There’s something magical about socks.
They’re warm, they smell like home, and they’re everywhere. Under the couch. Behind the laundry basket. Once, I even found one in the backyard. A treasure trove—each one a soft little puzzle just waiting to be claimed.
But this sock was different.
It was early morning. The house was still, filled with that fresh-sunlight smell. She was running around like she does on Mondays, hair up, shoes half-on, keys in her mouth like they were a chew toy.
She couldn’t find the sock. Not just any sock—the blue one with little white dots. Her “lucky pair,” she always says. The ones she wears when she needs confidence, like when she goes to talk to scary humans at work.
“Bailey, have you seen it? Please don’t tell me you took it again…”
Guilty. But not this time.
I tilted my head and trotted into the bedroom. Nose down. Sniff sniff. Past my toys. Past the cozy spot under the bed where I sometimes hide treats. And there it was—half-tucked under the dresser like it didn’t want to be found.
I grabbed it carefully, like it was a prize. No chewing. No slobber. Just a perfect sock rescue.
I padded into the hallway, tail wagging like a flag in the wind.
When she saw me, she gasped. “You found it?!”
I dropped it at her feet and sat tall, chest puffed out like a superhero in a dog’s body.
She knelt down, ruffling my ears. “Good girl, Bailey. What would I do without you?”
And then—this part I loved—she kissed the top of my head and gave me a new squeaky plush. One of the soft ones with the funny noise inside. I carried it proudly all the way to my bed by the window, the one where the morning sun pools like a blanket.
I watched her leave, sock secure on her foot, heart feeling oddly full.
That night, I found the sock again—this time on the floor next to the laundry basket.
I didn’t steal it.
I just curled up next to it and fell asleep.
Because sometimes, the things we love the most are the ones that remind us of them.