HE DIDN'T EVEN CRY: FEBO
Febo used to spend long hours curled up at my
feet. And ever so often he would get up, walk over to the door, and turn and
look at me. I would go and open the door for him and he would go out, coming
back after an hour or two.
One day he went out and never came back. I waited
for him until evening, and when night fell, rushed through the streets,
calling him by name. I returned home in the dead of night and threw myself on
my bed, facing the half-open door. Ever so often, I would go to the window and
call him again and again in a loud voice.
At daybreak, I again rushed through the deserted
streets.
As soon as it was daylight, I rushed to the
municipal dog prison. I went into a grey room where I found a number of
whining dogs, shut up in stinking cages, their necks still bearing the marks
of the noose. The caretaker told me that my dog might have been run over by a
car, or stolen, or thrown into the river by a gang of hooligans.
He advised me to go the round of the dog shops who
could say that Febo was not in some dog shop?
All the morning, I rushed from one dog shop to
another, and at last a canine barber is a dirty little shop near the Piazza
Dei Cavalieri asked me if I had been to the university veterinary clinic, to
which dog thieves were in the habit of selling cheaply the animals that were
subsequently used for clinical experiments.
I rushed to the university, but it was already
past midday -- th veterinary clinic was closed.
I returned home. In the afternoon, I returned to
the university and went into the veterinary clinic. My heart was thumping, I
was so weak and in such agony of mind that I could hardly walk. I asked for
the doctor on duty and told him my name. The doctor, a fair-haired ,
short-sighted young man with a tired smile received me courteously and gazed
at me for a long time before replying that he would do everything possible to
help me.
He opened the door and we entered a large, clean,
bright room, the floor of which was covered with blue linoleum. Along the
walls, one beside the other, like beds in a children's clinic, were rows of
strange cradles, shaped like cellos. In each of the cradles was a dog lying on
its back with his stomach exposed or its skull split or its chest gaping open.
The edges of those dreadful wounds were held apart
by thin, steel wire, wound round wooden pegs of the kind that in wooden
instruments serves to keep the strings taut.
One could see the naked heart beating, the lungs
with the veins of the bronchial tubes looking like the branches of a tree.
Swelling exactly as the foliage of a tree does when the wind blows; the red
shining liver very slowly contracting; slight tremors running through the pink
and white substance of the brain as in a steamy mirror. The coils of the
intestines sluggishly disentangling themselves like a heap of snakes waking
from their deep slumber. And not a moan came from the half open mouths of the
tortured dogs.
As we entered, all the dogs turned their eyes upon
us. They gazed at us imploringly, and at the same time their expressions were
full of a dread foreboding. They followed our every gesture with their eyes,
watching us with trembling lips, standing motionless in the middle of the
room, I felt a chill spread through my limbs.
Little by little, I became as if turned to stone.
I could not open my lips. I could not move a step.
A doctor laid his hand on my arm, "Courage," he
said. The word dispelled the chill that was in my bones. Slowly I moved and
bent over the first cradle. As I proceeded from cradle to cradle, the color
returned to my face, and my heart dared to hope.
Then suddenly I saw Febo.
He was lying on his back, his stomach exposed and
a strobe buried in his liver. He was staring at me, his eyes were full of
tears. He was breathing gently, his mouth half open, and his body was
trembling horribly. He was staring at me, and agonizing pain stabbed my heart.
"Febo," I said in a low voice, bending over him
and stroking his forehead.
Febo kissed my hand, and not a moan escaped him.
The doctor came up to me and touched my arm. "I
can't interrupt the experiment," he said, "It's not allowed. But for your sake
I'll give him an injection. He won't suffer."
I took the doctor's hand in mine. "Swear to me
that he won't suffer," I said, while the tears rolled down my cheeks.
"He'll fall asleep forever," said the doctor. "I
would like my death to be as peaceful as his."
I said, "I'll close my eyes. I don't want to see
him die."
"But be quick -- be quick!"
"It will only take a moment," said the doctor, and
he moved noiselessly away, gliding over the soft carpet of the linoleum. He
went to the end of the room and opened the cupboard.
I remained standing before Febo. I was trembling
horribly, tears were running down my face. Febo was staring at me, and not the
faintest moan escaped him.
The other dogs, lying on their backs in their
cradles, were also staring at me -- and not the faintest moan escaped them.
Suddenly, I uttered a cry of terror: "Why this
silence!" I shouted.
It was a horrible silence, a vast, chilling,
deathly silence, the silence of snow.
The doctor approached me with the syringe in his
hand. "Before we operate on them, " he said, "we cut their vocal cords."