocent faces and sweet conversation). Ah well. We all changed a bit through the years.

He put her in the new kennel behind his seat in the van. Before the trip was over, she was sitting on his lap. And that’s the way it was. She was smart and clean and lived life on her own terms as most of us do or should do. She found her way swiftly into our hearts, and as far as she was concerned, there was no better place to be than with her family.

002She was our dog no more than we were her family and our house was her house. She had her own family jobs. She was a task master at doing battle with varmints in our yard. One summer in particular, a squirrel took some stuffing from a stuffed animal she had played with. She sat for days on end under the tree not unlike the Queen’s Guard. Retribution was palpable in that spot that summer.

The manner in which her jobs were done was sometimes a matter for debate. One day when the kids had left for school and as my husband was about to leave, he noticed a new stuffed animal on our daughter’s bed. That day I spent part of the morning figuring out how to get the still soft and warm dead bunny our dog had smuggled into the house away from the dog and back to the earth from whenst it came. Let me just say that disagreement, bribery, and distraction were involved.

Besides rodent management, our dog also was attentive to keeping our floors cleared of food. She was a bit pre-emptive at times. There was the time that she jumped up and snatched the just-prepared hotdog iliad 008from my son as we sat together at dinner and left him holding nothing but air. It was impressively swift and clean, like a disappearing act. Well, supper was a family thing and she was family; just relegated to under the table. Dogs do that. They love their food. And yours.

Another job, taken seriously, was to help us have fun. We played hide and seek with her with duck feathers after hunting season. We’d put her in another room, then trail a duck feather up, over, around, and through the living room and hide it. Then we’d let her in and it was great fun to watch her follow the trail until she found the feather. Her sense of smell was amazing.

002She loved stuffed animals and regarded a few of them as her own personal favorites. One or two are still buried in our backyard, a blue head or beige foot sticking up from the earth, leaving the polite uninformed to puzzle over after they’ve left.

But the job she did best was to just love. She didn’t care how you did on a test at school. She didn’t care if your level of life success was amazing or clearly needing some attention. She didn’t care if people loved you or hated you or found nothing at all to think about you. Our dog thought each one of us was wonderful. What a gift. What. A. Gift. She did that better than any of us could do it, and did it without effort. She celebrated our happiness with plenty of jumping and playing and a few happy barks thrown in for good measure. Her intuitive sensitivity brought her to our sides even when we sought to keep some private sadness apart. Whether apparent to others or private, she sat with us in our sorrow; just sitting and looking and licking the tears from our faces.

Our favorite place was also her favorite place, and every summer when we would make a trip up to the cabin, she would budge her way past everyone to be the first in the vanCabin 13 009. Oh, the piney, sea-weedy scent was a little taste of heaven to her whether she was running like a maniac unhindered and free, or jumping off the dock to swim to a thrown stick, or taking a boat ride or wading in the water, pawing at the minnows. The minute her paws hit the ground, she would smile her little doggy smile and delight in just being. Such a simple thing. A good thing. A thing we would all do well to learn.

Our dog would (almost) always come when we called her. She would sit, lie down, and roll over on command. She shook your hand when asked and sometimes when you didn’t. When you threw something up in the air, there was rarely a doubt she would catch it; and if you threw it waaay out in the lake, she would make a running leap from the dock and swim out to get it and bring it back. She had a fairly large vocabulary of words and expressions she understood. She quickly learned to love music and occasionally sang along with the cello or violin. She would drop something we didn’t want her to have, unless she wanted to hold it a while longer first. She would stop jumping on someone just as soon as she could manage her excitement. She would stand still for us to put her leash on to go for a WALK(!). No, she didn’t really do that. Our dog wasn’t the best dog in the world or the most well-trained dog in the city. I often told her she was the best dog on the block. That was enough for her and it was enough for us.

Benny 006We were the house with the dog who barked at everyone who had the audacity to walk past her house (black motorcycles elicited much loud concern). We were also the house with calm spirits and whispered secrets and spoken and unspoken love all because of a dog who loved openly and completely.

