I’d seen him a few times before, but never really noticed—until one brutally hot day when I stopped for water and saw him sitting cross-legged on the pavement, surrounded by calm, watchful dogs.
In his hands was a sick, trembling dog. He wasn’t just petting her—he was speaking to her softly, almost like singing. She began to calm down. Then all the other dogs lifted their heads in unison, just listening.
He looked up at me and smiled. “This one’s been waiting for you,” he said.
He turned the dog’s face toward me. Around her neck was a tag: Luna—my childhood dog who had gone missing years ago. I whispered, “She’s mine.” He nodded, handing her to me like it was the most natural thing.
When I asked why, he simply said, “They find their way to me. But they’re not really mine. They belong where they’re loved most.”
I left with Luna. That night, memories came rushing back—and questions too. Who was he? How did she end up with him?
The next day, I returned to the spot but found only a woman who called him Elias. “People say he’s magic,” she said. “The dogs choose who they belong to. And she chose you—again.”
Luna slowly regained her strength, and joy returned with her. One day, I found an article about Elias—stories of him saving animals across the city, appearing like a guardian angel.
Eventually, I found him outside a small cabin on the edge of town. He welcomed me calmly. I thanked him, and he replied, “She brought herself. I just helped.”
When I asked what happens next, he said, “They’ll keep finding me—until they don’t.”
And just like that, he was gone. I haven’t seen him since, but every time Luna curls up beside me, I feel him near. Love, it seems, always finds its way home.