The Old Man and the Dog
Saying goodbye to Meg was the hardest thing I‘ve ever done.She’d been part of my life for so long,always there when I needed her.
Throughout the last fifteen years,she’ d been my closest friend,sharing my joy and sadness.
She’d seen me marry and divorce,have two children,lose my mother and nurse my father through a long illness.So much in one lifetime.
We buried her in her favourite corner of the garden,beneath the flowering cherry tree.Matthew made a little cross out of wood and Laura carefully printed her name in red crayon1).
Friends are always full of good advice at times like that.Get another dog is one of the favourites―but you can’ t replace a friend like that.
My father had been left almost helpless after a stroke.I ‘ d nursed him back to health,but I was beginning to feel that we‘d taken a step backwards.
A month after Meg’s passing,I took a tray2) into the garden for Dad.He liked to sit on the bench in the sunshine.
“Tea and biscuits,Dad,”I said cheerfully.
He turned away,startled,but not before I’d seen the tear on his cheek.
“What a lovely day,”I burbled,giving him time to compose himself.
“Yes Jill,”he said at last.“It’ s beautiful.”
“Try to eat something,Dad.”
He sighed and looked up at the sky.
“The children will be home from school soon.”I smiled.“Then you’ll have a fight on your hands if you want a biscuit.”
He chuckled softly and I had to swallow the lump which had risen in my throat.
“I love you,Dad.”I rested my hand on his shoulder.“Please,don’ t give up.”
“I don’ t know what you mean.”He shrugged3).
“Yes,you do.You’ve fought every inch of the way,you were winning,too,but lately,it’s as if you’ve just given up.”
He heaved a sigh and picked up a biscuit,nibbling at it before grinning at me.
Dad’ s decline puzzled the doctor,too.
“I’ m sorry.There’s nothing physically wrong with your father,apart from what’ s left over from the stroke.And mentally,well,I really don’t think there’s anything to worry about there.”
The doctor was right.Dad’ s blood tests came back clear,and further tests showed nothing wrong.He should have been continuing to get better―but he wasn’ t.
I tried all kinds of new meals to tempt his failing appetite.I even persuaded him to come for a drive in the car,but as soon as we got home,he’d sink back into apathy and I‘d think,I‘m losing him again.
What made it so much harder to bear was the fact that I remembered him so well as a young man.He‘d been so full of energy and life,carrying me on his shoulders,chasing me around the park and catching me up in his arms.
He‘s set off for a walk and always,always,I‘d run out of the house behind him.He‘d had such a zest4) for life that it broke my heart to see him now,sitting out in the garden,a blanket over his knees,gazing miserably into space.
When he first came to live with us after the stroke,he’ d been bed-ridden.I smiled as I remembered how Meg had finally got hi m up.
Dear Meg.She’d brought in a stick from the garden and trotted straight upstairs with it.
I followed her,wondering what on earth she was up to.She deposited the stick on Dad’ s bed,then stepped back,wagging her tail like mad.
Dad lifted his head from the pillow.
“What’s this?”
She barked ever so softly and nudged t he stick with her nose.
“For me?”Dad chuckled,reaching for it,but Meg was too quick and snatched the stick back.
It turned into a game.Every time Dad tried to touch her stick,she whipped it away.At last,she dropped it on the floor.T his time,Meg let him pick it up.
“Jill.”Dad shouted.“Jill.”
When I got to him he was laughing.
“Would you help me down the stairs?”he asked.“I’ d like to sit out in the garden.I can throw the stick for Meg.”
“Of course,Dad.”I’ d been thrilled and from that moment on,he’ d progressed in leaps and bounds.
Meg had been a friend to me,a playmate to the children,but she’ d been so much more to Dad.She’d been with him all the time,keeping him company for the hours he h ad to spend alone.No wonder he’d declined.He had time to sit and brood and think,an d sadness had settled all around him.
The following day,I settled Dad in the garden and left the children playing under his watchful eye.
“I won’t be long,”I promised.“You’ll be all right,Dad?If you want anything,Matthew can get it for you.”
“Thanks,love.”Dad smiled.“Don’ t worry.I ‘ ll keep an eye on things.”
I could never replace Meg,I knew that.But I could,perhaps,fill a void in Dad’ s life.
I’d never been to an animal home before and wasn’t prepared for the shock.Not only dogs,but cats,a couple of ponies,three pygmy goats and several rabbits wanted new homes.
Two sisters ran the place.Hardly aware of what I was doing,I found myself pouring out my life story to them.
Babs,one of the two nurses,led me to t he end of the row of pens.There,in the very end,I saw Sadie sitting in the corner.She wasn’t sitting quietly.She was howling―a sad,heart-broken noise.As soon as she saw us,she stopped and came over to me,staring a t me through the wire.She seemed to be weighing me up.
When I poked my fingers through the bars,she shied5 away from them.I spoke softly to her,coaxing6)her to come to me.After w hat seemed an age,she came forward and licked my fingers.
“She’ s very gentle,”I remarked,wondering how she would take to my noisy children.I’d already lost my heart to her in a way I never imagined possible.
“Her owners moved away,”Babs said.“They put her in boarding kennels,saying they’d be back in a week but they never returned.She won’ t give her trust easily,but if she’s given enough love―well,who knows ?”
“How cruel.”I gasped.“How could they?”
“Oh,it could have been a lot worse,”Babs continued.“She was never physically hurt,but her confidence has taken a terrible battering.She needs constant reassurance and can’ t bear to be alone.”
“She’ d never be alone,”I said and Sadie wagged her tail as if she understood.And in our house,believe me,there’ s no shortage of love.
“When I got home,Matthew and Laura were out of sight.Dad,as always,was staring into space.He didn’ t even bother to read any more,but seemed to spend his whole life just watching time slip away.
“Dad...”
He turned and looked up at me,taking a moment or two to register that I wasn’ t alone.I looked at Dad’ s face.He stared at the dog and for an awful moment,I thought he was going to reject her.But Dad could never be cru el...