Authors: Susan Conant
Buck intends to E-mail you about the neurologist. I do wish that he could be persuaded not to write E-mail in ALL CAPS. He has repeatedly been informed that the usage makes his communications look as if he is SHOUTING. Buck's invariable reply to me when I draw his attention to the matter is that he IS shouting. Thank heaven, he is just kidding as usual. :0 (Is that right? It's supposed to be a smile, but it looks peculiar, like that painting, "The Scream," by Munch, isn't it?)
Molly went R.W.B.
*
on Saturday. I was moderately pleased with the Reserve. Buck was not. Your father felt that the Winners Bitch was inferior to Molly and said that the judge, Lester Offenbach, chose the incorrect bichon over Molly because the other one had a pretty handler. It's certainly true that our own dear Horace Livermore is not pretty! But even Buck admits that Horace is an excellent handler. And Molly went W.B. on Sunday! Only one point, but who cares? Well, your father does, but I don't! I must confess that I am still not entirely comfortable in spelling out the B. in W.B., so to speak. Buck correctly points out that if "bitch" (There! I've done it!) were other than a proper term for female, the American Kennel Club would ban its use, as is certainly not the case since you-know-what is every other word spoken at AKC shows.
We really must have another go at Harvard Yard. It's a shame that we were foiled in our previous attempt. I won't feel quite right until the deed is done.
Your loving stepmother—Doesn't that make me sound like a witch!
Gabrielle
Chapter 3
Subj: BORDER COLLIE
From:
[email protected]
-----------------------------------
GABRIELLE SAYS THAT RITA HAS PACKED YOU OFF TO A NEUROLOGIST. REAL DOCTORS ARE OK, BUT DON'T LET ANY OF THOSE CAMBRIDGE TOFU GUM-MERS TALK YOU INTO THINKING YOU NEED YOUR HEAD EXAMINED. THE ONLY THING THOSE JOKERS ARE AFTER IS YOUR MONEY. THERE'S NOT A DAMNED THING WRONG WITH YOU THAT DOGS AND HARD WORK WONT CURE.
GIVE SERIOUS THOUGHT TO THE BORDER COLLIE.
Chapter 4
Vee Foote. I ask you! What kind of stupid first name is
Vee?
It isn’t even a name; it’s an initial. And
Foote
?
Dr.
Foote? For a
psychiatrist
? It sounded to me as if her idea of treatment would be a swift kick. On reflection, however, I decided that a swift kick might be precisely what I needed. Besides a new vet, of course. As I’ve mentioned, my last vet, Steve Delaney, married...
Well, enough about Anita Fairley-Delaney. For now.
For whatever reason, I found myself in the Proverbial situation of the wicked, who, as the Bible says— Proverbs 28:1—“flee when no man pursueth.” Steve, having plighted his troth to Anita, was no longer pursuing me. My next-door neighbor and thoroughly admirable longtime admirer, Lt. Kevin Dennehy of the Cambridge police, finally had a girlfriend, a cop named Jennie, as opposed, for example, to a dog writer named Holly. I’d seen almost nothing of Kevin lately. He hadn’t even introduced me to Jennie, whom I imagined as thin, blond, and gorgeous, in other words, remarkably like Anita Fairley. Dog clubs and dog shows are lousy places to meet men. They’re disproportionately packed with women, and the men tend to be married or gay. Indeed, the world of dogs is a microcosm of the world at large, or so it often seems to me.
“Hunting attracts men,” I told Dr. Foote, “but malamutes are useless for hunting, and besides, the last thing I want to do is kill animals. AA is supposed to be great, but I’m not alcoholic, and it seems a little risky to make myself eligible. AA or no AA, I might not dry out.”
“Tell me more about Steve,” said Dr. Foote, whose home office was in a big single-family Victorian house that must have been undergoing renovation. Or were the workers possibly putting up a kennel run? In any case, the curb was lined with contractors’ trucks and vans. Hammers banged. There weren’t any tricycles in the front yard or anything like that, and Dr. Foote was a little old to be the mother of toddlers. She looked forty-five or fiftyish, my senior by a decade or more, and had long, dark, gray-streaked hair that fell loose around her shoulders, Cambridge style, even though she lived in Newton, the suburb of suburbs, which according to an article in one of the Boston papers had recently won an award for being the safest city in America. The rankings were based on crime statistics, not on psychotherapy ratings, but Newton had also made the news lately for having the highest number of psychiatrists per capita of any city in the U.S. A connection there?
Anyhow, especially because I’d never consulted a therapist before, it felt comforting to know that I was seeking help in not just any old safe place, but in
the
safest city in the entire country. Dr. Foote’s office had apparently been furnished to convey that same impression. The walls were lined with books, the carpet was a tweedy tan, and the chairs were upholstered in a velvety brown. There was nothing threatening-looking about Dr. Foote, either. She wore a loosely draped dress in gray jersey with a red-patterned scarf and chunky gold earrings. Her footwear consisted of black flats, not boots.
“Steve,” I repeated. “No matter how we’d split up, I’d miss him. Even before he fell into Anita’s clutches, I was lonely for him. In so many ways, we liked the same things. Hiking with our dogs. Eating out. I don’t really cook. For people. I cook for dogs. But that was okay because Steve likes restaurants. And no one could ask for a more attentive—” I stopped. As maybe you’ve noticed, I don’t hold back a lot, but I didn’t feel like talking to Dr. Foote about sex. “Except that asking for someone else was basically what I did. I was unappreciative and ungrateful. And stupid. I miss Steve a lot. And India and Lady. With India around, I used to be able to let Rowdy and Kimi off leash once in a while, in the woods, where there were no cars anywhere nearby, because India would watch out for them. She’s a shepherd. German shepherd dog,” I explained. “Very responsible. Incredibly obedient. The perfect dog. I’ve thought about getting one myself.” Dr. Foote raised her eyebrows. For some weird reason, her mouth twitched.