A year ago today she wasn’t feeling well. She took extra time that evening to look at each of us who was at home as we petted her. She ran off in the middle of the night through, we later learned, a park that reminds us all of that favorite place up north and then lay down on the edge of someone’s yard and died. For three days we searched through woods and along roads and parks, hardly eating, barely sleeping, begging God to send an angel to bring her home. When I finally tracked her down at an animal hospital she was in a cremation bag with a few dried leaves still sticking in her fur. I brought her home, letting her ride in the front seat of our new car. I petted her all the way. I made a body bag from unbleached muslin and lined it with an old, soft flannel sheet. Each member of our family wrote something from their heart; a memory, a personal gratefulness, an expression of love on that canvas bag; and it has been her sleeping bag now for a year as she rests in a private spot in a place she loved.

Our dog loved all the true things: fresh air, good food, family. Oh, sweet little girl. You might have been only a few feet tall, but you filled up our hearts with your love and spoke fun and silliness and goodness and blessing into our lives. Rest well, my little friend. You really were the best.

 

Libby

 

 

If I Had Only Known

If I had only known. I wonder how many times those words are said or thought.

If Melissa Rivers had known her mother’s appointment for throat surgery would lead to a funeral she would have tried to bar the door to the doctor. If Derek Boogaard’s brother had known the pills he gave to his brother would lead to his death, I’d bet the lottery he would’ve held them back. If anyone who accidentally started a fire in a house or ditch or forest had known what would happen, they would have taken more care. If you knew this was the last day of a loved one’s life, nine out of ten of you would spend time with them.

If you had known a refund check from the insurance company would be in today’s mail, your step would be a little lighter on your way to that oblong box. If you would have known a favorite neighbor would drop by for a chat, you might have made some cookies. If an old friend of mine had known her choice of a husband would lead to a really profitable business, well – okay, she would have married him without a clue about the future, which she did. Which we all do.

Sometimes we see the consequences of our actions and words. There are times, though, we will never know what happens because of something we say or do. And despite our grasp of history or what is typical or usual, things can turn on a dime and surprise us. That is why “if I had only known” will always be a familiar phrase. Sometimes the unexpected can be brutal, but it’s a mercy we don’t know some things ahead of time. It’s good that life is like it is: lots of educated guesses with surprises thrown in for adventure.

Hey – have a great day, do your best to muddle along the best you can, enjoy the good wallpaper-download-free-sea-sa-37310surprises, know that the troubling times will pass just as everything eventually does, and if you get to the corner before the rest of us and manage to peek around it, give us a heads up because we might benefit from knowing.

 

Photo: wallpaper-download-free-sea-sa-37310.jpg

Labor of Love

Labor Day was initiated to celebrate the laborer, to give the hard-working person a day off. I wonder how many of us use the long weekend that is a result to catch up on the work that we don’t have time for because of other work (work, in the non-scientific, cultural definition being something most people would say is doing something for monetary payment)? And then there are times when the work done is not paid in dollars, may not be noticed at all, and may not be defined by some as work, but is time spent to help someone or some group and is noticed only by the angels – a labor of love.

The project I’m sharing with you today is certainly not a paid project. However, it is time spent to make life a little more interesting for those around me. Some years ago, I painted a checkerboard on our picnic table. Years passed, rain and snow fell, little animals scampered, and it grew in obvious need of a little facelift. Ha. I’d forgotten the math involved, which makes this work even more a matter of love than it was originally. So here is my little labor of love from last week. I hope you find one to do, too; even if the only witnesses are the angels.

001002I’m loving you right now because you’re reading this post written by a person I will generously describe as a non-crafter. My art teacher made sounds like exploding bombs when he looked at my drawing using perspective. I was in 7th grade. I haven’t changed that much. We all have our own aptitudes, but, you know, it’s good to stretch horizons, isn’t it? Let my weaknesses be your inspiration!

I bought a sander. I know, I can’t believe it either; but it was so helpful in sanding the original paint from the picnic table! I then measured the length and width of the table to get an idea of how big to make the checkerboard since I wasn’t sure I trusted the notes I’d taken before I began the project, and I’d sanded the other one off. *Welcome to my world.

I concluded I’d make a twenty-five inch square. Ta da!

003Okay, this is where it gets tricky, and to make it even trickier, I inadvertently threw away my notes before I wrote this blog entry *, so if you actually want to try this, you’ll have to do the math yourself. However, maybe this will help: I marked every 3 1/8 inches. Then I taped with masking tape in order to make a checkerboard. In other words, along your border tape, mark every 3 1/8 inch.

