The Sky Between You and Me

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The Sky Between You and Me Page 8

by Catherine Alene


  Even from here

  I can tell

  This isn’t

  Good

  Temperature, Pulse, Respiration

  Some say you should put a colicky horse in the trailer

  Take them for a ride

  Let them stomp

  Hope the road bounces

  The colic out

  Others say keep them walking

  Even let them lie down

  But whatever you do

  Make sure they don’t

  Roll

  Torsion

  Rupture

  Impaction

  Gallop over the top of my diagnostic list

  As I fish the lead rope and halter

  From behind the driver’s seat

  Kept there for

  Emergencies

  The halter goes on

  Over Rocky’s muzzle

  Buckles

  Behind his ears

  I run my hand down his

  Neck

  Chest

  Flanks

  Dark with sweat

  Nostrils flaring

  With breaths

  Coming too fast

  Too shallow

  Surgical versus medical

  I wish I knew

  How long

  He’s been

  Like this

  I press my ear to his side

  Just below his ribs

  Needing to hear

  Gurgling

  Grumbling

  Hearing only

  Silence

  Forefingers slide down

  Just below his jawbone

  Counting the beats

  Thrumming

  Ten more

  Then there should be

  Within the space

  Of a minute

  Palm to his barrel

  Each in and out

  Equals one

  Breath

  Passing the magic number

  Fifteen

  Before the second hand

  Makes it once

  Around

  Blue jumps off the bed

  Knows I need his help

  To get Rocky

  moving like his feet

  are mired in glue

  To the barn

  A step and then a stop

  I give him the cue

  Gentle, Blue

  Setting off the nipping

  At the fetlock joints

  That gets Rocky moving

  The other horses are interested now

  Thinking about the grain

  Not the first aid kit

  I keep in the barn

  As they fall in behind

  Rocky

  Who is moving

  Moving slow

  In the Tupperware box

  Stashed under my saddle rack

  Stocked with vet wrap

  Betadine and gauze

  There’s Banamine too

  In the dust-covered fridge

  But I can’t give that

  Not yet

  Dr. Katy will need to see Rocky first

  Symptoms unmasked

  Time Stops

  A minute becomes

  A millennium

  After the call is placed

  To the vet

  Waiting

  Watching

  For her truck to appear

  At the end of the road

  As I pull and

  Blue pushes

  With gentle nips

  To keep Rocky

  Walking

  Up and down the hard-packed path

  Alongside

  The barn

  Ignoring the weight of the phone

  In my back pocket

  Reminding me of the second call

  I haven’t made

  To Dad

  At least not yet

  He’ll be worried

  Imagining the worst

  Of the 101 things

  Rocky’s colic could be

  Assuming his cell could even pick up my call

  As he drives across the state

  Transporting cattle in his semi

  To the sale yard

  Where they’ll burst out of the belly of the truck

  Onto the ramps

  Stopped cold

  Blinded by the sun

  Shocked still by the sight of the other cattle

  Bellowing and charging

  Up and down the maze of chutes and alleys

  Leading into the sale ring

  Going once

  Going twice

  From hoof to rail

  Sold to the highest bidder

  That’s what I tell myself anyway

  Words to cover up the fact

  That part of me feels

  This is my fault

  Getting home

  Later than usual

  Feeding

  Later than usual

  Knowing that I switched dewormers

  This month

  Opting for a new brand

  Guaranteed to wipe out

  Ascarids to pin worms

  Had it been too strong?

  Not that it would matter

  To a younger horse

  But Rocky

  Isn’t young

  Not anymore

  The sickest part of all this

  Is that underneath the push

  And the pull of my conscience

  always eager to assign blame

  I don’t mind the walking

  Each step I take

  Negates the calories

  I ingested

  Today

  Lighter

  Leaner

  Faster

  My goal

  Is always

  There

  Blue Yips

  Yanks me from my reverie

  He dashes up the drive

  Canine chauffeur

  For Dr. Katy

  As she pulls her truck up to the barn

  Pulls on her Dickies

  As she steps out

  “Well, this guy is looking good,” she says as she leans down and scratches Blue around the ears. “He’s not who I’m here for though, is he? Let’s get Rocky into the stocks.”

