Non-Profit Internet Source for News, Events, History, & Culture of Northern Frederick & Carroll County Md./Southern Adams County Pa.

 

Pets Large & Small

Dad isn’t coming back for me ….

Jennifer Vanderau
Cumberland Valley Animal Shelter

(6/2018) The minute they shut the cage, the shaking starts. He can’t seem to help it. Or stop it. That clanking sound was just so…final. This place – it’s strange, different. And loud. He got a glimpse of some monstrous-looking thing in the kennel right beside his. He can only assume it was another dog like him, just much, much bigger. What on earth could that be?

The blanket, toys and water they gave him are nice, but he’s scared and his body trembles. It makes his stomach hurt, the shaking.

He tries to calm himself with thoughts of Dad.

Dad’ll be back. I’ll only be here for a little while. He wouldn’t leave me here. Not Dad. Sure, I don’t see much of him, certainly not as much as I’d like, but that doesn’t mean he’d leave me here. Just because I seem to make him mad more often than I make him happy doesn’t mean he’d walk away from me... Dad wasn’t even upset when they brought me back here. He didn’t say goodbye. See? He’ll be back.

So he watches the hallway. And anyone who comes through it. Looking for the only face, listening for the only footsteps, that really matter.

The staff walks by. Some of them stop to tell him he’ll be alright, but he can’t take his eyes from the hall. And he can’t stop shaking. He wants his dad. He didn’t know it was possible to want like this.

One of the staff members cleans up the little spot he’d made on the floor when they put him in the kennel. He couldn’t help it. He was so terrified. He breathes a tiny, nearly insignificant, sigh of relief. Good. Dad would’ve been mad if he would have seen that when he comes back to get him. Dad gets mad a lot about slip-ups like that. He’d have been really mad if he found it on this floor. Sometimes it’s just really hard to hold it. Especially because he’s older. He knows Dad doesn’t really understand that, so he always tries to hold it.

The random barking from all around startles him. That monster next door has a voice to match the huge body. It’s disturbing when you’re not expecting it. And he fears, really fears, what they’re trying to tell him. Because of that, their canine voices shoot through his body like an arrow and make the shaking worse.

He knows what they’re saying, but he doesn’t want to hear it.

He’s not coming back.

Somewhere in the back of his mind, he knows it’s true. It’s why he’s been so afraid. From the minute they’d walked in the building, he knew. This isn’t a place where Dad comes back.

But if his willpower alone could make it happen, it would. Because he suddenly wants nothing more than to see the man he’d spent years of his life with come down that hallway and take him home to his bed, his bowl and his toys.

When the lights go out and he hears staff whisper, "G’night, kids," a terror like none he’d ever known rushes through him and he thinks he’s going to throw up. He can’t sleep here. He can’t be here. He can’t live here. He can’t do it. He can’t.

Night always scares him. He doesn’t like the dark. He used to calm his fear by listening to Dad snore. It wasn’t anything jarring or irritating, just a light, almost soothing sound that let him know he wasn’t alone. But Dad’s not here now. There are no sounds to calm him. And he is alone. Alone with the monster next door and a building full of animals he doesn’t know.

Morning comes and therein begins a routine of sorts. The staff members are nice and they make sure he’s cared for, but it’s just not the same as his home.

He’s moved over into what’s called the adoption area and some days he thinks maybe Dad will come back for him and tell him it was all a mistake. That he really does love him and he can’t live without him.

It doesn’t happen.

Although.

Although.

There is a guy who comes by one day. And he comes back the next day. And he’s super nice. He had incredibly kind eyes. One day the two of them go into something called a bonding room together.

At first, he doesn’t want to go up to the man. His heart is still hurting from missing his Dad.

The man doesn’t push. He just waits and talks. He says he’s alone, that he moved away from his family for his job and he doesn’t like living by himself with nothing to come home to.

The pup listens and for the first time since Dad left him here, a little bit of hope flares in his heart. That night, he wonders, what if?

The next day they go for a walk around the property. It’s fun and the man is so nice and when they come back in, they go back to the bonding room. The pup gets kind of excited and a little nervous because this is really starting to mean something to him.

He has a little accident on the floor and cringes to himself, thinking, this is it. I’ve done it again. There’s no way he’ll want me now.

The man just grabs a paper towel and says, "No problem, buddy. That kind of thing happens," and scratches his ears.

Actually scratches his ears!

That’s the day the term adoption is used and by the next afternoon, he’s going home with the man.

It’s a little scary at first, figuring out the new house and what he’s allowed to do. He’s hesitant, but the man talks in a soothing tone and tells him it’s okay and asks if he wants to watch something called Netflix.

The man lets him sit beside him on the couch and he turns on this pretty cool show called Stranger Things and at one point, the little pup looks up, makes eye contact with the man and he smiles.

And that little dog’s heart beats in a new rhythm, a comfortable rhythm, and he wonders to himself if maybe, just maybe, this is a man could really be a dad to him and someone he can rely on for the rest of his life.

As he falls asleep that night in bed with his new owner – he actually gets to sleep in the bed! – he thinks maybe all the pain he had to endure had been leading him to find the place in life where he was meant to be – where he truly belongs.

With someone who could really be his father for life.

********

This is a story in honor of Father’s Day. We had a little terrier come in a few years ago because his father "couldn’t care for him" anymore. He watched the door like a hawk, as though he was expecting someone, and just shook like a leaf. We assumed he wanted his dad back. He found out soon that his father wasn’t coming back. Thankfully, we found him a home where people gave him a second chance and love for the rest of his life. This story is in honor of him and all the others who are tossed away, but eventually learn that some humans, some father, know the true devotion of an animal and cherish that spirit.

*****

Jennifer Vanderau is the Director of Communications for the Cumberland Valley Animal Shelter in Chambersburg, Pa., and can be reached at cvasoc@innernet.net. The shelter accepts both monetary and pet supply donations. For more information, call the shelter at (717) 263-5791 or visit the website www.cvas-pets.org.

Read other articles by Jennifer Vanderau