He was breaking in public.
A six-foot biker, leather vest, gray beard, clutching a scruffy old dog like it was the last solid thing left in his life. I thought bikers were trouble. Criminals. Tough guys with empty eyes. Then I heard why he was saying goodbye to the only soul he hadn’t failed, and everythin… Continues…
I met a man I’d been taught to fear and found someone who was willing to shatter his own heart to protect his dog. Tom believed losing Buddy was the only way to save him. All he could see was his failures: the PTSD, the drinking, the homelessness, the hunger he couldn’t shield his dog from. But beneath the leather and tattoos was a man who’d already proven, twelve years earlier, that he would not walk away from a helpless life in a dumpster.
All I did was refuse to walk away from him. A few phone calls, a vet who understood, a VA program, some paperwork, a number saved in my phone. Two months later, there was Tom in a small apartment, Buddy on the couch, both of them alive in every sense of the word. I used to think people like him were the danger. Now I know the real danger is the moment we decide not to care.