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Leo hopped down, his feet hitting the ground with a soft thud. He buried his hands in Barnaby’s thick mane, inhaling the scent of dried cedar and summer air. They walked back together, a boy and his golden shadow, leaving the fence to guard the hill until the sun returned.
The fence at the edge of Miller’s Farm was more than just a boundary; for young Leo, it was a grandstand. Every afternoon, as the sun began its slow dip toward the horizon, Leo would climb the weathered cedar rails, his boots dangling over the tall, un-mowed grass. 5429006_035.jpg
Beside him, always, was Barnaby. Barnaby was a Golden Retriever who seemed to have been spun from the very sunlight they sat in. He didn't climb the fence—he was far too dignified for that—but he would lean his heavy, warm shoulder against Leo’s leg, a silent anchor in a world that felt too big for a seven-year-old. Leo hopped down, his feet hitting the ground