A strange dog followed the man in silence, day after day. When he found out why… he burst into tears.
— “That stupid mutt again!” — muttered Daniel, annoyed, stepping onto the cold, damp street on that gray October morning. — “What does it want from me now?!”
Every morning, it was the same story: he’d barely step out of his “cage” and she’d appear from around the corner — a scruffy figure, a little stray with sharp eyes that looked way too intelligent. The dog would follow him silently, keeping her distance, block after block, all the way to the bus stop.
His alarm rang precisely at 6:30. Daniel barely managed to open his eyes, fumbling for his phone on the nightstand. The room was dim, the sky outside still cracked with early light, and in his chest, the same old feeling of emptiness. Ugh, how he hated Monday mornings…
Over forty, and still living like he was twenty: a rented studio with peeling wallpaper, squeaky floorboards from the tenants before him, and only the picture of his daughter on the wall reminding him that once, life had felt different.
— “Come on, Daniel Jameson, get it together,” — he said to himself in the mirror as he slipped on his slippers. — “You’ve got a meeting at nine. Better double-check those reports.”
His morning routine had been the same for years: shower, shave (more gray hairs showing lately), coffee and a sandwich. His navy-blue suit, prepared the night before, was slightly worn at the elbows but still respectable. Much like Daniel himself.
He gave himself a quick glance in the mirror and adjusted his tie. Staring back at him was a tired man, average height, deep bags under his eyes — a classic corporate drone, as his ex used to call him.
— “You work too much!” — her voice still echoed in his mind. — “You’re never home. You don’t take your daughter out. What, you plan to rot in that accounting firm of yours?”
Daniel shook his head at the memory. He grabbed his leather briefcase (a 35th birthday gift from coworkers) and checked the documents inside. All in order.
Time to go. Fifteen brisk minutes to the bus stop. If all went well, he’d be at the office by eight sharp.
— “That stupid mutt!” — he muttered again when he saw her at the corner. — “What do you want from me, huh?!”
Every single day: he left the house, and she showed up — scratched up, quiet, with eyes that seemed to read right into him. She followed silently, always at the same distance, until he got to the station.
Daniel had tried everything to get rid of her: yelling, waving his folders, even throwing a rock once (not to hit her — he didn’t have the heart). But the more he tried to chase her off, the more faithfully she stuck.
— “Maybe she’s got rabies?” — his coworker Sylvia had once said during lunch.
— “No way,” — Daniel shrugged. — “Rabid dogs are aggressive. This one just walks. And stares. She looks right through you, you know?”
People nodded sympathetically.
— “You know… animals sense loneliness,” someone said quietly.
— “I’m not lonely!” — Daniel snapped. — “I just… have a lot going on. That’s all.”
But deep down, he knew Sylvia was right. Ever since his wife left, taking their daughter with her, life had turned into a gray loop: work–home–work. That rented studio he’d lived in for ten years had never truly felt like home.
And then… something incredible happened.
It was a Friday when Daniel snapped.
He turned around sharply, faced the dog, and shouted:
— “Why?! What do you want from me?! What did I ever do to you?!”
The dog stopped. Lowered her head. Took a few slow steps toward him.
Then, she gently dropped something from her mouth — a small pink bracelet, old and worn, with little flower beads.
Daniel’s heart stopped.
He dropped to his knees, hands trembling, and picked it up.
— “This… this belonged to my daughter… her bracelet when she was six… How? Where…?”
And suddenly, it all hit him.
The dog wasn’t just any stray. She had been his daughter’s dog. The one they gave away after the divorce, when everything fell apart. He had moved out, his wife had relocated to another state… and his daughter…
His daughter had died. That awful car accident, just two years ago.
But the dog had stayed. Alone. In the same neighborhood. Somehow, she had found him again. After all those years. And she followed him. Every day. Asking for nothing. Wanting nothing.
Just staying close. Refusing to let him be alone.
Daniel broke down on the sidewalk, the bracelet clutched in his hand, his face buried in his palms.
— “I’m sorry… I’m so sorry I didn’t recognize you…”
The dog sat beside him. Quiet. Just like every morning.
And for the first time in what felt like forever, Daniel realized… he wasn’t completely alone.
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