A Homeless Army Ranger Saved a Feared K9 From a Deadly Secret-rosocute

My name is Tom Jenkins, and for four years I lived where Chicago forgot to look.

Lower Wacker Drive is not a place so much as a throat under the city.

Trucks roar above you, tires hiss through dirty water, and every horn becomes something sharper once it bounces off concrete.

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In winter, the cold comes up from the pavement first.

It crawls through cardboard, through wool, through boot soles split at the toe, and it finds the old injuries you thought Afghanistan had already claimed.

I had been a decorated Army Ranger once.

There were photographs somewhere to prove it, citations written in language cleaner than the things we actually did, and a file with my name stamped honorable in places where honor had become mostly paperwork.

None of that kept me warm.

None of that kept me sleeping.

I kept my camp small because small things are easier to abandon.

A sleeping bag under a concrete overhang.

A plastic bin with socks, a can opener, two folded shirts, and a phone I charged at a library when the guard working the front desk looked the other way.

Inside my right boot liner was a number written in black marker.

I had not called it in four years.

The number belonged to Colonel Miriam Voss.

There had been a time when I would have followed an order from Voss into smoke without asking what waited inside it.

That was before the night in Afghanistan.

That was before Havoc.

Havoc had not been a pet.

He had been a military working dog, a black-and-tan German Shepherd with a scar over one eye, a bite record that made young soldiers nervous, and a memory better than most men in command.

He could clear a room faster than fear could explain itself.

He could smell wire through packed dirt.

He could tell the difference between a man hiding because he was scared and a man hiding because he was waiting.

Most people called him dangerous.

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