For several days, I have contemplated how to present
this incredible story, which is simultaneously heartbreaking, outrageous, bizarre,
and, ultimately, inspiring. It is a drama
with no element lacking: the crime was obscene, the victim was beloved and
helpless, the good guys are heroes you can cheer for, and the villain turned
out to be more malevolent and dangerous than I ever could have
anticipated.
We’ll get
to her in a minute. Oh yes, we certainly
shall…
First, though,
the story:
On May 31, this beautiful chocolate lab named
Moose escaped from his yard. He jumped
the fence and went for a stroll.
note collar and ID tag |
Moose’s
family, Sissy and Rex Workman, noticed his absence almost immediately. Within fifteen minutes, they were canvassing the neighborhood searching for him.
Moose was a well-known dog in the area.
He was also wearing a collar and ID tags (which you can see in the
photo). Within two hours, the Workmans
and their friends put out an alarm call on Facebook asking for help to find
Moose.
Moose, alas, was nowhere to be found.
Over the
next six weeks, the Workmans—especially Sissy Workman—did everything humanly
possible to get him back. According to the timeline at justiceformoose.com, they repeatedly posted and distributed lost dog flyers, contacted police
departments in multiple towns to inquire about his whereabouts, and visited at least 3 local animal shelters looking for
Moose. They reached out to
the media and the local community, and with the support of local businesses,
sports teams, volunteer organizations, and individual donors, they established a
“Reward Fund to Bring Moose Home.”
The Workmans
must be well-regarded people, because their friends and neighbors absolutely went to bat
for them. Everyone wanted to help the Workmans find their dog. It was pretty touching, frankly. I don’t
think I’ve ever seen someone search for their missing pet with such dedication
and energy. It is a testament to how
much Sissy loved and valued Moose.
The
hope, desperation, anguish, and worry in Sissy Workman’s writings at this timeis painful to read:
"I cannot tell you how much Rex and myself are touched by the support everyone has given us. i am not going to give up hope that we can find him and bring him home. I am having the hardest time with this because I am always the one who can find things. If something is lost around the house or the yard I make it a mission to find it. It is a personality trait that is killing me right now because I can't find him. I thank John for this and hope it works. Thank you everyone for the support. When MOOSE comes home we will have a Meet and Greet so everyone can meet MOOSE!"
A Meet and Greet. If that doesn't break your fuckin heart, you have no heart to break (keep that in mind...).
"I cannot tell you how much Rex and myself are touched by the support everyone has given us. i am not going to give up hope that we can find him and bring him home. I am having the hardest time with this because I am always the one who can find things. If something is lost around the house or the yard I make it a mission to find it. It is a personality trait that is killing me right now because I can't find him. I thank John for this and hope it works. Thank you everyone for the support. When MOOSE comes home we will have a Meet and Greet so everyone can meet MOOSE!"
A Meet and Greet. If that doesn't break your fuckin heart, you have no heart to break (keep that in mind...).
It
seems to me that Moose had a pretty fantastic family. Heck, when I die, I want to be reincarnated and come back as Sissy Workman’s dog! Moose had a sweet deal! Moose had a great life.
Until
he didn’t.
Sissy
Workman and all her friends and family searched tirelessly for Moose for six
weeks. They could not possibly have done
more to bring their beloved family member home.
No proverbial stone was left unturned.
But they couldn’t find beautiful
Moose.
Where
could Moose possibly be…? It was as if
their dog had simply vanished into thin air.
Did he fall down a well or a hole in the earth...? Did aliens beam him up to a fuckin spaceship...?
Did he fall down a well or a hole in the earth...? Did aliens beam him up to a fuckin spaceship...?
Sissy
Workman, no fool, posted this online on June 3:
Oh
yes…someone picked up Moose, all right.
And unfortunately, the person who “picked
him up” did more than just kidnap and steal him.
Part II tomorrow!
Part II tomorrow!
Thank you, Miss Margo. Can't wait for the other parts.
ReplyDeleteWhat DubV said.
ReplyDeleteI can't imagine how awful they must feel. I would probably end up in jail if I found out who had stolen and tortured my dog. And then to have to listen to a public defender explain how this thief isn't evil.
ReplyDeletePoor Moose. :(
ReplyDeleteditto orange dog . some peops dont deserve to walk among us .
this is one of the more bizarre tales of animal cruelty. looking forward to the rest.
ReplyDeleteDog rescuer + dead dog = pit nutter
ReplyDeleteI could be wrong, but I'm probably right.
Thanks everyone! I really appreciate the comments and your patience. I stalled on this story for a few days because I was beating my brains out like a yellowjacket in a jar trying to make sense of Lockard. She's a puzzle to me. So, how to write about her?
ReplyDeleteEventually, I decided that she's like a Rubik's Cube: you can kill yourself trying to solve it, but what's the point? You know what you're going to get when you do.
I'll leave the analysis to her future state-mandated therapist. That's not my place, even though I still find myself asking WHY? WHY did she make the decisions she did?
And yes, there is pit nuttery (nutterdom?) forecoming. This is Craven Desires, after all.
I wish your mother never created such a karma as you. You caused my community too much mental anguish. I truly wish we could have found Moose before you destroyed him. Any imbecile knows you don't leave a dog in a car on a hot summer day. Once my car stops on a hot day, I cannnot breathe.
ReplyDelete