REQUIEM FOR A ONE-EYED CAT
The
veterinarian didn't give her long to live. With his slow, diffident responses
to our questions about treatment he seemed to indicate that he didn't know why
we were planning to keep her alive in the first place, but if the two of us
were willing to throw good money at him in exchange for inoculating, spaying,
and prescribing daily Prednisone for a skinny, ferocious stray cat with one
under-developed eye and the other one streaming goo, then we may do such, and
live to regret it. That was four years
ago. Ne riens pas.
Now that she
is gone, the only thing I regret is having become far too attached to her, what
we used to joke about when I worked at the SPCA years ago as "over-bonding."
I first saw
her out the window of my study when she was possibly three or four months old,
making her way along our chain link fence in the rain. Homeless cats and dogs
are a common sight in Traveler's Joy*, where people lack sentiment for animals
that aren't useful to them. I've seen neglect
so horrible I won't describe it here at the risk of depressing animal-lovers, but
it seems to be a symptom of lives lived without stability, something in which
Tomahawk County* specializes.
This is
when you can be sent off to jail suddenly or fired from a job or you have to light
out of town in the middle of the night leaving the rent unpaid on your
falling-down mobile home, a place so squalid and filthy -- glass knocked out of
the windows and torn blinds banging in the wind -- that people driving by don't
wonder how anyone can bear to live in such a place so much as they wonder, more
importantly, how anyone who is human can accept MONEY from fellow humans desperate
enough to rent this pig-sty in order to put a roof over their heads and, God
forbid, their childrens' heads. And when
you're jailed or hospitalized or fleeing ahead of warrant-serving deputies, collection
agents or Child Welfare investigators, the dogs and cats and chickens all left sitting
in the yard of the place where you don't live anymore are immobilized by
bewilderment and despair, facing unluckier times than you, even.
The kitten |
Billie guards the veggies |
Anyway, there
was no way to know if this little black and white cat had been abandoned or if
she had ever belonged to anyone, although she seemed to be moving forward
through the rain with a destination in mind.
I moved to the bedroom window to see where she would go and watched her
pause on the cement pad of our heat pump, protected by the eaves, taking cover from
the weather. Our old cat Toby had died
of heart disease months before and I hadn't yet been able to throw away his
bowl or his kibble. I poured some and
set it on the front porch, telling myself that if she doesn't find the food, there's
no harm done. I'd barely stepped back in
the house before the cat was on the porch, eating as if it were her last
meal. As far as she knew, it might have
been. That bowl was her destination,
then. Miss Billie's roaming days were
over, until the morning in March when I opened the door to greet her and she wasn't
on the porch.
Into the woods |
When she
first came to stay, my husband and I theorized that she was most likely born in
the woods bordering the meadow on our eastern property line. Although we've lived in our cottage for
nearly six years I had never explored those woods until the morning she
vanished. They turned out to be much
denser and deeper than I'd supposed; my heart was in my throat as I stepped
gingerly over rusting metal car parts and thorny vines, discarded pieces of
clothing, an old mattress, tractor tires, a large stuffed animal, and hundreds
of discarded bottles. I was trying to
avoid tetanus, a severed artery or a social disease while simultaneously
looking out for what I most dreaded finding: signs of a savage struggle between
animals, traces of fur or claws. I found
none.
At the center of the woods the trees were enormous, meaning they were also very old. Blooming spottily beneath them were clumps of daffodils marking the vanished perimeter of a house that now consisted of a pile of weathered bricks, like an archaeological site titled, "Better Times, Long Gone." It was a wildcat's paradise back there, which may explain why I perpetually see neighborhood pets and strays slinking in and out of the vinca and thorn vine that rings its ragged confines, Miss Billie among them. But there was no sign of her that morning, dead or alive.
At the center of the woods the trees were enormous, meaning they were also very old. Blooming spottily beneath them were clumps of daffodils marking the vanished perimeter of a house that now consisted of a pile of weathered bricks, like an archaeological site titled, "Better Times, Long Gone." It was a wildcat's paradise back there, which may explain why I perpetually see neighborhood pets and strays slinking in and out of the vinca and thorn vine that rings its ragged confines, Miss Billie among them. But there was no sign of her that morning, dead or alive.
The remains of a house |
C. W., the
neighbor who lives at the bottom of Byars Street*, walks her two dogs on
lengths of rope several times during the day.
She once walked as far as our corner, but hollered at us to 'Call 'im
back' when Billie charged her dogs. In
that respect, our cat embodied the spirit of this place in every atom of her
mind and body, being brash, loud, territorial, and always itching for a good
fight. She wasn't subtle and she wasn't pretty: she was southern cat-trash to
the core. I've seen her chase other cats
up trees and intimidate dogs so large they could have swallowed her whole
without a hiccup. Our neighbor's little boy was playing across the street one
day but suddenly dropped his toy and ran inside, telling his parents there was
a wild animal in the yard. His dad came
outside to take a look at the creature Carson* had seen leering up at him from the
drain in their patio, then hailed my husband to tell him our cat was trapped in
the storm drain. But she wasn't
trapped. She often dove into the culvert
under our street and occasionally traveled up the long pipe from that ditch to
spy on the kids across the street through the drain, flashing her teeth and her
one good eye up at them to get a reaction.
I often told my husband that Billie's fearlessness worried me: what she didn't seem to understand is that she was still just a cat, not much bigger than a large loaf of bread. I knew she wouldn't stand a chance against a pack of dogs let loose to roam the town at night (that's how our neighbor Miss D.'s cat died). And she wouldn't have been able to halt a monster truck speeding on Limestone Street, if she'd been careless enough to cross the street as the high school students were getting out of class in the afternoon (I scraped up a kitten killed that way soon after we moved in). As for dangerous wild animals, I didn't know what to watch out for, and I couldn't have taught Billie to steer clear, in any case. I certainly wasn't thinking I had to be worried about foxes, or, even more outlandish: coyotes.
I often told my husband that Billie's fearlessness worried me: what she didn't seem to understand is that she was still just a cat, not much bigger than a large loaf of bread. I knew she wouldn't stand a chance against a pack of dogs let loose to roam the town at night (that's how our neighbor Miss D.'s cat died). And she wouldn't have been able to halt a monster truck speeding on Limestone Street, if she'd been careless enough to cross the street as the high school students were getting out of class in the afternoon (I scraped up a kitten killed that way soon after we moved in). As for dangerous wild animals, I didn't know what to watch out for, and I couldn't have taught Billie to steer clear, in any case. I certainly wasn't thinking I had to be worried about foxes, or, even more outlandish: coyotes.
Northern edge of the woods |
When C. W.
isn't walking the dogs, she's sitting on her porch with them, day in and day
out, watching life go past in the neighborhood.
When my husband called on her the day Billie went missing, she surprised
him by telling him that she knew Billie well because our cat sometimes crossed Limestone
despite the traffic and came up on the woman's porch to sit and visit with her,
ignoring the dogs. C. W. was sorry to hear that she'd gone missing, and said it
was strange because she knew of several other cats who'd disappeared in the
last couple of weeks. How so?, asked my
husband. Apparently one of the owners of
a shuttered business on the Thicketty Highway*, up the hill behind our
neighbor's tiny house, had taken to installing cats at the building because of
a rat problem. One by one, the three
cats vanished. She put another cat
there, and it vanished too. (When I
heard this story, I wanted to know: where was this woman obtaining her supply of
expendable cats?) C. W. added that her
son had heard of a couple more cats going missing on the east end of Limestone where
he lived. As C. W. said to my husband, "Nothing lasts in this town! Nothing lasts!"
Rosa multiflora in thicket |
In telling
this story, our neighbor realized that she'd seen something on the day Billie
disappeared that had struck her as very much out of the ordinary: she says a
red fox emerged from the woods and crossed the street, vanishing into the scrub
borders that run along the hill behind her house and up to the closed business
that was now cat-less. Typically, foxes in the southern
Piedmont (Vulpes vulpes) hunt for small mammals like voles and rabbits, although
they have long been the bane of farmers, as they also kill young livestock
and regularly prey on chickens. But as habitat
declines and hunting territories, along with farms, shrink all over the world, foxes
and other woodland mammals have adapted to living covertly in the midst of human
settlements in order to survive. This can lead to killing and eating an occasional cat or small dog, especially if there
are kits to feed. Foxes have become such
a problem in London, for instance, preying on pets, getting into garbage, and
occasionally amazing riders of the tube by appearing on subway cars or trotting
up the escalators at busy stations, that a specialized trade of urban fox-trappers
has sprung up to kill or remove the animals.
Rabbit in the meadow bordering the woods |
Despite what Londoners may be
experiencing, however, most Carolinians tell me that they have never heard of a
verified killing of a cat by a fox. My
most recent conversation on this topic was with a woman raised in the Blue
Ridge who has worked as a forest ranger at parks all over North Carolina. She does not think an American red fox would
risk attacking anything that could fight back as aggressively as a full-grown
cat, but believes that coyotes, once established, can wipe out an area's small
pet population, as a group of them have done in her rural Cabarrus County
neighborhood. Changes in our country's
ecosystems over the last 150 years and competition for shrinking habitat forced
coyotes to migrate east from the plains and desert states, mating with Northern
wolves along the way to create the 'eastern coyote' (Canis latrans var.), a bigger version of the western scavenger,
with more efficient jaws. In South Carolina, migrating coyotes were first
sighted in 1978, but the problem was exacerbated by hunters illegally importing
them for the purposes of hound-running.
The animal has become such a problem in the state that the S.C. Department
of Natural Resources permits state residents to shoot them without any license so
long as they're on your property, and are actively urging hunters to target them
and save the white-tail deer population, which has been decimated by coyote-killings of fawns. Interestingly, some
naturalists and wildlife biologists in S. C. have noted that the invasion of
coyotes in the Piedmont has pushed red foxes out of their natural habitats, forcing
them to live surreptitious, hungry lives under decks and houses in suburban
areas. I have seen live coyotes in the
Carolinas as well as coyote and red fox roadkill, so it's possible that either
or both of the wily varmints have moved into Traveler's Joy.
On my exploration
of the woods behind our house I saw countless places in vine-choked gullies, in
hollows under fallen trees, and deep within blackberry thickets, where a hungry
mammal could dig out a snug den and be completely hidden from the world. Animal or human -- whoever or whatever her
attacker was, I know Miss Billie must have given that predator the fight of his
life. It's horrible to contemplate.
View from the woods, our house in the distance |
In my
rational moments, when I lean on my education and powers of reasoning, I understand
that bad things don't happen because of the position of the planets, or the
dispositions of the gods, any more than good things happen because of
them. Disaster, good fortune and
everything in between happens as the result of a set of factors acting in
concert, some of which humans control and some of which we don't. But maybe because as I grow older I have more
wins and losses to compare, or because I was born with a 'literary' nature that
can't resist seeking connections between seemingly random elements in order to
create a narrative, I often feel as if there is some kind of system at work
that determines the courses of our lives.
Some cosmic stylus that writes our story.
The ancient Greeks believed this system consisted of three immortal sisters called, collectively, the moirai, or Fates. Clotho, The Spinner, sits winding wool from her distaff on to a spindle, creating the thread of life. The Allotter, Lachesis, measures the thread with her ruler, deciding how long it will be (or how short), and binding knots in it if she's decided to give this individual a troubled life. The last sister, Atropos, is The Cutter. She wields a pair of powerful shears, which she uses to cut the thread when the allotted measure is reached. Atropos not only determines when death will occur for each person, but she decides the manner of death as well.
The ancient Greeks believed this system consisted of three immortal sisters called, collectively, the moirai, or Fates. Clotho, The Spinner, sits winding wool from her distaff on to a spindle, creating the thread of life. The Allotter, Lachesis, measures the thread with her ruler, deciding how long it will be (or how short), and binding knots in it if she's decided to give this individual a troubled life. The last sister, Atropos, is The Cutter. She wields a pair of powerful shears, which she uses to cut the thread when the allotted measure is reached. Atropos not only determines when death will occur for each person, but she decides the manner of death as well.
There has
always been debate in academic circles about the specific powers of the moirai, (academic circles being the only
ones where anyone gives two hoots in hell about such arcane subjects), with
some Classics scholars insisting that the Fates were considered all-powerful by
the ancients and others arguing that human destinies (or deaths) could be
altered by the intercession of a particular god or the influence of a dead
kinsman's spirit. Homer seemed to be part of the "all-in" camp,
judging from the role played by the moirai
in the Iliad. A typical reference is the
one made by Hecuba as she argues with Priam over his decision to go to their
enemy, Achilles, and ask him nicely to return the body of their son and Troy's
hero, Hector. She tells him that he can't change what's happened:
He'll not respect you. No, let's
mourn here,
in our home, sitting far away from Hector.
That's what mighty Fate spun out for him
when he was born, when I gave birth to him --
that swift-running dogs would devour him
far from his parents beside that powerful man.
How I wish I could rip out that man's heart,
then eat it. That would be some
satisfaction.
Hecuba's
last two lines are strangely relatable.
