A
great deal can happen in four weeks, so I'm grateful to let readers
know that Rags, our Old English sheepdog, is still with us. Thank you
for every message of caring from readers who wrote, emailed or asked
in person about his health. I stayed home from our family's July
vacation on Priest Lake, to keep Rags stable and secure. Our days
followed the pattern he knows: me spending time at my computer,
working on writing projects while he slept. After dinner, I read in
the living room, with Rags sprawled in front of my chair, doing his
usual stellar job of keeping our house and me well guarded.
The
big, shaggy guy was so skilled at protection that he literally worked
with his eyes shut. Sometimes he even snored. But I knew he was on
duty 'round the clock, because, one very late night, he woke me with
sharp barks that scared the zucchini out of me. As I grabbed my robe
and stumbled to the living room, his staccato barking continued. I
gently put my hand on top of his head so he didn't startle, because
Rags is nearly blind and deaf, and then looked out our living room
window. A midnight dog walker was crossing our street and continuing
on his way, with his large, leashed dog jogging ahead of him. The
bark-alarm was a false one, but I gave Rags major points for effort
and heart, and offered him a peanut butter treat to help him settle
back into sleep.
Our
sheepdog is nearly 13 years old, and I see him growing a bit more
frail each day. But he can still rouse himself when my husband, Lee,
comes home from work every night. Rags is still eating, although more
sparingly. If he reaches the point where he refuses his specially
ordered dog food, I will switch him to homemade meals of scrambled
eggs with beef broth, which kept our golden retriever Kaylee, alive
in her final days. On most late afternoons, when I guide him outside
to the backyard, Rags likes to stand for a moment, facing west, with
the sun on his face. He lifts his shaggy head and seems to listen to
the wind, as if he is waiting.
While
Rags drifts through his days, his faithful buddy usually keeps him
company, snoring and spreading cat fur on the living room chair. I
refer, of course, to Benjamin BadKitten, my Maine coon cat and chief
garden staffer. A staff shakeup may be imminent, though. My BadKitten
has been my on-again, off-again chief staffer for more than four
years, but his recent employment record is spotty. On the plus side,
he has caught no birds since his unfortunate Mother's Day gift to me:
a gray and yellow finch. His willingness to stifle his hunting
instincts counts a lot with me, and I'm willing to believe this is a
conscious act of obedience and goodness, instead of the natural
effects of a slightly portly cat reaching middle age. On the red side
of the ledger, though, is his lack of interest in helping me in the
garden. This summer he has kept me company only once, while I weeded
and planted – after I threatened to replace the slacker with the
long, plumed tail and round, black and brown tummy.
A
lack of qualified candidates has held me back from making the switch.
Rags entered permanent emeritus status last year. Abigail Grump, our
black and white, long-haired cat, has the brains to take over as
garden chief, but lacks the necessary social skills. She'll come out
to the flower beds sometimes, select a spot under a spreading phlox
plant, and curl up in the sunshine – but if greet her, she'll offer
only a crabby “Mmrrrfff” and shut her eyes again. The squirrel
that haunts our apple tree is another nonstarter: He would demand I
plant nothing but walnut trees and peanut bushes.
But
a unique possibility has emerged: Tessa the Vague, our 14-year-old
white, peach and gray calico cat. Now that she has learned to use the
cat door (after only three years of study,) Tess has become a more
confident cat. She will approach me from a distance in the garden,
and once came close enough to peer at me with her always-bleary stare
and sniff the fingertip I offered in greeting. She is sweet-natured
and uncomplaining, and shows no tendency to let fame turn her into a
spoiled publicity hound (no names here, but his last name rhymes with
GadMitten.) I will wait a week or two to make this important staffing
decision, and will rely on readers' opinions: Should I keep Benjamin
BadKitten as chief garden staffer, or fire his butt and promote Tessa
the Vague? Let me know with your comments on this post.
I vote for Tessa and I love your story as always.
ReplyDeleteI vote for Tessa and I love your story as always.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Evelyn. Tessa is delighted with your vote -- Benjamin BadKitten is getting worried.
ReplyDeleteMy vote is still with Benjamin, and I very much hope this scare prompts him to action!!
ReplyDeleteSo far, Mandapanda, the BadKitten is pouting on his favorite living room -- and he has reason to worry. The early voting is running 5 to 2 in favor of Tessa, with several undecides.
DeleteTessa sounds like a good companion...but Benjamin may need to up his game to keep his spot as chief staffer, I agree. I suppose I might need to know the qualifications of your staff positions to make a more effective choice. Is there any need of guarding the garden? Or...knowing where it is? These are all important considerations.
ReplyDeleteTracy, my sides still hurt from laughing -- because, until you pointed out its necessity, I hadn't thought there was a need to stipulate that my chief staffer must actually know where the garden is. With Tessa in the competition, this becomes very important. As for guarding the garden -- I watched early this summer while Benjamin cowered in the pea patch while a pair of quail checked out the newly planted beans and sampled the seeds. I'm not at all sure Tessa is aware of the existence of winged, flying species. So I will have to do some field tests. No wonder your Uncle Lee says hiring personnel is so difficult.
ReplyDelete