Picture
The Mona Lisa of Hot Fudge Sundaes, from Heggys, in Canton, Ohio.
This takes place in December, 2012, after the surgeon had told me the cancer was "everywhere." ( in the previous blog post )  Parts of this chapter did appear in my manuscript, Dillie the Deer, but this is the original unedited version from the manuscript.


That night, the full impact of the news finally shattered Steve’s self-defense force field of denial.  

“What am I going to do without you?” He was crying so hard, that it only made me wish that I had not told him the truth.  


His fear made me stronger, as I had to force myself to pretend there was nothing to fear.  


“I’m going to be just fine,” I told him.  “Nothing’s changed at all. It’s all about the chemo now,” I said, repeating what the surgeon and radiation doctor had said.  


Exhausted from worry and ravaged by his man-cold, he went to bed without dinner.


I couldn’t sleep.  I had too much to do.  The surgeon had told me to get my affairs n order, and I went to my upstairs office to do just that.


First, I went online to look at funeral homes.  I knew that when the time came, Steve would not be able to deal with this unpleasant task.  I intended to pre-plan and pre-pay for everything so he would not have to worry about a thing.  Plus, I wanted this event, my final  hurrah, to be as joyous and unique as my life had been.  I looked for a funeral home that had a kitchen.   I wanted my guests to be served hot fudge sundaes.  


My whole adult life I had battled with a sluggish metabolism, fueled by excessive estrogen from polycystic ovarian disease.  Hot fudge sundaes were forbidden fruit I could never have.  Now I saw them as a gooey metaphor.   They were a celebration of life, the joy of living for the moment, and the need  to leave world without regrets, with a maraschino cherry on top.   I wanted to impart this invaluable lesson as my last official act on earth.


Not just any hot fudge would do for my friends.  Oh no. No Hershey’s syrup for this crowd.  The funeral director would have to procure Heggy’s  hot fudge sauce.  


Paris has the louvre, Toronto has Niagara Falls, St. Louis the arch.  My hometown has Heggy’s.   For nearly a hundred years, this family run chocolate shoppe and soda fountain  has served the Mona Lisa of hot fudge sundaes, with a rich homemade French vanilla ice cream, slathered with heaven in its chocolate syrup state.  Only that particular culinary blast of decadence could properly impart my final  message to the world.


Though my old country grandmother had told me when my grandfather had died when I was twelve that music during this time was disrespectful, at my funeral, I wanted music. I started to go through my I-tunes collection and picked out songs for the soundtrack of my life.  “Someday” by blues belter Michelle Willson brought me to tears with lyrics that came right out of my own heart.


“Someday

I will go home
Someday
I will go home
And I will see the face of my father
And I will fear pain no more.”

No, no.  Too sad.  I wanted people to celebrate my life, not roll in the aisles wailing.


I tried Josh Groban instead.  Poor Josh.  His sweet baritone voice was probably played at more funerals than “Taps.”


Hearing her favorite singer Dillie pushed open the door and came in to listen, laying her head on my lap as she always did.


I could not keep my composure any longer.   I stroked her beautiful face as the tears fell.  “I will miss you so much, Dillie,” I told her.  “Please take care of your daddy for me.”


Dillie licked my tears, liking the salt.  Her tongue flipped out of the side of her mouth, in the goofy way it always did, and that made me smile.


Pets are completely in tune to their human companions.  They know when we are happy or afraid.  They know when our world  is crumbling around us.  Dillie laid down at my feet.   For a princess used to lounging on her micro-fleece blanket, 330 thread count Egyptian cotton sheets,  and Sealy Posture-pedic mattress, laying on my office floor was slumming it.  A few minutes later, Lady joined her.  Then Spazz the cat.  My entire animal family was around me as I continued to “get my affairs in order.”


My next task was going to be tough.  I needed to write my own obituary.  I am not a control freak, by any means.  I am surrounded by many, and I share the DNA of at least one of them, but I am not.  However, writing my final farewell was important to me.   


I was very bothered by the fact that nothing in my life was lasting, that I would leave the earth without anyone knowing I had even been here.  I planned to be cremated and have my ashes scattered with Steve someday on our land in Idaho.  I wasn’t even going to have a headstone.  There was going to be no granite marker telling the world like Ozymandias that at one time there was this person Melanie Butera that had been a vet and loving, breathing person.  I thought that if I wrote my own obituary, I would at least have something somewhere that told the world I had been here that  was lasting, even in this increasingly paperless world.  


As I struggled to find the words, my music library continued to play random selections.  Pavarotti began to sing the beautiful “Il Lucevan le Stelle,” the heartbreaking aria from Tosca. His doomed character Cavaradossi recalls his love and life from his prison  cell.  He knows he will be executed at dawn, and he sees the sun rising.  


