At 3:58 on euthanasia day, I lifted the syringe for an old orange cat abandoned with a child’s note—and realized I was seconds away from killing the only thing another broken family had left.
My husband, Caleb, was still alive then.
Still warm.
Still joking with nurses.
Still asking if I had eaten lunch.
And a man in a clean white coat was already teaching me how to lose him in installments.
That was four years ago.
I still came back to work two weeks after the funeral because grief does not pause your mortgage, and county jobs don’t hand out mercy.
So yes, when I looked at Marmalade, I saw a cat.
But I also saw every family that ever had to give up something living because the numbers said so.
At 3:40, I finally went to his kennel.
He struggled to stand when he saw me.
Not because he had strength.
Because he still had hope.
That was the worst part.
He pressed his face into my fingers through the bars and gave one cracked little meow like he was apologizing for needing anything at all.
I opened the kennel and wrapped him in a towel.
He smelled like dust, old fabric, and that faint sweet smell animals carry when they’ve spent years sleeping near the same person.
A home smell.
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