My poor little moggy, Dyson, finally lost his ninth life at 2am. After a week of veterinary appointments, blood tests and injections, he died mercifully quickly. Mercifully, because he was very distressed when he went, and he clearly knew he was going.
I’m heartbroken. I know there are those who will think that you can’t get that attached to a four-legged animal, or who can’t understand that one could be that fond of a cat, as opposed to a dog, as cats are always viewed as so stand-offish. I can only say that Dyson was probably the friendliest cat you could hope to meet, and that there are thousands of actors in London who can vouch for that, as he provided cuddles and stress relief as they waited for their auditions, learned lines and rehearsed. He even, in some cases, got used for blocking scenes when actors were delayed or absent. He didn’t mind, he just loved the attention.
He was a shadow of his former self when he died. It turned out that the problem was not kidney disease as I had previously feared, but a blood parasite that was causing major anaemia. We had lots of blood tests that showed kidney and liver function were all good, that he wasn’t diabetic, and that he didn’t have FELV or FIV, which were the other candidates. It all came down to a parasite, mycoplasma, and the vets were hopeful that, despite him being very weak, we would be able to treat him successfully.
I duly learned how to inject his antibiotics, since his vets knew even they couldn’t get pills down him. And we went on Friday for a steroid injection that was supposed to help him. The vet was enouraged that he was more alert, more mobile, and had put on 60g. He showed all the signs of responding to treatment, so much so that we were told to take him back to the vets the next day for a second steroid jab, and to keep on giving the antibiotics.
Yesterday afternoon, I took him for his second steroid jab, but with the firm intention of refusing it. Dyson’s breathing was laboured, he was listless and didn’t even want to go and sunbathe in his favourite flower pot when I carried him there. I didn’t need to refuse. On examining him, the vet decided that he was too weak t cope with a second steroid jab, told me to keep on with the antibiotics and to take him in on Monday ton check on his progress and give him another steroid jab if he was looking better.
So I took Dyson back home, went to the shop to get him some special cat food, fed him and jabbed him and cuddled him. He settled on the mat by his bowls and seemed to sleep, which I figured could only help him. Around 1.45am I heard him start making strange throaty sounds and went to check on him. While S and I both checked him for obstructions in his throat, even going so far as to work out how to do a kitty heimlich manoeuvre, nothing we could do helped. We both hit the phones looking for out of hours veterinary services, and it was while I was talking to one - phone in one hand, other hand trying in vain to comfort Dyson - that he lurched off - as if trying to escape from himself, the wheezing now more recognisably a gurgle - hid beneath the kitchen cabinets and died. Even before I could get under there to investigate, I knew he was dead. The silence gave it away.
I’ve let the vets know he won’t be making his appointment on Monday. But I’ll pack up his medication, syringes and needles and take them back tomorrow. I’ve asked them to give them to an animal hospital so they can do someone else’s pet some good.
While objectively I know Dyson was very weak, and there was always a chance he wouldn’t survive, I can’t help but feel that it was the steroid injection that carried him off. But I’m no vet, so what do I know? Just that, if you look at the evidence, he was getting better until that jab, after which he went downhill fast. I even think the vet who saw him yesterday afternoon suspected this might happen, as she told me not to hesitate to call today if his condition worsened.
Does this help me? Probably not. It doesn’t give me what I would want the most, which is to have my darling cat purring in my arms again. Maybe the best I can hope for is that the vet in question learns from the experience and somebody else’s pet survives as a result.
In the meantime, I have a cat to bury. We have a small plot in mind at Dad’s, a grassy spot overlooking the fish pond, where he can rest next to his old friend, Octavia. I’m as lost for words to say at the grave site now as I was when we buried her. In the end, there is very little to be said.
Goodbye Dyson. No cat could have been more loved, or as sorely missed.