Even in happier times, this performance had always brought me to tears. Pavarotti’s rendition is the most extraordinary three minutes of beauty and anguish I have ever known.  That night, it devastated me.  I wept uncontrollably  from the bittersweet cry of the opening clarinet to Luciano’s heart-wrenching finale.   

 
I wished I didn’t understand the Italian lyrics.  

“I die hopeless

And never before have I
loved life so much.
Loved life so much.”

I had the breakdown to which I was entitled, but up to then had not allowed.  


“Is this all there is?” I said out loud to a Creator I thought would not answer me.  “I am just here and then ‘poof’ I am gone?  Did nothing I have done mean anything?“


Cancer had taken Il Maestro’s life, too, but his gift and voice were immortal.  Peformers and artists touched people long after they are gone.  Writers teach and entertain people for eternity.  Builders create bridges and monuments that time will not wash away.   What had I done?  I knew that I had achieved my goal of being a good vet and I had helped  a three hundred thousand and change clients and patients, but nothing I had done was lasting.  Nothing I had done made a single mark on the universe.  My life had not mattered.  


Awash in self-pity and the futility of my life, I didn’t even notice that the next music library random selection was perhaps not so random after all.  The Master DJ had His own playlist that night.  His next choice was from the soundtrack of “The Color Purple.”  The song He chose stopped my tears long enough for me to regain my composure: “God is Trying to Tell You Something.”  


I was so self-absorbed, I didn’t even notice that what God was trying to tell me was that He was trying to tell me something. It wasn’t until the third “random” selection I finally got the hint.  Of the 1436 tracks in my eclectic collection of blues, jazz, opera, and soundtracks, He chose the one single track He knew would grab my attention by the horns: “The Brain,” from Mel Brooks’  “Young Frankenstein, the Musical.”  


A lesser god would have chosen any song that was meant to turn my tears into laughter.   Only a truly ominiscient and omnipotent Super-God could have known that this particular song would not only dry up my tears, but make me know He was there.


The lyrics of that crazy song were not what finally got my attention.  The coded message was the musical and its parent movie themselves.  “Young Frankenstein”  had become a key symbol of hope between an old friend and me as we fought our illnesses together.


The  day before my first cancer surgery, a friend from high school, Sandy , had posted essentially a goodbye to the world on her Facebook page.  I called her, perplexed why such a beautiful, gifted, and spiritual lady could be so desperate.


Sandy explained she had been battling a mystery illness for several months and despite countless visits to specialists and emergency rooms, she still had no explanations.  She couldn’t stand without passing out.  She had constant headaches and neck pain, vertigo, nausea, shortness of breath.  She had twice coded in emergency rooms when her blood pressure fell to  forty over twenty.  


Through it all, she had kept her faith and her humor.  Once she awoke from a blackout in a hospital room, unwittingly sporting an Inspector Clouseau French accent.   She tried to get the resident to understand her speech had changed.  For some reason, however, the doctor could not hear the problem.  He insisted her speech was just fine, and that he had never heard of such a condition in all his years training in his hometown of Paris, France.  


The last straw for her, though, that had finally beat her hope into submission, was a snooty lady neurologist that had gone so far as to suggest that Sandy was faking her symptoms.  Although this doctor with accolades out her overeducated wazoo could not explain how anyone could fake a BP of forty over twenty, she arrogantly chose to accuse her patient of hypochondria instead of accepting her own limits as a doctor.  Instead of researching Sandy’s symptoms or even just asking “Siri” on an I-phone, she ignorantly assumed that Sandy was “faking it.”  She addressed Sandy in a shockingly condescending manner.


“So,” she said, oozing insensitivity in tones reserved for speaking to a child, “you’re mother  died from a stroke.  We want to be like our mother, don’t we?”


After that enraging experience, Sandy, this vivacious, loving, gifted, child of God was ready to give up.  She could no longer fight both the illness and the doctors.  Exhausted, she gave up all hope that she would ever be well and accepted that she was dying.


“Sandy,” I told  her, “don’t you give up. My surgery is tomorrow.  I’m just starting my journey .  We’ll keep each other company along the way.”


We prayed together.  Sandy was a minister’s daughter and I was Catholic.  We were raised in different traditions and radically different faiths, but we prayed to the same God.  She led a prayer from her heart that she would have enough strength to help me fight my illness and that I would help her fight hers.  I told her, jokingly, that I was praying to the modern Catholic saint Padre Pio for strength, and was making her an honorary Catholic so he would help her, too.


