Her Dog Kept Bringing Her Black Stones — When She Realized How Much They Were Worth, She Called 112
When Daisy first dropped the black stone at Laura McKenna’s feet, Laura almost kicked it aside.
“Again?” she muttered, glancing down at the muddy retriever grinning proudly in the Colorado sunlight.
They lived just outside Cañon City, Colorado, where scrubland met rocky foothills and the Arkansas River cut its steady path through ancient terrain. The land was beautiful but stubborn—dusty in summer, icy in winter, and always hiding something beneath the surface.
Laura bent down and picked up the stone.
It wasn’t smooth like river rock. It was jagged. Dense. Unusually heavy for its size. Its surface was dark—almost metallic—and streaked with faint silvery lines.
“Where are you getting these?” she asked.
Daisy wagged harder.
This wasn’t the first one.
Over the past week, the dog had brought her six nearly identical stones, always after disappearing behind the same low ridge at the edge of Laura’s property.
At first, Laura assumed they were chunks of old asphalt or slag from abandoned mining activity. Southern Colorado was riddled with mining history—gold, silver, coal, even uranium in certain pockets.
But something about these stones felt different.
They were cold. Not just temperature-cold.
Cold in weight.
Cold in density.
Laura was thirty-eight, recently divorced, and trying to make her late father’s small property work for her. The old house creaked in the wind. The barn leaned slightly west as if tired. Money was tight.
She’d inherited the land two years earlier after her father passed unexpectedly from a stroke. He had been a quiet man who loved rocks more than people.
A former geology professor at a small community college, he had shelves filled with mineral samples and field journals. Laura hadn’t paid much attention to them growing up.
Now she wished she had.
She carried the latest stone inside and set it on the kitchen table. The pile was growing.
Seven black stones.
Each about the size of her fist.
Each strangely heavy.
Daisy sat proudly beside the table, tongue hanging out.
“You think you’re helping,” Laura sighed.
Still, curiosity tugged at her.
She walked to the back bedroom—her father’s old study. The shelves were still lined with labeled specimens: quartz, hematite, magnetite, chalcopyrite.
She grabbed a small magnet from one of the drawers and returned to the kitchen.
She hovered it over the stone.
The magnet snapped down sharply.
Laura froze.
“That’s… not normal,” she whispered.
Iron content. Strongly magnetic.
But these didn’t look like ordinary iron ore.
She fetched her father’s old digital scale.
The stone weighed nearly three pounds.
Too heavy for its size.
Too dense.
Her pulse quickened.

That night, she barely slept.
The next morning, Daisy disappeared again beyond the ridge.
Laura followed.
The terrain rose gently behind the house, leading to a shallow depression hidden by scrub brush and scattered juniper trees.
Daisy ran ahead and stopped at a small, half-collapsed mound of dirt.
She began pawing at it enthusiastically.
Laura knelt beside her and brushed away loose soil.
Beneath the surface, something dark gleamed faintly.
She dug with her hands.
Then with a small shovel she’d brought along.
Within minutes, more black stones emerged from the dirt.
Not scattered.
Clustered.
As if they had fallen together.
Laura’s breath grew shallow.
She cleared more earth.
The shape underneath wasn’t random.
It curved.
Metallic.
Embedded in the ground.
A larger mass lay buried there.
She leaned closer and brushed away dirt carefully.
The surface was fusion-crusted—dark, charred-looking, like something that had burned intensely.
Her father’s voice echoed faintly in memory.
“Some rocks fall from the sky.”
Her heart slammed.
Meteorites.
They were rare.
And valuable.
Especially iron meteorites.
She rushed back inside, heart pounding, and pulled out her laptop.
She searched terms carefully:
“Magnetic black stone heavy Colorado”
“Fusion crust rock”