"It is a fearful thing to love what death can
touch"---unknown
Battered and bruised, the knight in shining armor lay on his
back in a vast arid plain just downwind of Constantinople. The battle had moved
on, but he would not. You don’t go far as a knight without your horse.
During the first Crusade, the armored knight was state of
the art when it came to projecting military force in faraway lands. Educated,
highly trained, and lavishly equipped, a knight perched upon his horse was
almost invincible. Clad in interlocking iron plate from head to toe, he was
protected from scimitar and arrow. His lance and sword made quick work of any
opponent on the field of battle that was not similarly protected.
His horse was huge, weighing in at nearly a ton and leaving
tracks the size of dinner plates. It was armored nearly as well as its rider
and was trained to leap into the air to kick out at foot-soldiers that
attempted to surround and unseat the knight.
Each knight had a cadre of men who supported him in the field.
Their job was the care and feeding of this weapon system. They polished and
repaired the armor and weapons. They catered to the horses. They helped prepare
him before battle and nursed his wounds after. They peeled a grape for the
knight if he that is what he wished.
But perhaps most important, they hoisted the knight onto his
horse. For with the weight of all that metal, the knight was not able to climb
aboard his own horse. In fact, his armor was so heavy, he could barely walk.
When the enemy managed to knock our knight from his horse,
he became as helpless as a desert tortoise that has been rolled over on its
back.
Peering out through tiny slits in his helmet, our knight
couldn’t see much as he lay on the ground. He hoped he would be rescued by someone
from his side of the war, but that was not to be. The voices he heard were
Saracens. And they were not happy voices.
The only gaps in the armor’s protection were the eye slits,
two small ear holes, and a couple of joints at the shoulder and elbow that
allowed the knight to move, which explains the Saracens’ affection for their
daggers. The long, thin blade was just the ticket for extinguishing a
non-believer clad in armor.
I can imagine how it must have felt to be trapped in that
iron coffin, hapless, helpless, and hopeless, just waiting for the inevitable
dagger in the eye. That’s how I felt when I finally realized that Lennie was
going to die.
Lennie never really had a chance. When some kids brought him
to the clinic he was a homeless, malnourished, undersized waif of a kitten. He
had lice, fleas, and mites. And some sadist had left cigarette burns on his
belly.
He found a home with my wife and me, and he tried his best
to be a kitten, running all over the place, wrecking stuff, and getting underfoot.
He harassed the other animals mercilessly, but in a few weeks we started seeing
him curled up, sleeping with the big black and white cat, Orion. And he slid
into any lap that was available. He was a great kitten, and he wormed his way
into all of our hearts.
Lennie scattered toys all over the house, and we tripped
over him in the kitchen and every time we tiptoed to the john in the dark of
night. His litter pan was in the bathroom and he liked to join in whenever
anybody was busy in there.
About the time the burns finally healed, Lennie started
slowing down. He didn’t play as much and his hair began looking rough. And he
was filling his litter pan with awful stuff.
I made sure he didn’t have any parasites and we changed his
food, but the problem continued. Lennie wasn’t growing like he should either,
but I chalked it up to a bad start in life.
Three months into his time with us he really started looking
poorly. He just kind of lost his spark. I was ready to take him down to the
clinic for the important tests when he just fell apart one morning. He suddenly
lost his balance and staggered all over the place. I knew what was wrong before
the tests even came back.
The virus had been in him all along. The best minds in
veterinary medicine have come up with no cure for this one. As the doctor in
the house I knew this, and I had to tell everyone else.
Like an un-horsed knight, I knew that despite all I could do
against the right enemies, it would not matter against this one.
Our home is still full of animals, but it feels strangely
empty. I still watch where I step until I remember I no long must worry about a
kitten underfoot, and when I find one of his toys it drives a dagger into my
heart.
Lennie, we miss you. Wherever you are, I hope you get a
better start next time.
In 55 years of living and over thirty playing doctor, I've
seen many really neat animals come and go. Some stuck around a long time, and
some left way too soon. I brought this kitten home not just to rescue him, but
to give my wife a few much needed laughs, as she is mired deep in an on-line
masters program that provides far more stress than joy. And he did that, in
spades. Watching him play and her giggle made this whole mad world go away for
just a little while.
She used to call me in the middle of the day merely to tell
me about the new toys she made for him and how much fun he was having. We both
knew he wasn't all right at least a month ago. She kept asking me what was
wrong and I kept avoiding answering her.
Once the vestibular and cerebellar stuff kicked in I
couldn't dodge anymore. His lab work was pretty classic FIP. The drugs bought
him about three weeks. He still had a head tilt and mild ataxia, but he forged
his way through those little impediments without complaint. And she tried to
drown him in love, even though she knew he would be leaving soon.
Through the whole course, I couldn't look in the mirror. I
am supposed to be a doctor, after all. I brought this little life into our home
to please my wife, and now look what I was doing to her. When the crying and
seizures started at 4AM yesterday, I ran down to the clinic to get the stuff
and let him go quietly while she held him in her arms.
Tomorrow, when the rain will have stopped and I can get home
before dark, we will bury him out back in the little grove of redwood trees
next to Sabrina, our old calico weirdo. She survived three bouts of hepatic
lipidosis over the years only to run into carcinomatosis. I had to put her down
last Monday, and we buried her last Wednesday. It's been a long two weeks.
Looking back on a lifetime of pets and patients, I have
nothing but fond memories of the special ones. As I tell my clients, those are
the memories that remain with us, when we lose all this painful stuff. Soon
enough my wife will be able to laugh again as she recalls this little guy, and
I will get back to what the gods actually let me do, which is to save some of
them, and help their people through the rest. And we will be ever so grateful
for the time we had with Lennie. It was a gift.
Thank you.
ReplyDeleteMy husband and I adopted a kitten that later passed away from the "wet" form of FIP. (He died less than a week after being diagnosed.) It was tough to see such a small creature who should have had such a long life ahead of him dying right before our eyes. He was only with us for a total of about two months but my husband and I still talk about him fondly.
Thanks Bob. Like you I've passed enough seasons to realize what they should have spent more time teaching us. That we can only save some of them. And hopefully make a difference for the rest.
ReplyDeleteThat made me cry.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing Lennie's story. We lost a kitten to FIP over the winter, it was also the cerebellar variety. We took him in as a bottle baby when somebody brought him into our vet when we were there. He was only with us for 4 months but he certainly left his mark on us. I feel the same way when I find one of his toys now.
ReplyDelete