“I couldn’t walk away …”
For volunteer Emily Carter, visiting the shelter was nothing out of the ordinary. With her list of dogs in hand, she moved from kennel to kennel, just as she had done for dozens of fosters before. But fate had other plans.
As Emily was leaving, something made her glance back. At the very end of the ward, a dog suddenly stood up, tail wagging with desperate joy, as if she had been waiting for this moment.

“It felt like something bigger than me turned my head,” Emily said. “She looked right at me, as if to say, ‘Don’t leave me here.’”
The dog’s name was Rosie. She pressed her paws against the bars, her eyes filled with hope and longing.
Emily’s heart ached, but with travel plans ahead, she told herself she couldn’t take on another foster. Yet that night, Rosie’s face lingered in her thoughts.
“I couldn’t stop thinking about her,” Emily admitted. “And when I learned she was placed on the euthanasia list, I knew I had to act.”
Since Emily was away, another volunteer, Marisol, opened her home to Rosie. For the first time in months, Rosie felt safe — even bonding with Marisol’s young son.
When Emily returned, Rosie joined her family, instantly fitting in with her foster dad, their cat Milo, and her new dog sister Bella.

“She blended in perfectly,” Emily said. “It felt like she had always been with us.”
Rosie underwent heartworm treatment while soaking up love and cuddles. For Emily, this foster felt different. She had let go of 54 dogs before, but this time, her heart told her letting go wasn’t possible.
Her husband noticed, too. “I told him whether we kept her or not, the decision was his,” Emily laughed.

On Mother’s Day, he handed her Rosie’s adoption papers inside a card. Emily cried tears of joy. “He’s a good man,” she said. “And I’m so grateful Rosie is ours.”
Months later, Rosie is thriving. She adores Bella, still remembers Milo, and curls beside Emily every night as she waits for her baby brother to arrive.
For Emily and her husband, Rosie was their 55th foster — and their first foster fail.

“It was never in our plan to adopt,” Emily said. “But when it’s your dog, you’ll know. Rosie made sure I did.”
