
One cold winter evening, with the sky covered by a gray fog,
Daniel Carter , a thin but sturdy man in his fifties, heard desperate barking coming from a narrow side street. Following the sound, he came across a group of men putting a golden-coated dog into a rusty metal cage. They haggled over the price as if the creature’s life were nothing more than a commodity.

The dog’s golden coat gleamed faintly in the pale light, and its eyes, a mixture of fear and pleading, fixed on Daniel. In that moment, he saw pure despair… and hope. Without hesitation, he stepped forward, took all the money left in his wallet, and bought the dog from the meat dealers, saving it from a cruel fate.
Daniel called him Buddy . From that day on, Buddy always stayed close to him, his eyes shining with gratitude. Years earlier, Daniel had lost his right leg in a work accident, and Buddy, with amazing instinct, always walked on his right side, as if filling the space where his leg had been. The townspeople would smile and say that Buddy was “Daniel’s second leg.”
Every morning, when Daniel went out to do some shopping or odd jobs, Buddy would walk beside him, matching his stride to the steady beat of the wooden cane against the ground. On steep or uneven paths, Buddy would gently lean against Daniel to help him maintain his balance. Passersby would often stop, moved by the silent bond between them.

On rainy days, Buddy would sit under the porch, watchful, never leaving his owner’s side. When Daniel’s old injury caused him pain, Buddy would rest his head on his leg, transmitting a warmth that soothed like a balm.
Daniel used to say:
“I saved him once… but he’s been saving me every day since.”
Daniel and Buddy’s story spread far and wide, becoming a testament to how friendship between humans and animals can transcend all boundaries, and how sometimes it’s the smallest companions who give us the strength to keep going.