  Rocky groans as I tug his lead

  Coaxing him into the barn

  Through the palpation stocks

  Stopping him with the gate

  That closes across his chest

  Dr. Katy is close behind

  Swinging the back gate closed

  As she moves around to his side

  Stethoscope in hand

  “How long has he been like this?” she asks.

  I’m not sure exactly. I called you right when I found him.

  She nods her head

  As she puts in the earpiece

  Listens

  I take my position

  Alongside Rocky

  Lead rope in hand

  Making sure he stays up

  As Dr. Katy listens to his GI tract

  Before checking

  temperature

  pulse

  respiration

  capillary refill

  Finally moving toward the back of the chute

  For the rectal examination

  “Let’s see if we can do this without a twitch.”

  I slide to the front of the chute

  Kneading Rocky’s ears

  It’s going to be all right, I
whisper

  Hoping it will

  Not knowing if I have the heart

  To twirl the loop of rope at the end of the twitch

  Around his whiskery nose

  Rocky’s head jerks up

  He sways

  Stomps the rubber mat beneath his hooves

  As Dr. Katy’s hand slides in

  Rocky stomps again

  Hard

  My cue to grab the skin

  On the right side of his neck

  Hard

  My hand a fist

  Of skin and hair

  Creating a diversion

  From Dr. Katy

  An endorphin rush for him

  My fingers start to cramp

  But I can’t let go

  Not until Dr. Katy is done

  I want to ask

  What she is finding

  knowing which words

  I don’t want to hear

  But Dr. Katy isn’t one to talk

  Not during an exam

  Dr. Katy pulls her arm out

  Glove off

  Gives me a nod

  My cue to lead Rocky from the stocks

  To follow her outside

  Where she grabs a metal bucket

  Fills it with water

  From her truck

  Before grabbing tubing

  pump

  oil

  Dr. Katy drapes the tubing around her neck

  Drops a dollop of lube

  On her hand

  Runs it along the tube

  The cotton lead is rough against my palm

  Soaked wet with rain

  Dried hard by the sun

  More than a time or two

  I run my hand up to the clip

  At the base of the halter

  Gentle pressure

  A tug not a pull

  As I tease his neck round

  Rocky breaks at the poll

  Creating a smoother path for the tube

  Dr. Katy is ready to slide

  Up his nasal passage

  Down his throat

  Her right hand slides over the top of his muzzle

  Fingers hook

  Around to his nostril

  Holding his head still

  Still as can be expected

  When a tube is being run down a horse’s esophagus

  Dr. Katy takes the end of the tube in her mouth and blows

  Rocky swallows

  I can see the tube moving down

  His throat

  As she feeds it though his esophagus

  Into his stomach

  You can smell when it gets there

  The gas from his stomach

  That can’t push food out

  Not like ours can anyway

  Throwing up

  When something makes us sick

  Smells like ingesta

  Alfalfa and bile

  Dr. Katy reaches down

  Takes the metal pump

  From the bucket

  Primes one

  Two

  Three

  Moving the water through first

  As she lavages his stomach

  With one bucket

  Then two

  The mineral oil comes next

  Rocky stands through it all

  Seeming to know

  That this is what it will take

  To make him better

  Again

  Finally, the pump comes off

  The tube comes out

  Dr. Katy coils it up

  Places it in the bucket

  Pulls a syringe out of her back pocket

  Places her thumb

  In the jugular furrow

  Occlusion

  The vein bulges

  The needle slides in

  Blood flushes the Banamine red as Dr. Katy pulls the plunger back

  Before pushing the medicine in

  Holding off the site

  Before a bubble of blood blooms

  Where she pulls the needle out

  “Now, we wait and see,” she says.

  As if it’s as simple as that

  Don’t be a Hero

  It was midnight

  Before I pulled my phone

  From my pocket

  Dad was already on his way home

  “You should have called,” he said.

  Like I knew

  He would

  I should have.

