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The Sound That Stopped a City: When a Biker Risked Everything for a Cry in the Rain

CHAPTER 2: THE WEIGHT OF THE WATER

The silence that descended upon Route 42 wasn’t the peaceful kind. It was the heavy, suffocating silence of a collective heart skipping a beat. The rain continued to lash down, but the angry cacophony of horns had vanished, replaced by the rhythmic thwack-thwack of windshield wipers that now sounded like a ticking clock.

Jax Reed didn’t feel the cold anymore. He didn’t hear the distant sirens Miller had finally summoned. All he felt was the slick, freezing grip of that tiny hand against his calloused palm. It was a grip born of pure, primal terrorโ€”a child clinging to the only thing that hadn’t swept him away into the dark.

“Iโ€™ve got you,” Jax whispered, his voice cracking. “Iโ€™m not letting go. Do you hear me? Iโ€™m not letting go.”

But there was no answer from the darkness of the pipe. Just the frantic, wet breathing of the Golden Retriever puppy Sarah was now cradling against her chest. The dog was shivering violently, its small body tucked under her scrub jacket, but its eyesโ€”wide and amberโ€”were fixed on the hole in the ground.

“Jax, the water is rising!” Sarah yelled, kneeling in the mud beside him. She was a nurse at St. Judeโ€™s, used to trauma, but the sight of a toddlerโ€™s sneaker in Jaxโ€™s hand had drained the color from her face. “The drainage overflow from the hillโ€”itโ€™s all dumping right here!”

She was right. The suburban landscape of Willow Creek was deceptive. The neatly manicured lawns and paved driveways acted like a funnel during Ohioโ€™s late-summer storms. What had been a trickle ten minutes ago was now a roiling brown torrent, swirling with debris, rushing toward the narrow throat of the pipe.

“Help me move this!” Miller shouted, throwing his weight against the heavy iron grate that Jax had only partially cleared. Two other menโ€”one a construction worker in a neon vest, the other a teenager who had been filming on his phone seconds agoโ€”leapt from their cars to help.

Even Henderson, the man in the Lexus, had stepped out. He stood a few feet away, his expensive Italian leather shoes ruined in the puddle, his face a mask of disbelief. He looked at the sneaker in Jaxโ€™s hand, then at his own car, then back at the hole. The arrogance had evaporated, replaced by a haunting realization of how close heโ€™d come to screaming at a man for trying to save a life.

“Is… is there a kid down there?” Henderson stammered, his voice thin.

Jax didn’t look at him. He couldn’t. His mind was a thousand miles away, back in a dusty valley in Helmand Province. He was back in the Humvee, the smell of burnt rubber and copper filling his nose. He could hear the muffled cries of his best friend, Tommy, pinned under the wreckage. I canโ€™t get to you, Jax! The fuel! Get out!

Jax had stayed that day. He had stayed until the flames forced him back. He had stayed until there was nothing left but silence.

He wasn’t going to let the silence win twice.

“I need a flashlight!” Jax roared, his voice snapping everyone back to reality. “And someone get me a jack from their trunk! The pipe is collapsing at the lipโ€”itโ€™s pinning him!”

The construction worker, a burly man named Dave, sprinted to his truck. “I got a heavy-duty hydraulic! Hold on, brother!”

As Dave ran, Jax leaned further into the hole. The water was up to his chin now. He could feel the childโ€™s small body. The boy was wedged into a secondary pipe, a smaller overflow line that was never meant for anything larger than a basketball. He was stuck waist-deep, his upper body barely above the rising waterline.

“Hey, buddy,” Jax said, trying to keep his voice steady despite the freezing water entering his mouth. “My name is Jax. Iโ€™ve got your dog. Heโ€™s safe. Heโ€™s right here with a nice lady. Whatโ€™s your name?”

A tiny, wet sob echoed from the pipe. “L-Leo.”

“Leo. Thatโ€™s a strong name. Like a lion, right?” Jax felt for the boyโ€™s shoulders. He was small, maybe four years old. “Leo, I need you to do something for me. I need you to take a big breath, like youโ€™re about to blow out birthday candles. Can you do that?”

“Iโ€™m cold,” the boy whimpered. The sound was so fragile it nearly broke Jaxโ€™s heart.

“I know. I know you are. But Iโ€™m going to get you out, and then weโ€™re going to get you a giant hot chocolate. With the big marshmallows. Deal?”

