It was past midnight when the sound echoed through the parking lot.
A thin, desperate cry.
Under a parked car, a tiny puppy paced in circles. She was exhausted, barely able to keep her eyes open — yet she couldn’t lie down. The pain was too intense.
Her tail had been severed.
The wound was fresh.
She kept turning, licking the injury, trying to make sense of what had happened. Even in the darkness, it was clear she had suffered something deliberate and cruel.
She was only a baby.

And she was alone.
A Stranger Who Chose to Stop
A young woman heard the cries and followed the sound.
She didn’t rush in.
Instead, she crouched at a distance and placed food gently on the ground. Hunger won over fear. The puppy devoured two bowls within moments — proof she hadn’t eaten properly in days.
When the woman reached out slowly, the puppy didn’t run.
She was tired.
And perhaps, somewhere deep inside, she still hoped.
With surprising obedience, the small dog allowed herself to be secured gently and followed the woman away from the cold pavement.
An Emergency Visit in the Middle of the Night
They went straight to the veterinary clinic.
The doctors confirmed she was a female puppy, only three to four months old.
Video: From Midnight Pain to a Belly-Up Smile — How Xiao La Ba Learned to Trust Again
During the examination, she revealed just how much fear she carried. When blood was drawn, she covered her face with her tiny paws. When a muzzle was brought near her, she panicked intensely.
It was suspected that she had been restrained during the act that caused her injury.
Even so, she endured the necessary surgery to properly treat the wound.
Small body.
Immense resilience.
She survived the operation.
Healing More Than a Physical Wound
The young woman gave her a name: Xiao La Ba — “Little Trumpet.”
During the days she stayed at the clinic for anti-inflammatory treatment and monitoring, the woman visited daily. She sat beside her kennel, spoke softly, and let the puppy adjust at her own pace.
At first, Xiao La Ba guarded her food — a common sign of past hunger. She ate quickly, anxiously, as if unsure whether the next meal would come.
But gradually, something shifted.
Her body relaxed.
Her tail stump healed.
Her eyes softened.
She allowed gentle strokes.
She leaned into the touch.
Trust does not erase trauma.

But it grows around it.
A Home Where She Could Finally Rest
After several days, Xiao La Ba was discharged.
At her new home, she experienced something unfamiliar — safety without condition.
No shouting.
No restraint.
No harm.
One moment stood out above all: she rolled onto her back willingly, exposing her belly, inviting affection.
A vulnerable position.
A position that says, “I feel safe.”
And then she did something else.
She smiled.
Despite what she had endured at human hands, she chose to trust again.
The Quiet Message Behind Her Story
Cruelty leaves scars — some visible, some not.
But compassion leaves something stronger.
Light returns to the eyes.
Joy returns to movement.
Rest returns to sleep.

Xiao La Ba’s story is not only about rescue.
It is about the extraordinary ability of animals to forgive.
If we cannot love, we should at least never harm.
Because every small life feels pain.
And every small life deserves kindness.