006

I measured for 3 inch squares, 8 across and eight down. I decided to just leave the squares that would be black on an original checkerboard unpainted. This is a picture after I moved the tape to accommodate the painting of squares the row down from the ones painted. The width of the tape must be taken into consideration when marking for painting. No, I can’t explain what I just said any better. You’re on your own. We’re supposed to be sitting by a fire talking here (see “welcome” page), so let’s leave specific project details to crafters, shall we? I’m not a visual arts genius (see “about me” page), so none of us should be surprised here. (Sing Kum Ba Ya and then continue.) The first time I did this years ago, I used a brush. This time I used a sponge. It looks better this way.

008

 

 

Here it is: my labor of love, otherwise known as a checkerboard painted on our picnic table.

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011I painted twelve rocks red and twelve brown, turned them over and painted a cross on the other side to use as the king. Make your own religious conclusions here.

 

 

 

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There you go. A labor of love to enjoy on warm summer evenings and cool autumn days. King me!

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Hot and Cool Green Beans

There’s nothing quite like fresh. Vegetables from a summer garden are a wonderful way to love healthy eating. I’m not even a fair gardener, but my dad, who was running a farm by the time he was 17, is always successful. It’s great when someone’s success makes up for your lack of it.

My daughter and I tried a new recipe a few weeks ago and ate nearly the entire thing in one sitting. Please don’t tell her I said that. I will not, NOT, I repeat, own the entire bean affair. Ah, well. The nice thing about eating vegetables is that there’s no guilt. I tweaked the recipe a little, to tame it. The squash and walnuts cool down an otherwise spicy dish. However, if you like hot, hot, hot, have at it and add more heat-inducing seasonings like pepper or ginger.

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1. Heat skillet. Snap ends from 1 lb. green beans and add to hot skillet along with 1/4 c. water. Cover and cook 3-4 min. Uncover, and cook until water is evaporated.

2. Add: 1 Tbsp olive oil and 2 Tbsp minced garlic. Stir for 1-2 min. until garlic is lightly browned.

3. Combine and Add: 2 Tbsp soy sauce, 1 Tbsp red wine vinegar, 2 tsp. sugar, 1/4-1/2 tsp. hot pepper flakes. Bring to boil and cook while stirring for 2-3 min and sauce coats beans.

4. Transfer to serving dish.

5. Add: 1 yellow squash, peeled and cut into 1 in. chunks and 1 or 2 handfuls of chopped walnuts.

Serves 8 – 10 unless you eat it all at one sitting, in which case please confess here. I’d rather not be the only one.

The Goal

Long ago, far away, a thousand miles from shore;                                                            Sun set, obligations met, was there any more?                                                           Closed my eyes, mesmerized, walking as through time;                                               Saw it there, should I dare move to make it mine?

Travel on, hesitate, fighting with my dream;                                                                    Could there be more to me than what I had seen?                                                     Walking slow, running fast, inner heartbeat’s thrum;                                                     Finally, I can see now the sight of home.

http://commons/wikimedia/org/wikiFileCarina_Nebula.jpg

Photo: http://commons/wikimedia/org/wikiFileCarina_Nebula.jpg

 

The Key (conclusion)

It stood there, its tongue lolling out, and looked directly at him. It was a brown and white mutt with friendly eyes. It gave a hesitant wag of its tail and took a step toward him.

“Waddaya think, Hop?”

Hop responded to his whisper by tickling his hand.

The man squatted on the edge of the road and the dog trotted up to him, giving his stubbly face a quick lick with his hot tongue. It nudged his hand with its nose and 1280px-Dog_nose Elucidate CC by 3.0 en.wikipedia.orgsniffed. Hop slid through the small gap and hopped on the dog’s nose, pausing as the two looked each other in the eye, then up on the dog’s head and finally rested on his back.

The man looked the dog over. It had no collar nor tags and its ribs were beginning to show. He petted it for a full minute, then got up and began walking again. The dog trotted sometimes beside him, sometimes nosing into the grasses along the road, then catching up again, Hop clinging deftly to his back.

He watched the dog and its tiny passenger, riding now backward and watching the man as he walked behind them. The ghost of a smile crossed his lips. Nothing had changed. The cicadas still sang their buzz saw song, the sun still beat down its white hot light and the lilies responded with carefree orange faces. Yet he began to feel different; a small excitement somewhere in his gut, a repressed hope he’d denied. He closed his eyes and breathed in the hot air.

