Everyone Feared the Dog and Gave It a Wide Berth—Until a Little Girl Walked Up to ItShe knelt down, and the dog timidly licked her hand, revealing the gentle soul hidden beneath its fearsome appearance.
Sometimes life throws up stories that make you think afterwards – surely it couldn’t have happened exactly like that. But it did.
On the corner of Elm Street, beside a block of flats, a dog appeared. Big, ginger with black markings. One ear torn, a hind leg dragging.
People were scared straight away. Understandable – a huge mutt, and injured on top of that. And injured animals, as everyone knows, are the most dangerous. That’s what the residents thought.
“We need to call the RSPCA,” said Aunt Margaret from the ground floor, adjusting her glasses. “Otherwise someone’ll get bitten.”
“Absolutely,” agreed Uncle Bob from the fourth floor. “There are kids all over the estate.”
And everyone started giving the dog a wide berth. As if it wasn’t lying quietly by the entrance, but snarling and lunging. But it just lay there. Shivering. Even in the October sunshine, it shivered.
Alice noticed the dog on the very first day. The girl generally noticed things that adults walked past without seeing. Maybe because she often felt invisible herself. After her dad died, the world had become different. Grey, somehow.
“Mum, what’s wrong with that dog?” she asked as she and her mother walked back from the supermarket.
“What dog?” Irene didn’t even glance towards the entrance.
“That one. Has she hurt her leg?”
Her mother finally saw it. And immediately took her daughter’s hand tighter.
“Don’t go near her, Alice. She could be ill. Or vicious.”
“But she’s not vicious,” the girl said quietly. “She’s sad.”
Adults never seemed to tell the difference between sadness and anger. Especially in animals. Alice had noticed that a long time ago.
Days passed. The dog didn’t bother anyone. She lay by the wall, occasionally trying to get up – limping to the bins, sniffing around. Never found anything, came back. And lay down again.
But the residents kept talking.
“It’ll get cold soon, and she’s still here.”
“Yesterday some kids ran past, and she lifted her head. They got such a fright.”
“What do you mean, lifted her head – she’s enormous!”
Alice watched from the window every day. Third floor – she could see everything.
“Mum, why doesn’t anyone help her?”
“Because it’s not our business, love.”
But Alice thought problems were when you didn’t have money for new shoes, or when your tooth hurt. This was just someone dying in front of everyone. And everyone pretended not to see.
Saturday morning, Alice woke up early. She looked out – the dog was lying there, but strangely. On her side. Not moving at all.
“Mum!” Alice ran into the kitchen. “The dog, she –”
“What about her?”
“I think she’s really ill.”
Irene came to the window. Looked. Something was definitely wrong.
“Probably sick,” Mum sighed. “Poor creature.”
“So let’s help!”
“Alice, we can’t.”
“Why can’t we?”
Why, indeed? Irene didn’t know herself. It just wasn’t done – end of story. They had enough worries of their own.
But at lunchtime the dog tried to stand. And collapsed. Just fell onto her side. Stayed like that. Only breathing heavily – her ribs heaving.
Alice saw it.
She put on her coat. Took some ham from the fridge. Mum was in the shower.
In the courtyard, the dog lay with closed eyes. Up close, she seemed even bigger. And not frightening at all. Just tired to death.
“Hello,” Alice whispered. “How are you?”
The dog opened her eyes. Looked at the girl. And in that look there was so much surprise – as if she’d thought people had forgotten how to speak to animals.
“I brought you some ham. Do you want it?”
Alice held out her hand with the food. The dog sniffed it, but didn’t eat. Just licked the girl’s fingers. The tongue was hot.
“You’re ill, aren’t you?” Alice gently stroked the ginger head. “Everyone’s scared of you. They think you’re mean. But you’re not.”
And then the dog did something remarkable. She laid her head on Alice’s lap. A heavy, big head. And closed her eyes.
“Alice! Alice, get away from there this instant!”
Mum was running across the courtyard, waving her arms. Hair wet, dressing gown flapping – she’d clearly dashed straight out of the shower.
“Have you lost your mind? She could bite you!”
“Mum, she doesn’t bite. Look – she’s ill.”
Irene stopped three paces away. She stared at her daughter, sitting beside a huge dog and stroking her head. And the dog lay perfectly still.
“Mum, you know how you told me about Dad? How he used to bring home every stray cat when he was a kid?”
Irene remembered. Her father-in-law had told her – young Simon was like that. Soft-hearted to a fault.
“And you said the worst thing in the world is to walk past someone else’s pain.”
When had she said that? Oh, yes. After the funeral. When Alice asked why Dad used to go to the hospital to read books to old men he didn’t even know.
“Mum, can we not walk past this?”
Irene looked at her daughter. And suddenly she saw Simon in her. The same boy who’d dragged home cats. Who could never walk past someone in trouble.
“Stand up slowly,” she said. “Carefully.”
But the dog seemed to understand. She lifted her head herself, freeing Alice. Looked at Irene with an expression that seemed to say: “I won’t hurt her. Honest.”
“She won’t eat,” said Alice. “She must be really poorly.”
Irene stepped closer. Squatted down beside her. The dog didn’t growl, didn’t bare her teeth. Just watched. With clever, sad eyes.
“Is your leg hurting?” Irene asked, surprised at herself for talking to the dog as if to a child.
The dog seemed to nod.
“Alright,” Mum sighed. “Let’s go and make some calls.”
The vet arrived half an hour later.
“Fracture. Old one, healed badly. But fixable,” he said, examining the leg. “She’s a purebred. German Shepherd. Probably got lost.”
“What will happen to her?” Alice asked.
“Well, if nobody claims her…”
“We’ll take her.”
Irene looked at her daughter. At the dog. At the red scarf tied around her leg.
When had her little girl become so grown up?
A month later.
Rex (that’s what Alice had called her) was asleep on the rug beside Alice’s bed. Her leg had healed. Her coat was glossy.
“Mum,” Alice said before bed. “Why was everyone so scared of her? She’s kind.”
Irene stroked her daughter’s hair.
“You know. Sometimes people are scared to be kind. Scared people won’t understand. Scared of being judged.”
“That’s silly.”
“Yes. It is.”
After tea, Irene stood at the window.
Down in the courtyard, Alice was playing with Rex. The dog gently, carefully nudged the girl. And Alice laughed.
That day, her daughter had taught her not to be afraid.
Not to be afraid of kindness.
Not to be afraid to reach out to someone who needed it.
And in the courtyard, laughter rang out.
And the bark of a big, gentle dog who had finally found a home.
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14 липня 2026