I think if I ever discover who or what took down my cat, be it
swift-running pit bulls, coyotes or adolescent serial-killers in training, it
will be time to set the table.
Fallen tree |
I confess to
feeling the nimble fingers of Lachesis on my own thread at times. In October last year I received the best news
a longtime writer can expect. I hardly
dared to celebrate for fear that such a dream-come-true could vanish in a puff
of smoke if I focused too overtly on it. A few weeks later I was hit with very bad news, the kind your spirit
can't absorb all at once but must adjust to gradually. In a situation like that one can't help but see the Allotter measuring out one's thread, determining that what Fate hands out,
Fate can also taketh away.
I think
about the moirai in Billie's case,
seeing the poetic balance in the Fates giving a four-year extension to a doomed
kitten, an ugly, one-eyed throwaway tossed into a ditch from a moving car or
starving with her litter-mates in a trashy woodland. I can imagine the pitch as Lachesis might have delivered it:
Here's the catch, Miss Billie: you will live
a charmed life in the blue cottage on the corner, with a weird but well-meaning
couple who will see beyond your flawed physical self to the wholly individual
spirit that resides there. These people
will love you well and care for you, and will provide you with a warm bed in
winter and a protected garden to play in through the long days of summer.
About two years into your stay, on a rainy day like the one when you arrived, I will send you another abandoned animal to mentor, a traumatized red-hound who wets herself when men tower over her and who howls obsessively like cattle being castrated, a battered soul who needs someone flinty and practical, like you, to settle her down and teach her to appreciate what she has. Flinty you may be, but what most people don't realize is that you've also been endowed with the gift of boundless compassion, of the sort the Dalai Lama would envy. When this compassion is extended, as it will be when you not only welcome the stray dog on to your fiercely defended porch, but sit with her on her pile of wet towels until she is calmed and comforted enough to be fed by your People, it will amaze those who thought they had you figured out.
About two years into your stay, on a rainy day like the one when you arrived, I will send you another abandoned animal to mentor, a traumatized red-hound who wets herself when men tower over her and who howls obsessively like cattle being castrated, a battered soul who needs someone flinty and practical, like you, to settle her down and teach her to appreciate what she has. Flinty you may be, but what most people don't realize is that you've also been endowed with the gift of boundless compassion, of the sort the Dalai Lama would envy. When this compassion is extended, as it will be when you not only welcome the stray dog on to your fiercely defended porch, but sit with her on her pile of wet towels until she is calmed and comforted enough to be fed by your People, it will amaze those who thought they had you figured out.
Billie & Alice in the garden |
Every
day in this family's circle will be an enchanted one for you: an idyll. An arm of the couch that catches the
afternoon sun will be your perch when you nap, food will appear on the plate
whether you require it or not, and you and the red-hound will devise rough
games for the garden and a suitable pecking-order for indoors. A woman who is old enough to know better will
carry you around on her shoulder most mornings petting and praising you as she
raises the blinds to the sun. If you can
believe it, she will also habitually toss plastic balls around the living room
for you well past midnight, when you are just waking up and she is worn-out and
needs to get some sleep because she has an eight o'clock class. This will be your amazing life.
Do
you remember me saying there's a catch?
This life of yours will be cut off abruptly, perhaps violently, Billie, a
little more than four years after it begins.
(I'll put in a word for you with Atropos, The Cutter -- ask her to be
merciful and make the severing quick.)
There will be no lingering illness, no good-byes, no last looks at the hound or the humans who will grieve for you, who will blame themselves for your
disappearance and will ache for your presence in their lives, no matter what
the veterinarian thinks. That's the kind
of hard bargain we drive up here on Mt. Olympus.
Take
it or leave it, Miss Billie.
Take
it? I thought so.
Get
down there, then. The thread is already
winding off the spindle; my sister is sharpening her shears. Every slender inch of life is priceless. But you already know that.
#####
For more entries involving Billie, see the postings "Trampling Out the Vintage," Oct. 7, 2014; "Salad Days," July 18, 2013; "Knock, Knock. Who's There?" July 11, 2013; "Of Bogs, Beardless Iris, and the Boyds of Kilmarnock," April 2, 2013; and "Traveler's Joy: Where the Catbird Sings," January 2, 2013.
Lines from Book 24 of the Iliad are from an online translation by Ian Johnston, Vancouver Island University, Nanaimo, BC, Canada.
https://records.viu.ca/~johnstoi/homer/iliad24.htm
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