Skip to main content

Dog Impact — Animal Series 41

Leo, the night-shift veterinarian at the Clover Creek Animal Hospital, snapped on his latex gloves. The animal rescue warden, a woman named Mara with rain plastering her grey hair to her scalp, carried the bundle inside. It was a dog—a golden retriever, maybe, though its fur was matted with mud and blood. Its name, according to the frantic owner who had been found sobbing on the roadside, was Beans .

On the back, in shaky marker, was written:

It was a lie. There was no donor. Leo had written a check for the entire amount, wiping out his savings for a trip to Patagonia he’d been planning for three years. Animal Series 41 Dog Impact

Leo had a choice. The rational, clinical choice was euthanasia. A dog with a shattered pelvis, a ruptured spleen, and God knew what else had a slim chance. The surgery would take four hours, cost the owner a fortune, and even if he survived the night, the quality of life was a gamble. It was the kind of decision Leo had made a hundred times. It’s just a dog, the practical part of his brain whispered. Don't get attached. Don't waste resources.

The call came in at 2:47 AM. Not as a screech of tires or the crunch of metal, but as a whimper. A small, broken sound that cut through the rain like a needle. Leo, the night-shift veterinarian at the Clover Creek

Beans was barely conscious, but his gaze found Leo. It wasn't accusatory. It wasn't afraid. It was just… tired. And trusting. The same look Leo’s own childhood dog, a mangy mutt named Gus, had given him on the day Gus had saved his life.

But then he saw the dog’s eyes.

By 7:00 AM, the rain had stopped. Beans was wrapped in a heated blanket, a breathing tube still in his throat, his vitals fragile but stable. Leo peeled off his gloves, which were stiff with dried blood, and sat down on the cold linoleum floor. He leaned his head against the cage where Beans lay. He was shaking—from adrenaline, from fatigue, from the ghost of a frozen pond and a dog that had refused to let go.