Today I acquired a
kitten – on a short term basis – looking after my neighbours' joy
and the centre of their life for ten days over Xmas. For the first
hour she was all over the house like a troupe of monkeys. Checking
which chairs and pieces of furniture she could access looking ather
reflection in the flat screen – trying to clamber onto the keyboard
of my laptop. Then I went downstairs to collect my post. I went
back up looking at the post I my hand rather than what was going on
around me. After half an hour I noticed things were curiously quiet
on the cat front. I started to look around the flat - under all the
sofas and cupboards that I had seen her checking out for as potential
hiding places. Nothing. I called out kitty kitty kitty. Nothing.
I threw a chicken leg on the floor. Still nothing. I went to check
upstairs to see if she had slipped out while I was looking at my post
not at life around me and might be sitting outside her own flat.
Nope. I went down to check out the courtyard where she usually goes
to play every day – though I thought it wise not to let her out
there unsupervised on her first day in a new environment. She wasn't
there. And worse the main door was from the courtyard to the street
was open - as my downstairs neighbour was starting her move out. The
streets outside the house are fiercely heavily trafficked with the
daytime and there's no natural cat hiding places except for a couple
of derelict lots.
Oh ****. This can't
happen surely. I didn't believe it could. I can't lose my
neighbours cat within two hours of taking her in? Can I? As the
hours went past I thought perhaps I could. I chanted for a solution
'cats always come home don't they?' Yes, 'but not if they are
looking for their owners' – á
la 'Incredible Journey'. I put a chicken bone by my front door and
to the impending annoyance of the cleaner of the communal area rubbed
chicken fat from the skin on the front door of the house and up the
stairs.
I distracted myself -
did a bit of work – playing a lot of word scraper (online
scrabble). I also posted a message asking for the address of the
local animal sanctuary. And I wrote, google- translated and printed
out twenty 'cat lost' posters to distribute later. How can I face
my neighbours and tell them I've lost their cat I asked myself. How
can I be so inattentive and irresponsible to do that? I had real
self-confidence attack- so much so that I ended up taking the
modern-day equivalent of a valium. I walked the block twice just
looking.
Yet I held my ground
(just). These things don't happen in real life do they? Four hours
after the original panic set in I heard a very quiet crunching sound
– the chicken bone wasn't where I had left it – there was
purring cat under the sofa. So thank you every protective spirit and
guardian angel on the planet for keeping me from going into total
'headless chicken mode' and for slowly losing my deeply ingrained
conviction that the worst is always bound too happen.
2 comments:
Ha Nick, reminds me of this summer when I was staying with my half sister in Northern Ireland. She had a nasty fall and had to go to hospital, so we stayed behind to be home for her teenage daughter who had gone AWOL. The dog needed walking, so up the hill we went with it to give it a run around Dundrum castle (half-sis lives in quite a scenic part of NI). The dog slipped its leash, got into a field full of cows and spent the next half hour running around the field, teasing the cows and then running away again, while we frantically tried to get it back before one of the cows stamped on it. It was a ridiculous sight as the dog is a tiny Tibetan shitsu, but didn't seem to realise it was totally out-sized. Just as I was having visions of half-sis coming home to find her teenager still missing and the dog dead, a man passed by with his dog and the little SHITsu ran under the fence to have a go at it instead, allowing us to catch it. Got home with a live dog to find teenage niece was curled up in bed as if butter wouldn't melt. That's the last time I'm looking after either the child or the dog!
Liz - that sounds like a stressful holiday. Hop your sister left a bottle of potcheen in the house for you to calm down a little afterwards (or maybe her daughter drank it?)
Post a Comment