A Veteran Couldn’t Pay For His Cat. Then A Biker Changed Everything-lbsuong

The vet clinic smelled like disinfectant, wet dog fur, and old coffee.

Arthur noticed those things because he was trying very hard not to notice the number on the screen.

$145.

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The little payment terminal glowed like it had no idea what it was doing to him.

Arthur stood at the counter with his faded cap tucked under one arm and a pile of crumpled bills spread in front of him.

There were ones, a few fives, and quarters darkened from years of drawers, coat pockets, and old coffee cans.

He had counted them twice in the car before coming inside.

He counted them again at the desk because hope sometimes makes a person do foolish math.

$82.

That was all.

Inside the faded blue carrier by his boots, Barnaby made a weak sound that was almost a purr.

It came out raspy, tired, and stubborn.

Arthur looked down through the little metal grate and saw cloudy green eyes blinking back at him from a face that had been orange for fifteen years and slightly grumpy for all of them.

‘It’s all right, boy,’ Arthur whispered.

Barnaby pressed his head against the carrier door like he believed him.

That nearly broke Arthur more than the bill did.

Since his wife died, the house had changed shape around him.

It was the same little place with the porch rail that needed sanding and the mailbox that leaned a little toward the street, but silence had moved in like a second tenant.

There were no more coffee cups beside the sink that were not his.

No more sweater tossed over the couch.

No more soft voice from the back bedroom asking whether he had remembered to bring the trash cans in.

There was only Barnaby.

Barnaby padded behind him in the mornings.

Barnaby slept on the folded blanket at the foot of the bed.

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