The Unexpected Pause
“Hold on a moment,” Dr. Aris whispered, more to himself than to Sarah. He shifted his position, pressing two fingers firmly against Max’s inner thigh to check his pulse. Sarah held her breath, her eyes darting between the doctor and her dog. Max remained motionless, his eyes half-closed, seemingly indifferent to the sudden tension in the room. The doctor stood up abruptly, stepping over to the counter to grab a small flashlight and a reflex hammer.
He began a series of rapid-fire neurological tests that seemed entirely out of place for a dog seconds away from being euthanized. He shone the light into Max’s pupils, watched the contraction, and then tapped the tendons in his hind legs. To Sarah’s shock, Max’s back leg gave a sharp, involuntary twitch—a movement that had been difficult for him for months. The doctor’s eyes widened, and he muttered something under his breath.
Sarah wiped her eyes, her voice shaking. “Doctor, what’s happening? Is he in pain?” She was terrified that this was some final, cruel spasm before the end. But Dr. Aris wasn’t looking at the tray of syringes anymore. He was looking at Max as if he were a puzzle that had suddenly changed its shape. He asked Sarah a question that felt completely irrelevant: “Did you say he started failing right after you moved into the new house on Miller Street?”