I was driving home when something slammed softly against my car window.
Not a sound of anger —
a sound of desperation.
A stray dog stood there, thin and trembling, eyes locked onto mine like she already knew I was her last hope. Before I could even open the door, she pressed her paws against the glass, tail barely moving, as if asking instead of begging.
I stepped out, and she didn’t run.
She turned.
Slowly.
She kept looking back to make sure I was following.
We crossed the street, passed broken fences and weeds taller than her body, until she stopped beside a pile of old boards behind an abandoned house.
There, hidden in the dirt, were her kittens — tiny, silent, barely moving.
She lay beside them, wrapping herself around their fragile bodies, then looked back at me.
That look said everything.
Please don’t leave us here.
I took them home.
Now they sleep in warmth instead of dust.
They drink milk instead of rain.
And every night, she curls around them like she’s afraid the world might steal them again.
Sometimes animals don’t bark for help.
Sometimes… they knock on your heart.