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As we lifted her, the dog forced himself upright, limping badly, blood dripping from his left shoulder, pacing alongside the stretcher, refusing to be left behind.
“He’s bleeding,” Allison said.
The fur on his shoulder was matted dark red.
“He stays,” I said when Frank opened his mouth. “I don’t care what protocol says.”
IV lines. Oxygen. Monitors screaming numbers no one wanted to hear.
Bruises.
Not accidental.
Finger-shaped.
Human hands.
And then I saw her wrist.
Allison’s voice dropped to a whisper.
“No,” I said quietly, my stomach sinking as the truth settled like a weight in my chest.
It wasn’t.
And the dog—
The bloodied, exhausted military dog lying on the floor—
Hadn’t just brought her to us.
He had rescued her.
And whatever had happened before he reached our doors was something no child should ever survive.
But she had.
Because someone—something—refused to leave her behind.
The heart rate monitor went to a flat line seconds later.
“I’ll start compressions,” I said, and I was already pressing, counting through my teeth, with sweat dripping down my face as the seconds stretched out like an eternity.
The dog crawled closer and rested its head against the bed, whimpering softly, rhythmically, like a prayer.
“The epi is already in,” Allison said.
“Come on…” I murmured. “Stay with us.”
And then, impossibly, the monitor came back to life.
“He’s back,” someone said, their voice breaking.
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