When someone experiences a āfoster failā with a Dog, he or she usually ends up benefiting from that āfailureā through a lifetime of love and companionship instead of just providing a temporary foster home.
The Haegeman family got more than that: Their foster failure ended up saving their lives.
Gracie is the name of the hero in this story, and sheās a pet who clearly had her familyās best interest at heart.
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In the early morning hours of Dec. 22, the familyās Nevis, Minnesota, mobile home caught on Fire with all six of them inside. The fire apparently began in the laundry room and quickly spread.
Gracie, who according to the Park Rapids Enterprise usually sleeps in the parentsā bedroom, had gotten shut out of it and started barking frantically at 5 a.m. She woke up the oldest daughter, Emily, 9, who started screaming and woke up dad Devin Haegeman.
āIt was hazy in my room and it smelled nice,ā Haegeman said. āIt smelled like warm wood, even like a campfire. I build furniture, and it just smelled like warm wood sitting next to a heater. And then I opened my door and I just couldnāt see. So I hollered at my wife.ā
Everyone was in a different part of the home, and as the parents scrambled to usher all four kids (Emily; Maddox, 4; Daniel, 2; and Marcella, 4 months) outside, they realized most of them had already been roused by Gracieās barking.
Once everyone was out, Devin looked around ā and couldnāt find Gracie. He ran back into the house, which was quickly going up in a blaze, and found her cowering under a bed, terrified. He later wrote that he experienced carbon monoxide poisoning after going back in for her, but he said it was worth it.
Once heād escorted the Dog outside, he plunged back into the burning mobile home to try to battle the flames with a Fire extinguisher but quickly realized he was beaten.
The family lost most of their possessions but escaped with their lives, thanks to the 5-year-old, mixed-breed Dog that alerted them all to the danger.
āAt 5 oāclock, on the nose, is when my daughter says the Dog woke her up,ā Haegeman later recalled to the Enterprise. āI woke up. My clock said 5:01 a.m.
āThe 911 call says 5:02 a.m. By 5:06 a.m., I had everyone out of the house, and at 5:08 a.m., as the Fire department arrived, the wall that was in the laundry room fell off, and the Fire flashed.ā
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Nevis Fire and Rescue responded to the call, assisted by threeĀ groups, according to the Enterprise, which reported that the Haegemans did not have renterās insurance on their home.
Devin Haegeman shared his familyās story on his Facebook page and has been grateful for the help his family has received, including lodging. Friends even set up a GoFundMe that had raised over $24,000 as of Friday.
āToday has been one of the hardest days of our lives, it has also been one of the most inspiring,ā he wrote on Dec. 22. āDan and Stephanie Houchin entertained a steady flow of traffic this afternoon, we have warm beds to sleep in for the time being, and the kids are in their jammies tucked in with new blankets and new stuffed animals.
āOur loss is devastating, but the outpouring of love we have recieved over the last 17 hours is beyond what I ever expected.
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āLess than 10 minutes after everyone got out, the laundry room was completely engulfed, flames shooting into the sky, and any chance of getting to the boys room was absolutely lost.
āSo the Dog we were supposed to foster and fell in love with became a member of our family. Shes gentle and kind and brilliant. And this morning, she woke Emily up, and literally saved our lives.ā
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Despite the destruction and loss, the family was committed to having a merry Christmas, and friends and family came in clutch to make sure that happened.
āWe donāt have a house,ā Haegeman wrote on Facebook Ā on Dec. 24. āWe donāt have a kitchen to dance in. But we have a home.
āWe lost a lot. Iāve never cried this much in my life. But our Christmas will be nothing short of Merry.ā
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
