Now don't get me wrong, we weren't broke or struggling to find food to eat -- but another mouth to feed was not a great idea as far as I was concerned. Especially a canine one.
"But he's like totally cute, mum!"
"You're eighteen," I sighed, already knowing deep down that I had lost the argument, "You should be out hunting down a girlfriend, not at home with an over-sized puppy."
Jamie shrugged, "It's not my fault we'll be in lockdown again next week. He'll be company for us."
"And the second the lockdown is over, or we're all vaccinated you really will be off trying to sniff out a female companion and your poor single mum here will be left with a puppy to look after, right?"
I received another shrug, "I'll be around for a while yet. There's like no way they'll get the universities sorted out for ages and he really will be great company anyway..."
"He's already huge! What breed is he?" The bundle -- the enormous bundle -- of black fur pointed his snout my way and I swear he grinned at me.
"He's a Newfie cross, mum, they're great--"
"They're vast, more like. Have you any idea how big they get? And anyway, what's he a Newfoundland crossed with? A horse?" The shrugs were coming thick and fast, "His owner wasn't sure. Their only other dog is a pug and there's no way--"
"Yes, I get the picture," I interrupted, "There's no need to go into detail. So, how did this thing's mother actually get pregnant? Let me guess -- a stray from the local stable escaped and ended up in their garden." I snorted, "Then ended up in this thing's mother!"
"Mum! It was nothing like that."
"An unnecessary comment but carry on."
"She escaped from their garden and that's all they really know."
I sighed as the big, black ball of fur licked my hand tentatively, "So it really could be fathered by anything, horses included."
"That's just silly," my son grinned, "But it must be something taller than a pug."
"Like a horse," I nodded, finally giving in and petting the now dribbling puppy. Its fur was luxurious -- so soft and dense...
"Mum! It was more likely to be the Alsatian that lives near them."
"Or one of the giraffes from the zoo. It's only two miles away." The furball licked me with its already enormous tongue. It liked me.
"Dogs don't mate with other animals, mum. You know that!"
I sighed again. I knew the furball was staying. "You evidently haven't seen some of the websites I have. Not that you should," I added quickly.
Jamie joined in with my petting of the great big fuzzy lump, sending it into slobbery raptures of delight, "So, we're keeping him, right?"
"We really shouldn't," I persisted, despite knowing the argument was already lost -- you have to show the right cards, regardless.
My son, though, could read my hand better than most professional poker players, "I knew you'd agree!"
"I did not agree!"
"Your mouth didn't but your face did," he laughed, "And let's face it, you're single and we've got loads of space and when I finally go to uni you'll be all alone here and--"
"And staying alone if I'm playing mother to this furry thing. Mind you, as a son replacement he'll probably be tidier and more talkative."
"Funny -- not," Jamie grinned, "But that's a 'yes', then, right?"
And of course, he was right. If the truth had been told, I really had been wondering whether some sort of pet might be a good idea after Jamie had departed. But a huge dog had not been on the list of possibles. Cats, yes. Chinchillas, yes. A parrot, maybe... "Well," I sighed as the hairy bundle licked my hand harder, "Perhaps we can give it a trial. No promises!"
And thus, it started.
*****
I'm Debbie (note to others - never Deborah, thanks), and a single mum, by choice, of thirty-three. Given that Jamie is eighteen you can read into that a story of teenage stupidity but that's an altogether different story -- just do the maths (or math if you're American) -- and not for telling here. I inherited a smallholding that earns enough to keep us in food, and life is good. It's a simple existence and it suits me perfectly.
Perfect or not though, it's not exactly a thrilling existence but I like the peace and the honest toil that is all my life demands. I think -- like most mums -- that I've raised a fundamentally decent son, and he's a smart kid -- even if he is a typical moody teen who treats every horizontal surface as somewhere to store his junk. To be fair to him, I will miss his grunts and mess when he finally heads off into the wild world on his own, but that's life for all decent mums, and I wish him every success. And at least he isn't a parent yet unlike his own mother eighteen years ago...
As far as I can make out, we're a normal mother and son. We have a large, rambling place here and we keep to our own areas, doing our own things with a large degree of privacy and decorum. The older he's become the more those areas of privacy have expanded and in all honesty I will barely miss someone I seldom see here regardless of our shared life. Such is life.