The little brown, curly-haired dog didn't look like it was dead.
As usual for a Saturday morning, I had come downstairs to get breakfast started before Sharon joined me. It looked just as if Fifi was fast asleep in her basket, but the total absence of movement and a vague odour of shit and piss was clear evidence of her demise. Fifi was only a few months old and I was surprised she must have died in her sleep sometime during the night.
It wasn't my idea to get a dog. Sharon and I had been trying to start a family and as far as I was concerned non-humans were not included in our thinking about what that would entail. I had a questionable early track record with tropical fish and I didn't want to be bothered with caring for pets, large or small. While it was still only the two of us we had no ties to bind us to our home base and we enjoyed the freedom to roam. We live close to Edinburgh Airport and were able to take occasional weekend breaks in other parts of Europe that could be reached by direct flights.
Sharon and I had been married for a few years and had settled into a comfortable routine on Saturdays. We usually had plenty of good wake up sex in the morning, followed by a lazy breakfast before tackling any domestic chores. In the afternoon, Sharon invariably headed out for some retail therapy with her mum or a girlfriend, while I went to watch the local amateur football team. Neither pastime cost us much. Entrance was free for the football and Sharon was careful with her spending. She had insisted on having a house with a garden, so paying the mortgage was the number one item on our budget, followed by funding a few weekend breaks in Europe.
This comfortable state of affairs changed a few months ago. When I got home from watching football one Saturday afternoon, Sharon was clearly bursting to give me some news. She was grinning from ear to ear as she fetched me a bottle of Bavarian lager from the fridge and a glass. Sharon knew from experience it was always best to let me get comfortable before she started in on me with whatever she wanted to tell me, whether it was a burning issue that was troubling her or some sort of news or gossip she could hardly wait to share.
Part of the ritual was making Sharon wait and she was visibly growing impatient as I settled into an armchair, poured myself a glass of the golden nectar, drank generously and placed the glass on a side table, sighing in appreciation. From the broad smile on her face, I thought this was likely to be good news.
"So, what's up, Sharon?" I asked.
"Well, Jim, you know how we said it might take a while before we could start a family," she said, pausing and checking to make sure I was paying attention.
I gulped, not because I was drinking one of the finest lager beers in the world, but because I was wondering if she was in the family way.
"I hope you don't mind," she happily continued, "but I bought us a puppy!"
I gasped with surprise and some relief. I definitely wanted kids, but I didn't mind waiting a bit longer for that to happen.
"Don't worry," she quickly continued. "I know I'll have to make time to care for it, but I'm sure it will be fun. What do you think?"
"I don't mind," I said, faced with a fait accompli and trying to look pleased, "as long as you remember this was your idea. I don't want to end up being the only one taking the dog for walkies. Where is this puppy anyway?"
"The dog breeder brought her this afternoon and she's in her basket in the kitchen," said Sharon. "I can't wait for you to meet her. Her name's Fifi and I know you'll just love her to bits."
Faced with a fait accompli, I went with the flow and tried to appear enthusiastic.
At this point I should explain that Sharon is a lovely woman, both in appearance and by her nature. Her upbringing was so sheltered that she was a virgin when we met. She was eighteen and I was in my mid twenties. Believe it or not, as our romance blossomed I found myself having to explain to her about the birds and bees. To match her innocent nature, she has a very positive outlook on life and takes people at face value.
In my eyes, Sharon's innocent nature, or naivety if you prefer, is an endearing quality, because there's never any sort of hidden agenda with her. However, it means she can be quite gullible and I enjoy gently pulling her leg from time to time. April Fools' Day is a highlight every year and without fail Sharon falls for a prank. I think the best one was when I told her about the disastrous spaghetti harvest in Italy, resulting from unseasonal snowstorms. Convinced there would be a shortage, she rushed off to the supermarket and bought a dozen packets of dried spaghetti. Thankfully, she has a good sense of humour and laughed along with me when I revealed she had been duped.
It was not much of a surprise that someone managed to sell her a pup. In hindsight, letting Sharon go to a dog show the previous Saturday without me was a mistake. Heather, one of her more sensible girlfriends, went along with her, so I didn't think there was any chance she would end up buying a puppy. I had no idea what had happened until Fifi made her appearance a week later, dropped off while I was out. That was no doubt a deliberate ploy on the part of the breeder, to avoid a surprised husband refusing to take delivery of the dog.
Sharon said Fifi was a cross between a poodle and some other type of dog. This was important, according to Sharon, because Fifi had been especially bred to have short, curly brown hair that wouldn't moult and was easy to wash and dry. At least, that's what Sharon said the breeder had told her. I thought Fifi looked more like a curly haired gerbil than some sort of poodle. To add insult to injury, Sharon eventually confessed she had paid the dealer five hundred in cash for the dog.
To be brutally honest, I never liked Fifi. It was Sharon who loved her to bits. I found looking after the dog was inevitably added to my domestic chores. Very occasionally, Sharon took Fifi for a walk, but I still had to go along and it was my job to scoop poop with a little black plastic bag whenever necessary. As time went by, walkies with Fifi became almost solely my responsibility.
Standing in the kitchen, confronted with the dead dog, I knew I would have to spend a fair amount of time comforting my wife, so I decided to go ahead and make myself some coffee anyway. I needed to be in a reasonable frame of mind before I could deal with cleaning up Fifi's last mess and doing something about disposing of the body. Coffee would help, but first I opened the kitchen windows. As I poured the Vietnamese Arabica coffee beans into the bean grinder, the thought struck me that, for Fifi, this was literally a case of life's a bitch and then you die.
Of course, because Sharon loved Fifi to bits, giving her the bad news was not going to be easy. Making it even more of a challenge, Sharon was now in the early stages of pregnancy, she had morning sickness, she was tired and her emotional state was fragile. Sharon had become pregnant not long after Fifi arrived and now we were looking forward to the birth of our first child. The silver lining in the cloud of Fifi's demise, as far as I was concerned, was that I would no longer have to worry about any eventual incompatibility of dog and baby.
After I finished my coffee I went upstairs with a cup of tea for Sharon and broke the news. Sharon was much more distraught than I had expected, even allowing for her fragile emotional state. You would have thought a close relative had kicked the bucket. She was almost inconsolable, moaning and wailing about how this wasn't supposed to happen. That much was true, as Fifi was only a few months old, but I was surprised by the huge outpouring of grief. I guessed the major waterworks were a result of Sharon's hormones being seriously out of whack from having a bun in the oven.
Disposing of a dead dog in Scotland is not difficult. The simplest and cheapest way is to dig a hole a few feet deep in your garden and bury the thing. This was totally unacceptable to Sharon. She insisted she needed to know why Fifi had snuffed it, which would entail an examination by a veterinarian, and she wanted Fifi cremated, so Fifi's ashes could sit in an urn in our lounge. I phoned the local veterinary clinic and they were very helpful. That was probably unsurprising, given how much I was going to be paying for their services. Anyway, I made an appointment to bring the dead dog to them later that morning.