Chapter 2: A Bed Without Her Was Not Mercy
The night the cold became sharp enough to burn your lungs, I found him sitting upright beside the laundromat door.
His own coat was wrapped around Hazel, tucked carefully under her chin like a blanket for a sleeping child. His hands were bare, red, and shaking so badly that he could barely take the hot coffee I handed him.
Still, he smiled.
“She’s not used to this kind of cold,” he said softly, as if his own suffering did not matter at all.
Later that night, an outreach van stopped at the curb. Two workers stepped out with kind voices and tired faces. They offered him a bed, a shower, warmth, a way back into the world.
He listened. He nodded. Then he looked down at the small orange body breathing against him.
“Can she come?” he asked.
The answer was quiet, practiced, and final.
No.
He looked at me then, clear-eyed and calm. “I won’t leave her,” he said… Continue Reading ⬇️