“Deal,” Leo whispered.

Above ground, the scene was a controlled frenzy. Dave had returned with the hydraulic jack, and he and Miller were working to brace the crumbling concrete edge of the drain. Sarah was on her phone, barking orders at a 911 dispatcher.

“We need the heavy rescue squad! Now! And an underwater dive team! We have a four-year-old trapped in a Type-B overflow pipe at the intersection of 42 and Miller Road! The water is rising six inches every five minutes! Hurry!”

A local woman, Mrs. Gable, who lived in the Victorian house on the corner, came running out with a stack of dry towels and a thermos. She didn’t ask questions; she just started wrapping the shivering puppy and handing towels to the men working in the rain.

“He lives three houses down,” Mrs. Gable cried, her voice trembling. “Thatโ€™s Leo. His mom… oh God, Maya! She was unloading groceries. She turned her back for one second. The dog chased a ball toward the street and Leo went after him. Sheโ€™s been screaming his name for ten minutesโ€”she thinks he ran toward the woods!”

As if on cue, a womanโ€™s scream pierced through the sound of the rain. A young woman in a rain-soaked sweater came sprinting down the sidewalk, her face a mask of pure agony.

“LEO! LEO!”

Miller intercepted her before she could reach the hole. “Maya, stay back! We have him! Jax has him!”

“Is he alive? Is he okay?” Maya collapsed into Millerโ€™s arms, her legs giving out.

Jax heard her. He felt the weight of her world resting on his shoulders. He reached deeper, feeling the jagged edge of the concrete pipe that was snagging Leoโ€™s jacket.

“Leo, Iโ€™m going to pull, okay? It might hurt a little, but Iโ€™ve got you.”

Jax gripped the boyโ€™s torso. He braced his boots against the interior wall of the main drain. But as he pulled, a sudden surge of water from a heavy gust of rain slammed into the intersection. The volume was too much. A wave of brown water surged over the curb and poured directly into the hole.

Jax was submerged.

“JAX!” Sarah screamed.

Underneath the earth, Jax was in total darkness. The pressure of the water was immense, pinning him against the pipe. He could feel Leoโ€™s hands slipping from his. The boy was being pulled further into the narrow overflow line by the suction.

Not again, Jax thought, his lungs burning. Not this time.

He found a handhold on a rusted iron rung inside the manhole. He used every ounce of strength in his backโ€”the strength heโ€™d used to lift engine blocks and pull men from burning trucksโ€”and he lunged forward in the dark.

He grabbed Leoโ€™s waist. He didn’t care about the skin he was scraping or the cold. He just pulled.

With a sickening shuck sound, the boyโ€™s body cleared the obstruction. Jax kicked off the wall, his head breaking the surface just as his lungs were about to burst. He gasped for air, coughing out silt and rainwater.

In his arms, he held a limp, pale boy.

Jax scrambled up the rungs, his muscles trembling. A dozen hands reached down to help him. They hauled him and the boy onto the wet pavement.

Maya let out a sound that wasn’t humanโ€”a guttural cry of relief and terror.

But as Jax laid Leo down on the asphalt, the relief vanished.

Leo wasn’t moving. His skin was a terrifying shade of blue. He wasn’t breathing.

The puppy, escaping Sarahโ€™s grip, crawled over and began frantically licking the boyโ€™s cold face, whining a high, mournful sound that echoed through the silent street.

Sarah pushed Jax aside, her medical training taking over. “Heโ€™s in respiratory arrest! Move!”

She began chest compressions. One, two, three…

Jax sat there on the wet ground, covered in mud and oil, his hands shaking. He looked at the puppy, then at the mother kneeling in the rain, then at the empty hole in the road.

The world seemed to blur. The flashing lights of the approaching ambulance looked like tracers in the dark. He felt a hand on his shoulder. It was Henderson. The businessman didn’t say anything. He just stood there, holding a towel, his own eyes wet with tears.

“Come on, Leo,” Sarah whispered, her voice a plea. “Come on, baby. Breathe.”

The only sound was the rain and the rhythmic thud of Sarahโ€™s hands on the boyโ€™s chest. Jax closed his eyes and prayedโ€”something he hadn’t done since the day Tommy died.

Please, he thought. Don’t let the dog be the only one who tried.

