Giselle's drowsiness vanished as she bolted upright. "What's going on?"
The clinic manager's voice crackled through the phone. "Five vaccinated dogs from our clinic just died, and now the customers are raising hell. It's gotten so bad they're throwing punches! Y-You need to get here now!"
Giselle's mind went blank, a deafening buzz filling her ears. She hung up, threw herself out of bed, and yanked on the first T-shirt and jeans she could find.
Within minutes, she was speeding toward the downtown veterinary clinic. She gripped the wheel with one hand, phone pressed to her ear as she spoke to the clinic manager, rapidly putting the pieces together.
From what she gathered, every dog that had died had been vaccinated at her clinic in the last three days. None had preexisting conditions, and their death was tied to the vaccine.
This was massive. Giselle's heart raced, but she forced herself to stay focused, her mind already working through possible solutions.
But the moment she stepped out of the car, the dog owners lunged at her like a pack of wild animals before she could even enter the clinic.
One grabbed her hair, another kicked and punched her, while the rest stood by screaming curses or sobbing hysterically. Completely frenzied, the women unleashed their rage on Giselle in a brutal onslaught.
It took several male staff members a great deal of effort to pry the furious customers off Giselle, finally giving her just enough space to breathe. Without their intervention, she might have been beaten to death right there.
Two female staff members quickly pulled her up and rushed her inside, guiding her to a seat.
Giselle's scalp burned, her lip was split, and her back, waist, and stomach ached from the kicks. Bruises from pinches covered her body. Every inch of her throbbed with pain and humiliation.
But she had to stay calm and endure it. She took the customer's rage without resisting.
As a dog owner herself, she understood. To these people, losing a pet was like losing a child. No matter how furious they became, it made sense.
"I'm so sorry, everyone. I'm just as heartbroken as you are about what happened." Giselle forced herself to speak with the steady calm of a business owner, even through her own pain. "I promise I'll make this right. You'll get every penny of the compensation you're owed—"
"Do you think we want your damn money?" a customer shouted, her voice raw with grief. "Do you think a few lousy dollars can bring our dogs back? You should drop dead and rot in the ground with them!"
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