Prose & a Poem for Flynn
When
I was five or six, our family cat, Cotton, was euthanized after being attacked
by a raccoon. She came running into our yard from the tree farm next door, her
back right leg ripped clean from her body, blood dripping into the dirt. My sisters and I screamed and
screamed and screamed. It was April Fools Day. I hate April Fools Day.
That’s
the earliest I can remember not wanting to go to sleep at night, hating
bedtime, and not understanding how I was supposed to feel about animals – that
they should be cared for and loved even though we ate meat, that they were
family members even though their deaths shouldn't be as traumatic a
loss as a human relative’s passing. I seemed to only be capable of loving in
one gear, and it scared me that I thought of Cotton no differently than
one of my sisters or my mom. I couldn't bear to lose anyone. Everybody, people and animals, suddenly seemed too
easy to lose. It’s the earliest I can remember trusting animals more quickly
than I bonded with people.
*
Six
years ago, Tom and I drove into the empty, dried up fields of Paulding County,
Georgia, to a dog shelter that sagged against a rocky hillside. The facilities
and organization were both soon to be condemned, and we’d heard there was a
seven-year-old German shepherd available for adoption – the oldest dog under
their roof, the only one that wasn’t a pit bull or lab. We walked through an
outside hallway lined on both sides with chain-link kennels and found her,
curled up in a ball that seemed sickeningly small for the size we expected of a
large breed. About thirty pounds underweight and hunched around an infected
spay incision that hung from her underside, her reproductive parts were
infected and swollen, her ears were pocked with engorged ticks, and her skin
crawled with fleas. When we opened her gate, she stood at attention. We put her
on a leash and left the kennel door swung open over a standing puddle of urine.
On
the way home, my cell phone rang. The police were waiting at our house in
Atlanta, where the bedroom window had been smashed with a brick and our belongings
ransacked for the second time in a week. Flynn panted in the rear view mirror,
ears up, broken teeth catching glints of afternoon sun. It was the last time
we’d be broken into for years.
*
[The dogwoods in bloom outside our Atlanta house.]
The
one condition we adopted Flynn under was that she had to get along with our two
cats, Suvi and Lunchbox, two rescues from Alaska, near the army post Tom had
been stationed at for the second and third years of our marriage. Within two
months, Flynn had not only desperately tried to make friends with Suvi (to no
avail), she had learned the command “Go find the kitty,” and could be sent out
into the neighborhood at dusk to gently bring Lunchbox home for dinner. The two
of them would sit in the yard like old friends, underneath the dogwood trees
that thrashed our windows during tornado warnings; some mornings, the white
petals swept across the yard in arcs like the patterns of migratory birds.
A
month after adopting Flynn, during one of our walks, two pit bulls flew from
the screen door of a small pink house in our neighborhood. One bit into Flynn’s
neck and the other circled me. I kicked the jaw of the dog attacking Flynn and
screamed, surprised at myself. The other dog nipped and yowled; the kicked dog
came back for another bite of Flynn. Two women in a Cadillac pulled over and
yelled honey we’re calling the police,
hold on. A man carrying a belt staggered from the pink house and said Smoke! Smoke! Get the fuck back here!
I
couldn’t believe I’d kicked a dog. I watched Smoke circle us, his back bumpy
with scars. Flynn and I ran to the post office and hid in the lobby until a
clerk told me my dog had to leave. We sprinted home.
*
[As close as Flynn usually got to befriending Suvi.]
A
year later, we moved to Columbus, Georgia, where Tom was stationed at Fort Benning.
By now, we had gratefully accepted Flynn’s virtues as cat herder, house
guardian, and my unyielding shadow. She slept on the floor at the foot of our
bed, refusing to snuggle, resting with her eyes half open. She followed me so
closely her nose bumped into the backs of my knees.
We
began to accept, too, the relentless aggression Flynn showed toward other dogs
and many people. She allowed our friends into the house but snarled at anyone
we didn’t know or didn’t like. In Georgia, going for walks at lunchtime was
near suicidal because of the heat; instead, Tom woke up at 4am five mornings a
week to run with Flynn for six miles, bringing her home focused but calm for a
day of patrolling the house and yard.
*
Six
months after we moved to Columbus, we left for Colorado Springs and Fort
Carson. We were still living in a hotel when a middle-aged
couple walking a blue heeler puppy through Garden of the Gods called me a
dumbass as my dog lunged through her muzzle at their pet, nowhere near touching
it. They lifted their noses as they said it, their jawlines parallel with the
red clay trail. A week later, a woman on Colorado Avenue muttered bitch when her cockapoo yapped and
clawed at Flynn as we passed by their storefront. Flynn bristled and I pulled
her closer to me. I knew no one in that town. I had a job teaching writing at
the community college, but I would spend most of the first year there alone, wishing
Tom wasn’t in Iraq and I wasn’t so far away from home, wherever that was.