Suddenly, Leoโ€™s body convulsed. A spray of water erupted from his mouth. He let out a weak, sputtering cough, then a thin, wailing cry.

Maya lunged forward, sobbing, as Sarah rolled him onto his side. “Heโ€™s back! Heโ€™s breathing!”

The crowd broke into a cheer that was instantly swallowed by the roar of the arriving ambulance. Medics swarmed the scene, lifting Leo onto a gurney. Maya followed, clutching the puppy which the medics allowed into the back of the van.

As the ambulance sped away, sirens wailing, the intersection began to clear. The adrenaline was fading, leaving behind a cold, hollow ache.

Jax stood up slowly. His Harley was still idling in the middle of the road, its headlight cutting through the gloom. He felt a hundred years old.

“Youโ€™re a hero, Jax,” Miller said, wiping his brow. “I mean it. If you hadn’t stopped…”

Jax looked at his hands. They were covered in small cuts and black grease. “I just heard the dog, Miller. Thatโ€™s all.”

He walked toward his bike, but a voice stopped him.

“Mr. Reed?”

It was Henderson. He was standing by his Lexus, looking small. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a business card, then paused and put it back. Instead, he walked over and extended his hand.

“Iโ€™m an ass,” Henderson said simply. “Iโ€™m sorry. You saved that family. You saved me from being the man who watched a child die because I was late for a meeting.”

Jax looked at the manโ€™s hand, then at his face. He saw a flicker of something in Hendersonโ€™s eyesโ€”a crack in the armor. Jax didn’t shake his hand. Instead, he just nodded.

“Check your blind spots, Henderson,” Jax said quietly. “Thereโ€™s more than just cars on the road.”

Jax climbed onto his Harley and kicked it into gear. He rode away into the rain, the sound of the engine a lonely growl in the suburban night.

He thought it was over. He thought he could go back to his quiet, lonely life in the shop.

But as he pulled into his gravel driveway, he saw a car waiting for him. An old, beat-up sedan. And sitting on his porch, huddled in a blanket, was a man he hadn’t seen in ten years.

The man held a newspaper with a headline that made Jaxโ€™s blood run cold.

The rescue at the intersection had been filmed. It was already viral. And the ghosts Jax had been running from had finally found his address.

CHAPTER 3: THE GHOST IN THE RAIN

The headlights of Jaxโ€™s Harley flickered across the peeling white paint of his small, isolated cottage at the end of Blackwood Lane. It was the kind of place people bought when they didnโ€™t want to be foundโ€”tucked behind a wall of overgrown maples, far enough from the suburban sprawl of Willow Creek that the sound of the highway was just a dull hum.

Jax killed the engine. The silence that followed was jarring. No sirens. No screaming mothers. No rushing water. Just the ping-ping-ping of the hot engine cooling in the damp air.

He stayed on the bike for a moment, his head bowed. His hands were still trembling. The adrenaline had burned out, leaving a hollow, aching fatigue in his bones. He could still feel the phantom weight of Leoโ€™s small, limp body in his arms. He could still see the blue tint of the boyโ€™s lips.

“You shouldโ€™ve kept riding, Jax,” he muttered to himself.

He swung his leg over the bike and trudged toward the porch. Thatโ€™s when he saw the silhouette.

A man was sitting in the shadows of the porch swing, the glowing cherry of a cigarette the only light. Beside him, an old, rusted sedan sat in the grass, its engine ticking just like the Harleyโ€™s.

Jax froze. His hand instinctively went to the small of his back, reaching for a knife that wasn’t there anymore. Old habits died hard, and in the dark, Jax wasn’t a mechanic anymore. He was a Sergeant again.

“Itโ€™s been a long time, Jax,” the voice said. It was gravelly, worn down by years of cheap bourbon and even cheaper regrets.

The man stepped into the yellow pool of the porch light. He was older, mid-forties, with a jagged scar running through his left eyebrow and eyes that looked like they hadn’t seen a full nightโ€™s sleep since 2014.

“Elias,” Jax breathed, his voice tight. “How did you find me?”

Elias didn’t answer. He held up a smartphone. The screen was cracked, but the video playing on it was crystal clear. It was the footage from the intersection. It showed Jax, covered in filth, emerging from the earth like a ghost, cradling the boy. The caption read: The Miracle of Route 42: Mystery Hero Saves Child and Puppy.

