The morning after the storm, I found a dog pinned beneath my fallen fence — only his mud-covered head was moving, and his tired brown eyes followed my shaking hands like I was the last person left in the world.

PART 2 – ONE BOARD AT A TIME

The first thing I realized was that I wasn’t strong enough.

Not anymore.

I wrapped both hands around the rain-soaked fence board and pulled until my shoulders burned.

It didn’t move.

The dog watched me without making a sound.

His muddy paw twitched once beneath the broken wood, just as it had a moment earlier, and somehow that tiny movement hurt more than any pain in my knees.

“I told you I wasn’t leaving,” I whispered. “Now don’t make a liar out of me.”

I forced myself to stop.

When I was younger, I solved problems with strength.

At eighty-five, I had to solve them with patience.

I hurried back to the shed and returned with a garden trowel, an old hand saw, and Margaret’s faded blue kneeling pad. She had used it every spring while planting tulips. I had never imagined it would end up beneath my knees while I fought to save a stranger’s dog.

“One board at a time,” I said quietly.

The dog blinked.

I took that as permission.

Instead of pulling, I began digging.

Wet mud packed beneath my fingernails as I cleared the earth around the lowest rail. Every few minutes I stopped just to make sure the dog was still breathing.

He always was.

Barely.

“You’re tougher than you look,” I said with a tired smile.

His ears twitched.

“My wife would’ve liked you,” I continued. “She had a habit of bringing home anything that looked lost.”

The words caught in my throat.

Five years had passed since Margaret died, but grief has strange timing. It doesn’t ask permission. Sometimes it waits until you’re kneeling in the mud beside a frightened dog before reminding you how empty a house can become.

I wiped my eyes with the back of my muddy hand and kept working.

The vine wrapped around the fence gave way after several careful cuts with the old saw. I slipped the trowel beneath one loose board and lifted just enough to ease the weight pressing against the dog’s shoulder.

He let out a slow breath.

Then, for the first time, his tail thumped weakly beneath the boards.

I laughed.

A broken, relieved laugh.

“Well… that’s the first good sign we’ve had.”

But the largest section of the fence still wouldn’t budge.

I looked toward the house.

My phone was inside.

Every sensible part of me said to stand up, go inside, and call for help.

But every time I looked back into those exhausted brown eyes, I was terrified that if I left—even for a minute—I might return too late.

So I stayed.

Minute after minute.

Handful after handful of mud.

Until a voice suddenly called from beyond the broken gate.

“Mr. Whitaker! Are you okay?”

It was Daniel Price, the young Black father who had moved in behind me the year before.

I looked up, exhausted.

For five years after Margaret died, I had convinced myself I didn’t need anyone.

The words that came out of my mouth felt heavier than the fence itself.

“I need help.”

Daniel hurried over, stopping only when he saw the dog trapped beneath the boards.

“Oh my God…”

“He’s still alive,” I said. “But we have to lift this slowly.”

Daniel nodded without another question.

Together, we gripped opposite ends of the broken fence.

“One…”

“Two…”

“Three.”

The soaked wood finally shifted.

Another board came free.

Then another.

For one terrifying second, the dog didn’t move at all.

Neither of us breathed.

Then his muddy head lifted.

Slowly…

Painfully…

He dragged himself out from beneath the wreckage and collapsed across Margaret’s blue kneeling pad.

I reached out with trembling hands and rested one gently against his neck.

His heart was still beating.

Daniel let out a long breath.

“You saved him.”

I looked at the exhausted dog lying in front of me and slowly shook my head.

“No…”

“I think,” I whispered, “this is only the beginning.”

Thanks for reading 💬 If you enjoy stories like this, feel free to leave a comment or share your thoughts below 👇 What kind of drama stories do you want to see next? (This is a fictional story created for entertainment purposes.)

Related Posts

At exactly two minutes to noon the following day, Wesley’s SUV crept through the massive wrought-iron gates of the Pembroke estate

—– PART 2 —– At exactly two minutes to noon the following day, Wesley’s SUV crept through the massive wrought-iron gates of the Pembroke estate . His…

I yanked my wrist free from Liam’s burning grip, my heart pounding so hard I felt it in my throat

—–PART 2—– I yanked my wrist free from Liam’s burning grip, my heart pounding so hard I felt it in my throat. "Wanting something from a distance…

The clinic door burst open as two nurses rushed in with a wheelchair and a fetal monitor, their faces tense with the kind of urgent efficiency that made my fingers turn ice cold

—–PART 2—– The clinic door burst open as two nurses rushed in with a wheelchair and a fetal monitor, their faces tense with the kind of urgent…

The emergency lights flickered on, painting the ruined parking garage in a terrifying, bloody red glow

—–PART 3—– The emergency lights flickered on, painting the ruined parking garage in a terrifying, bloody red glow . Arthur was completely gone . So was our…

The wad of hundreds he left behind didn’t just pay the rent; it covered the overdue utility bills and bought groceries that weren’t cheap ramen noodles

—–PART 2 👉—– The wad of hundreds he left behind didn’t just pay the rent; it covered the overdue utility bills and bought groceries that weren't cheap…

The man standing in the doorway was not a doorman, a security guard, or a wealthy homeowner looking for his hired help

—–PART2 👉—– The man standing in the doorway was not a doorman, a security guard, or a wealthy homeowner looking for his hired help. It was Harrison…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *