“Peg! What did we miss last week?”
What did you miss last week?
Last week, if time hadn’t’ve gotten away from me, I would’ve shown you pictures of two plants that actually can grow quite tall. Teasel can get up to seven-feet high and Chicory can grow over four-feet high. I had to laugh at these midgets. They’re both only a few inches, in the case of chicory, to a foot for the teasel, off the ground before they flowered. They learn! Plants learn! Flower fast or get mown over!
Last week, if I
hadn’t’ve run out of steam, I might’ve shown you a picture of a flock of turkeys
that came through our yard. They're listening because they heard the dogs bark.
Last week, if I would’ve wanted to start another page, I might’ve shown you the display of mums at a local grocery store.
Fall means mums,
y’all!
I’m not sure I’m
ready for it.
Don’t get me wrong.
I like fall. I even like winter — and snow! I love snow! Spring is always welcome
and summer seems a whole lot shorter now than when I was a kid.
I kinda feel like
I’m sliding inexorably towards the grave and I’ll not take one single day for
granted, not miss one single opportunity to tell you that I love you, that you’re
in my heart, that you mean the world to me. I’ve stopped collecting things to
leave behind and instead I’m making things, with my hands and eyes and heart,
and sprinkling them around. When you see them, you’ll know I loved you.
“Peg! How morose!”
you exclaim.
No. Realistic. If
you don’t think about this stuff before you go, it’ll be too late after you’re
gone. Besides, not thinking about it or not talking about it isn’t gonna stop
it from happening. But I’m not depressed and I don’t dwell. I hope I get to
live another hundred years but know this very day could be my last.
If I’d’ve started
another page last week, I’d’ve shown you the first milkweed pod I saw that
opened to release its wispy, parachuted seeds to the winds of fall.
But mostly last week I would’ve told you about Whiskers.
Whiskers is a true
feral. I have no idea where he came from, but we’d see him around from time to
time. With Mr. Mister gone, I thought he’d move in. He didn’t. He’s still very
wary and runs away when he sees me. A month or so ago, he was getting more
brave. If I surprised him outside the cat room, he’d run as far as the weeds
and stop.
Yep. That little
gray speck in the middle of the photo is Whiskers.
I’d talk to him while Sugar purred and twined herself around my legs. I put the food out and go back inside. But I’d watch as he came in to eat.
Then Whiskers
started staying, only retreating to the awning post six feet away and watching
me. I moved slow, talked soothingly, and didn’t foist myself on him.
That’s what I would’ve told you last week.
This week,
Whiskers was gone for two days. It was the first time in weeks he missed his morning
and evening feedings. Funny how they can tell time. But since he is a true
feral, never one of ours, I didn’t think too much about it.
“Maybe he’s out
at Vernon’s,” Mike guessed.
Vernon told us he’d
had a gray and white cat hanging around sometimes.
Friday evening,
Whiskers was back and didn’t run from me. I walked out to feed Sugar and he was
laying right there by the outside entrance into the cat room.
“Well, hello
there handsome!” I gently cooed to him.
“Meow,” he answered
barely above a whisper. Whispering Whiskers. I’ve
noticed before that he had a very soft, quiet meow. Sometimes, if he’s over by
the weed line, I can hear him only if I’m listening really hard.
I didn’t want to
scare him so I moved slow as I fed and stroked Sugar, kept up the patter the whole
time.
Then I saw the
flies. They lit on him and he didn’t seem to care. The death flies. The iridescent
green flies that lay their eggs on dead things.
Uh-oh, I
thought. He’s sick or hurt.
The true test
came when I went back inside and watched. He didn’t go to the food bowl. After
a few minutes I went back out. I didn’t want to get scratched or bit so I moved
my hand slowly toward him, one finger extended. When he made no objection, I
touched him and jerked my hand back fast — just in case he objected.
Whiskers just
looked at me.
I touched him
again, ran my finger down his fur, scratch his head, and when no objection was
forthcoming, fully stroked his fur. He not only didn’t seem to mind, he started
kneading with his paws. When I ran my hand down his back he actually rolled farther
onto his side, presenting me with his belly.
This is
probably the first time in his life he’s ever been touched — and he likes it! I
thought.
I
stayed and talked to him for a few minutes then went inside, shutting the door
behind me. Then, thinking better of it, opened the door back up. Maybe Whiskers
would come in for the night. A couple of hours later I went to check and he had
come in. He was laying on an old quilt, just inside the doorway, that I stuff
at the bottom of the door to keep winter out. I made sure there was water where
he could get it and left him for the night.
The
next morning was Saturday. My traditional letter blog writing day as well as
traditional pancakes, bacon, and egg breakfast day. While we were waiting for
the bacon to cook a little before Mike started his pancakes — he makes the best
pancakes! — I made breakfast for the cats. Hot water over dry food, soak a few
minutes, mix in a can of soft food. Going out to feed Whiskers and Sugar, I looked
through the door before I went in. The blanket was empty. Then I see him. He’d
just moved to a different spot. He was on a blanket on a low shelf. Sugar had
gone out already.
“Good
morning, big guy. How are you today?” I asked.
He
answered with his barely audible, “Mew.”
I didn’t try to
pet him.
It was still
early and pretty chilly so I didn’t open the outside door.
I washed the
dishes and settled in to download my camera.
“Ding!” says my
computer.
“Mike!” I called
into the other room. “That lady with the table saw messaged you!” Messaged me.
Mike uses my Facebook account when he scrolls through Marketplace.
“What’d she say?”
he wanted to know.
I opened the
message. “She says she and her husband will be home all day today.”
I heard the
footrest on the recliner slam down. “You wanna go?”
It was Saturday.
Did I tell you that? My usual, customary, traditional, letter blogging day. But
I thought I wanted a table saw. Mike has a table saw. Mike has two table saws. But
Mike has no fence for one of his saws and thought this saw, an old saw, one
that had a fence and a pusher with it, would fit his — and it was cheap. He’d
been trying for a couple of days to arrange to go see it.
Can you say, “Road trip!”
Fracking is hot and
heavy right now. This is the siding at Tunkhannock with all the sand trucks
lined up waiting to be filled with the fracking sand.
“Is it okay if I take pictures?” I asked the guy. Chris. I found out later his name is Chris.
“Sure!” he says and mugs for the camera.
“You’ve got a nice
view here,” Mike said.
“We like it,” Chris
said.
“What are those
buildings over there?” Mike wanted to know.
“Just warehouses.
Five years ago, it was all trees up there. They just keep tearing out the mountain
and putting new buildings up.”
“What’s the silo?”
I asked.
“I don’t know
what that is,” Chris replied.
Later, Mike said, “If it were me, I’d drive around until I found it and find out what it is.”
I chatted with
Laura while Mike checked out the saw. “It was my father’s,” she told me. “But
it’s been sitting here for ten years and we’ve never use it. I don’t even know
if it works.”
We were buying it for parts mostly so it didn’t matter a lot if it worked or not. Chris helped load it.
Then the guys stood back and it tickled me that they were both standing the exact same way.
I took more
pictures on the way home.
There were a couple
of places we saw where they’d fixed a pole and left part of the old one
hanging. I can’t imagine the justification or reason for this.
The time to think about if a bridge is safe or not is not when you’re in the middle of crossing it. But what choice do you have?
“We’re going past
that building with the spiral staircase in it,” Mike said.
“With my spiral
stairs‽”
Mike laughed. “It’s
not your spiral stairs!” he pointed out.
“Okay! The ones
you were going to buy for me!”
“I was never
going to buy them for you!”
“Okay! Okay! The spiral stairs I wanted, then!”
We stopped once, a
few years ago, and I took pictures of it before they boarded up the doorway. I’d
love to have it. I just hope it doesn’t get demolished with the building.
Al has a lot of junk cars.
Some are even on the inside!
We were home by
early afternoon and it’d warmed up nicely.
