NANCY ETCHEMENDY
SAINTS AND MARTYRS
In the steamy, chickeny kitchen, cats paced and mewed,
rubbing against
Esmeralda's ample legs. Outside, the town lay cold and voluptuous with
snow. She
gazed through the window, filled with unreasonable longing, and spoke to the
saints
as she opened the oven and basted chickens with butter drippings.
"Soon, Cecilia. Soon,
Eustace and Sebastian and Saint Joan, my dears. Chicken
dinner for everyone. There's
nothing like roast chicken on a snowy evening." The
cats -- each named for a favorite
saint, as her cats had always been -- purred,
drifting around her ankles like wayward
clouds.
Two chickens, she thought closing the oven door. One for the cats, and one for
her
and Maurice. The window drew her gaze again, with its view of restful curves
and feathery
flakes. She remembered a time when three chickens, not two, were
the norm. Three chickens
to be divided among her and Maurice and the four
children who had gone their own ways long
since. In those days, the animals only
got scraps. Flossie the dog, dead now, had loved the
necks and gizzards. The
cats had gobbled hearts, kidneys, and bits of gristle. These new
cats were
spoiled, she thought as she stooped to stroke Saint Cecilia's velvety brown and
white neck. Only meat and skin for them. She smiled. There was no one left to
spoil now
except the cats -- and her husband.
Above the murmur of the ball game, she heard Maurice
call from the living room.
"About time for a drink, Em, isn't it?"
Esmeralda looked at her
watch. Four-thirty. "It's not five yet, dear," she
called in reply.
"What do you mean?"
Maurice had the whine in his voice, which meant he wanted
her to think he'd been unfairly
wounded.
Esmeralda walked to the living room. Football players rammed each other on the
television
screen. Chips and dip littered the table beside the recliner, which
periodically creaked
under the pressure of Maurice's portly frame. Saint Eustace
jumped into his lap.
"It's not
five yet," she repeated.
"But it's a Sunday afternoon," said Maurice, scratching softly
under Eustace's
chin. "There's chicken for dinner. I don't see what's wrong with
celebrating a
little."
Maurice pushed at the boundaries of things. This had always been his
way, but it
had never mattered so much before. Three weeks after his retirement from the
insurance firm where he had worked for forty years, he suffered a heart attack.
The doctors
advised him to give up alcohol completely. It added too much to his
weight, they said. But
his pre-dinner bourbon had been a beloved part of his
life for so long that Esmeralda
softened eventually. What could it hurt, one
drink each day at five? She'd started with
half an ounce in plain seltzer, but
Maurice complained bitterly. It tasted like water with
aspirin in it. Couldn't
he have his 7-Up back? But after she had taken pity and bought him
the sugary
mixer, he still complained. Surely a full ounce of bourbon wouldn't hurt, just
once each day. It tasted so much better. She had relented.
She had also relented about the
low-fat diet. Night after night he sat joyless
before plates of plain rice, vinegary salad,
dry string beans, begging for a bit
of steak, a tiny piece of cheese. She remembered how
lustily he ate in the days
when she had cooked beef Stroganoff, scalloped potatoes, ham
glazed with
marmalade. He was a man who smiled and grunted with pleasure and mopped his
shining
head whenever he dealt with good food. How could she take that away from
him? To see him
slumped at the table as if he were dining on sand was more than
she could bear.
So it had
come to this. Maurice had his bourbon and his roast chicken, he took
his "daily" walks if
and when it pleased him, and played nine holes of golf on
Saturdays when the weather and
the season were right. He told Esmeralda over and
over again that she was an angel from
heaven; he petted her, took her hand when
she stepped from the Chrysler, proclaimed his
adoration with yellow roses and
boxes of candy. When he did these things, a buttery glow
filled her, as if in
some secret inner place she wore a halo. He was like the cottage
garden which,
in her caring hands, smiled with happy scent and color nine months of the
year.
He was like the children, like the cats. She knew how to please him, and it gave
her
great joy.
Only now, pleasing Maurice had become complex, almost frightening. Pleasing him
was no longer in his best interests, or so the doctors said.
"Come on, Em. It's only half
an hour earlier than usual. What can that hurt?."
said Maurice.
A great desire for rest came
over Esmeralda as she stood in the doorway beside
the recliner, her husband's face a
picture of pleading.
"Oh, all right," she said. "But you won't make a habit of it, will you
?"
Maurice grinned, his cheeks as rosy as a toddler's. "Of course not," he said,
and gave
Eustace a delighted squeeze.
Esmeralda smiled, too, filled against her will with the
wonderful wine-yellow
glow of his happiness. She returned to the kitchen and fixed two
bourbons, one
for him and one for herself, while the saints resumed their purring around
her
ankles, and outside the snow continued to fall.