I
spent days in my office, writing, with Flynn sleeping under the desk. She was
starting to show her age. One morning, as I sat at my desk sending out poetry
submissions, a whitetail deer tapped its antlers accidentally against my office
window and cautiously peeped in the glass, waiting for me to fly up from my
seat with a rifle, I suppose. I looked down at Flynn. She continued to snore.
The deer relaxed, ducked its head below the sill, and munched in peace whatever
brush had grown between my house and the alley.
*
Flynn
continued to bully other dogs and intimidate people. As I gradually made
friends in Colorado, Flynn got in more trouble, biting a skateboarder on 22nd
Street, snapping another man on Colorado Avenue. Both men deserved it, but
that’s neither here nor there.
We
started taking her to a trainer who worked with her in a group setting – ten
dogs and their owners in a large room filled with obstacles, stunt vacuums and
mailboxes. Flynn was the only one, some nights, who had to be chained to the
wall, muzzled, and leashed. She adored the trainer. She wanted to kill Vino, the sophisticated Rottweiler who could smell grand mal seizures before they happened. When the
trainer brought Flynn to the middle of the room, all the dogs sniffing toward
her, she panicked, snarled in every direction, barked and spat until she could
return to my side. The trainer said Flynn was a “bite-first-talk-later”
personality. I had spent months feeling my patience with Flynn slip until that
moment. I looked down at her, her muzzle dripping, eyes wide. She wanted to go
home, she wanted her cats and her bed, she wanted these strangers to leave her
alone. I saw myself in her, the self that was tired of being uprooted and
replanted and expected to get along, figure it out, and be nice.
While Tom was training for his third
deployment and first mission in Afghanistan, our cat Lunchbox died of lymphoma.
Two weeks before he showed any symptoms, Flynn started herding him onto her bed
at night, refusing to let him move away. We thought she was being bossy. We
took pictures and let her guard him closely. On the morning Lunchbox died, I
didn’t go to class for the first time since I’d miscarried two years earlier. I
felt as if a part of my mind or memory had wandered away in the nighttime. I
started looking forward to thunderstorms because they were the only event that
could persuade Flynn to sleep on the bed with me. I’d pretend to sleep, my back
to hers, glad she was there.
A
month later, we adopted Bill, an adult male cat who didn’t seem to sleep for
the first week we had him. He played endlessly, following Flynn like a puppy,
pushing his way onto her bed at night.
*
[Lunchbox's first time going outside in Colorado. He ran straight for Flynn.]
[Flynn and Lunchbox.]
[Flynn meets Bill in 2012.]
In
August 2012, I moved to New York to start my PhD in English. Tom was in
Afghanistan and I was comfortably terrified, a sensation I’d grown used to
after moving so many times. I wasn’t scared of the PhD as much as I dreaded
executing the move while Tom was deployed, potentially in mortal danger every minute of the day. I had to transfer the pets and all
our belongings halfway across the country to a house my husband would only
technically live in and had never seen, I had to meet new people, I had to be
nice. My mom and her husband, Paul, flew to Colorado to help me. Paul drove the
Uhaul and I drove the car, my mother in the front seat, two cats and all my
suitcases in the backseat, and Flynn in the trunk, panting against the dog gate.
We
arrived in New York late and spent the first night in a hotel. The next
morning, Mom, Paul and I went to breakfast, mentally preparing ourselves for a
day of lifting boxes in 100 degree heat. When we returned to the hotel, Flynn
greeted us at the main entrance, paws up on the glass, happy we’d returned. No
one was around. A cart of clean sheets and baskets of shampoos and soaps was
parked in the hall. My room door was open, the cats were hiding underneath the
bed, and a piece of the doorknob had been clawed off the door.
I
quickly pieced the doorknob back together and we packed up, checked out.
*
[Not sure I can count how many screens we replaced when I first moved to NY.]
I’d
been in New York for about a month before I started trying to leave Flynn in
the house alone for short periods of time. I’d noticed, as we moved from city
to city, Flynn became increasingly anxious when left alone in each home,
clawing at the windows, pacing, having accidents. She had no interest in
sifting through garbage; all the signs of her anxiety were left in failed
attempts to escape the house and bring me home. Once, in Atlanta, when we’d tried to leave Flynn
in the fenced yard during the day, she’d scaled the ten foot woodplank fence
and Tom had found her on his way home from work, halfway between our house and
the army post. She'd followed his scent for hours.
A
colleague in New York invited me to dinner at a local Thai restaurant and I
decided Flynn would eventually have to get used to being alone in her new place.
Before the spring rolls were brought out, my landlord called my cell phone.
“Abby? Your dog has broken through your upstairs window and is on the roof. The
neighbors have called the fire department. Are you very far away?” I sped home,
met my new neighbors in the yard as they pointed skyward at Flynn, who had her
paws in the gutter and couldn’t get any closer to falling. I tore upstairs and
carried her back through the window, noticing, oddly, that she’d lost weight.
She was happy to see me. The fire department was called off.
