For most of us, this dusty church basement is the only home we have. It’s the one place in the city where no one asks questions if you show up cold, hungry, and with your dog by your side. But now, she wants to take it all away.
Her name is Eleanor Davenport, and she lives in the gleaming luxury condo building that went up across the street. She calls us a “public nuisance.” Her official complaints started with noise, then sanitation, but we all knew the real reason. She hates the dogs.
She sent a lawyer to deliver an eviction notice last week, citing a dozen bogus city codes. Our founder, a kind old woman named Martha, was in tears. We felt hopeless.
Alistair, the quiet man everyone calls the dog whisperer, just held his oldest retriever close and said, “Kindness will find a way.” I wasn’t so sure. Then, this morning, I saw her. Eleanor.
Standing across the street, on her phone, pointing at our door with a disgusted look on her face. As she turned to leave in a huff, something small and black fell from her designer purse. She didn’t notice.
After her car sped off, I ran over to pick it up. It was a small, expensive-looking leather planner. My hands were shaking, and I know I should have just tried to return it, but something told me to open it.
I flipped past the first few pages of appointments and lunch dates. Then I saw it. Tucked into a back pocket was a folded piece of paper.
It wasn’t a shopping list. It was an official-looking veterinary report for a golden retriever. And the owner’s name listed wasn’t Eleanor Davenport.
It was the name of a man who had vanished from our neighborhood two years ago. His name was Arthur Grayson. I clutched the paper, my mind racing.
I remembered him vaguely, a quiet older man who always walked a beautiful golden retriever. He lived in one of the old brownstones before they were torn down to make way for Eleanor’s glass tower. Then one day, he was just gone.
His mail piled up, and eventually, a “for sale” sign appeared. The neighborhood gossips said he’d moved to Florida to be with family, but no one really knew. Now I was holding a recent vet bill, dated just last month, for his dog.
But the address listed at the top was Eleanor Davenport’s penthouse. My first thought was dark and immediate. She had something to do with his disappearance.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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