Kalliope 2014.pdf May. 2014 | Page 34

no skills was too much. Elkins was my last option. I had worked so hard getting the position; was I really willing to throw all that away? Of course, the guilt was enough to eat me alive, and I lay awake all night pondering my decision. I wanted to do this; I needed to do this. I was going to be successful. I needed to be suc cessful first, so that I could go to school and become the opposite of everything Dr. EIlis was. I could save so many more animals, and this position was the stepping stone I needed in order to get myself there. The very next day, I awoke with my 8 a.m. alarm and went in to work. Months went by, and I saw Dr. Ellis commit more and more atrocities; in fact, I assisted with them. The guilt that once consumed my every thought began to subside like waves being dragged back to shore. I began not to think about it. My first impression of the bright and pristine hospital was now infected, and everywhere I looked I saw filth and mistakes. Instead of the stench of disinfectant, the smell of blood consistently surrounded me. After I clocked out each day, it was much easier for me to leave work at work, and the line between the hospital and myself was thickened; so was the grey area between right and wrong. I calloused like a workingman’s hands; I, too, was overworked to the point where I didn’t feel anything. During my last week with the Elkins Animal Hospital, one miniature dachshund changed my life forever. The three-year-old dachshund made my decision to stop allowing my morals to suffer for my work. Dobby, covered in short, chocolate-colored fur and black, misshapen spots, arrived at the hospital, at the end of the day, with extensive injuries and a (surprisingly) cheery disposition. Though caked in blood, his stubby tail still wagged, and though he labored to breathe, his soft, pink tongue still managed to dole out many kisses to whatever hand was within reach. Dobby’s family had said they were not sure what had happened to him; they just found him lying at the end of the driveway with some nearby blood. However, full-body x-rays revealed that Dobby had a fair amount of broken bones as well as some old, untreated injuries. At this point, the staff had many speculations that perhaps this animal was abused, and I agree; when brought to her attention, Dr. Ellis said that confronting the owners about the old injuries would have to wait until the current injuries were treated and Dobby’s condition was more stable. 33