Every morning at exactly the same time, Max would jump onto the windowsill and stare down the quiet street.
Rain or sunshine, weekday or weekend, it didn’t matter. He would sit there patiently, ears forward, tail gently swaying, as if waiting for someone only he could see.
At first, his owner thought it was just a habit. Dogs watch birds, passing cars, delivery trucks. Nothing unusual.
But one afternoon, a neighbor walking past noticed something different. Max wasn’t just watching the road. He was watching one specific house across the street.
That house had belonged to an elderly man who used to greet Max every morning during his walks. He always stopped, scratched behind his ears, and shared a small biscuit from his pocket.
A few weeks earlier, the man had quietly moved into assisted living. No more walks. No more biscuits.
But Max didn’t know that.
So each morning, he kept his spot at the window, waiting for his friend to come back down the sidewalk.
When the neighbor learned the story, she brought a small photo of the man and placed it near the window.
Max didn’t move from his post — but for the first time in days, his tail wagged a little faster.
Some friendships never need words to be remembered.