Zeke died Aug.28.2001. He was a wonderful, fantastic cat; a true "alpha-male" and he loved people and was the 7th smartest person I ever met.
We got him, as a kitten, at an animal shelter in (I think) 1993. It was one of those scenes from the Hallmark channel on TV. He was the one kitten left of a litter, and alone in a cage. Every time I walked by the cage to look the cats over, Zeke would reach his paw through the bars, meow meow and try to grab me. If I looked at him, he would stick his face right out there and say "You're not going to leave me here, are you?"
At home, he never left me alone. At night, he jumped on the bed, I'd pull the sheet over my head and he would sit on my chest and paw at the sheet until I let him slip under it to sleep with us.
In 1996 or 7, Zeke was diagnosed with kidney failure (incurable, eventually terminal). The vet said he could come home if we could
"give him his medicine at home". I said
"sure". Then she pulled out the bags of Lactated Ringer's solution, plastic tubing and a box of hyperdermic needles . . . I had to sit down ! . . . .
"What do you expect me to do with those needles?" . . .
"You have to inject this solution into him twice a day every day for the rest of his life. When you stop doing that, he will die. Or, the other option is that we can put him down now."
Well, we gave Zeke his fluids for the next five years; he was much better at it than I was. In the end it was a very very traumatic event for me every day, and it pained me enormously to continue injecting him. I think because I could tell it was over, why make him suffer more.
When the day came, I cried like a baby.