“I’m going to
open the cat room door and see if Whiskers wants to go out,” I told Mike. But
first I had to help unload the new saw. Mike backed the car into the garage and
we took the stand out first.
“I bet this stand
alone is worth what you paid for the whole thing,” I told Mike.
We didn’t have much
trouble unloading that heavy-ass saw. Mike had the car backed up on the apron so
it was high enough we could pull the saw straight out onto the stand with very
little lifting involved.
I left Mike to
play while I went to check on Whiskers.
In the cat room,
I found him back on the quilt once again.
“Hey Whiskers,” I
said and bent down to pet him. “It’s really nice out and the sun is shining.
You wanna go outside and lay in the sun?” I asked.
His mouth opened
like he had something to say but no sound came out.
“Okay, buddy. I’m
going to open the door but I don’t want ya to be afraid.” The door can catch
sometimes and I have to pull hard to get it open. But it didn’t scare him and
he stayed where he was.
I went back in
the house and you better believe I washed my hands with hot water and soap — twice!
— after every encounter with him. I still didn’t know if he was sick or just
hurt.
It’s still
Saturday. It’s still my letter blog day. I made coffee and started to work on
editing pictures when Mike came in.
“Will you help me
for a minute?” he asked.
What the heck! The
day was half shot anyway. I pushed my chair back. “What do ya need?”
“Help me tip the saw back and see if there are pins in the bottom that lock it into place on the
stand.”
I went down to
the barn with him but there weren’t any pins. Mike oiled the saw, plugged it in
and it works. Best thirty bucks he ever spent. Finding a replacement fence for
his saw — which he couldn’t — would’ve cost at least that.
I checked on
Whiskers on my way back to my computer. He’d just left the blanket and made his
wobbly way to the water bowl. I could see how really thin he was, gaunt, emaciated
even. He was drinking, but I don’t believe he had eaten anything.
“I bet he hasn’t
eaten in days,” I told Mike. “Maybe he’d been laying somewhere for a couple of
days before he could get back here.”
I had one more job
to do before I went back to working on my pictures. I needed to spray a protective
coat on two porch signs. Miss Rosie’s Halloween and a fall one for my beautiful
friend Joanie.
I’m learning. I always
find ways to improve my projects. Sometimes on purpose, sometimes accidentally.
I took my board
and stencils down to Miss Rosie’s house and let her lay them out the way that
was pleasing to her.
“Let’s hang the
spiders off of ‘SPELL’,” she suggested.
“I can do that,”
I assured her.
I put the stencils on and used a thin layer of Mod Podge. The gal on the You Tube video said it would keep the paint from bleeding underneath. There was only one hiccup. I had to paint the word ‘SPELL’, let it dry and take the stencil off before I could put the spider stencil on. Don’cha know I forgot the Mod Podge step.
Aye-yi-yi!
Well, if it
bleeds underneath, I can sand it off and do it again, I console myself. I’d
just have to wait until it dried enough to remove the stencil to find out.
When I took the stencil
off, I noticed the paint without the underlayment of Mod Podge seemed brighter
— and I had no bleed. I think that’s because I use a good, sticky vinyl to make
my stencils.
When I made Joanie’s
board, I didn’t use the Mod Podge and had no bleed. Saves me a step.
“Peg! Aren’t
Halloween cats supposed to be black?” you ask.
Yeah. I suppose so.
But in this case, I modeled it after the Kipps’ cat Flannel. I figured if Miss
Rosie didn’t like it, I could paint over it with black. Turns out, she loved
the idea of having Flannel on her sign.
“The signs are done!” I announced when I came in from clear coating them.
“Want to take it down
to Rosie?” Mike asked.
Letter blogging was
on my mind, but I said yes anyway.
Miss Rosie loves
her two-sided porch sign and Lamar hung it right away.
I checked on Whiskers when we got home. He was just going outside and it looked to me like his side was wet. I’m gonna guess he peed on the blanket he was laying on.
I went in and
Whiskers had just stepped from the concrete to the grass and flopped down when
I caught up to him. He was right in front of the windbreak that Mike built to
keep the winter winds from howling straight into the cat room. I sat down on
it, right above Whiskers, and spent some time stroking his fur, talking to him
and keeping the death flies at bay.
