September 20, 2011
Annmarie Kelly-Harbaugh is a writer, mom and dog-lover currently living in Chagrin Falls, Ohio.
He has been trouble.
From
the first second he stepped out of my car and ran far, far away to the
recent whole chicken episode in the backyard. From the tunnels he dug
under our fences to the path he swam to freedom when we lived on
Chesapeake Bay. From the squirrels he treed and dismembered to the
skunk that sprayed up his nose.
He has been a difficult Hound.
He
has had fleas, ticks and worms, weeping eyes and seeping cysts. His
first surgery cost more than my first car. Despite his slender frame,
he has fought every dog he has ever come upon unleashed. Though he is
neither strategic nor wise, Hound holds his own in these scuffs because
he fights like a weasel: He bites hard and never lets go.
But
he kept me company when I lived alone in Seattle and has barked off
more predators than I care to count, including the thieves who broke in
and stole tools while I slept. If Hound could have opened the French
doors, I'd still have that nail gun, and he probably would have used it
on the intruders himself.
Before bed, I
always say, "Good boy, Hound. Good boy." Based on his history, he can
have absolutely no idea what these words mean.
He's
run away in swamps, forests and subdivisions. He's chased every
motorcycle, no matter how far from our home it blazed. I imagined one
day that's how he would go, a flash of brown and white loping away with
my heart.
Instead Hound died of cancer. Not from a snakebite, a car accident or chocolate.
I
found him at the top of the stairs. I put my head to his chest,
unsure whether I heard his heart beating or mine. He was still warm
when I carried him to the car, still soft as the vet laid him on the
doggie stretcher and pronounced him gone. I have bid farewell to
grandparents, neighbors and classmates, but I did not cry for them like
I did for my Hound. He was my first dog, the great canine love of my
life.
We shared only a decade, but I can
hardly remember life before. I have imagined him into it all. We are
children together: I'm climbing a tree with Hound nipping at my heels.
He is barking at my first boyfriend and waiting at the back door when
I tiptoe in after curfew. Hound is eating pizza in my college dorm.
He nibbles on my bouquet as I prepare to walk down the aisle.
I am torn between being glad he's at peace and hoping he haunts me, not unlike a dog version of Patrick Swayze in Ghost. Dogs
love us like we wish we could love others; they are faithful where we
are feckless. For as long as they are able, they endure.
So
today I'm wearing sweat pants, crying over chew toys and wondering
about the future. I'm looking for my next big leap, a jump Hound knew
we could no longer make together, but something I suspect he did not
want me to miss.
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