The police dog was furiously barking at a cardboard box abandoned in the middle of a snow-covered street; when the officer opened it, he nearly screamed in horror 😱😨

Officer Thomas had gone out for a routine evening walk with his service dog, Rex. The frost bit at his cheeks, and the air was silent and heavy — the kind of silence found only on the outskirts of the city after snowfall. Rex walked confidently but calmly, his nose close to the snow, alert to every sound, just as an experienced service dog should be.
But suddenly, without any warning, the dog jerked so violently that Thomas nearly dropped the leash.
— Hey, easy, what’s wrong with you? — he muttered, struggling to keep his balance.
Rex seemed to go mad: he growled deeply, from his chest, with a sound Thomas had never heard from him before. Then he lunged sharply toward the trash containers beside a dark fence. Snow sprayed out from under his paws; the dog was relentless, tense, as if something invisible were pulling him in.
— Rex! Stop! — Thomas planted his feet, already annoyed, assuming the dog had picked up the scent of another cat or discarded chicken bones. — Calm down, do you hear me?
But Rex didn’t listen. He growled, barked, and pulled with such force that the leash was stretched to its limit. His eyes were unnaturally wide, his ears pinned back, his tail raised — his entire posture screamed danger. In all his years of service, Thomas had never seen his dog like this.
— What is wrong with you… — he clenched his teeth and finally followed Rex to an old cardboard box standing almost right next to the trash bin. The box was dusted with snow, as if it had been there for a long time.
Rex reached it first — scratching at the cardboard and barking so loudly that Thomas’s ears rang.
— Alright, alright, let’s take a look. My God, just let me see…

The officer bent down and carefully opened the box. And in that very moment, his breath caught in his throat.
Inside… something moved. 😱😨 Continued in the first comment 👇👇
Thomas jerked his hand back as if burned. His heart dropped to his feet. He leaned in again — slowly, cautiously. And he saw a small face. Red, wrinkled. The lips were trembling.
A baby. A real, living newborn baby.
For a second, his vision went dark.
— My God… — he managed to whisper, his voice breaking. — Merciful God…
Rex fell silent, as if he understood that what had been found was the most fragile thing in the world. He only whimpered softly, staring at the baby.
With trembling fingers, Thomas wrapped the child in his scarf, pressed him to his chest, and lifted him out of the freezing box. He felt the baby’s weak breathing against his collar. Enough to live… but a little longer — and it would have been too late.

Later, when doctors confirmed that the child had been saved, the investigation began. And that same evening, the patrol found the biological mother.
An emaciated woman stood in the doorway of a partially ruined house. Twelve children lived in that house, in extreme poverty.
She had given birth alone, without help. And she had thrown the newborn away because she… simply didn’t know what else to do.
— I have nothing to feed them… — she whispered, staring at the floor. — I didn’t want to… I couldn’t…
Thomas stood across from her, the report in his hands. But before his eyes there was only one image — the box in the snow and that small, trembling body.