He
had disappeared, and as usual I was approaching the point where my pulse was
picking up in apprehension of an awful event when I spotted him intent on
something important under the hedge.
As I got
closer he looked up as if to say – “Hey, guess what I’ve found!” And
what he had found was a very small and very live mouse with a long sharp nose
like a shrew – which on reflection it probably was. Yorick picked up the little
beastie and walked to the middle of the drive and dropped it. The little fellow
shook itself and headed with commendable courage back towards the hedge, with
Yorick following giving a gentle pat, nudging it in the right direction - which
I thought was very friendly. The little fellow was about to dive under a
welcoming refuge of leaves and twigs when Yorick gently picked it up and
carried it back to the middle of the drive – and the whole cycle started again
– although I must admit that this time the mouse/shrew was a little unsteady on
its legs.
" . . the hunting instinct has to be honed". A Saturday morning training session. |
And so I
left them to it and went shopping.
“And didn’t
intervene?”
No I
didn’t. It’s a cat thing you see. It’s a natural learning process; the hunting
instinct has to be encouraged and honed. The mouse/shrew (if it ever
survived) had got to learn to keep its head down when there's a cat is about. And
anyway I will do anything - anything to ensure that Yorick doesn't start
thinking like a goldfish.
" . . . do anything to ensure that Yorick doesn't start thinking like a goldfish" A terrible alternative identity. |
__________________________________________________________________
As an
editorial note I have to add here that the following was first reviewed by
Margaret who was at the time watching some awful saccharine cartoon on the
Cartoon Channel. One full of bizarrely proportioned “humans” with gigantic eyes,
and improbable maudlin animals talking in American accents. I watched expectantly
as she finished reading my efforts and was moved beyond words to see tears
streaming down her face.
On finishing she pointed with shaking finger at the
cartoon drama unfolding on the television and choked something to the effect
that she felt she had just experienced the impossible. That she’d read something worse than a Disney script.
Beyond this comment I could get nothing more coherent other than gulping sounds
and silent mouthing.
As I forced
her head into a brown paper bag in an attempt to regulate her breathing it slowly dawned on me that she
thought that this was basically crap. However unbowed and unabashed I reproduce
it now almost in full. And it was after all only the very last bit over which
she lost control.
It is dark
and stormy at the closing end of another largely pointless Sunday. It is 6pm
and the sun has set. The last vestiges of the day starkly outline the
mountains. The foreground is pitch and the sky is a narrow band of steely,
aquamarine, framed with battle-ship grey clouds. The air is absolutely still, pure
and clear.
"The foreground is pitch and the sky is a narrow band of steely aquamarine . . " Another one of those boring old African skies! |
Yorick is
sitting on a bench on the stoep. Front legs curled in front and under him in
the way that only cats can do. Haunches sticking up behind him. He looks
compact, contained, almost dreamy. I swear that he is also looking West at the
fading view.
I sit
beside him, not too close; he dislikes a full frontal affection attack.
He looks at
me, and I at him. I tap my fingers on the bench in front of him– a kind of “I’m
here” message. It’s a sort of man thing.
He unfolds
into a bone crunching elongating skeletal stretch. Standing on the tips of his
pads his skin ripples from head to tail which seems to quiver in relief. He
moves, stretchily, towards me and paw by careful paw steps onto my lap. He
stands, he sits, he lies down. Head heavy in the crook of my arm. Head suddenly
up again in response to one of the few discernible sounds in the early evening
air – the dull thudding “plut” of a wet tennis ball on concrete as Hamlet
pleads for yet another throw. Yorick looks disdainfully at the dog, who
retreats, cowed by the acid serenity of the cats gaze .
I look down
at Yorick and see that the oil stain round the back of his neck has still not
come off. Testament to his experiments with car mechanics on the underside of the
hearse (don’t ask).
We listen,
Yorick and I, to the few other sounds at the end of the day. Distantly a single
dog barks, insistent and alone. As counter point, from a completely different
quarter, comes frantic puppy yelping that suddenly and suspiciously stops. A
lone car comes up the road from below and briefly illuminates the end of the garden
with its headlights and then accelerates past us.
Close by a
woman is singing. A strong vibrant voice – something with a religious theme, a maudlin
melodramatic minor keyed devotional number. Closer still the front gate
clatters as Zodwa returns from home or church. Suddenly a toad winds up into a
rasping mating call, and in front of us again, the “plut” of a wet tennis ball
on concrete. The closest sound of all is a purr of contentment.
Yorick
stretches up and gives me a little nibble on the end of my nose, and my eyes
mist over.
It’s a man
thing you see.
![]() |
"Its a man thing you see" Yorick and I in a private moment of bonding. |
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