I was cutting through a side street to avoid traffic when I saw her. Off the road, behind a chain-link fence, was this little white dog—tied up with a thick chain like she was some kind of threat. No shelter. No blanket. Two tipped-over bowls and a patch of dead dirt where she must’ve paced for days.
I don’t know what hit me harder—how small she looked or how quiet it was. She didn’t bark. Didn’t wag. She stared at me like she was too tired to hope for anything better.
I stood there frozen. Part of me wanted to mind my business. I had groceries in the car. My day was already behind.
But then I thought, “What if nobody ever stops?”
So I did.
I knocked on the door. No answer. Waited. Still nothing. That chain looked like it weighed more than her whole body. I looked around to see if any neighbors were out, but the street was still and silent.
I tried calling out—“Hello? Anyone home?” Nothing.
Then I did something perhaps I shouldn’t have. I stepped into the yard.
The dog didn’t flinch. Didn’t growl. She sat there, ribs visible under her matted fur, her eyes locked on mine like she was asking me not to leave.
I knelt beside her and ran my hand down her back. She trembled, but didn’t pull away. That chain… it was thick, rusted, and looped through a cinder block. Like she was an old bicycle left to rot in the rain.
I pulled out my phone and snapped a few pictures. I wasn’t sure what I was going to do with them, but it felt like a start. Evidence, perhaps. Proof that she existed.
Then I walked back to my car, sat behind the wheel, and stared through the windshield for a long time.
That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept seeing her eyes. That stillness. That silent kind of begging.
So the next morning, I drove back.