  I say

  Throwing in an excuse

  About how fast it had all gone

  Finding Rocky

  Calling

  Waiting for

  Helping the vet

  Not mentioning

  The hours

  Between then

  And now

  When it has just been

  Rocky

  Blue

  And me

  Walking

  Waiting

  For Rocky’s GI tract

  To relax

  Enough for the manure and gas

  That had been tying him up

  To pass

  “But he’s going to be okay?” Dad asks.

  I lean into Rocky

  Pressing my forehead

  To his

  Rocky’s breath is warm

  Against my chest

  The night air cool

  Around my shoulders

  He is.

  “You need to call me when things like this happen,” Dad says.

  “Pick up the phone and I’ll be there. Don’t be a hero.”

  I know. I’m sorry, Dad.

  His name, Dad,

  Catches on a tear

  Tears the sentence

  In half

  “Hey, Sweetie. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean—”

  I know, Dad. It’s not you. I’m just tired.

  “Of course you are. I want you to put that horse up and get yourself to bed. I’ll be home soon, okay?”

  The radio station jumps from station to station in the background

  It’s something he does when he’s trying to stay awake

  Turns the music up

  The air conditioner on

  I worry about him driving

  This late at night

  Okay. I love you, Dad.

  “I love you too.”

  Dad hangs up

  But I keep the phone

  Pressed to my ear

  And say it again

  I’m sorry, Dad.

  I lean into Rocky’s chest

  Slide down his front legs

  Blue comes

  To sit on my boots

  His nub of a tail wagging

  As he smiles up at me

  Even with this horse

  Who carries a part of my mom

  This dog

  Who carries a part of my heart

  Pressed into me

  I can’t turn them off

  These tears

  Because I know

  What a hero

  Doesn’t do

  A hero doesn’t tally the calories

  She’s walking off

  As her mom’s horse

  Lathers with pain

  Who does that?

  And when did that person

  Become

  Me

  That is the Question

  Today has been hard

  Running on almost no sleep

  After being up with Rocky

  Asia knows that
/>   Which is why

  I can’t believe she’s asking me

  Now

  Fifth block

  Fifteen minutes before the final bell

  “So you can’t stay?”

  She is my ride home

  Or was supposed to be

  Snide words serpentine

  On the back of my tongue

  Because why wouldn’t I

  Want to sit in front of a computer screen

  Between Asia

  And Kierra

  “She’s going to show us the website she made for their team last year and explain how she put it together. It won’t take long,” Asia says. “Once I see it I’ll have a better idea which pictures to include on ours.”

  We’re supposed to be creating found poems

  Which usually requires reading

  And writing

  Asia isn’t even pretending

  To do either

  Her camera is in her lap

  Beneath her desk

  As she scans pictures

  So much more interesting

  Than Hamlet

  “Like this one.”

  She passes me the camera

  On the screen is a picture

  Of Micah

  His rope looped round

  As his horse explodes out of the box

  Chasing the black-and-white blur of a steer

  Across the arena

  Will it be clear enough for the website?

  Asia takes the camera back

  Rubs her thumb across the screen

  “Probably not. See? That’s why I need you!”

  I sigh

  Wishing I could take it back as soon as I do

  Trauma drama isn’t me

  At least

  It didn’t used

  To be

  It’s not like I can’t get a ride home from Cody

  If I choose not to stay

  But still

  I wish you would have said something earlier.

  Asia puts her camera back in its case

  “I know. I’m sorry. Things have just been so crazy today, I forgot.”

  Which actually makes sense

  Midmorning pep assembly coupled with a precalc exam

  Equals an understandable excuse

  But still

  I shouldn’t. I have to take care of some things this afternoon.

  It’s my vague excuse

  That clues her in

  “It’s because it’s her, isn’t it?”

  No. I just have things to do.

  Asia raises an eyebrow

  “Okay.”

  Assuming I’ll stay late

  Acting put out if I don’t

  The words on the page of my textbook pitch and roll

  I pin them down with my eyes

  Because I am not angry

  jealous

  betrayed

  “Seriously, Rae. We aren’t going to be that long.”

  Asia shoves her camera into her backpack

  “Please? You know I’ll need your opinion.”

  Which is true

 

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