試す 金 - 無料
Miranda's Last Gift
The Atlantic
|May 2024
When our daughter died suddenly, she left us with grief, memories and Ringo.
I was at the kitchen counter making coffee when my daughter Miranda’s dog approached. Ringo stands about 10 inches high at the shoulder, but he carries himself with supreme confidence. He fixed his lustrous black eyes on mine. Staring straight at me, he lifted his leg and urinated on the oven door.
After the mess was cleaned up, I complained to Miranda, “I don’t think Ringo likes me.”
Miranda replied, “Ringo loves you. He just doesn’t respect you.”
Theoretically, Ringo is a Cavalier King Charles spaniel. You may have seen depictions of the breed peeking at you from portraits of monarchs and aristocrats. But the spaniels in the paintings are almost always the cinnamon-and-white variety known as a Blenheim spaniel. My wife, Danielle, has a Blenheim. The Blenheim Cavalier is a true lapdog: easygoing, obedient, insinuating. Ringo is very different. He is exactly the color of a cup of espresso, mostly black-haired with a little brownish tinge at his extremities. He’s commonly mistaken for a miniature Rottweiler. That confusion is less absurd than it sounds. If an unwelcome stranger steps in his way, 18-pound Ringo will stiffen and growl, murder in his eyes.
Ringo came into my life in the spring of 2018. Miranda had returned to the United States after four years living in Israel. She had thought seriously about staying there, but then the romantic relationship that had kept her in the country ended. Miranda was cast alone upon the open world. She relocated to Los Angeles to start over.
She chose L.A. because the landscape reminded her of Israel, even if the people were as different as could be. “My Israeli friends criticize Los Angeles as so fake,” she told me. “But let me tell you, fake nice is a lot better than authentic rude.”
このストーリーは、The Atlantic の May 2024 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Atlantic からのその他のストーリー
The Atlantic
The Realist Magic of Philip Pullman
The Golden Compass author tells us how to love this world. It's not easy.
9 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
We Are Not One
When it came into view, Doctor Rustin was struck by its size.
14 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
THE COMING ELECTION MAYHEM
Donald Trump's plans to throw the 2026 midterms into chaos are already under way.
22 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The One and Only Sammy
The astonishing, confounding career of Sammy Davis Jr.
7 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
GET A REAL FRIEND
The false promise of AI companionship
10 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
PRESIDENT FOR LIFE
Donald Trump is trying to amass the powers of a king.
10 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The Last of the Literary Outdoorsmen
Thomas McGuane—fisherman, hunter, rancher, writer—says “good riddance” to his kind.
14 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
THE MISSING KAYAKER
What happened to Ryan Borowardı?
44 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The Man Who Rescued Faulkner
How the critic Malcolm Cowley made American literature into its own great tradition
9 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
Patti Smith's Lifetime of Reinvention
Nearing 80, the punk poet reflects on the twists in her story that have surprised even her.
12 mins
December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
