On a quiet summer afternoon in Los Angeles, just days after the fireworks of the Fourth of July had faded, a brown-eyed dog named Ricky was led into a city shelter. His paws hesitated at the doorway, his tail low, as if he already sensed something was terribly wrong.
The man who brought Ricky in told the staff that the dog was a stray. At first, no one questioned it. Shelters see strays every day, and Ricky looked confused enough to fit the part. But when the staff scanned his microchip, the truth came to light—Ricky already had an owner. And that owner was the very person who had just abandoned him.
“He looked Ricky straight in the eyes, lied about not knowing him, and then walked away without a second thought,” Los Angeles Urgent Dogs, a rescue network dedicated to saving dogs at risk of euthanasia, later wrote on Instagram.
That betrayal cut deeper than any wound. To Ricky, his human was supposed to be home, safety, and family. Instead, home had just turned its back on him.

Life Inside the Shelter
At just five years old, Ricky had so much life ahead of him. He loved walks, loved the touch of gentle hands, and behaved beautifully one-on-one with people. But the shelter environment was overwhelming.
Crowded kennels echoed with barking and whimpers. The metallic clang of gates, the sharp smell of disinfectant, and the constant noise created a world that Ricky couldn’t handle. Other dogs frightened him, and loud sounds sent him into panic. His anxiety grew day by day.
Like many sensitive dogs, Ricky wasn’t “bad.” He wasn’t aggressive. He was simply scared—his heart breaking in a place that wasn’t built for tenderness.
Shelter workers did their best. They walked him, gave him treats, and reassured him. But when he returned to his kennel, his body trembled, his eyes pleading silently for someone to take him away.

The Countdown to Death
After nearly a month, the shelter made a heartbreaking decision. Ricky was placed on the euthanasia list. His deadline: 4 p.m. on August 10. If no adopter or foster came forward by then, Ricky would be put down early the next morning.
The clock began ticking.
Volunteers shared Ricky’s story online, hoping someone would see the sweetness in his eyes. Thousands of dogs face this fate each year, but Ricky’s time was running out.
That’s when his story reached Courtney Tillia, the founder of Minnie’s Mutts Rescue.
“I hadn’t even met him yet, but something about him just spoke to me,” Tillia told The Dodo. “Volunteers and staff kept saying what a wonderful dog he was. I couldn’t stop thinking about him.”
Tillia worked tirelessly. She posted Ricky’s photos, begged for fosters, called contacts—anything to save him. She knew Ricky wasn’t “broken.” He was simply a dog crushed under the weight of shelter stress.

“There are so many incredible dogs who suffer inside shelters,” Tillia said. “They shake, they cry, they stop eating. But often, those are the dogs who turn out to be the most loving once they’re freed.”
The Longest Night
August 10 arrived. Ricky’s deadline. Tillia had no foster lined up, no adopter willing to take him. She sat by her phone, frantically messaging, making last-minute pleas to strangers. Nothing worked.
“I was devastated,” she admitted. “I barely slept. I felt like I was watching him slip away, and I couldn’t stop it.”
The next morning, she called the shelter, bracing herself for the worst. Instead, she heard words she never expected:
“Ricky is still here.”

Somehow—whether by grace, luck, or timing—the shelter hadn’t gone through with his euthanasia.
“I couldn’t believe it,” Tillia said. “I didn’t know why or how, but I didn’t care. He was alive.”
A Smile on the Way Home
Wasting no time, Tillia rushed to the shelter. She didn’t have a concrete plan. She didn’t have a forever home lined up. All she had was one determination: Ricky would not die today.
When Ricky walked out of the shelter doors, something magical happened. His tail began to wag. His face lit up with a smile, the kind only dogs can give—the kind that forgives, forgets, and clings to hope even after heartbreak.
“I was elated,” Tillia recalled. “Sometimes we don’t have the answers. Sometimes we just say yes, save the life, and figure everything else out later.”
As her husband took Ricky for his first walk of freedom, Ricky rolled in the grass, burying his face in flowers, basking in sunlight he hadn’t felt in weeks. Every step seemed to say: I’m alive. I made it.
Healing and Hope
Today, Ricky is under care at a veterinary clinic. The weeks in the shelter left him with kennel cough and stomach issues, but with treatment, he’s getting stronger.
Despite everything—the betrayal by his owner, the stress of the shelter, the looming shadow of euthanasia—Ricky’s spirit shines. He’s goofy, playful, and endlessly sweet. He loves tug-of-war with his leash, and he greets each day with joy as though it were a gift.
“He’s happy-go-lucky, affectionate, and just full of love,” Tillia said.
Ricky is still waiting for his forever family. Somewhere out there, someone is looking for a loyal friend, a dog who knows the value of second chances. And when they find him, Ricky will be ready—with a smile that says, “Thank you for choosing me.”
A Lesson in Compassion
Ricky’s story is just one among thousands. Every day, dogs like him face the same ticking clock. Not because they are unlovable, but because shelters are overcrowded, and people turn away from the commitment of caring for them.
But Ricky reminds us of something simple and profound: even when the world betrays them, dogs never stop loving. They never stop hoping.
He came within minutes of death, yet he left the shelter smiling. And maybe that smile is his way of telling us—we all deserve a second chance.

