drawing bob


I love Julia’s pictures of Bob.


She draws him flying across the page, a blur of feet and fur. She draws him motionless, peeking out from behind a trash can or the soft hill of my belly. Sometimes in her drawings, Julia gives Bob wings or a lion’s mane. Once she gave him a tortoise shell.


But the best thing she ever gave him wasn’t a drawing. Julia gave Bob his name.


For a long time no one knew what to call Bob. Now and then a mall worker would try to approach him with a tidbit. “Here, doggie,” they’d call, holding out a French fry. “Come on, pooch,” they’d say. “How about a little piece of sandwich?”


But he would always vanish into the shadows before anyone could get too close.


One afternoon, Julia decided to draw the little dog curled up in the corner of my domain. First she watched him for a long time, chewing on her thumbnail. I could tell she was looking at him the way an artist looks at the world when she’s trying to understand it.


Finally she grabbed her pencil and set to work. When she was finished, she held up the page.


There he was, the tiny, big-eared dog. He was smart and cunning, but his gaze was wistful.


Under the picture were three bold, confident marks, circled in black. I was pretty certain it was a word, even though I couldn’t read it.


Julia’s father peered over her shoulder. “That’s him exactly,” he said, nodding. He pointed to the circled marks. “I didn’t realize his name was Bob,” he said.


“Me either,” said Julia. She smiled. “I had to draw him first.”

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