I donât remember how I got there.
One moment I was somewhere warm, then cold, then loud, then⌠alone. Days blurred into each other â new smells, new people, metal bars, barking. So much barking.
Some dogs would cry when humans passed. Others jumped, tails wagging wildly. I just watched. I didnât really believe someone was coming for me.
Until she did.
She didnât rush. She didnât baby talk. She knelt. Her hand didnât grab â it hovered, waited. I sniffed, and it smelled like sunshine and peanut butter. I leaned in before I knew I was doing it.
She smiled.
Then she whispered something Iâll never forget:
âYouâre coming home, Bailey.â
The car ride was quiet. I sat in a soft padded dog booster seat she had already buckled in â like she expected me, like I mattered. I was too nervous to enjoy it, but it was warm, and I didnât slide when we turned.
We passed trees, lights, big moving machines. I saw her glance at me in the mirror, like she couldnât believe it either.
When we got home, she let me explore. Every corner smelled like a story. A toy gently squeaked under my paw â new, just for me. There was a soft donut bed tucked by a window. I didnât know it yet, but it would become my spot.
She didnât force anything. No leash yanking. No loud clapping. She sat on the floor and just⌠waited.
Eventually, I went to her. Sat close. She didnât move.
So I laid down.
She placed a blanket over me.
That was the first time I slept without one ear open.
I donât know why she picked me.
But on that day, I stopped being a shelter dog.
I became Bailey.
And she became mine.