The video already had four million views.

“Youโ€™re trending, brother,” Elias said with a grimace that might have been a smile in a different life. “The whole world is looking for the ‘Biker Angel.’ Took me about twenty minutes to track the bike to this zip code. You always were partial to that custom fender work.”

Jax pushed past him and unlocked the front door. “Iโ€™m not a hero, Elias. And Iโ€™m definitely not your brother. Not after what happened at the Ridge.”

“Thatโ€™s just it,” Elias said, following him into the cramped, dimly lit living room. The air inside smelled of stale coffee and old leather. “The Ridge is why Iโ€™m here. You think you can just disappear into some Podunk Ohio town, fix minivans, and pretend Tommy didn’t happen? You think saving one kid in a drain makes up for the boy we left in the sand?”

Jax spun around, his eyes flashing with a sudden, violent heat. He grabbed Elias by the collar of his worn field jacket and slammed him against the doorframe.

“Don’t you say his name,” Jax hissed. “I tried to go back. Youโ€™re the one who held me down. Youโ€™re the one who told the brass it was a lost cause.”

Elias didn’t fight back. He just looked at Jax with a devastating pity. “I did my job, Jax. I kept my Sergeant alive. But Tommyโ€™s mother… sheโ€™s dying, Jax. Cancer. Sheโ€™s got weeks, maybe days. And sheโ€™s been watching that video of you on a loop. She thinks itโ€™s a sign. She thinks if you can save that boy, you can tell her the truth about her own.”

Jax let go, his strength evaporating. He slumped onto his battered couch, burying his face in his hands. The ‘truth’ was a jagged thing. It wasn’t the sanitized version the Army had sent home in a folded flag. It was a story of a missed signal, a jammed weapon, and a twenty-year-old boy crying for his mom in a language no one else understood.

“I can’t,” Jax whispered. “I have a life here, Elias. A quiet one.”

“Do you?” Elias gestured to the window.

A set of headlights was turning into the long driveway. Not a rusted sedan. A clean, white SUV.

“Looks like your ‘quiet life’ is calling,” Elias said, heading for the back door. “Iโ€™m staying at the Motel 6 off the interstate. Iโ€™ll give you twenty-four hours to decide if youโ€™re a hero or a coward, Jax. Because if you donโ€™t talk to her, I will. And I won’t be as kind with the details.”

Elias vanished into the shadows of the kitchen just as a knock sounded at the front door.

Jax took a deep breath, wiped the grime from his face with the hem of his shirt, and opened the door.

It was Sarah. She was still in her scrubs, though sheโ€™d thrown a cardigan over them. She looked exhausted, her eyes rimmed with red, but when she saw Jax, a small, genuine smile broke through.

“I hoped youโ€™d be up,” she said, holding up a paper bag that smelled like heaven. “I figured you hadn’t eaten. And I thought you might want an update.”

Jax stepped aside to let her in. “How is he? Howโ€™s Leo?”

“Heโ€™s a miracle,” Sarah said, setting the bag of burgers on his coffee table. “Lungs are clear. Heโ€™s got some bruising and a hell of a story for show-and-tell, but heโ€™s going to be fine. His mom… she hasn’t stopped crying. She wants to meet you, Jax. Properly.”

Jax sat down, the weight of the dayโ€”and the weight of Eliasโ€™s visitโ€”pressing on him. “Iโ€™m not good at ‘properly,’ Sarah. Iโ€™m better off in the background.”

Sarah sat on the edge of the coffee table, looking directly at him. She was the first person in years who really looked at him, past the tattoos and the scowl.

“You know, Hendersonโ€”the guy in the Lexus? He came by the hospital,” she said softly. “He donated fifty thousand dollars to the pediatric wing tonight. In your name. He said heโ€™d never seen a man move like that. Like you knew exactly what was at stake.”

Jax looked at his hands. “I did. Iโ€™ve lost that fight before.”

The room went quiet, save for the rain tapping on the roof. Sarah reached out, her hand hovering over his for a second before she gently placed it on his forearm. Her skin was warm, a sharp contrast to the icy water of the drain.

“Jax, whatever youโ€™re running from… you didn’t run today,” she said. “You stood in the middle of a storm and you held on. That counts for something.”