I was infuriated at her last neurologist.  “Don’t you dare let some arrogant doctor ruin your hope,” I told her.  “As soon as I get back on my feet from surgery, we are going to get you to a better doctor, to the best doctor – to the Luciano Pavarotti of doctors.”  


When I called her a few days later to tell her my surgery was over and I was home, I discovered she had been in the hospital herself during the same time.  After our last conversation, she had blacked out again.  She had been taken by ambulance to the hospital.  She would not allow them to assign the same snooty neurologist, so the French doctor was back. She jokingly called him in an exaggerated French accent “le docteur Gi Gadois”  (Peter Sellers’  alter-ego to Clouseau in the Pink Panther movies.)


Despite what she had just gone through, her voice was strong and full of hope.  She explained why.  Two things had happened this time that had not happened before.  They had put her on a “tilt table” to test her to see if different angles induced her signs.  It did .  She coded when they elevated her about 40 degrees.  During this time, as the doctors and nurses ran around her trying to get her BP to register, she had a feeling of warmth all through her body.  She knew that the Lord had wrapped His arms around her.  He then told her: “You will live as long as you are supposed to, my child.”  This brought her peace.  Whether she lived or died, she took peace in knowing that either path was her destiny.


The second thing that had happened during this hospital visit was that her MRI finally showed something wrong in her brain, not a tumor but changes were noted in the brainstem  area.   She was greatly comforted that finally someone, in this case Dr. Gadois, could point to something and show the world that she had not made this up.   The problem wasn’t in her head, it was in her brain.  


The source of her problem was still a mystery, but le docteur  saw an area where the structure was wrong.  In his French accent, he told her that her brain was “abby normal”.


“Melanie,” she told me laughing.  “As soon as he said that, the first thing I thought about was your brother Tom in high school mimicking Marty Feldman in “Young Frankenstein.”  He had the whole schtick down and kept saying his brain was ‘abby normal.’ He was such a cutie!” Poor Dr. Gadois never did know why the patient he had just given serious news to responded with a hearty laugh.


Just a few hours after that conversation, the “Young Frankenstein” symbol between us was solidified.   I was recliner-bound, recovering from surgery.  Steve turned on the tv.  Without  changing the channel or consulting the channel guide, the movie that was playing was, of course, “Young Frankenstein.”  The very first image as the tv came to life was Marty Feldman looking through the “brain depository” flap, on his way to steal “Abby Normal’s” brain.  


Now, six months later, as I hopelessly faced my own death as the sun began to rise, God was trying to tell me via “Young Frankenstein” what He had told Sandy: “You will live as long as you are supposed to.” This gave me such peace.  This song “The Brain” could only have been chosen by a truly divine all-knowing, and surprisingly cheeky God.


Smiling, I trashed the draft of my Magnum Opus obituary and with dry eyes looked through digital folders for a certain picture of myself.  Again thinking that  “getting my affairs in order” meant I had to prearrange my own funeral, I wanted to find a photograph to enlarge and frame to display at the calling hours.  I don’t really like any photos of myself, but there was one with Dillie that I thought would be all right.   


I opened a folder I had entitled “Dillie.” The photograph was not there, but I discovered I had stored the first draft of a book I had begun to write about Dillie two years ago.  She had gotten famous in 2009, and all these people were writing about her and putting  her in books.  I had boldly and, perhaps, foolishly thought:  “I know her better than anyone.  I should write a book about her.”  As I reread the pages I had written so long ago, before my cancer, before Pat’s cancer, before Dean’s tragic fall off the ladder in his dream home, before all the losses of the animals and people in my life that had occurred in the last two years, I knew I had to finish this book.  Even if it never sold a copy, even if no one else ever read it, I had to finish it.  This was my legacy.  This was my ganite marker.  This was my proof that I had existed.  


With the sun rising, and Dillie, Lady, and Spazz lounging around me, I began to “put my affairs in order.”  I wrote  “Dillie the Deer, Love on Hooves.”




-----


 
 

This is an unedited chapter from my original manuscript that was not included in the final draft.  Chronologically, it takes place after the last blog post, "Return of the Blob."

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The moment before my life changed forever. The surgeon's exam room.

A week later, I was still oak strong that this cancer thing was just going to be another bump in the road. My confidence did not waver even after the surgeon called me to set up my suture removal and ominously told me “we had to talk about the scan results.”

Dunt-da.

I’m surprised that no one has developed a sound effect button for physicians’ telephones. I guarantee it would be a big seller.

He was going to hit me with the scan results. He thought I was gong to crumble. No, no, not I, I thought to myself. For as long as I know how to love I know I will survive.

Calling Dr. Gloria Gaynor. Please report to oncology...

