TheBanyanTree: A Small Drama
Sally Larwood
larwos at optusnet.com.au
Wed Apr 28 19:32:20 PDT 2010
What a wonderful story Roger. You had me checking out the cat protection
society to see if they had any Aby crosses. Silly of me, because with two
dogs and a cat, we really mustn't get another one, but your story moved me
and we do so miss our Moochie.
Mooch was an Aby cross that we brought up on a bottle when his mother was
killed when he was 10 days old. He was so beloved and gave as much as he
got. We had to have him put down about 6 years ago when he had too much
scar tissue to urinate and was in such pain we made the decision. We all
still miss him, whenever we need loving or comforting or are sick. When we
were that way, he would come to us and put his arms around our neck and
cuddle his head into our shoulder and not move till we felt better. If we
were sick he would spend the whole day with us on the bed.
Sal
-----Original Message-----
From: thebanyantree-bounces at lists.remsset.com
[mailto:thebanyantree-bounces at lists.remsset.com] On Behalf Of Roger Pye
Sent: Thursday, 29 April 2010 10:28 AM
To: The Banyan Tree
Subject: TheBanyanTree: A Small Drama
I was sitting at my computer when an animated furball raced into the
room, skeetered under the desk past my feet and holed up in the corner
of two walls.
"What happened?" I asked as Robin came through the archway.
"Caspar came into the study and spat at her. Can you reach her?"
"Not a chance, she's behind the leg. Anyway it would only frighten her
some more. We'll just have to wait, see if she comes out by herself.
It's lunch time, let's have a coffee."
As I moved away from the desk my path was crossed by Merlin, a young
tabby cat with white chest and paws; five minutes later on my way back
into the room with the coffee I saw he had positioned himself under the
desk facing the corner, a definite and very obvious barrier to any
attempt to reach the kitten. A cup of coffee in each hand I hesitated,
wondering what to do; our patriarchal ginger tom Woodstock took
advantage of the pause, strolled past me and sat down where he would be
in full view of the tabby if Merlin turned his head. A few seconds later
Caspar the black cat jumped down from the bench which separated my room
from the kitchen, hissed in our general direction then exited into the
dining room.
"Here," Robin said and patted the space next to her on the settee. I
joined her, handed over her cup, we sipped our coffee and waited for the
drama to unfold - clearly, there was going to be one - and, equally
clearly, it was going to take some time because that is often the way
with cat dynamics. Meanwhile I thought about the situation.
It was August last year and Merlin and Miss Midgley, the animated
furball, had only been with us a few days. They had come to us from
Brenda the Cat Lady who lived a few suburbs away and had responded to
our advert for a female tabby kitten a few weeks before. Not that she
had one at the time but being a member of a very extensive cat rescue
network there was good reason to think she would have, one of these
days. We had met Merlin (Lionel as he was then) on our first visit to
Brenda two weeks before and heard his story inasmuch as she knew it to
be. Said to be less than a year old he exhibited all the manner one
would expect from a senior mature animal. Witness the watchful way he
was sitting under the desk.
Midge was allegedly four months old but seemed only half that; Brenda
had scooped her up for us off Death Row at a large cat shelter in
Sydney. She was very shy and insecure and beneath the fluff there was
very little substance, we both thought she was on the fringe of being
feral if not actually so.
Woodstock mewed very softly; Merlin turned his head instantly. I glanced
at the ginger cat. He had settled down into sphinx position and was
staring straight at the tabby. Interesting, I thought, he had been quite
ambivalent about these two coming into his territory, really very
neutral as if he wanted to see what they were made of before committing
himself to anything. He mewed again, Merlin's left ear twitched,
Woodstock's eyes closed tightly, opened, closed, opened. The tabby
turned to look at the corner again. A strange noise came to my ears, a
wailing which rose and fell in cadences like an older child might use;
it took a moment for me to realise that it was Merlin singing to the
kitten like a mother crooning to her baby. Something that was quite new
to me and very remarkable even though I have been close to animals
almost all of my life.
Robin squeezed my hand as the crooning continued; a small furry head had
emerged from behind the deskleg, very cautiously the kitten almost
crawled to the tabby until she was close to him. He stopped singing, I
hardly dared to breathe, Woodstock stood up and walked silently to one
side of them both, faced them, mewed again. Miss Midgley stood up,
fluffed her tail, walked carefully one slow step at a time into the
middle of the room then on to the dining room and to Robin's study
followed by Merlin two steps behind her with Woodstock walking
alongside. The two males watched as she settled herself into the bed we
had made for her in the bottom shelf of an open bookcase. Woodstock made
that commanding noise again; Merlin went into the study and curled up,
watchful, not far from Midge. Robin closed the door quietly. Woodstock
visibly relaxed, sat down and began to wash himself and I went back to
my computer.
Of Caspar there was no sign.
roger
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