The previous summer, Gracie, who was fifteen and fragile, had been facing the challenges of pancreatitis and diabetes. Maddie cared for her gently, navigating her medications and doing her best to keep Gracie comfortable.
Her eyesight was nearly gone, so Maddie would carry her outside, laying a blanket in the yard where they’d sit together in the sun. At times, Gracie, with her brindle coatthat changed colors with the seasons, would still pace the familiar path by the country fence, somehow finding her way.
Occasionally, she would rally for a few weeks, which gave Maddie and Frank a flicker of hope, though deep down, they sensed it might be short-lived. And as each day revealed the quiet decline of Gracie’s health, Maddie’s heart broke a little. Yet beneath the sorrow, she felt grateful to be sharing what she knew were their final days together.
Inevitably the final day arrived. Gracie had another pancreatitis attack, and they hurriedly took her to the vet who said she could put her on fluids “forever,” but gently said it would be pointless, and unkind to do so. There was nothing further to be done.
Fifteen years.
It’s hard to explain what it means to spend fifteen years with a creature as loving and selfless as a dog. Maddie had raised Gracie from eight weeks old; she had been there through every season of Maddie’s life and marriage. She comforted her through illness and sorrow, greeted her with joy that never faded, and offered complete trust asking for nothing in return. Letting go of Gracie wasn’t something Maddie knew how to do—it was something she knew she simply had to somehow survive.
As Maddie held Gracie at the vet hospital, memories came flooding back—the first day her wobbly little furry legs made it up the stairs on her own, her sweet puppy face beaming with pride. The first time she ran free in the backyard, tail high, nose to the ground, sniffing every blade of grass and corner of her new kingdom.
Or the time Frank took her fishing with him, and while he painstakingly used the cotton balls and salmon juice bait he’d made to catch catfish, Gracie sat nearby with that smiley face dogs have when they're thrilled to be on an adventure with Dad. When Maddie saw the bait, her eyes widened. "Cotton balls, Frank? Are you trying to choke the fish to death?"
Frank took his little sidekick everywhere—errands, road trips, even to buy office supplies. He’d plop her in a cart, her front paws perched on the edge, surveying the world. The clerks at Staples knew her by name:
“Hey Gracie! Whatcha doing today?” a clerk would call.
Gracie would wag her tail excitedly at everyone, thrilled to be there.
There was the time Frank was caught sneaking her up the back stairs to his office. He’d tuck her under his arm like a football, and if he passed anyone, would try to act like she wasn’t there. Once he ran into the building manager, who looked at Frank’s sheepish face and said simply, “Frank, we know you have a dog.” Then, patting her on the head, added with a grin, “Hi Gracie!” and continued up the stairs.
Frank clutched her like a bag of money he’d just stolen from a bank, shock still in his eyes. The manager even knew her name!
The great irony, of course, was that Maddie had been the one who wanted a dog. Frank had said “absolutely not.”
Maddie was crushed hearing this but the next day she countered “are you saying that for the rest of our lives, I can’t have a dog?”
Frank reiterated, “I just don’t think we can manage it now.”
“Don’t worry, I’ll take total care of her!” Maddie promised.
Frank still objected.
So, over the next couple of months, while Maddie researched dogs, she began leaving clues to help Frank warm up to the idea: first a leash, then about a month later, a halter.
“What’s that?” he’d ask.
“That’s for the dog.”
“What dog?” he asked, eyebrows raised.
“Our dog.” She smiled.
“We don’t have a dog,” he said matter-of-factly.
“We will soon,” she replied in a sing-song voice.
He’d grumble and go back to whatever he was doing, clearly annoyed.
But fate had its own timing. The day Maddie brought Gracie home, she and Frank happened to pull into the parking lot at the same time. Maddie got out holding Gracie, a wiggly, wide-eyed eight-week-old bundle of puppy. Frank took one look and melted.
“Ohhh, she’s so small,” he whispered.
He carried her upstairs, lay down on the floor to play with her, and within minutes, she curled close to his chest and they both fell asleep.
From that moment on, they were inseparable.
That was fifteen years ago; and now the end had come. The vet gently explained the procedure, the needle with the fatal drug, the way Gracie might lurch after it was administered.
Maddie cradled her baby’s small, warm body in her arms, stroking her as she had so many times throughout her life. The injection was given in her paw and Gracie moved slightly.
Moments later, that sweet creature took her final breath.
Maddie was inconsolable; Frank stood beside her, his hand resting on her shoulder, steady but distant. It was as if he feared that touching Gracie in her final moment might shatter something inside him beyond repair. Gracie held Frank and Maddie together in ways they barely understood—which, before long, became achingly clear.
A year later, Frank and Maddie quietly decided to live separately, for all the quiet, complicated reasons couples do. Maddie was even more heartbroken, with the emptiness of their home suddenly magnified, despite the fact that the decision was hers.
Autumn in Maryland arrived as if a painter had slipped on a rock while hiking and spilled his palette across the mountains. Splashes of gold, bursts of crimson maples, and fleeting shades of orange and yellow from the oaks were sprinkled throughout the slopes of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Cars climbed the winding roads, in slow, breathy lines, a joyful ritual of passage, a kind of shared gratitude for the incomparable beauty of the leaves.
The heavy humidity of summer had finally lifted, replaced by crisp, clean air that felt like a gift to thankful lungs. It was always a glorious last hurrah before winter’s bite, and Maddie savored it.
But as the days grew shorter, the loss of the light deepened her grief. The cold was coming. And she would be alone.
Soon it was November. The shivering night was dark and rainy as Maddie returned home late after dinner with friends. The streets glistened from a storm that had knocked out power in her neighborhood, leaving the house pitch black.
Maddie hesitated at the door, uneasy about stepping into the silent, shadowy darkness. She called Melaku and Miri. Miri was asleep, but Melaku had just hung up after calming Betty down, the panicked single woman across the street.
“Everyone turns to Melaku,” Maddie thought smiling to herself.
He said to come over and sit with him and his sleepy children until the lights came back on. Maddie was grateful for his kindness.
As summer wore on, Miri began to sense Maddie’s loneliness and started inviting her out—for lunch, coffee, or dinner. Maddie loved those outings. She and Miri shared stories from their lives and grew even closer.
One afternoon, as they sipped their coffee at the nearby Starbucks, Miri fell unusually quiet. The usual hum of conversation around them, orders being called out, chairs scraping, people reuniting, seemed to fade as Maddie glanced up, noticing her friend’s thoughtful look.
“Is everything ok?” Maddie asked. “I was just thinking...perhaps it’s time you got another dog?” Miri said gently.
"Ohhh,” Maddie let it sink in slowly. “I don’t think I’m ready yet,"
“Then maybe...a fish?” Miri offered with a warm smile.
Maddie raised an eyebrow “A fish?”
“A fish is fairly simple to take care of” Miri said matter-of-factly. “They’re beautiful to watch, peaceful. Not as demanding as a dog,”
Maddie was intrigued by the idea, and gradually relented. “You know, why not!”
And so it was, that on this scorching summer day, the two friends made the trip to the fish store in Congressional Plaza.
Aquatic stores, a kind of hardware store with animals, have lots of mysterious paraphernalia to the uninitiated. And Maddie was definitely uninitiated.