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Neighbors Called the Authorities on My 72-Year-Old Dad for Getting Rid of Dogs for Money – When We Opened His Garage, the Officer Was Left in Tears

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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.

I turned to Dad. “You stayed up with them? All these years?”

He nodded. “Some of them got restless at night.”

“After your mom passed away, the house got too quiet, Pete.”

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“And you kept every name.”

“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?”

Dad gave me the look he used when I was a teenager being dramatic over a flat tire. “You never asked, Pete.”

That one was fair. And fair can sting worse than mean ever could.

The officers spoke quietly with Dad for a few more minutes, their tone completely changed. No suspicion was left in it. The older one said he’d make that clear in his report. The younger one looked at one of the empty spaces and asked Dad, “You do this all yourself?”

“Mostly,” Dad answered.

“Those old dogs… they just needed to know love was still out there.”

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***

Outside, Mrs. Donnelly finally found her voice. “Walter, I didn’t know… I’m… I’m extremely sorry…”

Dad didn’t rescue her from that. He just looked at her.

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