Late one night, outside a 24-hour laundromat, I saw a man curled up on a worn camping mat, his shoes held together by duct tape and a trash bag at his side. On his chest lay a small orange cat, her fur patchy and one ear damaged. They seemed inseparable — the cat’s breathing perfectly matching his.
Over time, I learned his story. He had no home and no family left — his brother stopped answering calls, and his mother had passed away years ago. Shelters wouldn’t allow Hazel, his cat, inside, so he chose to brave the cold rather than be separated from her. “She chose me,” he told me softly one night. “That’s all that matters.”
I started leaving food for them during my night shifts at the café, and he always made sure Hazel ate first. Their bond was a quiet testament to loyalty and love amidst hardship.
Then one week, they disappeared. Three nights in a row, no sign of the man or Hazel. People said a city crew had cleared the area, but no one knew where they went.
This morning, on my walk to work, I saw a flash of orange at the bus stop. It was Hazel, alone, looking right at me — as if she’d been waiting.
Their story reminds us that love and companionship can come in the smallest, most unexpected forms. For this man, Hazel was more than a pet — she was family, his reason to face each day despite the harshness of life.