The trip was supposed to be quick, simple, and uneventful. Stop for gas, maybe grab a snack, stretch my legs, and then get back on the road. That was the plan.
I wasn’t even supposed to stop in that tiny forgotten town wedged between two stretches of highway. But the fuel gauge was sinking fast, and there wasn’t a choice. Twelve hours of driving lay ahead of me to help my sister with her move, and I was already halfway through.
I remember thinking how badly I just wanted to push through and keep going. That stop was nothing but an inconvenience—or so I thought. The only station for miles looked like it had been standing since the seventies, if not longer.
It was more shack than store, with peeling paint, one flickering light buzzing above the door, and a single working pump leaning like it had given up trying to stand straight. A crooked sign dangled overhead, letters sun-bleached and cracked. My truck was running on fumes, so even if I wanted to press forward, I couldn’t.
I pulled in, rolled down my window, and the air hit me—dusty, dry, carrying the faint smell of gasoline and something metallic. As I filled up, I heard it. A sound I almost ignored at first, light and quick, like a squeak carried by the wind.
A yip. Then another. I froze for a moment, listening, waiting.
At first I assumed it had to be a dog tied up somewhere nearby. Maybe the station owner’s. But when I turned and looked around, the place was empty.
Just weeds overtaking the cracked lot, a rusted ATV abandoned near the fence, and endless fields stretching toward the horizon. The sound came again, this time sharper, urgent. I followed it across the lot and that’s when I saw it—a beat-up pickup truck, dented sides, paint peeling in spots, sitting lopsided on its tires.
I walked closer and peered into the bed. That’s where I found them. A pile of tiny, trembling bodies.
Puppies. Eight of them. Dirty, thin, their fur clumped and matted.
Some huddled together for warmth, others dragged themselves weakly across the truck bed, their little cries desperate and raw. Their ribs showed through their skin. Their eyes darted around as if they were searching for someone—maybe their mother, maybe anyone at all.
But there was nothing. No mother, no owner, no sign that anyone had been near. I stood frozen, not knowing what to do.
My mind spun in circles. Were they abandoned? Was someone coming back?
Was I intruding on something that wasn’t mine to interfere with? As if to answer me, the station door creaked open. A man stepped out, wiping his hands on a rag.
His nametag read “Carl.” He watched me for a second, then said words that chilled me. “You’re not the first to find a load like that around here.”
The way he said it—flat, resigned—made my stomach twist. I looked at him, searching his face.
“What do you mean?”
Carl leaned against the wall of the station and shrugged like it was nothing new. “Animals get dumped out here all the time. Folks drive by, think nobody’ll notice.
Half the year this place is empty anyway.”
His voice was steady, but his eyes betrayed something heavier—anger maybe, or helplessness. My heart sank as I turned back to the puppies. They were so young.
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