I ended up with a truck full of puppies after stopping for gas in the middle of nowhere

75

The journey was meant to be brief. Get a snack, fill up with gas, and resume your journey. To be honest, I didn’t even want to stop in that dusty tiny town halfway through the twelve-hour drive to assist my sister with her transfer.

The only gas station nearby was a dilapidated hut with a single functioning pump and a crooked sign, and the vehicle was running on fumes. I could hear it—a faint yipping sound—from nearby as I was filling up. I assumed that there was a dog in the car.

However, there was nothing there when I looked around. Just a broken-down old ATV sitting in the weeds and vacant fields. I saw the bed of a beaten-up pickup parked across the lot at that point.

I approached and looked inside. They were there. A bunch of puppies.

Shivering and filthy, some of them huddled on top of one another while others crawled around, wailing for assistance. No mother in sight. Not even a human.

After observing me gazing inside the truck bed, the gas station employee walked outside and said something that chilled me to the bone:

“You’re not the first person in this area to find a load like that.”

Like smoke, the words hung in the air. I glanced to him, and my gut wrenched. “What do you mean?”

Leaning against the building’s side, he shrugged.

“Carl” was the name on his name tag. “Animals are constantly dumped out here. Think nobody will notice.

In any case, this place is dead for half the year. My heart fell. How could somebody simply abandon these small animals?

Their ages could not have exceeded six or seven weeks. Their eyes darted about as if they were also seeking for answers, and their matted fur clung to their emaciated bodies. I took another look at Carl.

“Are you aware of who abandoned them?”

He responded bluntly, “Nope.” “And I would most likely go to jail for what I would do about it if I did.”

I was surprised by his candor, but he shared my dissatisfaction. Standing there, however, wasn’t making things better. The sky was becoming pink and orange as the sun began to set, and the temperature was rapidly decreasing.

Those puppies wouldn’t survive the night if I didn’t take action right away. “May I have them?” I inquired. Carl’s eyebrows went up.

“Are you certain? That’s quite a bit of accountability. I retorted, “I can’t just leave them here.” “They will perish.”

He gave a slow nod before vanishing into the shop.

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