Deployed Soldier’s Rescue Dog Was Hours From Euthanasia Until Veterans Acted-congtien

The call came through with so much static that I thought the line had dropped twice before Sarah finally spoke.

I was sitting outside the deployment tents with dust in my teeth, generator noise behind me, and heat trapped in the seams of my uniform.

Her voice did not sound scared.

Image

It sounded tired of being inconvenienced.

‘I cannot look at this ugly mutt for another second,’ she said.

Then she said Barnaby’s name.

Barnaby was a scruffy terrier mix with one floppy ear, a patchy coat, and scars that showed whenever the light hit him wrong.

Two years earlier, I had taken him home after he was pulled from an abusive hoarding situation.

He had been so afraid of open rooms that he moved along walls like a shadow.

He did not trust bowls at first.

He did not trust sudden voices.

He did not trust hands reaching over his head.

But he trusted my combat boots.

The first week, he slept pressed against the toe of my left boot because it was the only thing in the house that did not move too quickly.

I spent three nights on the floor beside him, one hand resting near his back, until he finally scooted close enough to touch me.

That was the way Barnaby loved.

Carefully, completely, and with one paw on whatever felt safe.

When my deployment orders came down, I worried about leaving him more than I admitted to anyone.

Sarah told me I was being dramatic.

She said he was only a dog.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *