The air smelled of smoke and rain. Ash clung to the snow-covered ground. People whispered, firefighters moved in the background, but he didn’t seem to hear them.
He just stood there, clutching the tiny, shivering kitten against his chest. His hands—rough, trembling—shielded her from the cold, his sweater speckled with soot and falling snow.
I swallowed hard, stepping closer. “Sir… are you okay?”
He didn’t look up. He just held her tighter.
“They’re all gone,” he whispered, his voice barely there. “The house. The photos. Everything.”
Then, he looked down at the kitten, stroking her damp fur. His lips trembled, but not from the cold.
“She’s all I have left.”
And in that moment, my heart broke.
I didn’t know his name then. I only knew the man, a silhouette against the flickering emergency lights, a man who had lost everything tangible, but clung fiercely to the one thing that remained. I later learned his name was Elias.
“Do you… do you need help?” I asked, my voice softer this time.
He finally looked up, his eyes a watery grey, filled with a weariness that seemed to stretch beyond the immediate tragedy. “Just… just a warm place for her. And maybe… maybe a little milk.”
I nodded, not trusting my voice. “My car’s right there. We can go to my place. It’s not far.”
He followed me, the kitten nestled securely in his arms. We drove in silence, the only sound the gentle hum of the heater and the occasional sniffle from Elias. When we arrived, I ushered him inside, setting him up by the fireplace with a warm blanket and a saucer of milk for the kitten, whom he’d named Spark
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