S.TrujilloL.
New member
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2025
- Messages
- 19
- Points
- 3
Hi folks,
Just wanted to open up a heartstring-pulling question:
Could be a loyal dog, a quiet creature, a sentient AI pet, or even something metaphorical.
Was it the way they waited?
The way they never spoke, but always understood?
The moment they refused to leave?
Why I’m Asking:
I’m working on a sci-fi story, and one of the characters that readers seem to connect with the most isn’t a hero or a fighter — he’s a one-eyed, slightly broken dog named Kiru. He doesn’t speak. He doesn’t attack. He just… stays, when others don’t.
There’s one moment I keep coming back to: He walks nearly 100 km through ruins, limping, not because he was told to — but because someone he once trusted taught him this:
Along the way, he helps and keeps going.
I’ve been thinking a lot about the animal companions that stay with us — not because they’re powerful, but because they made us feel something real.
I’d love to hear about your own unforgettable fictional animal companions.
Bonus points if you cried. Extra bonus if you still remember why it hurt.
- S. TRUJILLO L.
(Author of The Story of Nemi)
If anyone’s curious about Kiru, he’s in here:
https://www.scribblehub.com/series/1726481/the-story-of-nemi/
And yes — we talk about dogs, trauma, and memory here too:
https://discord.gg/aTah2bgJ93
Just wanted to open up a heartstring-pulling question:
What’s the most emotional animal companion in fiction that made you tear up — or broke you completely?
Could be a loyal dog, a quiet creature, a sentient AI pet, or even something metaphorical.
Was it the way they waited?
The way they never spoke, but always understood?
The moment they refused to leave?
Why I’m Asking:
I’m working on a sci-fi story, and one of the characters that readers seem to connect with the most isn’t a hero or a fighter — he’s a one-eyed, slightly broken dog named Kiru. He doesn’t speak. He doesn’t attack. He just… stays, when others don’t.
There’s one moment I keep coming back to: He walks nearly 100 km through ruins, limping, not because he was told to — but because someone he once trusted taught him this:
“A crying child isn’t a signal for combat. It’s a call for tenderness.”
Along the way, he helps and keeps going.
I’ve been thinking a lot about the animal companions that stay with us — not because they’re powerful, but because they made us feel something real.
I’d love to hear about your own unforgettable fictional animal companions.
Bonus points if you cried. Extra bonus if you still remember why it hurt.
- S. TRUJILLO L.
(Author of The Story of Nemi)
If anyone’s curious about Kiru, he’s in here:
https://www.scribblehub.com/series/1726481/the-story-of-nemi/
And yes — we talk about dogs, trauma, and memory here too:
https://discord.gg/aTah2bgJ93
Last edited: