I've been working with Rhodesian Ridgeback Rescue Inc for about a year and a half now and had managed to avoid the situation NO ONE wants to experience and that most rescue coordinators try to avoid placing their foster parents in: the death of a rescue while in your care.
As I understand from several rescue colleagues, many of those situations involve intentional euthanasia because of dog aggression but, occasionally, a terribly, horribly abused dog dies as a direct or indirect result of the abuse it received.
Friday night I felt the pain of the latter when I got the call that sweet Jeb died on the OR table during the amputation of his gunshot leg. Here's what happened...
Thursday night had been worse than Wednesday night, with the painkillers useless against the pain he was feeling. The swelling in his damaged leg had increased all the way down to his ankle and he was obviously in agony. He cried so hard that when he stopped, his voice had a little hiccup in it similar to what a child gets after a long, hard sobbing session. I sat up with him until 5 a.m., talking to him and stroking his head with tears streaming down my face. Finally, I found some earplugs and dozed off in troubled sleep for a few hours with his pitiful moaning/barking in the background several rooms away.
By Friday morning, he would no longer take any food or treat-wrapped meds, and the swelling was even worse. I called my vet in tears and her assistant finally reached the local ortho specialist who agreed to do a consult that day. His crying was pretty much continuous by then.
They are a 24 hour service, although typically only take admissions after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. I got there around 10:30 a.m. and we took the crate out of the car there so that he wouldn't be tempted to jump out. He then had to be pulled out and carried because he couldn't find the strength to stand and walk out on his own.
Around 4:30, the attending vet called and gave me the options: try to repair/pin the fracture, which would likely involve a longer recovery period, had unknown prognosis until they could get in there to see the damage but certainty that there would be more than one surgery, or amputate, which would likely immediately relieve much of the pain and have him off restricted activity in a couple of weeks. Since I had already consulted with my rescue colleagues earlier in the day, I quickly opted for the amputation.
She also thought that, while he was in less than optimal condition for surgery bloodwork-wise, trying to get the infection under control that begun to rage again in his grown-over wound would be riskier than the surgery. She told me that she would call me that night as soon as he was out of surgery.
With phone on nightstand to await the post-op call and all dogs (except new puppy) piled on the bed with me, I went to bed early hoping to catch up on sleep I'd missed the previous two nights while comforting him. I had just turned the TV off and flicked off the reading lamp when the phone rang at 7:40 p.m.. "I'm sorry to have to let you know..." she began. He had gone into respiratory failure, followed by cardiac arrest, likely due to blood clots travelling from the wound area.
I can't say I wasn't expecting it in my subconscious, but it still took me by surprise. I thanked her for trying and told her she could stop trying to resuscitate him and let him be at peace finally. Then I sobbed for an hour while I dug down to find the courage to call the various angels who had fallen in love and tried to help him along the way.
How people deal with grief is interesting. Most of the reactions were similar to mine: extreme sadness, but some level of comfort knowing he was no longer in pain and that he had gotten our heartfelt love for the last week. One reaction that perplexed me was umbrage that the vet had done the surgery knowing that his bloodwork was off, notwithstanding the agony he obviously was in.
Today, my birthday, I feel as though I have passed an unavoidable rite of initiation into rescue, one that worried me when I started a year and a half ago, but now strengthens my resolve to do everything I can to keep it from happening again.
I don't mean to sound righteous, but I'll wear the badge of my experience proudly, glad that maybe I made just a small difference in his memory of humans, that we're not all to be feared.
In many ways, Jeb was a gift that helped me grow more than any of the other rescues I fostered and I will accept such a gift again if given the opportunity.