Orlando went onto the subway tracks with
Cecil Williams, 61, when the man lost consciousness and fell from a station
platform.
Mr Williams and Orlando both escaped
serious injury when they were bumped by a train passing over them - a
miraculous end to a harrowing ordeal that began when he felt faint on his way
to the dentist.
Witnesses said Orlando barked frantically
and tried to stop Mr Williams from tumbling off the platform. Matthew Martin
told the New York Post that Orlando leaped onto the
tracks as the train approached and licked Mr Williams to get him to move.
Michelle Brier, a spokeswoman for Guiding
Eyes for the Blind, which provides working dogs for free but cannot cover
retired dogs' expenses, said today that "as of right now," Mr
Williams plans to keep Orlando as a pet after Orlando retires and he gets a new
working dog early next year.
"The spirit of giving, Christmas ...
exists in New York," a tearful Mr Williams said calling the outpouring of
money and good will a "miracle".
Ms Brier said that "it's an emotional
time" and the organisation will support whatever path he ultimately takes.
The family that raised Orlando has said it would be thrilled to take in Orlando
if Mr Williams is unable to care for two dogs.
"I'm not a crybaby or nothing. But my
eyes are misty and I'm tearing right now because things like this here don't
happen for everybody," Mr Williams said in hospital. "They should
happen. We should care about one another. We should do for one another. But
it's not always that way."
Mr Williams expressed gratitude to all of
the people involved in his rescue and those who donated money to help him keep
his "best buddy."
He urged the public to support other
disabled people who need guide dogs. Guiding Eyes said any leftover donations
would be used for that purpose.
Mr Williams doesn't remember much about
the subway incident because he lost consciousness. He recalls that Orlando
tried to brace him against the fall and thinks momentum may have propelled the
harnessed dog onto the tracks with him.
"He stayed with me. He was licking my
face," Mr Williams said. "He's a very gentle gentleman."
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