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Walking Home from the Market with Mom, I Was the First to Notice

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When Mum and I were walking home from the market, I spotted him first.
He wasnt curled under the bench like tired strays usually dono, he sat right on the bus stop seat itself. Like a person. Calm, steady, watching. The winter light made him squint as he stared at the road, lifting his head now and then to scan the passersby, as if searching for someone. He didnt run around, didnt bark, didnt beg. Just sat there, waiting. Strange almost human.

Mum, look! I tugged her sleeve. A puppy!

Small, bony, with ears too big for him, a bit clumsylike a teenager still growing into his limbs. But his eyes caught me. Tired, but not empty. There was something deep in them, something you cant put into words but feel straight away.

Mum gave him a once-over and sighed.

Dont touch him. Probably full of fleas. No jabs, either. Cant take him on the bus. Hell move on when we do.

But the bus came, then anotherand he stayed. Shifting from paw to paw, glancing around, never leaving his spot. Like he was choosing. Waiting for the right person. And when he looked at meI swear I heard it: *You came for me, didnt you?*

Mum, please I wasnt good at grown-up pleading yet. Just stared, throat tight. Hell freeze

Mum bit her lip. Looked up at the grey sky. Back at the pup. Then let out a long breath.

If no one takes him by tonight, well bring him home. But hes *your* responsibility. If Dad kicks off, you explain.

I nodded like it was life or death. Rushed back, unwrapped my scarf, and bundled him up. He didnt fight it. Just sighedsmall, childlikeand nosed into my coat.

At home, he ate quietly. Fast. Desperate. Every crumb like his last chance.

Then he curled on an old jumper and slept. Like he could finally stop holding on.

Whatre we calling our hero? Mum asked, putting the empty bowl away.

I thought. Then it hit me.

Its April twelfth today.

So?

Churchill, I said.

Mum raised a brow.

After the Prime Minister?

After the *first*. Cause hes *my* first. And a proper hero.

She smiled. The name stuck. Churchill Churchill.

It wasnt easy. The cat hissed from the doorway before bolting under the dresser. Gran announced the house now smelt of dog. Dad, away on business, rang to say wed lost the plothe was allergic. I nodded through it all. Didnt back down.

Churchill was perfect. Barely barked. Never chewed shoes. Just stayed near me. Quiet. Like knowing we were there was enough.

He grew. Ears even bigger, legs lanky, all anglesbut sweet. Hed wait by the door when I got home from school. Not jumping. Just looking up, like, *How was your day?*

He knew my moods. If I was ill, hed lie beside me, still. If I cried, hed nudge his ball at me*Play instead*. If I argued with someone, hed rest his head on my lap. Just *there*.

That winter was brutal. Heavy snow, bitter frosts, the river behind school frozen solidkids and adults skated every day. Churchill and I went often. Id throw snowballs; hed chase, skidding on the ice. Perfect.

That day, I went alone. My mate was poorly; Mum was late. Snow fell thick, the world hushed. Just my boots crunching.

Churchill trotted ahead, weaving through bushes. I neared the river. The ice looked smooth, solidbut cracked under my step.

Then*snap*.

No time to shout.

The world dropped. Water swallowed me. Cold punched my chest. Flailing, slippingno grip. Ice breaking. Panic screaming.

Then*a jerk*.

My coat tugged hard.

I turned. Churchill.

Jaws clamped on my sleeve, pulling with everything he had. Slipping, scramblingbut never letting go. Dragging. Barking. Fighting.

No memory of getting out. Just bloodied elbows, shaking, and him beside me. Soaked. Shivering. Holding me like hed lose me again.

Then paramedics. Mum. Doctors. Me to hospital, him to the vet. Mild hypothermia for me. Cuts, exhaustion for him.

They saved us.

A week later, I came home. Churchill met me at the door. Pressed his nose to my stomachthen lay beside me. No words needed.

After that, he wasnt just a dog.

He was my universe. My Churchill.

A year passed. We moved. New house, new doornow with a sign: *Beware: Hero Lives Here*.

He wont let me near the river. Not winter, not summer. Blocks my path. Stares me down. Not angry. Just certain.

Sometimes he sits on the balcony, watching the sky. Long stretches. Like hes searching.

Counting stars, Churchill? I laugh.

No answer. Just his head resting on mine.

And its warm.

So warm.

Always.

If youve got a story about your Churchillshare it below. And dont miss the next one. Plenty more heart-warmers coming.

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