Six weeks ago, I met a dog named Blue on my delivery route. He wasn’t like other dogs—no barking, just a calm stare, and this strange feeling he knew me. One rainy day, I finally scratched his ears and saw something chilling: his tag didn’t say “Blue.” It said “Melissa.” My name.
I was stunned. Then one day, Blue brought me a letter with a key inside. It read: “Go to the red-doored house on Willow Lane. There’s something there that belongs to you.”
I went. Inside that dusty house, I found old photos… of me as a child. A letter explained I’d once lived there before losing my parents in a tragedy. I was just eight. Trauma had erased everything—including Blue.
But he hadn’t forgotten me.
He waited, year after year, for me to come home. Neighbors moved away. The world changed. But Blue stayed.
I walked out of that house with Blue by my side—and a heart finally whole.
Sometimes, the things we lose aren’t gone forever. They’re just waiting in the quiet, in the dust, in the silence of memory—until love finds its way home again.