With some disdain and a great deal of steel, she begins again. |
This sums up my day rather nicely. When the cats have had enough of slinking wide-eyed and soldier-like through the garage, they fling their bodies against the door, filling the kitchen with furry thuds and muffled thumps which become lost in the din of electric buzzing and the racket of running water. Both categorically black, one is comprised of spare parts, with knock knees and a shaggy flatness which calls the probing hand to feel for a spine, or safety pins and loose threads. He sneers, does this cat, and he studies, and in all of it is he is startlingly human, calm and calculating, a mind reader who knows when I’m reaching for a can of tuna. Little Napolean with milk saucer eyes, he shines red in the sun and scratches the couch to spite me. The other, is a ball of lead in a fur coat, a green-eyed mass of muscle and nerves, who shakes the walls when he leaps and lands. A simple, oafish melon of a cat, he loves us with his tender, blinking eyes and the nudge of his face as we lie reading. His token of adoration is a line of sloppy, wet sap on our naked arms, like the slime trail of a slug on a leaf of lettuce, and we hide our repulsion, because he seems so proud to share. The white tuft on his chest marks the site of his greatest feature. Most often, I open that door to toss the unread newspapers, rinsed bottles and freshly peeled cans, discovering the worried felines, looking as though they thought they’d been banished forever, left to gather dust with the tools that never move. Then, today, these boys were oddly silent and there was no clamour to come back in. An open door cast a searchlight on the pair who looked up from the middle of the place, jolted and black-eyed, before moving toward the doorway, their heads low, their cold paws creeping along the grey, cement floor. There was a geminate shame in these two awkward lions; a shared secret, an furtive oath, an unspoken complicity was in every agile movement. We looked then, intrigued by the mystery, until we saw it in the middle of the room, between the bags of dead leaves and the lawnmower wrapped in its own cord: a tiny corpse, lying cold. Looking slicked and buttered with worship, the tiny creature glistened in its lifelessness, the prey of emphatic attention, and unyielding curiosity. In the absence of blood and any other hint of feral savagery, we wondered: was this a kill for nature, or was it the outcome of kittenish wonder about the feel of softer things? They knew, when the hand twisted the doorknob, when the darkness was split by the light, when all struggle in the little body had been siphoned, that they had done a deed. |