I had no idea anyone had taken a photo of me that day. Not until my sister called, her voice trembling, telling me I was
“everywhere.” She said the internet thought I was some kind of hero. The image showed me kneeling in the dirt beside my K9
partner, Finch, hands clasped in prayer under a setting sun. “It’s beautiful,” she said.
But no one ever asked what I was praying for.
They saw the uniform. They saw Finch lying still, as if he understood the gravity of the moment. People saw strength, faith,
sacrifice. But they didn’t see the fear. They didn’t see what was really happening.
I wasn’t praying because I felt strong. I was praying because I didn’t know what else to do.
Just before that photo, Finch and I had finished clearing a small compound. Then the blast came—close enough to rattle us, but
not close enough to take me down. Finch didn’t move. He was hurt—badly. His leg was bleeding, his eyes locked on mine. He
whimpered once, then went quiet. There were no medics for him. Just a roll of gauze and hands that wouldn’t stop shaking.
I dropped to my knees and prayed—not with brave words, but with desperation.
That’s when someone took the photo.
It spread fast. People called it powerful. They said it symbolized loyalty, devotion, hope. But I wasn’t thinking about any of that.
I was just hoping Finch would survive the night.