I went to surprise my boyfriend at the animal shelter, but the woman at the desk said no one by that name volunteered there. When I showed his photo, she froze. “Don’t cause a scene, his wife is here.” But that wasn’t even all. My heart dropped when I saw a little girl run out of the back room and wrap her arms around him, yelling, “Daddy!”
I just stood there, clutching the dog treats I’d brought, feeling like someone had punched me in the stomach. My boyfriend—well, ex, I guess—looked up and his whole face changed. Not guilty. Not surprised. Just… annoyed.
He walked over to me like I was a dog who’d peed on the rug. “What are you doing here, Tessa?”
That snapped something in me. “What am I doing here? What are YOU doing here? With a whole wife and child?”
The woman behind the counter stepped in, clearly panicking. “Please, not here. Not in front of the animals.”
And you know what? That made me laugh. Not in a funny way. The kind of laugh that sounded like it came from someone else. I turned around and left, right past a couple trying to adopt a cat, past a display of dog bones, out the automatic doors that whooshed open like they were happy to be rid of me.
I sat in my car for twenty minutes, trying to make sense of it. We’d been dating for ten months. I’d met his friends. He’d stayed over at my place. We went to his “uncle’s cabin” three times. He told me he had no close family except an older brother who lived abroad. What a joke.
I scrolled through my photos. There he was, holding my hand at the farmer’s market. Smiling on the beach. Cooking pasta in my kitchen. Telling me he couldn’t wait for me to meet his so-called brother someday.
My phone buzzed. A text from him: “Let’s talk. Don’t blow this up.”
Oh, blow it up? Honey, the grenade was already pulled. I didn’t reply. I just sat there, staring at nothing.
Later that night, I told my best friend Margo. She brought over cheap wine and fancier cheese. I told her the whole thing in a daze.
“So he has a wife? Like, legally married?”
“Yep. And a daughter. Five or six, I’d guess.”
Margo’s face twisted like she’d just smelled a dead fish. “Why are men?”
“Excellent question.”
We toasted to garbage decisions and sat in silence for a while. Then Margo said, “You know what? You’re going to need a distraction. Let’s go on that trip to Devon you keep talking about.”
I blinked. “Devon?”
“You always say you want to walk those cliffs, clear your head. Let’s go. Get some sea air, scream into the wind, throw his hoodie off a cliff, I don’t know.”
So we did.
Three days later, we were in a tiny rental cottage near the coast, the kind with creaky floors and a kettle older than electricity. It was perfect.
On the second day, we went into the little village shop to get snacks. I was browsing the biscuit aisle when a little black dog trotted in like he owned the place. No leash, no collar.
He went straight to me and sat down at my feet.
I crouched. “Hey, buddy. Where’d you come from?”
The shopkeeper came around the corner. “There he is again. That’s Murphy. No one’s claimed him. Shows up every day like he’s got shopping to do.”
I scratched behind his ears. “Can he come home with me?”
The man chuckled. “Wouldn’t be the first stray adopted by a tourist.”
I looked at Margo. She shrugged. “You always said you wanted a dog.”
So I left with biscuits and a dog.
Back at the cottage, Murphy curled up on the couch like he’d lived there forever. He had this calm way about him, like he knew I’d just had my whole heart stomped on and decided he was in charge of patching it up.
The next morning, I took him for a walk along the cliffs. The air was crisp, the sky pale blue, and the sea thrashed like it was mad at something. I let him off the leash. He didn’t run. Just stayed close, occasionally bumping my leg like, “Still here. Still got you.”
Halfway along the path, we passed another woman walking a shaggy spaniel. We nodded politely, but then she stopped.
“Is that Murphy?”
“Uh… maybe? The shopkeeper called him that.”
Her eyes softened. “He used to belong to a woman named Pat who passed last year. He wandered for weeks. People fed him, but he wouldn’t settle.”
I felt something catch in my throat. “Guess he finally picked someone.”
She smiled. “Dogs know. They just do.”
Back at home a week later, things slowly came back into focus. I didn’t hear from the ex again, which was fine. Better than fine. Margo helped me block him on everything. No drama, just… done.
Murphy adjusted to apartment life like a champ. He even made friends with my neighbor’s grumpy terrier. The two of them would bark at pigeons together like tiny security guards.
A month later, I got an email. From the ex’s wife. Subject line: “Thank you.”
I opened it, hesitating. She wrote:
“Tessa, I found your number in his phone and matched it to your Instagram. I hope this isn’t crossing a line. I wanted to say thank you. Not sarcastically. Sincerely. I didn’t know. About any of it. That day you showed up, you made me see what I refused to admit for too long. I left him. We’re okay. My daughter is okay. You probably didn’t mean to, but you helped us. Wishing you peace. —Serena.”
I stared at the screen for a long time. I didn’t reply. Not because I was angry, but because I didn’t need to. She said what needed saying.
Life kept going. Murphy and I had our little routines. Every Saturday we walked to the farmers’ market. I started taking a painting class just for fun. I painted Murphy once; he looked offended by my poor attempt at his majestic scruff.
One day at the dog park, Murphy ran up to a man sitting alone on a bench. Not unusual—Murphy liked everyone. But he stayed there longer than usual, sitting at the man’s feet.
I walked over, a little embarrassed. “Sorry, he thinks everyone wants to be his friend.”
The man smiled. Late 30s, maybe. Messy hair, gentle eyes. “That’s alright. I could use a friend today.”
We chatted. His name was Colin. He’d just moved back to the city after his dad died. Said it was weird being back in a place full of ghosts.
I got that.
We kept bumping into each other. At the park. The corner coffee shop. Then one day he asked if I wanted to go to the art museum with him. I said yes.
It wasn’t instant fireworks or movie-style makeouts in the rain. It was just… good. Steady. Kind. He didn’t lie. He didn’t disappear. He met Murphy and brought him treats that didn’t taste like cardboard.
One night, I told him the whole story. About the shelter. About the wife and the kid. About the pain.
He listened. He didn’t try to fix it. Just held my hand and said, “I’m sorry someone treated you like that. You deserved better.”
And I believed him.
Six months after we met, he said, “You, me, Murphy. That sounds like a good life.”
And it is.
Sometimes the worst moments crack us open in ways we don’t expect. They show us who’s fake and who we really are when things fall apart. And sometimes, they lead us to stray dogs, cliff walks, and people who actually show up.
If you’ve ever had your heart broken by someone living a double life, or if you found healing in the weirdest, most unexpected places—like an abandoned dog in a seaside shop—know this: you are not alone. And you deserve the kind of love that doesn’t come with lies attached.
If this story hit home, share it with someone who might need it. And hey, give it a like if you believe in second chances—the real kind.