For a moment, Jax felt a flicker of something he hadn’t felt in a decade. Hope. The idea that maybe, just maybe, he could be the man Sarah saw.

But then he remembered Elias. He remembered the dying woman in a hospital bed three states away. He remembered the viral video that was currently broadcasting his face to every person heโ€™d ever tried to hide from.

“I have to go away for a few days, Sarah,” Jax said, his voice flat.

The warmth in her eyes dimmed slightly. “Is it because of the video? The news? Theyโ€™re already calling the shop, Jax. Youโ€™re a big deal.”

“Itโ€™s because of a promise I didn’t keep,” Jax replied.

He walked her to the door. As she stepped out into the night, she turned back. “Leoโ€™s mom gave me something for you. She said the puppy wouldn’t stop barking until she put this in her bag.”

She handed him a small, frayed piece of blue ribbon. It was the collar the puppy had been wearing. Attached to it was a small brass tag that simply said: Brave.

“Keep it,” Sarah whispered. “Maybe youโ€™ll start believing it.”

She kissed him lightly on the cheekโ€”a fleeting, soft touch that felt like a brandโ€”and walked to her car.

Jax watched her tail lights disappear. He stood on the porch for a long time, the blue ribbon clutched in his hand. He looked toward the interstate, where Elias was waiting.

He knew what he had to do. He had to face the ghost of Tommy. He had to tell the truth. But as he looked at the ‘Brave’ tag, he realized that the truth wasn’t just for Tommyโ€™s mother.

It was for the man he was trying to become.

But as Jax turned to go inside and pack a bag, a black van with tinted windows pulled into the far end of his driveway, its lights off.

Jaxโ€™s pulse spiked. This wasn’t Elias. This wasn’t Sarah.

The viral video hadn’t just found his friends. It had found the people who had been looking for the “missing” evidence from the Ridge for ten years.

And they weren’t here to give him a medal.

CHAPTER 4: THE PRICE OF LIGHT

The black van sat at the mouth of the driveway like a predator in the tall grass. Its engine was off, but Jax could hear the faint, rhythmic thrum of a high-end surveillance system. In the silence of Willow Creek, that sound was as loud as a gunshot.

Jax didnโ€™t go back inside. If he went inside, he was trapped. He knew the layout of his cottage too wellโ€”three exits, all of them vulnerable, none of them offering a clean line of sight to the woods. Instead, he stayed on the porch, shadowed by the overhanging roof, his heart hammering against his ribs like a caged bird.

Two men stepped out of the van. They weren’t wearing tactical gear or masks. They were dressed in charcoal-grey suits, the kind of men who worked in glass buildings in D.C. but knew how to handle a suppressed 9mm.

“Sergeant Reed!” one of them called out. His voice was polite, professional, and terrifyingly cold. “We saw the news. Quite a performance at the intersection. But you know how it isโ€”fame brings a lot of unwanted attention.”

Jax stepped forward into the light, his hands visible. “I don’t have what you’re looking for, Miller. I told you that ten years ago.”

“We believe you think that’s true,” the man said, walking slowly up the gravel. “But the Ridge was a messy operation. There were… discrepancies. A flight recorder that went missing. A set of coordinates. We just want to make sure the ‘Biker Hero’ doesn’t start talking to the press about things that don’t involve puppies and storm drains.”

Jax felt a cold realization wash over him. They weren’t here for a physical object. They were here because he was no longer invisible. As long as he was the ‘surly mechanic’ on the edge of town, he was a dead end. But as a viral sensation, he was a liability.

“There’s a camera on my helmet,” Jax lied, his voice steady. “And the footage from today? Itโ€™s already uploaded to a secure cloud. If I so much as trip and fall, those ‘discrepancies’ from the Ridge go to every major network in the country.”

The man in the suit paused. He looked at the Harley, then at Jax. For a moment, the air was thick with the possibility of violence. Then, the man smiledโ€”a thin, bloodless curve of the lips.

“You always were a gambler, Reed. But remember: heroes have a nasty habit of falling from grace. Stay in your lane. Fix your bikes. Keep your mouth shut about the desert. Or the next time we visit, we wonโ€™t be talking to you. Weโ€™ll be talking to the nurse.”

The van backed out of the driveway, the gravel crunching under its tires. Jax stood there until the red glow of their taillights vanished into the mist. He was shaking, not from fear, but from the sheer weight of the secrets heโ€™d been carrying.


