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“Mostly,” Dad answered.
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***
Outside, Mrs. Donnelly finally found her voice. “Walter, I didn’t know… I’m… I’m extremely sorry…”
Mrs. Perez stepped forward. “I should’ve said something sooner. I had a feeling it wasn’t…” Her voice thinned out.
Grayson cleared his throat and stared at the grass. “I was wrong.”
There was no meanness in it. That made it land harder.
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The vehicles pulled away. Neighbors drifted back to their porches. Dad went back into the garage, picked up a folded towel, and started wiping a water bowl as though he had a normal morning to get back to.
He didn’t look up. “Yeah?”
“I’m sorry.”
“For not asking. For keeping my distance from that garage door instead of trying to understand what was behind it.”
Dad’s face softened around the eyes. “You were a kid when that started.”
Dad let that sit. Then he said, “You’re here now.”
“You were a kid when that started.”
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I stayed in the garage after Dad went inside. I walked every row. Read every name. And opened the notebooks and kept reading until the pages blurred.
One dog liked old jazz. One only ate if Dad sat nearby. One small guy had arrived so frightened he slept in a toolbox for three days before coming out.
Dad had written it all down, like each life deserved a witness… noting where the ones who passed peacefully were buried at the pet cemetery nearby, and already planning his next trip to bring home dogs the world had overlooked.
When Dad came back with two grilled cheese sandwiches, I was standing by the photo board with tears drying on my cheeks. He handed me a sandwich. We ate side by side, looking at the wall.
One small guy had arrived so frightened he slept in a toolbox for three days.
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“How long were you planning to do this alone?” I finally asked.
Dad chewed and swallowed. “Till I couldn’t.”
“I’m not going back tomorrow.”
That got his attention. “You have work.”
“I’ll move things around, Dad.”
“You have a family, Pete.”
“My wife will be the first one to tell me I’m staying,” I replied firmly.
Dad looked at me for a long second.
“You have a family, Pete.”
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