My husband came home the other day with a new puppy. He said his parents never got him one and he’s always dreamed of owning a pet. Problem is, our son is allergic.
Despite that, he told me our son can stay away.
So, I got rid of it late at night.
The next day, I was terrified to find my son wheezing on the couch.
He had dark circles under his eyes, and his breathing was shallow and ragged. I rushed him to the emergency room without waking my husband.
In my panic, I forgot to grab anything—just scooped up my little boy and ran.
I remember praying under my breath the whole drive, asking God to just keep him breathing. At the hospital, they said it was an allergic reaction—severe enough that it could’ve escalated to anaphylaxis if I had waited any longer.
My stomach dropped.
I was confused.
I had gotten rid of the puppy. He was only around it for a few hours before I took it to my sister’s house, who lives thirty minutes away and has no pets of her own.
But the allergist asked me a question that made everything click. “Did he come into contact with any surfaces where the dog had been?
Clothes, bedding, furniture?” I blinked.
Of course.
The couch. The puppy had slept on the couch that first night.
We were discharged that afternoon with a warning and a few prescriptions.
My son was quiet on the way home, curled up in the passenger seat, still a bit shaken. He’s only seven, a sensitive kid, always kind and curious.
He doesn’t understand why his dad would bring something into the house that could hurt him.
And truthfully, neither did I.
When we got home, my husband was making pancakes, acting like nothing had happened.
I told him where we’d been, that our son had been rushed to the ER. His reaction? “You’re exaggerating.
It’s just allergies.”
I stared at him, waiting for something—remorse, concern, anything.
But he just shrugged and said, “So, where’s the dog?”
I told him I’d given it away.
He stared at me like I’d just confessed to murder.
“You did what? That was my dog!”
“And this is your son,” I said.
He didn’t speak to me for the rest of the day.
That night, I found him texting someone about “how crazy his wife was being.” He didn’t bother hiding the screen. I didn’t recognize the name, but something in me shifted.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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