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Publié par | Troubador Publishing Ltd |
Date de parution | 01 janvier 2013 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9781780887302 |
Langue | English |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0250€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
GOODNIGHT, BUFFY
Loving a Lakeland Terrier
Thomas ina Price
Copyright © 2013 Thomasina Price
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study,
or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents
Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in
any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the
publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with
the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries
concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.
Matador
9 Priory Business Park
Kibworth Beauchamp
Leicestershire LE8 0RX, UK
Tel: (+44) 116 279 2299
Fax: (+44) 116 279 2277
Email: books@troubador.co.uk
Web: www.troubador.co.uk/matador
ISBN 978 1780887 302
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Matador is an imprint of Troubador Publishing Ltd
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Thomasina Price was born in Birmingham and spent part of her childhood in Scotland. She loves dogs and has owned many, including some she has rescued. Thomasina enjoys reading history and local travel. She is currently working on a new book to include some of her past dogs.
For my sister, Eileen, with love
INTRODUCTION
This book began on Buffy’s last weekend. As my time with Buffy was vanishing I felt a compulsion to write about her passing to ease my pain. I then felt the need to share Buffy’s story and what made her such a special little dog, for hers wasn’t just a story of doom and gloom.
Buffy was a Lakeland terrier. She was infuriating and inspiring, funny and cunning. I wanted to salute her bravery and thank her for showing me such happiness. She and I shared some dark times but she was always a beacon of hope and light for me. She even acquired her own fan club. I was astonished at how many people followed her treatment locally!
Buffy fought a long battle against cancer and took the record for treatment time. We did go on to live happily ever after but with a few hiccups.
I have many memories of Buffy but the ones I share with you here are my favourites. And I know, even as the years pass, that when I read them she will be in front of me as vividly as ever she was in life. Perhaps after all, this is a love story.
ALL ABOUT BUFFY
Buffy was beautiful, like an overgrown Steiff teddy bear, all blue and tan curls. Every few months, however, come clip time the other Buffy emerged. Under the curls lay a square-jawed workmanlike terrier. She was a formidable and feisty girl; she never became a fawning or over-affectionate dog. The occasional pat or cuddle suited her. She was very much her own independent little person.
My sister Eileen fostered Buffy in 1997. As a two-year-old rescue dog, Buffy had arrived via a fellow park walker, a young girl who had found her hiding in a Blackpool shop doorway late one night in the driving rain. The girl traced the owners but they said they didn’t want Buffy; she was a street dog, a hobo. The girl asked if she could have her and they gladly handed her over.
Buffy should have gone to live in her new home in Blackpool at this point but there was to be further tragedy. The young girl soon found out she had ovarian cancer and would need treatment in Birmingham, her old home. While there, she needed someone to foster Buffy and give her a permanent home. Eileen happily agreed.
Eileen was unsure whether she should adopt her, but I thought Buffy was an absolute gem and encouraged Eileen to keep her. A few months later the young girl died, at the age of twenty eight. Eileen attended the service at the ancient St Leonard’s church in Frankley and took Buffy to wait for her in the car, in sight of the hearse of her old mistress.
A few weeks after Buffy arrived she was taken to the vets and spayed. The day after her discharge and on her first walk after surgery Buffy showed her true colours. Her head was barely visible behind the Elizabethan collar but it had given her an idea for a cracking plan. Poor Eileen! She never suspected that given Buffy’s condition she would be interested in catching a squirrel.
Buffy was off! She soon caught the squirrel and then bashed it into a tree trunk. Her final act, to everyone’s horror, would be to use the tree trunk as a tool. Pushing her collar against the trunk Buffy managed to scoop and load the squirrel right into the collar. She then rushed straight back to Eileen to present her with the dead squirrel carefully draped inside her surgical collar.
The lesson was clear: all terriers can be ruthless but Buffy had raised the bar. Who would think a surgical collar could be used as a weapon and a tipper truck? Buffy was undoubtedly a genius in the worst possible way.
THE EARLY YEARS
Within a year I had joined Eileen’s household as my health was failing and fairly soon it became apparent my condition was very serious. I was diagnosed with an incurable and progressively degenerative disease.
At this time our home was also shared with two lurchers, Emma and Liege, but for me, as unfair as it might be, Buffy was the shining star. Perhaps I knew we would share many battles and a treasure trove of happy times. In the coming years I would experience relapses and Buffy was there, giving me comfort with her presence as I lay paralysed, waiting for the time to pass and the movement to return to my body; it was always a long wait. Buffy was so often my reason to continue with the fight. So this is Buffy’s story and what a wonderful story it would turn out to be.
Four years passed with fun and contentment for Buffy. She spent sunny days in the garden with Emma and Liege, where all three dogs would rocket around, tracing out an imaginary racetrack. Buffy always wanted to be the fastest and last the longest. She couldn’t outrun them, although she gave it a good try, but she could outlast them. She would go around on this ruddy racetrack for so long I worried she would get dizzy and keel over.
My, what fun we had on the way to the park with Buffy, Emma and Liege. I used to sing, “Roll me over in the clover” and the dogs all joined in, barking the chorus. I laughed and sang most of the way. They loved it. When we arrived at the park they shot out of the car and I felt complete happiness wash over me and a sudden and lovely peace! Of course this fun was nothing compared to the fun all three dogs had with Eileen. She was the main dog walker and took them up the Waseley hills and around vast reservoirs and all sorts of other delightful places.
EMMA AND LIEGE