Sunday, February 21, 2016

Tilly



She was a dork.

Weimaraners are supposed to be cool. Sleek, athletic, fast and smooth. Hunting dogs. Otters with long legs and flappy ears. Tilly was not like most weimaraners. She was a dork. A silly, uncoordinated, unthreatening, over-friendly, decidedly un-sleek ninety-pound chunk of weird-smelling grey fur who once lost a staredown with a groundhog. She couldn’t swim, despite coming pre-packaged with webbed feet.

She was not great at being a weimaraner. But she was the best damn dog.

She had more quirks than a Zoey Deschanel convention. Her tail wasn’t docked properly, so it was a little too long and had weird twists and bends, like an offensive lineman’s fingers. She had some sort of permanent hernia that left a nickel-sized bubble hanging off her pink belly. She was always a little greasy, even right after a bath. She was terrified of little dogs.  

She was expensive.

She had a facelift when she was a puppy. Her face skin had been so loose that it folded in, allowing her short, sharp fur to poke her eyes, leaving a constant trail of crusty tears. On Mother’s Day of 2008, she ate an entire pack of gum with Xlitol, which is supposed to kill dogs pretty effectively. She was fine. The following Mother’s Day, we came home from breakfast to find her rear-end covered in blood, with bloody geysers spurting out every few minutes, like the elevator scene from The Shining only grosser. We rushed her to the dog ER an hour away. She’d eaten some coyote shit and gotten a bacterial infection. She was fine.

Unattended food immediately became attended by Tilly’s belly.

She was stubborn and persistent and fancied herself a lapdog. Which meant that on nights I just wanted to stretch out on the couch and watch TV, I had to deal with an annoying dog staring me down from four inches away. Or deliberately pacing in front of the TV. Or thinking she was a ninja and oh-so-slowly easing herself over the arm of the couch. She always ended up spooning on the couch. Always.

Her breath was terrible on an Old Testament level. It smelled like rusty pennies dipped in blood. ALWAYS.

For some reason, her favorite place to poop is the middle of the goddamn road.

She wore her heart on her ears. Which is to say you always knew when she’d done something wrong. Her “guilty ears” hung low on her head, and they were so cute that they almost distracted you from the unpacked garbage can, the puddle on the floor, or the fact that she was just standing on her hind legs and eating out of the dirty sink.

She would take every single item out of the trash and lick it clean. We'd come home to find a trail of trash-crumbs leading to a low-eared Tilly, cowering in a corner.

She would lean into ear scratches until it hurt your fingers. Moaning in ecstasy the whole time.
I once clocked her at 23 MPH. So I guess she was kind of athletic.

At night, she’d relentlessly pace the house, flap her batwing ears or nose me awake to let her out to pee. I’m convinced she was just bored.

Her goddamn ROO-ROO-ROO bark was terrible and beautiful.

Tilly was the people-dog’s people dog. She loved snuggling, and when we weren’t available, she’d force her older sister, Tulip, to snuggle, usually by sitting in her and falling asleep. She hated being alone, and once when Airika took Tulip to the vet, Tilly broke out of the house and tracked the car down the road. Seth and I caught her just as she was following her nose onto the busy highway.

Tulip died a few years back, and Tilly was never the same. She’d never been alone in her life, and now her constant companion was gone. She got super-weird around other dogs, so getting a replacement pal was out of the question. She’d try to dig her way out of the house when we went to work. We put her in a kennel for her own safety, but she’d bite and bend the bars trying to escape. For months, we had to give her Xanax when we left the house.

Eventually, she calmed down, but she still didn’t like being left alone. She had the run of the house, but she wore holes in the arm of the couch as she stood vigil at the window, waiting for someone, anyone, to come home.

Tilly got old in a hurry after Tulip went away. Her hearing left completely and, while she'd never been svelte, she got fatter and fatter. She slept 23 hours a day. Still, she was happy to snuggle and give gross, full-tongue kisses. We thought she was finally ready for a buddy, so we brought Beans home. He helped a little, and his relentless desire to play was awfully Tilly-like. It certainly perked her up at times, even if her method of “playing” these days was to bark incoherently while Beans chased a tennis ball for an hour.

A few weeks back, her back legs stopped working for a while. She could walk, but she couldn't stand on her own. I had to carry her up and down the steps at night. We thought it was the end, but then, Tilly being Tilly, she recovered. She's like the dog equivalent of the end of Lord of the Rings.

She woke up Friday morning dizzy and unable to walk, drooling terribly. But, stubborn Tilly being stubborn Tilly, she kept trying to get up and pace around. I shudder to think what would have happened to her if Airika wasn’t home to keep Tilly from hurting herself. The vet said that the condition might go away in a few days, but would probably have lingering effects. It wasn't that she'd need constant care. It was that a dog should be able to move around when she wants.

It was time for Tilly to go. Our active, persistent, annoying, needy, stinky, pacy, loving girl needed to go find herself again.  And so she did.


But she’ll never truly be gone. Our dorky German is pacing behind me right now. I can feel the wind from her flapping ears. I can smell wet pennies.