The golden retriever lying by the side of the highway wasn’t guarding a lost wallet. He was waiting beside the last thing his owner had left behind…
I was the first to stop.

It was just after noon on I-74, one of those scorching Midwest days where the asphalt seems to breathe heat and every passing truck feels like it could rip the air apart.
At first, I thought he was dead.
He was lying on a flattened piece of cardboard just behind the guardrail. His fur was coated in dust and sunburnt. A gray strip of fabric was tied around his muzzle—not tight enough to stop him from breathing, but enough to keep him from barking for help.
Then one ear twitched.
A second later, he lifted his head.
Not toward me.
Toward the road.
As if he were still waiting for a car to come back and pick him up.
I grabbed a bottle of water from my car and slowly knelt down. He didn’t growl. He didn’t bare his teeth. He didn’t even try to move away.
He just stared at the highway with that exhausted kind of hope that breaks your heart.
That’s when I saw the wallet.
Brown leather. Worn at the corners. It was lying just a few centimeters from his paw, as if someone had dropped it in a hurry… or left it there on purpose.
When I reached out toward him, the dog finally reacted.
He placed a weak paw on it.
Then he pushed it toward me with his nose.
Inside, there was an Indiana driver’s license in the name Walter Grayson.
An oncology appointment card.