The War Dog Who Chose A Pregnant Nurse Over Secret Military Orders-eirian

The waiting room at Sagebrush Regional Trauma Center had run out of chairs before noon.

Oil-field workers sat shoulder to shoulder with flu patients, a child cried against his mother’s coat, and the fluorescent lights hummed with the same thin cruelty Stellin Voss had heard before every bad thing in his life.

He had learned to distrust rooms that sounded too calm.

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Vigil leaned into his left leg.

The black German Shepherd did not beg, wag, or look for praise.

He scanned.

Nose up.

Ears shifting.

Body still enough that Stellin felt the warning before he understood it.

Most people saw a service dog and softened.

Stellin never made that mistake.

Vigil had crossed desert roads ahead of patrols, found buried explosives under dust that looked innocent, and survived a blast that left him with a permanent tremor when certain tones hit his ears.

Officially, the dog had been retired.

Unofficially, Stellin had always suspected someone had placed Vigil with him for a reason.

He just had not found the reason yet.

Then the dog walked away from him.

Not toward a threat.

Toward a pregnant woman in faded teal scrubs.

She sat with one empty chair beside her, though the waiting room was packed, because people looked at her belly, her wedding ring on a chain, and her tired gray eyes, then decided to stand somewhere else.

Vigil pressed his head to her knee.

The woman did not flinch.

She looked down at him as if she had met him in a dream and lost him there.

“You can sit,” she told Stellin, “if your canine doesn’t judge my snack choices.”

Stellin almost smiled.

“He judges threats.”

Her name was Greer Kincaid, ER triage nurse, former Army combat medic, widow of Staff Sergeant Dane Kincaid.

Stellin learned the first two facts from her scrubs and the way she watched exits.

He learned the third from the ring at her throat and the grief she carried without asking anyone to help hold it.

The automatic doors opened near the ambulance bay.

Vigil stood.

A man in a charcoal suit entered with a clipboard and a badge that was too polished for a hospital employee.

He spoke to the triage desk in a voice made of warm water and no mercy.

“Kincaid prenatal vitamin enrollment.”

Greer’s hand froze on the paper bag of almonds.

“I didn’t enroll in anything,” she whispered.

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