You walked in all bloated, like down pillows On toothpicks with a stomach flipped Sideways. Your eyelids went white, your gums Were the color of earthworms.
Someone had told me that euthanasia didn’t hurt, But I wondered anyway as you were dragged, now cold. When you died it smelled like wet pavement.
I went home alone to find tufts of your fur on The floor where you had strained. I laid in it, searching for traces Of your smell, the warmth that was there Just hours before, but found none. Only The dim light of a streetlamp glaring Through the window.
A week later you were heavy in a big green box. The vet said “here’s your baby”, then handed you to me. I laughed. Some press paws in clay, bag a toenail, Or bury the ashes in their gardens, But I have learned that fragments of you Are not enough to say I’m sorry.