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- #51
The cat ran away, limping and I stood my ground. I jumped up and snapped my jaws in the air as the hawk flew by. Thats a warning! Leave er alone! I yapped. The hawk didnt want to become a victim of my teeth, so he flew away. The cat walked over to me, well, she limped over to me and brushed against my side as a thank you. I cant walk to town, my side hurts to much. She moaned. So I went back to my cabin and found the sled that my masters child would play with in the winter. I pulled it out and grabbed the rug at the doorstep and plopped it on the sled. Then I asked the cat to sit on it. She did as she was told and with that I picked the rope up and pulled her down the road. The gravel dirt road made much noise from the sled, and I was worried about coyotes hearing us. I had no choice though, so we walked on. Or, I walked on. Suddenly, a white flake fell on my nose. All around me, white flakes of snow fell. The noise from the sled got quiet, because now the ground was filling with snow. Snow layered my back, and my paws were like icicles, but I kept going. The cat had long hair, I had short hair. Big difference. Finally, we came to the edge of town where the vet lived. I stopped at the door and scratched it. I trotted down the road, not looking back to say goodbye to the cat. I have learned that if you make friends, eventually you will loose them and will be heartbroken. I do not want to have to suffer through heartbreak again, for the third time. The cat meowed Thank you! Thank you for everything. I turned around, nodded my head and with a wag of my tail, I trotted down the road, by myself once again.