Kitties in the Midst
Deborah Klein
Friends and family who know me also know I will
be a lone, old woman surrounded by cats, or at least a cat, until I die. If the
nursing home won’t allow them, my daughter will smuggle one in in a Little
Debbie cookie box.
I love all
the creatures, (except poisonous
snakes, spiders, and other really ugly, terrifying things that breathe.) But I respect every creature’s right to be here.
I’m certainly not worthy of having dominion over them, that’s for damned
sure. That was one of God’s stupid ideas, putting us in charge. Lot’s wife
was another stupid decision. So was
menopause and cramps.
I mean, make up your friggin mind already! Do you want the meek to inherit the earth?
Or do you want people, who,
last I checked, aren’t the meekest
shlobs around the place, to have
dominion over it? I’m here to tell ya, humans
are about as ugly and mean as life forms can get if you want my opinion. But you didn’t ask for my opinion. You just went ahead and issued thou shalts and shall nots
even though you waffle like crazy on what we should and shouldn’t do from
chapter to chapter. Who was your
editor? Jeezus.
I talk to toads, lizards, butterflies, you name
it. But I can’t usually find two words to string together at the office or social
gatherings. I don’t care if anyone hears
me admonishing toads for venturing in to the parking garage, or telling a
lizard he should send a card to his Mom once in a while. Would it kill
him?
So it’s no surprise that my driveway resembles the
African Veldt. I come home at night to the neighborhood cats in repose, lounging
like little lions across the landscape.
They wait for treats and minor conversation.
I know
each of their distinct personalities. I
observe them, in the wild, from my kitchen window. I know their lineage and characteristics,
just like Fossey knew her gorillas. If
Dian Fossey had not been murdered, I believe she would’ve become an old woman
with cats, living in a little village near her gorillas.
When people come to visit, they often point at
one of the felines and ask if it’s mine.
I launch into a long explanation about the life
of the outside cats until the
visitor’s eyes fog-over and a smile freezes on his face.
I explain that you don’t own cats, they own
you. I tell him the cats outside are
feral, because it’s just wrong to allow a domestic to venture into the wild.
“Silver” is a feral Tabby with green eyes the
color of Super Fly’s polyester bellbottoms.
She is elegant yet also very
hot. She’s one of the more popular cats
among her peers. She’s about 7 years old now and still has that “it” factor. [Insert Cougar joke here.]
But ever
since we captured her and had her spayed she’s put on a little in the
mid-section. I totally get it, although
I, myself, have not been fixed.
She had three litters that I’m aware of since I
moved into my house. It’s actually her house. At least the outside is. She was here before me. Her kittens were all adorable and she was an
extremely attentive mother. I have
friends who popped out kids like Silver did, and they raised them perfectly as well. But people don’t have to worry much about their
kids being carried away by hawks or other animals. It’s a very tough world out
there for cats.
Silver wasn’t a slut by any means. She’s only loved one cat, until my Lester
came along. Her baby daddy is a benevolent old tom with more scars than Joe
Frasier’s opponents. He’s skinny and
crooked. I saw one ear dangling from his
head a few years ago. It didn’t fall off, but healed a little lower than the
other. He shows up now and then, about every four or five months, and she
cleans him and finds a good sunbeam in the grass for his old bones to lie in. He’s afraid of people, but he’s always been
kind to the kittens, allowing them to crawl all over him. He’s more a lover
than a fighter, which probably explains his battered condition. I’m always amazed that he’s still alive.
Silver has one remaining kitten who is probably
three years old now. We had him fixed too. I don’t think we really needed to bother
because he’s a total Momma’s Boy. He’s
also gay. I call him Little Bear. There used to be another pitch-black cat, a
younger one, who made love to him frequently in my garden. My friend Nancy thought I exaggerated about their
relationship until she brought me home one night, and the headlights of her
truck caught them in the act. We sat and
watched as though we’d rented porn. They
didn’t even stop. The black cat groomed Little
Bear when they were done. When Little
Bear runs, he throws his front feet out to the side like a male dancer running
down the sidewalk towards Starbucks on his way to a try-out.
He’s not terribly good at climbing. Silver can climb anything as though she had
wings. He sits beneath her and
cries. He’ll let me pick him up now,
after years of gaining his trust, during our morning breakfast ritual. He likes to be held for a little while until
Silver becomes agitated and I have to put him down. He looks up at me and winks, we’ll do it again tomorrow.
Lola moved in to my carport two years ago. I thought she was a mean tom cat because she
sprays on everything and fights.
Imagine my surprise when a little boy rolled up on his skateboard one
Saturday afternoon to see her.
“Is that your cat?” I asked him.
“Ya, this is Lola. She’s thirteen. She was our only pet until we got a
puppy. She didn’t like it so she ran
away.”
“How did she get out?”
“We let her out every day. She just never came
back after we got the dog.”
Great, I thought. Another family that thinks it’s perfectly
acceptable to let their domestic cat out.
People don’t let dogs out to wander all day. Why cats?
I didn’t blame Lola for feeling betrayed. Her boy walks up every weekend to check on
her. She won’t go home. He’s tried to coax her. So she stays and
sprays.
She’s mean as hell too. She’s the alpha on the Veldt. She beats up Silver every chance she gets and
hisses at my boy Lester through the screens.
I’ve had to replace two because of the holes she’s torn trying to get to
him. She’ll chase any cat who wanders up to the house. She sprays on everything to make it her own,
including me on one occasion. But she’s old. I feel bad for her. So I make sure she has clean towels and a
bowl of food and water. I feed her separately
from the others. They’ve figured out what
time of day she’s not around. They hang out on the patio during Lola-free hours.
Silver loves Lester. She’s like a thirteen-year-old with Justin
Bieber. Or whatever the hell his name is. She sits on the other side of the
screen and makes squeaking noises until he notices. He lumbers over and she rubs against him
through the screen, then she shows him her ass. Lester is half her age. Plus, he’s a typical guy and doesn’t have a
clue what she’s doing. He usually yawns
and walks away while she’s in the throes of courting. I’ve never seen her react to any other cat
that way, except for her baby daddy. But
Lester does not have social skills where women are concerned. I’ve gone so far as to carry him outside for
her. She comes up and rubs his
face. He maintains a stupid, dazed look
in his eyes. He’s just not that in to
her.
See?
I’ve gone on about cats for almost three full sheets of paper. Lester and the new kitten, Colette, are
snoozing on the kitchen table as I write this.
They’re exhausted from prying the cupboards open and dragging the pans
and Brillo pads out. The toilet paper in the bathroom was tedious work as
well. Colette is an apprentice, but she
learns fast. She’s gifted. I keep her away from Silver. I don’t want her to get any ideas. They’ll sleep for a few hours, then clock
back in to create havoc and take multiple dumps in the litter box.
This is
life in the neighborhood wildlife preserve.
My apologies to God. But he pisses me off sometimes.
Hey God, tell Dian I said hey. The animals need more
people like her down here.
Deborah Klein teaches a funny writing class at the Safety Harbour Museum on Wednesdays. You can find her at stufffromthelaundrychute.blogspot.com . You can find the Safety Harbour Writers and Poets on facebook.
*This story will appear in the March 2013 issue of Authored By Schrödinger's Cat*
*This story will appear in the March 2013 issue of Authored By Schrödinger's Cat*
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