The woman was the last of a small group to leave her table at the restaurant. I saw her glance in my direction several times, as though she wanted to say something but wasn’t sure. Then she walked over to the table where I had been writing at my MacBook.
“Excuse me,” she started, “but don’t you walk a dog that looks like a collie? Do you walk near Bryant Avenue a lot of times?”
I don’t think Lucy looks like a collie, but I can see how someone could see her that way from a distance. I told her that Lucy and I turn around at Bryant Avenue at the halfway point of our typical walk, so it probably was us she was thinking of. I showed her a photo of Lucy.
She smiled and seemed pleased that she had been right.
“I just want to tell you that you have a wonderful dog,” she said. “I’ve never seen a dog so well-behaved. I can’t believe how she does everything you tell her to do. It’s amazing.”

Need for love drives behaviors; for me, old needs make me eat
When you can’t call one you love, silent phone just taunts your need
Why are U.S. troops going into Uganda to take sides in a civil war?
The truth about first Thanksgiving has lessons for today’s economy
What makes good science fiction? Aya Katz and I discuss ‘Podkayne’
A sincere apology can bring color back when the world looks gray
Democrats to Cory Booker: There’s no room for honesty in politics
Homeless honor student thrown into jail for missing too much school
Hypocritical Republicans wimp out on free market when politics calls