We Adopted a Rescue Dog — The Next Night, My 8-Year-Old Son Was Gone

What began as a simple family outing to adopt a rescue dog quickly turned into a night of panic, hidden secrets, and difficult truths. That night made me question everything I believed about trust and family.

Last weekend, I thought I lost my son.

It all started with a dog. My son, Andy, had been begging for one for months. Every day, he’d ask, “Dad, can we please, please get a dog?” He was relentless, and I was getting close to giving in. But he also had to convince Kelly, my wife.

After a lot of talking, my wife finally agreed. She looked at me seriously and said, “Fine, but only if it’s small and well-behaved. We’re not getting some big, messy mutt.”

Kelly had grown up in a tidy home, where pets were seen as small, clean, and polite. A poodle or a Yorkie, maybe, but definitely not a scruffy dog. Our son, though, wanted a real friend.

Source: Midjourney

The shelter was loud, full of barking and howling. Andy’s eyes lit up as we walked down the rows of kennels, skipping over the fluffy dogs we were supposed to be considering.

Then he stopped. In front of us was a kennel with the scruffiest dog I’d ever seen. She had tangled fur, big brown eyes, and a tail that looked crooked. She didn’t bark, just looked at us, tilting her head as if curious.

I squatted down next to Andy. “She’s not exactly what your mom wanted, buddy.”

“She needs us,” he said, looking at me with a stubborn glint. “Look at her. She’s… sad. We could make her happy.”

Source: Midjourney

“All right,” I said, ruffling his hair. “Let’s bring her home.”

When we walked in, my wife’s face fell. “She’s a little scruffier than I imagined,” she said, glancing between the dog and me.

“Come on, Daisy’s great,” I said, grinning. “Besides, they’re already best friends.”

She forced a small smile, looking unconvinced. “I just hope she doesn’t ruin the carpets.”

That evening, as we got ready for bed, Daisy wouldn’t settle down. She paced around, whining softly.

“Can’t you do something about that?” Kelly sighed, looking irritated.

“She’s probably nervous being in a new place,” I said. “Maybe she just needs some attention.”

Kelly hesitated, then swung her legs over the bed. “Fine. I’ll give her a treat or something,” she muttered and left the room.

Source: Midjourney

Minutes later, she returned, saying, “She just needed a treat.” She climbed into bed, and the whining stopped.

I woke up around 3 a.m. to a strange quiet. Something felt wrong. I got up to check on Andy. His bed was empty, the covers on the floor, and the window slightly open.

A cold panic crept over me.

I rushed down the hall, checking every room, calling his name louder each time. But he was nowhere.

I ran back to the bedroom and shook my wife awake. “He’s not in his room,” I said, my voice shaking. “The window’s open. Daisy’s gone too.”

She sat up, her eyes wide, but there was something else—guilt?

“Maybe she escaped, and he went after her?” I asked, desperate for an answer.

Source: Midjourney

She bit her lip, hesitating. “I don’t… I don’t know,” she stammered.

I picked up my phone and called the police, praying he was somewhere nearby.

Just as I was about to step outside, there was a soft scratching at the door.

When I opened it, Daisy sat there, covered in mud, panting. I dropped to one knee, feeling a mix of relief and confusion.

“Daisy?” I whispered. “Where were you?”

It felt strange to ask a dog, but I was desperate. She just looked up at me with tired eyes.

Source: Midjourney

Hours later, just as dawn broke, my phone buzzed. It was Mrs. Carver, an elderly neighbor who lived nearby.

“I saw a little boy near the woods behind my house,” she said. “He looked… lost.”

I thanked her, grabbed my keys, and headed to the car. Kelly and Daisy followed, looking tense. The woods weren’t far, but it felt like miles.

When we arrived, I ran into the woods, calling his name. And then, finally, I saw him.

He was curled up under a tree, shivering, his face dirty. I knelt beside him, pulling him close.

“Buddy,” I said, my voice breaking. “You scared us half to death.”

He looked up, his face lighting up when he saw Daisy behind me. She’d followed us, sniffing the ground.

Source: Midjourney

“Daisy,” he whispered, hugging her. “I thought you ran away because of me.”

I picked him up, wrapping him in my arms. “Let’s go home, all right?”

He nodded, looking back at Daisy like she was the only thing keeping him safe.

When we got back to the house, relief washed over me. My son was safe, Daisy was with us, but something still felt off.

My wife was tense, her eyes avoiding mine. She seemed distant, almost nervous. After we’d settled Andy on the couch with a blanket, I turned to her.

Source: Midjourney

“I swear I locked the door. How did Daisy get out?”

She looked down, her hands twisting. After a long pause, she took a deep breath. “I… I let her out.”

I stared, not understanding. “You… let her out?”

Her eyes filled with tears. “I thought… maybe if she disappeared, he’d get over it. She wasn’t the dog I wanted. She’s… scruffy, and I didn’t think she fit here.”

I felt anger and hurt boiling inside. “So you just… let her go?”

“I didn’t know he’d… he’d go after her,” she whispered, her voice breaking. “I thought he’d be sad, then move on. I didn’t want this mess. I just wanted things to be normal.”

Source: Midjourney

“Normal?” I repeated. “You put him in danger because you couldn’t handle a little mess?”

She sank into a chair, covering her face. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t know he’d do something so brave or that Daisy would stay with him. I didn’t think.”

I shook my head, struggling to understand. I looked at Andy, snuggled up with Daisy on the couch, her head on his lap. They’d bonded through something none of us had expected.

“I don’t know how we move past this,” I said quietly. “But for now… Daisy stays. She’s part of this family, and you need to accept that.”

She nodded, wiping her eyes, realizing the weight of what had happened.

Source: Midjourney

As I watched Andy stroke Daisy’s fur, a small, hopeful warmth rose in my chest. Family wasn’t about having things perfect. Sometimes, it was about the imperfect moments, the scruffy dogs, and the quiet forgiveness that held us all together.

Woman Says Man’s Aggressive Outburst At Gym Is Proof ‘Women Aren’t Safe In 2024’

“I work at a gym and have never seen anyone do what you were doing,” one writes.
“Looks nothing like pulse squats,” another agrees.
Other commenters are angry at Ruvee for filming herself in a public place.
“Ban video recording in gyms!!” one demands.
“Cameras should be banned, and she should 100 per cent be banned forever,” another shares.
While a third writes: “It’s the facial expressions. Pulse squats is one thing but adding facial expressions to make it look like something else is where she went wrong.”

In the video, a man approaches Ruvee while asking: “What are you doing?”
She explains it’s a leg warm-up, and he replies: “I know what you’re doing.”
The man then accuses Ruvee of being ‘what’s wrong with girls’, at which point the woman asks him: “Are you pointing at me?”
He goes on to describe her behaviour as ‘ridiculous’ before kicking her phone away, seemingly breaking the screen.

Later on, Ruvee speculates that the man knew who she was and that he was angry because of her OFs fame.
“I can’t believe I’m not allowed to stretch at the gym because of what I do for work,” she shares on Instagram.
“Before I started OFs I was doing the same stretch before every leg day,” she says in a follow-up TikTok video.
“And all the people saying that I deserve to have my phone kicked, I deserve to be harassed in public because I was minding my business in the smallest corner of the gym… is there a rule that says no phones? No there’s not. Was it on a tripod? Was I being obnoxious? No, I wasn’t. Was I being loud? No.

“So it’s really sad to me to see all these comments saying that I deserve something because I went to the gym and was stretching.”
There has since been some speculation on X, formerly known as Twitter, about whether or not the video was a staged skit.

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