The next morning Maurice, Esmeralda, and
the cats awoke to a world transformed
by icy frosting. Though the storm was over now, an
additional thirteen inches of
snow had fallen during the night. A breeze tossed frozen
crystals into the air,
where the sun danced as if upon slivers of glass. The two youngest
cats, Saints
Eustace and Cecilia, dabbed their noses into this mysterious cold whiteness
and
retreated to the cozy kitchen in alarm. Joan and Sebastian, on the other hand,
windmilled
through it as if swimming, headed for higher ground. When they
returned, Esmeralda carried
them to the fireside and pulled small hard snowballs
from their belly fur with fluffy
towels.
Maurice ate a large breakfast as Esmeralda mixed bits of chopped bacon into the
saints'
food and drizzled it with pan drippings. He napkined egg from his mouth,
and washed down
heart and blood pressure pills with gulps of fresh orange juice.
"I wish I were one of your
cats," he said jovially.
"Don't be silly," said Esmeralda. It was a running joke between
them, that she
treated the cats better than she treated Maurice.
He rose from the table
smiling and gave her a powerful hug. In his youth, he had
been an amateur wrestler. Later,
when the children were growing up, he had
coached Little League and football. His stout,
aging figure echoed that athletic
past. Except for the bulge of his stomach, his body was
square and compact, his
neck and shoulders massive. His arms and legs, though short, were
thick and
still impressively strong. He looked vigorous. It was hard for Esmeralda to
believe
that inside his big chest beat a clogged, pale heart. It went against
all of her instincts.
How could someone look so healthy, eat so heartily, and be
so ill?
Maurice gazed
thoughtfully out the window. "I feel great today. Guess the
weather agrees with me. Maybe
I'll shovel the walk."
"Shovel the walk?" cried Esmeralda. "But you mustn't. The
doctors..."
"Oh, bother the doctors." Maurice smiled almost impishly. "I won't overdo it. I
know when to quit."
"Yes, well, even so, I'm not sure..." said Esmeralda.
But Maurice was
already donning his heavy coat and wool golf cap. "You're always
begging me to go out and
get some fresh air. Well, now I want to and you're
worried about it. Women!" Maurice's
mouth pulled down in a pout. His cheeks
glowed pinkly.
This was the sort of argument she
nearly always lost. Maybe it wouldn't hurt him
to shovel the walk for a few minutes, just
this once. Saint Joan squirmed in her
arms, anxious for the bacon breakfast, escaped her
grasp, bounded away in a
furry flash.
"Oh, all right," she said.
A little while later,
Esmeralda went out to check on Maurice. "How about a
break, dear," she called from the
porch. "I've brought you some hot cocoa." She
had made it in a mug just the way he loved
it, half milk, half cream, extra
sugar, two marshmallows.
Ever after, she remembered the
tiniest details of the moment -- the pat-pat of
icicles melting in the brilliant sun, the
footprints of chickadees in the snow
beside his bluish face, the way the hot mug of cocoa
burst into pieces a minute
after she dropped it in the frigid whiteness, intact one
instant, shattered the
next like her own soul, because it couldn't take the sudden change.
He was dead before the paramedics arrived. Dead, they said, before she found
him. There was
nothing she could have done. But later in the day, waiting for
the children to arrive from
their far-flung homes, she wept as she washed the
breakfast dishes. She could have made his
life miserable; that was something she
could have done. The world was filled with choices
that weren't really choices
at all, and now what was she to do, after fifty years of dear
Maurice who gave
her yellow roses, the only person who had ever called her Era, what was
she to
do without him?
She stared out the window as she had done the day before, only now
the sight of
the snow made her feel trapped. All the while, around her ankles, the saints
floated like wayward clouds.
Esmeralda's children swooped into the isolated town at
different times in rented
cars they had driven from a distant airport. A girl, two boys,
another girl; she
had always loved that symmetry. She wished they were youngsters again,
before
the luggage, the spouses, the grief and urgency. She wished the occasion were
Christmas,
that the four of them waited rosy-cheeked at the big oak dining table
while Maurice carved
a turkey, she trammed bowls of sweet potatoes and dressing
from the kitchen, and carolers
sang on the radio. Instead, she sat bereft and
incompetent in Maurice's chair with Saint
Sebastian asleep on her lap, and
watched as her son Richard's wife pressed Maurice's best
black suit.
The children organized everything. She swam through the rituals as if through
gray jelly, slowly, feeling her way; The funeral was held at the small Catholic
church she
and Maurice had attended for years. She nearly collapsed at the sight
of him in the coffin,
foreign colors dabbed on his mouth and cheeks. He looked
so utterly, undeniably dead. At
the cemetery, sunshine spilled onto the snow
with astonishing beauty, and miniature white
avalanches poured from the boughs
of pine trees as the priest intoned," Ashes to ashes,
dust to dust." A falcon
flew off screaming and she stared after it, wondering if it were
significant
somehow, till someone tugged at her coat.