“What’s yer name? Shep?”

The dog stood still, looking back at him.

“Brownie? No? Look here, I’m no good with names.”

He licked his dry lips. He could feel heat radiating from his skin, his body a stove. The dog trotted ahead of him. Dust rose and settled. The sun goodfreephotos.com3began its slow descent. One mile. Two. He began to breathe harder. Either he was growing weary or the dog was trotting faster. Every so often the dog would stop and look back, waiting, then trot on again.

One foot in front of the other. Always onward. Why did he do this? Always. His life was a pattern of stay and leave, a wandering mission of disconnection. Five miles farther on, its sound began to wind its way into his subconscious until he heard it: water running over rock.

His life was a pattern of stay and leave, a wandering mission of disconnection.

He quickened his step and came to it, a river half a mile back from the dusty road, hidden by a dry meadow and a sudden drop from the tree line at its edge. The dog rushed its descent as the man followed him, hanging onto a bush here and there for balance. By the time he reached the bottom, the dog was splashing in the cold river, lapping the welcome water, then laying in the shallow edge, panting. He removed his boots and socks, stepped into the shallows, cupped his hand and drank. The cold water sent coolness through his tired bones. Looking down, he saw Hop, tickling the tip of his toe. The man felt hopeful, the first in a long time.

Man and dog lay on a bed of soft pine needles and slept as the moon rose and stars blinked on one by one.

A moist tongue on his face woke him. The sun was just peeking over the horizon, turning the sky from gray to violet to pink and orange and yellow. He waded in the now still water and drank freely, then pulled on his socks and boots. Rising from the piney bed, he stuck his hands in his pockets as he watched the sun’s early morning display.

“Hey. Where’s the key?” he asked, searching the ground.

The dog trotted up to him.

“Did you see it, boy? Did you see the key?”

The dog barked.

“Key?”

The dog put his front paws on the man.

“Your name’s Key?”

The dog jumped around in a circle, then lowered himself in a play bow.

“Waddaya know. Well, boy, it didn’t matter anyway, did it? Whatever that key was for might be long gone by now.”

The man began following the path upstream, then slowed to a stop.

“Key! C’mon now!”

The dog trotted up to him, looking at him expectantly, then back from where they’d come. He hesitated, looking at the man.

“Ah. Where’s Hop? Is that it?”

Key lay in the river, his head on his paws.

Maybe the mutt was more of a key than in name only. How had he gotten to a point when an animal cared more for connection than he did? He suddenly felt – he didn’t know – sad, he guessed. Lost. It was a feeling he’d not had since he’d left home at sixteen and never looked back. He’d not been acquainted with it in the twenty years of his wandering since then. He sat down, resting his arms on his knees.

What did it matter? It was just a toad, for pete’s sake, hardly as big as his fingernail. But the thought of trudging ahead without Hop – he shook his head. You had to let someone – or something – in to feel the emptiness when they were no longer there. He didn’t like it. He started on again, then stopped and looked back. Key waited, cocking one ear. He shook his head at his own weakness. A new knowledge pushed its way through his stubbornness and wouldn’t leave. He sighed. Maybe it was time. Perhaps he’d been a loner long enough. And, hard as it was to have the thought, it was possible it wasn’t weakness after all. Maybe it was strength. Maybe it was a source of strength he’d missed along the way.

Turning the other direction and starting back, he called, “Okay, Key! We can’t leave our pardner!”

Key bounded ahead of him, then began nosing along the water’s edge. The man jumped. Yanking up his jeans, he saw it perched on the top of his boot. He scooped up the toad with one hand and covered it with the other. Its tiny the-back-of-a-fowlers-toad-frog_w725_h483, public domainpresence tickled his hand and he smiled.

It scooted out of his hand onto Key’s nose, hopped onto the top of his head, and found his place on his back.

Down the river’s path, they walked; one talking, two listening, three together.

Photos: 1280px-Dog_nose-Elucidate-CC-by-3.0-en.wikipedia.org_.jpg; goodfreephotos.com_.jpg; the-back-of-a-fowlers-toad-frog_w725_h483-public-domain.jpg