louder. On the counter sat a can of Duncan's food. Next to it, a head of lettuce flopped against a pair of chicken breasts they were going to have for supper.
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"Don't fret, Lillian. How far can a ten-year-old corgi wander?"
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"Miles, for all I know," Lillian muttered, putting down the trowel and washing her hands.
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"He'll be back," Owen said and slipped a statement from its sheath. "When's the last time you saw him?"
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"About fifteen minutes ago. I was weeding, he was there, you know, lolling and panting. Then he wandered out front and when I called he didn't come." Lillian realized then she didn't believe in instantly replacing a pet, as she'd urged Emma's owner to do. It wasn't as simple as deciding the guest room needed fresh curtains.
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She looked at Owen. It was 6:30 and Duncan was out there when he should only be here, tangled in her feet, crazy for scraps, and there was Owen deep in some plea from a phone company. Lillian was going to find her dog. She tucked her shirt in tighter and said, "Owen, get the chicken ready, will you? I'm going to look for Duncan."
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"Stop fussing. He's out eating someone's trash," Owen said, not looking up from the advertisement.
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"I'll just check around the block." She couldn't dislodge the picture of the woman in the alley, the brown kerchief, the basket's tight weave.
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"Lillian," he said and looked up. "Stay put." The mail sorted, he wanted to talk, about the lateness of the 5:09, the pollen count, the Serbs. Talk to fill the blue bowl of the evening, while that poor fat dog waddled across streets, testing his blind luck.
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"Four minutes both sides," Lillian said. In the garage, she grabbed a box of dog biscuits, then drove slowly through the neighborhood, calling for Duncan through the open window. As she rolled past the neat houses, it struck her how few people they knew here now. Their oldest neighbors, Bob and Claudia Merchant, had moved last month to Chapel Hill. Did that make
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