Twenty-four hours later, Jax was crossing the state line into Pennsylvania.

He hadn’t taken the Harley. Heโ€™d borrowed a nondescript truck from the shop. He needed the anonymity. The “Biker Hero” was still the lead story on every news channel, but Jax Reed was nowhere to be found.

He pulled up to a small, white house with a sagging porch and a garden full of wilting marigolds. This was the place. The house where Tommy had grown up. The house Tommy had promised to buy his mother with his enlistment bonus.

Elias was already there, leaning against his sedan. He looked at Jax and gave a short, sharp nod. “Sheโ€™s waiting. Sheโ€™s had a rough morning.”

Jax walked up the steps, his boots feeling like lead. Inside, the house smelled of antiseptic and lavender. In a hospital bed set up in the living room sat a woman who looked like a brittle leaf. Mary Jo was barely sixty, but the grief and the cancer had stolen decades from her.

When she saw Jax, her eyesโ€”Tommyโ€™s eyesโ€”lit up with a frantic, desperate energy.

“Jax,” she whispered, reaching out a skeletal hand. “I saw you. I saw you save that boy.”

Jax took her hand, kneeling beside the bed. “Iโ€™m sorry it took me so long to come home, Mary Jo.”

“Tell me,” she said, her voice trembling. “The Army said it was an accident. They said he was in the wrong place. But you were there. Was he… was he brave?”

Jax looked at Elias, who was standing in the doorway. He thought about the men in the black van. He thought about the threats and the secrets. Then he looked at the woman who was dying without the one thing that mattered: the truth.

“He wasn’t just brave, Mary Jo,” Jax said, his voice thick with emotion. “He was the best of us. That day at the Ridge… there was a signal jam. We were blind. Tommy knew the only way to get the coordinates out was to get to high ground. He knew the risks. He went anyway. He saved thirty men that day. He didn’t die because of a mistake. He died so we could live.”

It was the truth. The dangerous, classified, suppressed truth.

Mary Jo closed her eyes, a single tear tracking through the deep lines on her face. A long, shuddering breath escaped herโ€”a breath she seemed to have been holding for ten years. “My boy,” she whispered. “My hero.”

She fell asleep shortly after, a look of peace on her face that Elias said he hadn’t seen in years.


When Jax returned to Willow Creek two days later, the rain had finally stopped. The sun was setting over the suburban hills, painting the sky in bruises of purple and gold.

He pulled into the driveway of the little cottage. He expected the black van. He expected the silence.

Instead, he saw a familiar Harley parked in the grass. And sitting on his porch steps, playing with a very energetic, very golden puppy, was Leo.

The boy looked up, his face breaking into a wide, gap-toothed grin. “Jax! Jax, look! Buddy has a new collar!”

Maya, Leoโ€™s mother, stood up from the porch swing. She looked at Jax with a profound, quiet gratitude. “We didn’t mean to trespass. But Leo wouldn’t stop asking to see ‘the man who swims like a fish.’ And we brought someone else.”

Sarah stepped out from the kitchen, holding two mugs of coffee. She looked at Jaxโ€”really looked at himโ€”and saw the change. The shadows behind his eyes hadn’t vanished, but they were no longer pulling him under.

“You look like you’ve been through a war,” Sarah said softly, handing him a mug.

“I think I finally finished one,” Jax replied.

He sat down on the steps next to Leo. The puppyโ€”Buddyโ€”immediately lunged at him, licking his face with reckless abandon. Jax laughed. It was a rusty, unfamiliar sound, but it felt good.

He knew the men in the suits might come back. He knew the world would eventually forget the ‘Biker Hero’ and find a new story to obsess over. But as he looked at the boy heโ€™d pulled from the dark and the woman who had waited for him to come home, Jax realized something.

The water had tried to take everything. It had tried to drown the past and the present. But he had held on. And for the first time in ten years, Jax Reed wasn’t just surviving. He was breathing.

He reached into his pocket and pulled out the small brass tag Sarah had given him. He looked at the word Brave.

Then, he reached out and clipped it onto Buddyโ€™s new collar.

“You keep it, pal,” Jax whispered to the dog. “I think I finally found my own.”

The sun dipped below the horizon, and for the first time in a long time, the dark didn’t feel so heavy.

The end.

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