My Entitled Ex Stole My Dog That Helped Me Heal – So I Made Her Regret It with One Move
It started with the accident. One minute I’m driving home from work, humming along to some terrible pop song, and the next minute I’m waking up in a hospital bed with more tubes than a science experiment.
The doctors threw around words like “compound fracture” and “extensive rehabilitation,” but all I heard was “your life just got flipped upside down.”
Those first few weeks were brutal.
My girlfriend, Camille, visited every day.
She’d record short videos of my recovery and take photos of us together… that’s all I really remember.
Pain medication made everything fuzzy, but not fuzzy enough to forget how alone I felt when she left, or even when she was sitting beside me, tapping at her phone screen.
When I finally made it home, though, Max was waiting.
Max was a black and white poodle crossbreed Camille and I adopted from the local shelter as a pup. The moment he saw me, he transformed into a furry tornado of pure happiness.
From that moment on, he never left my side.
When the pain got bad at night, Max would press his warm body against mine, like he was trying to absorb some of the hurt.
“Easy, boy,” I’d whisper, and he’d stare at me with the sort of pure, bottomless love that you only see in dogs and young children.
During those long, dark hours when sleep wouldn’t come, he’d stay alert, ears twitching at every sound.
Max wasn’t just a dog — he was my anchor.
Camille tried to be supportive at first. She’d bring me soup, fluff my pillows, and ask how I was feeling.
But I could see the impatience creeping in around the edges.
“Do you really need Max in the bed?” she asked one night, wrinkling her nose. “I can’t sleep with all this dog hair on the pillow.”
I looked at her, then at Max’s head resting on my chest.
“Yeah,” I said. “I really do.”
She sighed like I’d asked her to climb Mount Everest.
While Camille grew more distant, Max became my constant.
He’d sit by the basin during my shower, making sure I didn’t fall. When I had nightmares about the accident, he’d wake me with gentle paws on my arm.
Funny how you can live with someone for two years and only really see them when everything falls apart.
The breakup came three months later, right when I was getting back on my feet — literally.
I should have seen it coming, but hope makes you stupid sometimes.
“I think I need to find myself again,” Camille said, standing in my living room like she was delivering a weather report. “This whole nurse thing? It’s just been too much for me.”
Translation: she was going back to her ex. The one she’d claimed was “totally out of her life forever.”
I didn’t fight it. What was the point?
But then she looked down at Max, who had settled by the front door, ears twitching like he sensed something was wrong.
“I’ll take him with me,” she said, as casually as if she were asking for her throw pillow back.
I laughed. Hard.
Back when we first got Max, she complained constantly.
“He smells like outside,” she’d say, holding her breath after I brought him in from walks. “Do you have to let him follow you into every room?”
She never lifted a finger for him. No walks, no feeding, no cleaning up accidents.
“You never liked Max, Camille. You can’t take him,” I said.
“We adopted him together, remember?” she said, but her voice had that defensive edge. “I’ve gotten used to him, and I want to keep him. He looks great in my Insta pics, and my followers love him.”
That’s when I lost it.
“Max isn’t an Instagram, prop, Camille! You can take your stuff and go, I won’t stop you, but Max stays.”
Camille’s face went cold. “We’ll see about that.”
I watched her storm off and felt nothing. Camille stayed through my recovery, sure, but it was Max who sat with me during the night terrors and learned to bring me my medication bottle when I couldn’t get up.
Max had kept me sane. That was worth far more than any romance.
A week passed. My phone lit up with her name over and over. I let it go to voicemail. Then the texts started:
“Give me MY dog.”
“My followers keep asking about Max.”
“My apartment has perfect lighting and I know he’d look amazing there.”
The audacity floored me. HER dog? I trained him, paid for everything, handled the 3 a.m. bathroom runs, and sat with him during thunderstorms.
But apparently, looking good in selfies made her his rightful owner.