“I hope he’s dead
before I go out again,” I told Mike. "It'd be kinder if you shot him."
"You shoot him," Mike said.
"I can't. Where there's life, there's hope."
I had the
pictures from our morning jaunt to Pittston to download and sort. I did that
and looked at the time. We were having a thing at church the next day and I’d
committed to making cookies. It was time to get going on that so they’d be cool
enough to pack before I went to bed.
Raini.
Raini, Raini,
Raini!
The Great and
Fearful-of-all-mechanical-sounders isn’t afraid of the sound of my mixer. I
wonder why.
“Do you wash them good after the dog gets done licking them?” Mike asked.
“Nope! I just put
them away!” I told him.
Soap, hot water,
and a splash of bleach’ll kill a host of germs.
“You put bleach
in your dishwater?” you ask.
I do! When I'm cleaning animal dishes. And if you never want to eat anything I ever bake again, it’s
your loss. Besides, baking’ll kill the germs anyway.
Late afternoon of
this letter-blogging-with-no-blogging-getting-done day and I go to check on Whiskers.
I see something on his leg, a piece of fuzz, I think and pick it off. It’s
not. It’s fly eggs. Death fly eggs.
I finished resizing pictures and never got one word written on my letter blog. Not. One. Single. Word. At this point I’ve resigned myself to taking care of the things that need taken care of and I’d put out a late edition.
Two and half hours
later, cookies cooling, dishes washed, it’s around six. I give up the evening
news to check on Whiskers again.
It’s sad. The
dying. Whiskers was dying. He was spread out on his side, his breaths ragged and other than breathing and
swallowing occasionally, he wasn’t moving.
Death watch. I
was on death watch for a feral cat that wouldn’t even let me touch him until a
day ago. I knew it wouldn’t be long and I didn’t want him to be alone, to be
afraid.
“You’ve been such
a good kitty,” I tell him even though I don’t know if that’s true or not. “You’re
really gonna like it in heaven.” Do cats go to heaven? The Bible speaks of
horses, so why not our beloved pets? “Life will be so much easier for you. You
won’t hurt anymore…” I pause to think of what to say next, but I don’t ever pause
in stroking his fur. “… and you won’t ever be hungry again…” In my mind’s eye I
see him running in fields of tall, cool, green grasses, chasing and batting at
butterflies while the sun warms his fur. “Kat’ll be there,” I tell him thinking
of my beautiful daughter. “She loves animals. She’ll be waiting for you.” I see
her standing there on the other side of the Rainbow Bridge, holding her arms
out for Whiskers to jump into. “Give her a hug for me, will ya?” I say.
Whiskers starts
missing breaths and just about the time I think there won’t be another, he’d
gasp and start breathing again. Then he starts to vomit. After several heaves
that I thought would finish him off for sure, he pukes up worms. Those nasty,
most vilest, revoltingest intestinal parasites-est. I guess the only thing that
loves a parasite is another parasite, right Lamar?
I’m not sure what
happened at this point. I can make a guess or two. All I know for sure is at a
quarter to seven he never drew another breath. I reached between his front legs
and felt for his heartbeat. It seemed like it kept beating for hours but it
must’ve only been another minute or so. A very long minute or so.
And I cried. I
cried for a cat I never got to know. I cried for a daughter gone too soon. I
cried because sometimes it just feels good to cry.
I sniffed, wiped
my eyes and nose on my sleeve (I didn’t have a tissue and that was better than
letting it run all down my face), picked Whiskers up, carried him over to the
weeds, (he won’t feel a thing) and tossed him in. Nature would take care of him
from here on out.
“Isn’t that disrespectful?”
you ask.
Not in my book.
Heck, when I go, I don’t want to be burned up or pumped full of chemicals,
sealed in a vault. I’d rather you put my body in the ground, like they do in the Avatar
movie, plant a tree on top, and let nature take care of the rest.
Done — not done. But done for now.
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