The Brass Tag On Berserker’s Collar Had A Name Werner Never Expected To See Again-myhoa

The latch scraped back a second later, but nobody moved fast enough to touch the gate.

Mr. Werner stood outside Pen 7 with one hand half-raised, the other still full of keys. His face had gone the color of copy paper. Gabriel looked from him to me and back again, waiting for the laugh, the insult, the order that would turn this into a joke again.

None came.

“Open it,” Werner said once more.

The boy beside Gabriel fumbled with the outer bolt. Metal knocked against metal. The gate swung inward three inches, then wider. Cold morning air slid through the opening, carrying bleach, damp straw, and the bitter electric smell that clung to overworked kennel equipment.

Berserker did not budge from my legs.

I kept my hand on the dog’s neck and stepped out when I was ready, not when the boys wanted me to. Gravel pressed through the worn sole of my right shoe. The yellow bucket stood where I had set it down, one wheel turned sideways. Gabriel’s phone was still in his hand, but the screen was pointed at the ground now.

Mr. Werner’s eyes stayed fixed on the brass tag beneath Berserker’s collar.

It was not the cheap stamped plate he used on the rest of his dogs. This one was older, heavier, rubbed soft at the edges by time and fur. On one side was the number K-9 17. On the other was a name in block letters deep enough to survive years of bad handling.

CLARA WHITMORE
PRIMARY HANDLER
DO NOT SEPARATE

Werner swallowed once.

“You need to come inside,” he said.

His voice had changed. The barking edge was gone. What remained was quieter, and worse.

Gabriel blinked. “Sir?”

“Office. Now.” Werner did not look at him. “All of you.”

The apprentices started moving at once. Black jackets. Stiff shoulders. Sudden obedience. Only Gabriel hesitated, gaze snagging again on the scar at my wrist and the dog leaning against me like he had reached shore.

“Delete the video,” Werner said.

Gabriel’s thumb twitched.

“Now.”

The yard was silent except for the slap of water somewhere near the wash station and the dry clink of Werner’s keys settling against his belt. A raven cut across the pale Arizona sky. From the far kennels, one dog gave a single bark and stopped.

I bent, picked up my brush, then the bucket.

Werner took one quick step toward me. “Leave those.”

The bucket handle dug into my palm. “I’m working.”

His jaw locked.

The apprentices exchanged a look. They had never heard anyone answer him like that.

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