A silence that froze the entire airport
When fourteen service dogs suddenly broke formation and formed a circle around a little girl at the Pulkovo terminal, everyone nearby thought a tragedy was about to happen. But the most unsettling part was not the shout from someone demanding that the girl be moved away — it was the moment the handlers realized the dogs were not going to attack. They were protecting her.
It all happened on a Friday, around 11:20 a.m., near the waiting area of one of the boarding gates. Several service dogs were crossing the terminal after a joint evaluation exercise: Belgian Malinois, German Shepherds, and dogs belonging to transport and regional units. It was a routine, orderly, controlled scene — the kind that inspires confidence amid the noise of an airport.
Passengers stepped aside to let them pass. Some were already recording with their phones. Children watched in fascination while their parents tried to continue walking normally. But in a single second, all that calm shattered.
Without barking, without sudden movements, and without visible panic, the fourteen dogs changed direction almost at the same time. They turned toward a single point: a small row of charging stations beside a window, where a girl of about seven years old was standing. She wore a yellow vest too light for the April wind blowing in through the automatic doors. In one hand she held a silver suitcase; with the other, she tightly gripped the strap of a small pink backpack.
Beside her stood her grandmother, who at first, according to witnesses, did not even realize that every eye in the terminal had suddenly focused on the two of them.
The dogs showed no aggression. They stopped, approached with precision, and one after another sat down around the girl, forming a protective ring.