Within minutes, sirens wailed in the distance. Emma leaned over the coffin, gently brushing a strand of wet hair from Sophie’s face. Her daughter’s skin was pale and cold, her lips tinged blue, but there was warmth—faint, fragile warmth.
“Hang on, baby,” Emma murmured, tears streaming down her face. “Don’t leave us again.”
Buddy whined softly, licking Sophie’s hand as if trying to wake her.
The paramedics arrived and quickly assessed the situation. “Pulse is faint—she’s alive!” one of them confirmed. They lifted Sophie from the coffin with the utmost care and wrapped her in a thermal blanket before placing her on a stretcher.
Buddy tried to climb into the ambulance, whining anxiously. One of the medics glanced at Emma. “Let him come. He’s clearly part of this.”
Emma nodded, and Buddy jumped in, settling right beside the stretcher, refusing to move.
At St. Anne’s Medical Center, chaos turned to focused urgency. Doctors rushed Sophie into the emergency ward while Emma and Daniel waited outside, hands clasped tightly. Buddy sat at Emma’s feet, his eyes fixed on the door.
After nearly an hour, a doctor emerged—his face a mixture of astonishment and relief. “Your daughter is alive,” he said. “But I don’t think either of you are ready for how.”
He explained that Sophie had suffered from catalepsy, a rare neurological condition that mimics death. Her heartbeat had slowed to an undetectable rhythm, her breathing nearly stopped, and her body became rigid. “All the standard tests would have shown no signs of life,” the doctor said. “But she wasn’t gone. Just… in a state of suspended animation.”
Emma covered her mouth in disbelief. Daniel leaned forward. “So, she would’ve woken up eventually?”
The doctor’s eyes softened. “Maybe. But not before burial. If that dog hadn’t stopped you—” he exhaled deeply, shaking his head—“you’d have lost her for good.”
Buddy’s ears twitched as if he understood every word.
The family was allowed into the room once Sophie was stabilized. She looked fragile but peaceful, her small chest rising evenly now. Buddy hopped onto the side of her bed, resting his head beside her arm.
Hours passed. Then—softly, faintly—Sophie’s eyelids fluttered open.
Her lips moved. “Buddy?”
Emma gasped and rushed to her side. “Yes, sweetheart. Buddy’s here. We’re all here.”
The little girl blinked, confused. “It was dark,” she whispered. “But I heard him… barking.”
Daniel bent over, unable to hold back his tears. “He never gave up on you.”
Buddy wagged his tail slowly and gave a quiet whimper, pressing his nose to her hand.
That night, as Sophie slept peacefully for the first time in days, Emma sat in a chair beside her daughter’s bed, staring at the dog who had refused to surrender.
“He didn’t just sense something,” she whispered to Daniel. “He saved her.”