I
already don’t remember how many times we practiced leaving and returning before
Flynn got to the point where she would reasonably tolerate my going to school
each day. Every time I came home for a year, the couch cushions had been thrown
off the couch and her nose prints clouded the windows. Everything this dog
broke was an effort to find me, bring me home.
*
Three
weeks ago, I noticed a slight limp and a ping-pong ball-sized knot on Flynn’s
right front leg. She pulled her paw back when I felt it, and I brought her to
the vet that same afternoon for x-rays. An osteosarcoma, not good, the vet
said. The longest they can go with one of these is four months, she said, and I
never see them go four months.
My
face got hot. We stopped at the CVS drive-through to fill prescriptions on the
way home and for most of the month of January, Tom and I kept her comfortable
with Tramadol, Deramaxx, and Xanax. A week after the diagnosis, Flynn woke up
every 3-4 hours at night and I would get up with her, sit on the couch and read
while she whined, waited for the pain meds to kick in, and eventually fell
asleep again at my feet. Two weeks in, her appetite started to wane. We did
everything to make her eat. I started syringe feeding her once her appetite was
completely gone, mixed prescription dog food with water and fed her 10cc at a
time. She let me feed her, let me put pills in the back of her throat, followed
me from room to room though she could barely walk, her limp getting worse every
day. Sometimes she would fall. When she woke up at night, I would follow her to
the water bowl and hold her back end up while she drank. On her last night, I
let her out to pee at 3am and she wandered, confused, into the road. I ran
outside in the subzero cold wearing nothing but a t-shirt to bring her in; when
I reached for her collar she seemed surprised to see me there in the dark and
walked me back to the door, leaning against my leg. Her tumor had swollen and
her bones seemed to scream with every step.
On
Tuesday, the vet came over with a technician to do an in-home euthanasia. They
laid out a towel on the kitchen floor and Flynn tried to curl up quietly on the
other side of the room. I brought her to the towel and she laid down in a sphinxlike
pose, uncomfortable, waiting to be told she could get up and go, limp with her
lemon-sized tumor to the corner. The IV was put in, and I cradled her head in
my hands as the vet injected that bright pink serum into the line. I told Flynn
she was going to get tired, that it was okay, and she’d been so good to me. Tom
ran his fingers through her fur and she lowered her head into my lap. The edges
around one part of me, the part that wandered off with Lunchbox but had healed
up around the seams, crumbled.
*
[Flynn and me, post-hike in Red Rock Canyon.]
We’ve
donated most of Flynn’s things to the no-kill dog shelter here in Broome
County, even though we know we’ll adopt another shepherd soon. We’ll look for
another adult dog who needs a home, who’s been abandoned or given up on. I’ll
let that dog be whoever he or she is, but I know I will look for Flynn in its
eyes.
I
am still useless before going to bed or leaving the house, unsure of what I am
supposed to be doing if it isn’t letting a dog outside for a bathroom break in
the snow or tucking her in on her bed with her dragon, her favorite toy, which
we’ve kept. Every night, even when she had spent the day driving us up the wall
with her aggression or anxiety or neediness, we brought her to her bed, ran our
hands over her ears and said she was a good pup. I am still too accustomed to
being on campus, working, then pausing every hour or so to look up, count how
long Flynn has been alone in the house, wonder when I can get home. In the past few days, I have become a small girl again, uncertain how I'm supposed to sleep or live in a house that has been left behind by an animal.
When
Flynn’s tumor was first diagnosed, I wrote a poem. I don’t want to send it out to
journals. I figure, if I put them here, where you can see them, I can
always come back and see her again, check to see that she’s waiting for me,
like usual.
*
[The stuffed dragon, whom Flynn often invited to dine with her.]
Poem for My
Dog
Say you skip
breakfast
and sometime
around 3 o’clock
a friend asks
how you’re doing.
In German,
you would not be hungry,
you would have hunger.
I learned
this when I was a teenager,
when
everything I read
went into
imaginary saucepots
on an
imaginary stove
to stew until
it burned,
until it sent
smoke signals
to the part
of my brain that understood.
Fifteen years
later,
the first
week of January,
ich habe hunger begins to blacken
and a blue
wisp of readiness curls
across my
white yard.
I’m standing
at the living room window
with coffee,
watching heat escape
from the
shadow of our chimney,
a brick chute
that leads
to the memory
of a fireplace
someone
sealed up with concrete.
My dog sleeps
by the stairs,
dissolving in
a newfound bone cancer.
She is
hollowing herself
from the
inside out.
I tell her
about the difference
between being
hungry and having hunger,
between being
and having,
about the
language that says
when you are
empty,
you have
something new.
I tell her,
this year,
I will lose so much.
Comments
I lost my beloved pup "TJ" in February 2013. He had congestive heart failure and I had to put him down so I understand your pain all too real.
This is such a beautiful story and poem. Much love to you and Tom and we will all miss Flynn who I know is playing with Lunchie and TJ and countless other angels without pain right now in heaven. Hugs, Dana