Our world turned upside down on May 19, when a physician’s assistant silently walked into an examining room, handed Peggy the results of an MRI which contained the words “probable metastatic process,” and walked out. That day marked the end of either of us of us being happy for more than minutes at a time. Ours is such a hard way to live that I've often had the thought that there probably aren’t many ways that are harder.
Then, two weeks ago, things got harder when our fifteen-year-old tabby, Brewsky (the big cat in the photos), was diagnosed with stage two kidney failure. Before adopting him, Peggy so hated cats that she had nightmares of being pursued by unstoppable cat demons. Then, our little black schnauzer died, and Peggy surprised me by suggesting that we visit the pound to look for a dog the very next day. When the pound had no dog that suited us, Peggy surprised me a second time by saying. “Let’s visit the cattery.” Six-month-old Brewsky was the first cat we saw, and Peggy had no interest in seeing see another. Her nightmares of cats never returned.
![]() |
Despite doing everything that I could do short of violence, his disobedience continued. Then came the night that he suddenly stopped running, rolled onto his back, and looked me in the eye as if to ask, “What are you going to do now, Mr. Bad Man, beat me to death with your yardstick?” “You bastard, I never scared you for a moment did I?” I said as I dropped the stick and lay on the floor to pet him. Thus began a nightly ritual that continued for many months until he lost interest.
Brewsky soon matured into a mellow and confident 15-pounder who has since foster parented four other kittens, one of whom he has literally “nursed” since 2015. He has also, at times, served as a parent to the humans of the household, which might be why, after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, Peggy said to him and him alone, “Brewsky, you’ve got to help me beat this thing.” Two weeks ago, we took him to the vet with what we thought was a simple respiratory infection and were told that he also had stage two kidney failure. After telling the vet of her own illness, bald-headed Peggy, said, “I need my cat to survive, and you've got to save him.” Since then, Brewsky has stopped bathing, vomited blood, become incontinent, and stopped eating or drinking.
Tomorrow, we’ll take him to the vet for what might be his last visit. I started digging his grave yesterday but had to stop because every shovelful was harder than a day’s work. The only good thing I can say about losing Brewsky is that neither Peggy nor I will have to grieve alone, as will happen when she and our other cats die, assuming, of course, that I don’t die first. As much as she would hate to lose me, Peggy wouldn’t choose to die in my place, as I would for her. That’s how nature intended for husbands and wives to behave, and I’m very sorry that I can’t let nature have its way.
When Peggy is gone, I will have no one to share my days with; no bald head to kiss; no one to call beautiful; no one to share meals and music with; no one to watch old movies and TV shows with; no one to hold me in bed when I cry; and no one with whom to share decades of memories. People might bring food, tell me how sorry they are for my loss, and ask what they can do, but I can hardly ask for the thing I need most, which is for someone to stay with me indefinitely, to listen to my memories of 54 years of marriage, and to hold me in bed when my heart is breaking. I can’t think of a single person who would do that. This makes the other things that people do seem scripted, as though they were playing a role that says, “You can go close but not too close.”
When Brewsky dies, our spiritual father and the father of our other cats’ will be gone from us, and the nightmare that we are already facing will be many times more painful. And to think that we got cats in the belief that we wouldn’t suffer much when they died, the way we did with dogs.