little soul little stray
little drifter
now where will you stay
[hadrian]
Nothing fills me with despair like hearing her toenails click on the hardwood floor at midnight, then two in the morning, then again at three or four or five. Each finger-snap of a footfall echoing in the dark house is an indictment. She is in pain. She is confused. She is not young anymore. I don't know what to do.
The horror movies have it wrong. It is not some grinning demon who fills you with the deepest dread, a malicious spirit or evil presence. It is the shuffle of one you love, perpetually in your wake, the sound of their mindless pursuit. Of what, it's impossible to know. Routine, comfort, help. Help her. But I don't know what to do.
The pain medication seems to make her even more uncomfortable. She avoids the orthopedic dog bed. She will not eat the food I lay out in front of her until I go through an elaborate series of attempts to make it as palatable as possible, warming up various lunchmeats and shredding them over freeze-dried senior dog food, then switching to wet packets of dog food in a variety of flavors, then wet dog food in the only flavor she favors, then back to the freeze-dried food when she stops eating the wet food.
Eventually the ants find these rejected offerings, setting off a loop of dumping out bowls when they've been there too long, putting out bowls of broth from our chicken dinner she only looks at long and hard before swinging her doleful gaze back to me. I switch the broth out for sausage, cooked one-handed in a pan while my daughter swipes at the stove, saying Hot, hot. Norah will watch me set this in front of her, with the same unreadable expression.
I wish I could say I tenderly care for her in her distress, but truly, this gaze has driven me more than once to long for a gun. A slow death shaves you to your core.
Walking alongside those you love as their body disintegrates is a nightmare. They will topple, crumble, bury you under their rubble, and only after you have forgotten every single thing you ever loved about them, only when you are blinded by rage at the very sound of their cough or their footsteps or their tuneless whistling, only then will they leave this earth in a way that will wake you in the night for years afterward, the sadness like wet sand in your chest.
I remember her fast. I remember her, head and shoulders out my passenger side window, tongue in the wind. I remember her running, muscles in her chest flexing, mouth wide in a dog laugh. I remember her smiling in her sleep. The striped shadows of aspens flashing across her back, slapping her paw in the cradle of my hand for a treat, her happy, happy, happy.
I can't stand this. I can't leave her now. The years of waking up every few hours at night to let her out, then go get her from the yard, as she stands there lost and watching the back fence. The years of trying to coerce her to eat, after her stroke. She is unlike me in every way, most of all in this- that for all the countless times I have shown frustration with her, she has never shown anger or even irritation to me, even though she is the one suffering.
She deserves a good death. But as far as nature is concerned, a good death is like a good birth- still fucking terrible. The yawning void of the universe is, as always, beautiful and indifferent. Still I beg, Death, come soon, come gently.
Of course, I can do for Norah what was impossible to do for my father. A dog, at least, can be given a gentle death. I know this, but I canceled her first appointment with the vet, then made another, then canceled that one too. This, too, is my fault.
I hate death, for taking those I love, for coming too fast, for coming far too slowly, for revealing my true nature, always, to be one who can't take it. I recoil from the pain of others like a bug splashed with bleach. I avert my eyes from the gnarled toenails I can't bear to trim, the empty eyes I can't stand to meet. Cover my ears against the endless tap, tap, tapping that starts up in the very marrow of midnight, continuing every hour or two until dawn.
This makes me vow things to my small child that I do not now and will never have the courage to follow through on, caught in an endless loop of my own. When I get old, I will step off a canyon ledge, I say, to my disinterested one-year-old. She knows I am full of shit and doesn't even look up from her collection of empty yogurt cups, filched from the recycling bin.
Of course, I won't. I will want to live, despite everything, even up til the last. I think of the way Dad's breathing sounded near the end, his body pushing him to stay here, no matter the cost.
Last night I couldn't sleep and I rose when I heard Norah, walked to the living room to find her circling aimlessly, a dog about to lie down who has forgotten how.
As she staggered in an endless loop, and I stood there frozen, unsure what to do, I thought of the earth circling the sun in the long ages in the future when all life has burned away from our planet. Following its route with no one there to see the light come or go. It was never the act of witnessing that set our universe in motion, our bodies in motion, and it was watching dying that proved this to me once and for all. These things began unwatched and will continue, seen or unseen, until they can't.
But she does have a witness. Maybe Norah isn't quite here anymore, but I am. Cringing, cowardly, raging against what is, but still here. I'm all she has.
I called the vet back, scheduled the appointment again, apologized. It's okay, she said. It's hard. I get off the phone and lay a hand on her head. She's sleeping so deeply that she doesn't wake, unusual for her, a lifelong light sleeper.
I check to see if she's still breathing, and of course, she is, her chest rising and falling as the winter sun fades to another night.