The Route 9 Kennel Call That Turned Into A Deputy’s Worst Night-Quieen - Chainityai

The Route 9 Kennel Call That Turned Into A Deputy’s Worst Night-Quieen

The call came in near the end of a Tuesday shift, when the day had already started to feel used up.

I remember the weather first.

Late November in our county has a way of turning gray before it turns dark, and that afternoon the sky hung so low over the road that it felt like the clouds were sitting on the tree line.

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My partner Miller was riding passenger, one boot braced against the floorboard, one hand near the heater vent.

We had been talking about Thanksgiving because that was what you talked about when you were trying to get through the last hour without another call.

He had family coming in.

I had promised myself two days without a uniform.

Then Dispatch broke through the cruiser radio and took the shape out of the afternoon.

‘Unit 4, we need you to back up Animal Control at 449 Old Route 9. Neglect check. Caller reported hearing strange noises and a foul odor coming from the property.’

Miller did not sit up fast.

He turned his head slowly, the way men do when they already know the place being named.

Old Route 9 was not a neighborhood so much as a strip of road the county had stopped expecting anything from.

A few farms still worked out there, but the Miller farm had been empty for years.

The bank took it long before my shift ever took me down that gravel.

People used abandoned property for dumping trash, drinking behind buildings, hiding things they did not want found, and leaving animals they no longer wanted to feed.

That was the version I let myself believe as I put the cruiser in gear.

Dumped dogs.

Maybe a few neglected animals.

Maybe a smell that sounded worse over the radio than it would be in person.

Most calls begin with the mind trying to make them smaller.

It took us about twenty minutes to reach the property.

The paved road cracked into gravel, and the gravel narrowed under dead branches.

Bare trees leaned over both sides of the lane, and the wind pushed dry leaves across the road in little brown waves.

The farmhouse came into view all at once.

It sat back from the road with its porch bowed forward and its windows broken out, the kind of place that looked like it had been holding its breath for years.

The yard was high with dead weeds.

Two abandoned cars were rusting near the side of the house.

The Animal Control truck was parked near the porch.

Sarah was standing beside it.

She was young, but not new.

I had seen her walk into houses that smelled like rot and come out with half-starved dogs in her arms.

I had seen her handle angry owners, sick animals, and calls that made grown men stare at the ground.

She did not scare easily.

That was why the look on her face made me reach for my flashlight before I asked a question.

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