His Brother Tried To Take His Dog Until The Blizzard Answered-eirian

The papers hit my kitchen table with a soft slap, and Titan lifted his head before I did.

He always heard danger in the small sounds.

My brother Caleb stood on the other side of the table with his coat still buttoned, his gloves still on, and the smooth face of a man who had rehearsed concern in the mirror.

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Behind him, Marlene Price from county outreach held a folder against her chest and kept glancing from my cane to the black German Shepherd standing beside my chair.

Titan did not bark.

He simply planted himself between me and Caleb, all one hundred and five pounds of retired military working dog, amber eyes fixed on my brother’s hands.

Caleb told me the papers were temporary.

He said the county needed a signature because I lived too far out, because the road iced over, because my right knee was patched together with plates and screws, because people worried.

People, in Caleb’s mouth, usually meant Caleb.

I turned the first page with two fingers and saw the words he had not said aloud.

The form said I was unfit to live alone.

It said a family guardian should manage the cabin, my disability checks, and the animal in my possession.

Titan’s name was written in a little box like he was a chainsaw or an old truck.

I looked up at Caleb, and for a second I could see us as boys, him selling my baseball cards and then crying first so our father would believe him.

Some men grow older without ever learning a new trick.

“Sign these papers, or animal control takes your useless mutt tonight,” he said.

Marlene’s face changed.

It was small, just a tightening around the mouth, but I saw it.

Caleb reached down, took Titan’s leash from the peg by the door, and clipped it to the entry rail as if he needed to show everyone in the room who had control.

Titan looked at me, not at him.

That was the part Caleb never understood.

Command is noise when trust is gone.

I slid the papers back across the table.

“No,” I said.

Caleb laughed once and looked at Marlene like I had performed exactly the way he had promised.

He said I was stubborn, unstable, isolated, and a danger to myself.

Marlene asked if I wanted a private conversation before making any decision.

Caleb answered for me, and that was when she stopped writing.

I told her I was not signing anything in my own home while my dog was tied up like proof of my incompetence.

She nodded, closed the folder, and said the county would not accept a signature under pressure.

Caleb’s smile thinned.

He unclipped Titan only because Marlene was watching, but he bent near my ear on the way out and told me a storm was coming.

“When you fall, Jack, nobody is coming up that road for you,” he said.

The worst thing about cruel people is how often they mistake loneliness for weakness.

By evening, the sky over the Absaroka Range had turned the color of old tin.

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