They Sold My Daughter's Dog, Then Police Came Before Breakfast-olweny - Chainityai

They Sold My Daughter’s Dog, Then Police Came Before Breakfast-olweny

“Where is Sadie?” was the first thing I asked when I came home that afternoon.

Not hello.

Not what happened.

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Not why my daughter was standing in the hallway with her school backpack still on and her whole face swollen from crying.

Just that one question.

Because the house already had the answer sitting in it like smoke.

Sadie’s bed was gone from the corner of Sophie’s room.

Her stainless-steel bowls were gone from the kitchen mat.

The old rope toy she dragged around whenever thunder rolled over the roof was missing from under the desk.

And taped to my 11-year-old daughter’s bedroom door was a note written in my mother-in-law’s tight, careful handwriting.

We gave your dog away. Your cousin didn’t want it around. Don’t make a scene.

Sophie had found it before I did.

She had stood there alone, reading those words, with Sadie’s collar in her hands.

My mother-in-law, Brenda, sat at the kitchen table drinking tea like she had moved a vase from one shelf to another.

My father-in-law, Gordon, folded his newspaper slowly, irritated that grief had interrupted him.

“Where is Sadie?” I asked again.

Brenda lifted her chin.

“We found her a better home.”

I heard Sophie breathe behind me, a small broken sound that made something cold move through my chest.

“You mean you took my daughter’s dog while she was at school,” I said.

Gordon sighed.

“Elena, don’t start. The child needs to learn that not everything belongs to her.”

“Sadie belongs to us.”

“Sadie is a dog,” Brenda said.

Then she looked over my shoulder at Sophie.

“And Madison was uncomfortable.”

Madison was Brenda’s favorite granddaughter, and everyone in that house knew it.

Madison got the bigger cupcake, the longer hug, the good chair, and every adult’s sympathy.

Sophie got told to adjust.

But Sadie was the one thing Sophie did not have to adjust around.

Sadie had belonged to my mother first.

When Mom got sick, Sadie lay by her bed and watched every nurse like she had been hired for the job.

After Mom died, Sadie walked into Sophie’s room, climbed onto the rug beside her bed, and never really left.

She slept through storms with her head on Sophie’s ankle.

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