“You can’t take both,” the shelter manager said firmly. “Just choose the Shepherd. The little one is baggage.”
I looked through the fence and felt my heart sink. Atlas, the 85-pound German Shepherd, lay curled on the cold concrete. Tucked safely inside his body was Barnaby, a tiny six-pound Chihuahua mix trembling with fear. Atlas watched me carefully, as if to say, If you take him, you take me too.
They had been abandoned together after their family was evicted. For three years, Atlas had protected Barnaby, and Barnaby had comforted Atlas. When staff tried separating them, Atlas would scream and chew the fence until his gums bled.
“I’m taking both,” I said.
Four months later, they are inseparable—eating, sleeping, and guarding the house side by side. I didn’t just adopt two dogs. I saved a friendship that refuses to be broken.