“A shepherd.Or a Border collie. But I can’t, really, not where I live. If I got a male, there’d be trouble with Rowdy, and Kimi wouldn’t accept another female, and I don’t have room for kennels. The timing’s bad, too. I’m not back to normal yet. I’m a lot better, a million times better. My memory is fine, except that once in a while, I have trouble—I’ll read an article, and when I get to the end, I’ll have trouble remembering the beginning. And I don’t exactly have insomnia. I just wake up too early. Like four A.M.”
“That is early,” Dr. Foote agreed.
“And then I can’t go back to sleep.”
“What do you do then?”
“Get up. Feed the dogs. Work. Not that I exactly enjoy writing at five o’clock in the morning, but I get a lot done. I’m doing an article on fatal dog attacks, which is a fairly depressing subject, obviously, but it’s particularly depressing before dawn. Or sometimes I take the dogs to Fresh Pond, which is the kind of thing I always tell other people to do instead of going to singles bars or taking adult ed courses.”
Dr. Foote looked puzzled.
“World’s best dating service,” I explained. “A flashy dog. Two of them. The theory is perfectly sound, and I don’t
want
to take up swing dancing, and I don’t believe in personal ads—I think they’re dangerous— but I walk the dogs all the time, so I already know all the other dog walkers at Fresh Pond and in the rest of my neighborhood, and I’m not interested in them.”
“Have you let people know that you’re interested in meeting men?” Dr. Foote asked.
I thought the question over. It struck me as sensible. Had I let people know? “More or less,” I replied.
She smiled. “More
or
less?”
I smiled back. “Less.”
‘They may assume that you’re not ready. Or not interested. You do have an air of self-sufficiency, you know.”
“Me?”
“You.”
“Well, in a way it’s true. I mean, Rowdy and Kimi and I are... How do I say this? There’s a way in which we’re complete. Not exactly complete. A unit. One. We’re the
we
in my life, if that makes any sense.” The first thing I’d done on arriving at Foote’s house had been to scrutinize the premises for any sign of a dog. I’d found none, unless you count the possibility of a kennel run in progress.
“Does it make sense to you?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“And is there room for another person there? In that
we?"
“Not just anyone. But yes, there is. The right one.”
“I’d suggest that you let people know that.”
Close to the end of the fifty-minute hour, we made another appointment. The “session,” as Rita, my therapist friend and second-floor tenant, calls such meetings, had been different from what I’d expected. Unlike movie psychiatrists, Dr. Foote didn’t have a foreign accent and didn’t ask weird or corny questions about my father and mother. Rita does have a foreign accent—New York—and she’s obsessed with parents. Mine, I might add, were not the reason Rita had talked me into seeing Dr. Foote. Rather, Rita had argued that the combination of my head injury and the loss of my relationship with Steve were too much for me to bear by myself. I’d countered with a lot of claims about dogs, friends, and relatives, but Rita, who understands me, had pointed out that if Rowdy or Kimi had suffered a concussion and a traumatic loss, and had sporadic memory problems and early-morning insomnia, I wouldn’t hesitate to seek professional help. According to Rita, I should be as good an owner of myself as I was of my animals.
As I was passing through Dr. Foote’s waiting room on my way out, the door to the outside opened, and two thoughts leaped to my consciousness. The first was that since the bland-looking fortyish man who entered the waiting room was evidently Dr. Foote’s next patient, he must be totally out of his mind. The second was Rita’s assurance that seeing a therapist was invariably proof of sanity, not madness. The man’s appearance and demeanor supported Rita’s view. He was about five ten and had light brown hair, blue eyes, and a fading tan. Not that the mad are necessarily tall or short, pale or dark, but if they look and act like some of the obviously deranged people who hang out in Harvard Square, they seem anything but ordinary. Dr. Foote’s patient wasn’t wearing jingle bells, hadn’t embroidered bizarre words on his clothing, and didn’t shout or whisper to imaginary listeners. On the contrary, he was well groomed and wore a dark business suit, and he dealt with the awkwardness of confronting a possibly insane person, namely, me, by nodding his head almost imperceptibly and giving a slight, formal smile. With equal courtesy, I returned the acknowledgment. What are manners for, after all? Disguising embarrassment, among other things. You’d have thought we were in the waiting room of a V.D. clinic.
Chapter 5
Subj: Your referral
From:
[email protected]
-----------------------------
Hi Rita,
I tried to call to thank you for the referral, but your line was busy. In any case, thanks for referring Holly Winter. I really appreciate this gesture of confidence. As we discussed, I have a strong interest in neurology, as well as in loss, grief, and attachment, and always welcome referrals where these and other issues are paramount.
The plans for the new kitchen and baths are taking shape. David and I are very excited about the project. You'll have to come and have a drink with us when all the work is done.
Once again, many thanks for the interesting referral. I still have a few hours open I'd like to fill, so bear me in mind!
Best,
Vee
Chapter 6
Male dogs strut around and even roll onto their backs in public without visibly blushing at the prospect of embarrassing remarks about whatever surgery they may or may not have had. The canine inability to wish for medical privacy is not limited to males. If Kimi, for example, felt the need to consult a mental-health professional, and if her dog-psychiatric records eventually fell into her paws—or were dropped there by Rita—she wouldn’t object to my publishing them in
Dog’s Life
magazine or otherwise letting everyone on dog’s green earth read them. I, however, belong to a lesser species and am thus tempted to suppress documents I acquired months after they were written. Alternatively, I could annotate them at length. As it is, I’ll limit myself to a single comment: Had I but known!