Friday came. No one came to claim Suede. I took the day off work, showed up at the shelter at noon when they opened, walked up to the counter with the new collar and leash I’d just bought at Petsmart, and told the young male employee that I was there to adopt Suede. Twenty minutes later, my dog was sitting calmly on the floor next to me while I adjusted the new collar and signed the last of the paperwork. A man waiting to get a dog license asked, “How old is your dog?” I looked around, realized he was talking to me and replied, “Eight.”
“How did he happen to get in here?”
the man wondered.
“Oh—I’m adopting him today.”
“Really? I can’t believe how well he listens to you.”
My son would echo those same words
later in the evening when he watched us play fetch and my good dog dropped his
new toy turtle every time I asked him to.
Years ago my daughter introduced
me to the poetry of Seamus Heaney, and I became a fan. When I was searching my brain for some name
that might replace “Suede,” I wanted a long A sound, an Irish name and
hopefully one with character. And
suddenly there it was on my Facebook page, a post by Billy Collins (another
favorite poet who enjoys celebrity status) which included a photo of him
visiting Seamus Heaney in Ireland.
Perfect.
So from our first hours together
yesterday, Suede became Seamus. (For
those of you unfamiliar with crazy Celtic pronunciations, it’s Shay-mus.)
I called my vet upon arriving
home, and he just happened to have a free spot in the afternoon. (Yes, my vet does house calls.) He came by with his able assistant Emily,
pronounced Seamus healthy and gave him all the vaccines known to preventive dog
medicine. (The shelter had done no inoculations
as the family surrendering him had produced paperwork showing that he’d had his
shots. Just, no one recorded when. So we gave him all the vacs again, just to establish
a base line.)
And what did my new dog do while
he was being jabbed by a stranger repeatedly?
He wagged his tail and licked Dr. Lebovic’s face. Who’s a good boy? Huh?
Who’s a good boy?
In the evening, when the warm
spring day cooled a bit, we went for a two-mile walk. We did the same loop this morning after I’d
done my yoga. Seamus is calm and
obedient on the leash, even when other dogs bark at him or sprinklers go on or
cars whiz past. And yeah, he listens.
Dogs. They’re just so amazing, aren’t they?
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