Watching my cat Tim this morning leaping from the washing machine to the linen cupboard and from there to the ledge of the little window from where he likes to survey the kingdom, I was reminded of another cat I used to have and his adventures with a rescue dog my then partner brought home, wanting to take in. Just why we didn’t realise from the start just what we were letting ourselves in for, I don’t know. But we had a lot on our minds in those days, what with the two children and my elderly mother.
The cat’s name was Mao; he was a bluepoint Siamese, and he knew it.
The rescue dog’s name was Harry.
Harry was a German Shepherd that nobody seemed to want. That should’ve given us pause right there, but as I said, we had a lot on our minds, particularly in the mornings. Harry was obviously well bred, the sort of dog that would’ve had “papers”, yet nobody wanted him.
We tried him out with the children; he was fine, so we let him stay.
Night fell. We fed Harry and bedded him down and locked him into the shed at the side of the house. Next morning, unbeknown to me, as I was working in the kitchen, making breakfasts, ironing uniforms, getting the children off to school, my partner let Harry out.
Mao, the Siamese cat, having finished his breakfast, strolled out to inspect the dawn from the doorstep of the back porch. As he sat there checking out the day, Harry came around the side of the house.
The cat, accustomed all his life to being superior, waved a paw at Harry to tell him his presence there on the step was not required, that he was persona non grata, in fact.
But Harry came on. The cat found himself being pursued by this slavering beast. He raced into the nearby bathroom and leapt up onto the hand basin. Harry’s first leap landed him in the hand basin, too. Just in the nick of time, the cat leapt up onto the edge of the shower stall, a precarious position.
Harry was leaping and snarling at him, but he couldn’t quite reach the cat, when I came out, atracted by the commotion. I grabbed a straw broom and began to beat Harry with it, to no avail. Then the cat teetering on the edge of the shower stall lost his balance and leapt onto the head of the straw broom when it was at the height of one of its upswings. Anyone could’ve told him this was not a good idea, but it seemed it was the only one he had. He then fell off the broom head, and saved himself from landing in Harry’s waiting maw by latching onto my thumb.
I screamed, turning this way and that to save the cat. The dog leaped and snarled, the cat clung. I don’t know what would’ve happened next if my partner hadn’t arrived just then and whipped Harry off with one of the studded leather belts he liked to affect.
After that, we locked Harry back in the shed and drove to the hospital so that I could get a tetanus injection and, of course, I needed stitches. As I said, just why we hadn’t realised from the start what we were letting ourselves in for, I don’t know. But we had a lot on our minds in those days.
Harry stayed, by the way. He and the cat arrived at an uneasy truce, with the cat dominant. The tucker was good, and there were lots of cattle to harrass in the nearby paddocks; Harry knew he was on a good thing.
Reblogged this on Louise Forster.
Love this anecdote, Danielle! Especially — “We tried him out with the children; he was fine, so we let him stay.” made me laugh.:D
Thanks so much for the comment and the reblog, Louise. The whole business was one of those things that’s very funny later, but isn’t funny at the time.
“… why we hadn’t realised from the start what we were letting ourselves in for…” Or could it be that the passage of time has enabled you to forget that, given the era and the locality, you probably thought that, like humans, everything would get along with everything else. It was such a time! The rest of the world was going to change tomorrow – it having changed for the flower people yesterday. Ah, but I keep forgetting… you wouldn’t remember because it’s only people like me who didn’t inhabit the sixties who can remember what happened… haha
I was in a weird position in the ’60s/’70s, always being ten years older than everyone else. The same thing happened to me with parenting – and matters too personal to mention here. Guess i was just a slow starter
Dear Danielle,
I love cat stories and there’s nothing more entertaining that a good ole dog and cat tale! What more can I say? In the end . . . cats rule!
Purrs,
Cat McMahon
CatsStories.com
Thanks, Cat, it really was one of those things that isn’t funny at the time, but is hilarious later.