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“And the money?” Grayson called from the doorway, sounding smaller now.
Nobody spoke after that. Silence did to that crowd what noise never could.
I kept walking until I reached the back corner, and that was where the last part of it was waiting. One sleeping space stood empty. The blanket was folded more neatly. A small lamp hung over it. On the shelf above it was a framed photo, but not of a dog.
She was smiling the way she did in the kitchen, chin tipped down, flour on one cheek. I stared at that picture until my eyes blurred.
On the shelf above it was a framed photo, but not of a dog.
He came up beside me. “After your mom passed away, the house got too quiet, Pete.”
The older officer wiped both eyes and stepped back outside. Mrs. Donnelly lowered her phone all the way. Mrs. Perez whispered something under her breath. Grayson didn’t say a word.
He nodded. “Some of them got restless at night.”
“After your mom passed away, the house got too quiet, Pete.”
“Somebody should, son,” Dad murmured. “Those old dogs… they just needed to know love was still out there. That kindness isn’t gone just because the world got too busy to notice them.”
“You couldn’t mention any of this to your son?”
That one was fair. And fair can sting worse than mean ever could.
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