I sat in his exam room a few days later, bubbling over with confidence. I chastised myself for showing weakness the last time I had seen him, when he had blind sided me with the photo of the tumor lurking inside me like the creature from “Alien.”

Not this time, I told myself. You’re going to be strong. No tears. No fears. You got this. I was psyching myself up like an NFL coach at the Super Bowl half.

He’s going to come in and tell me about the scan, I thought. He thinks he’s going to shock me, but I already know the results. Three masses. Next stop chemo. You got this.

I was more than confident sitting in that beige drab exam room; I was downright cocky. I took a cell phone photo of the empty stool he was about to occupy to try and rock my world. I was going to post it on Facebook, with a laugh at his expense!

By the time the surgeon finally came in the room, with a boy-surgeon intern in tow, I was ready to take on the Pittsburgh Steelers. He sat in the same stool I had just photographed and asked how I was doing.

“Better than the last time I saw you,” I said.

“You talked to Dr. R?” he said, getting me ready for the big reveal.

“Yes.”

“And you know the results of the scans?”

“Yes.” I answered with a pre-planned smile.

He was surprised at my positive demeanor. He was just lining up for the field goal, in sudden death overtime.

“So you know about the tumors in the abdomen.”

“Yes.” A clear, confident answer.

Then he kicked the ball, right through the goalposts.

“And you know about the tumors in the kidneys, liver, lungs, and bone?”

Gasp.

I was stunned. Stunned. Dr R had distinctly told me there were three masses in the abdomen. Three. He didn’t even hint at anything else, and certainly never told me the killer cells were already in the lungs and bone. That defined my cancer as stage four, potentially terminal.

Stage four meant that the cancer had crossed the diaphragm and had spread throughout the body. Stage four was as bad as it could get. If I reached stage five, the pain would stop and I would no longer need chemo, but I would be the newest contralto in the choir invisible. In my profession my situation would prompt me to have a serious talk with the client about the pet’s quality of life, and reach for the purple juice with the funny name.

My bravado marched off the field, crushed. The tears I promised myself would not come couldn’t help themselves. He had blind sided me once again.

Well played, Dr. H, well played.

“It’s all about the chemo now,” he continued. “It’s everywhere.”

I could barely speak. I feebly assured him that Dr. R had already made the necessary arrangements.

“Good,” he said. “Go home and get your affairs in order.”

He had been pleasant, kind, and compassionate, or rather, as pleasant, kind, and compassionate as one could be while hitting someone over the head with a blunt instrument. He led me out of the room with an apologetic smile.

I was reeling. I was free-falling to earth with no parachute, and somehow, someway, I had to muster enough strength to walk to the waiting room where Steve innocently sat playing a drag racing game on my I-pad. I had to slap a smile on my face so he wouldn’t know the truth until we were at a better time and place for me to drive a stake through his heart.

Fortunately, Steve was absorbed right then in his own medical drama, and did not notice the bruises and wounds on my game face. He himself was nursing the single worst disease in the world. More debilitating than Lou Gehrig’s disease, more lethal than Ebola, this disease had claimed more victims than the Black Plague.

He had a man-cold.

The man-cold, or rhinitits horriblis masculinis as it has been known since the middle ages, is even more dangerous than the man-paper-cut or the dreaded man-hangnail. It was the Kryptonite of masculinity. This powerful virus turned robust males into shivering, quivering, teddy-bear clutching, bowls of Jell-O with size 12 work boots, that were unable to go to work, make a cup of soup, or open the needed anti-sera, a Coors Light, without help from their never-sympathetic-enough spouses.

Like all women, I fortunately was immune to the man-cold. Women get colds, all right, but just the usual kind, not the devil’s own man-cold. Our colds just give us a stuffy noses and runny eyes, but we still have enough energy to report to all three of our jobs, feed the children, do the

laundry, go shopping, and fix the TV when the cable goes on the fritz in the middle of the big game.

Steve had this stage 4 man-cold for seven days now, and he barely could walk back to the car. Subsequently, even though I was free-falling and searching for a way I could hide my fear from him, I didn’t have to worry. His focus was on his man-cold.

“Why did it take so long?” he asked, obliviously. “My head hurts. I think I have a fever. Feel my forehead...”

He didn’t even realize anything was wrong until we were nearly home and my dad called me. I couldn’t pretend any longer, and tearfully gave my dad the news.

Steve pulled his truck over and listened to my conversation.

“Don’t tell anyone,” I told my dad. “Promise me.”

I didn’t want my mother and siblings to know just how bad things really were. I had caused them enough grief already.

“I won’t tell,” my dad said. He was crying, too. He kept his promise to me, and my family never knew how extensive my cancer was until I had finished my chemo. Some of them perhaps  not until they read this chapter.
 

Dillie the Deer