The groom had been looking at his future wife in a strange way. Only later did it become clear that the dog hadn’t reacted randomly. The groom had planned everything in advance. After signing the marriage documents, he intended to mix a powder into the bride’s drink that would cause cardiac arrest.
The dose was calculated so that everything would look like a sudden heart attack. No one would suspect poisoning, and he would receive the inheritance he desperately needed.
Buster smelled it. A faint chemical odor, almost undetectable to humans — but completely clear and dangerous to a dog. He had smelled it before, when the groom had accidentally spilled some of the powder at home. Back then, the dog grew nervous, but everyone blamed his personality.
And now, seeing his owner walking straight toward someone emitting that same scent, he simply refused to let her get close.
The ceremony was immediately stopped. In the chaos, a small packet fell from the groom’s inner pocket. One of the guests picked it up, asked what it was, and the groom turned pale. He tried to explain, then tried to leave — but he was stopped.
Later analysis confirmed: the substance inside was deadly.