When I was five, we had a beagle mix named Spot. Lest you guffaw too loudly at the name of said beagle mix, go back and read the first part of that sentence. I was five years old, people. Cut me some slack. It was the first pet either my dad or I ever had. Sweet Spot. I have the barest of memories of her. Her life was cut short when we had her spayed; an allergic reaction to the anesthesia went horribly wrong. I have the most distinct memories of coming out of school, of kindergarten, that day, to find my dad standing there waiting by a tall tree in the playground. I was thrilled to see him there because he usually met me in his truck in the carpool line, and I ran up to him, unknowing. And then he told me the news: we'd lost little Spot.
I came, it seems, full circle on Thursday when Neel and I drove to school together to give Callum the news about our sweet Violet. I didn't want to tell him alone. Our surgeon had called at ten, but you know what? When I woke up that morning, I knew. All the pieces of her symptoms fell into place, and I knew that the troubles that had been plaguing her were not the result of a disk problem. She has two masses on her spine, and they have metastasized. "I hate to make this call," Dr. Watson, our surgeon said. And she clearly meant it. I held it together until the very end of the phone call, when I hung up crying. I had barely tapped out "Call me" on a text to Neel before I received one: "Any news?" It was from Callum.
What to say? What to say?