Afterward, the ladies from the Altar
Society put on a potluck style meal at the
Elks Hall. There were platters of sliced beef
and spaghetti, deviled eggs, fried
chicken, Jell-O salads in bright colors, filled with
marshmallows or canned
fruit. There were silver-edged paper tablecloths and folding chairs
and tables,
pitchers of cider,urns of coffee and tea. She felt grateful. Maurice was a
popular
man. Over a hundred friends and family members had come to see him off,
and the occasion
warranted a social gathering beyond the funeral itself. It was
one of the few times she
could remember simply not wanting to cook. She hated
having to hold herself together in
front of all those people. But the thought of
being home by herself was even worse.
In spite
of every delay she thought up, the children eventually shepherded her
back to the neat
little house with the blue-trimmed windows, the walk still
partially shoveled, the soft bed
of snow still rumpled where Maurice had fallen.
They stayed the night, but accommodations
were cramped and schedules busy. The
next day they began to leave in clumps and trickles.
Her oldest son and his wife
went first, Richard, in his dress shirt and tie, an chip off
the old insurance
block. Then Barbara the lawyer and her brother Roger the architect and
their
spouses slipped away with a kiss or two and promises of phone calls. Three days
after
the funeral, her youngest child, Jennifer, a secretary, left as well,
concern in her voice
and apologies on her lips.
"No, no, dear, you have important things to do. Life must go on,
you know. I'll
be all right," said Esmeralda. It was one of the hardest things she had ever
done, keeping tears at bay while she and Jennifer kissed good-bye.
"I'll call you tonight,"
said Jennifer.
Esmeralda stood with her forehead pressed to the door after she had closed
it.
When she heard the receding crunch of tires on snow, she let the tears come. The
saints
gravitated toward her, rubbing and mewing disconsolately. "Oh, my dears,"
she murmured
weepily, "I have so much time now."
She lay down in her bed half dressed, without dinner,
and slept through the
night, wakening only once to cry when she realized the warm bulk
beside her was
not Maurice but a tumble of cats. If Jennifer's phone call ever came, she
did
not hear it.
She had trouble making up her mind about even the smallest things. She
spent
whole days gazing out at the snow, wondering whether to fry eggs for breakfast
or
settle for peanut butter toast. Should she put on her coat and go shopping?
If she did go
out, should she drive or should she walk? Would God understand if
she failed to appear for
Mass?
Once or twice, it occurred to her that she could sell the house and move
elsewhere.
But decisions of that magnitude terrified her. So life tended to stay
as it was,
deteriorating in a predictable, majestic way, like a glacier spilling
into the sea.
Outside, the depth of the snow increased inch by inch; inside,
dust settled undisturbed.
Sometimes she forgot for a second or two that Maurice was dead. She would do
some small
thing-- set a place for him at the table, get up to fix his drink at
five. At such times,
she felt as if someone had reached inside her and ripped
out the part that was Maurice.
Anyone walking into the room would surely see the
black nothingness his death had left,
would sense the wind blowing through her.
She couldn't hide it. Nor could she, now in the
midst of tribulation, make
herself believe that Maurice waited for her in some warm and
golden afterlife.
The pain was overwhelming.
She stopped attending her book group, let her
watercolor classes slide, turned
down luncheon dates with friends until finally they
stopped asking. At some
point, she realized that she only got up in the mornings because of
the saints.
She often awakened to the little tickle of their whiskers or tongues, the
pressure
of furred paws on her bosom. They wanted to be let in and out, to be
fed, to be dried by
the warmth of a fire. They needed her.
Toward the end of February, another big storm
arrived. Snow began to fall late
in the afternoon, and flakes the size of quarters drifted
innocently onto the
previous accumulation, now nearly a foot-and-a-half deep. Esmeralda
made dinner
for the cats and heated a can of soup for herself. When she had finished, she
donned a flannel nightgown, turned out all the lamps, and lay down on the couch
with her
favorite quilt. A small log burned on the hearth. The cats stretched
themselves before it
luxuriously. Beyond the window, the snowy night looked
brighter than the room, weirdly pink
and silent. Perhaps she closed her eyes.
Hours or moments later, she heard a cry.
Her first
thought was of a child, frightened, howling for its mother. Then it
came again, closer, and
she realized that if it were a child it must be
hideously defective, for although it did
not sound like an animal, it did not
sound quite human either. All four of the cats had
heard it, too. Saint Eustace
lifted his head and stared with pointed curiosity. The fur
stood in a ridge
along Saint Joan's sleek spine. The cry came a third time, nearer still.
She
thought she detected movement through the French doors that opened from the
living room
into the snowy half-light of the garden.
Esmeralda stood up, clutching the quilt tightly
about herself. The fire had
burned to embers. It's dark in here, darker than outside, she
thought. Whatever
it is, it won't be able to see in. Cautiously, she stepped toward the
door. She
saw nothing at first, perhaps because she expected something large.
The cry came
again, "Eeee-ooowm!" It was so unlike anything she had ever heard
before that it made her
shudder. Several seconds passed before she realized that
the muddy lump of snow below the
caves was not snow at all, but something
capable of motion. It appeared to squirm toward
her, to stop, then to wriggle
forward again as if hesitant, afraid, or merely weak.
She
couldn't see very well in the eerie storm light, separated from whatever it
was by double
panes of reflective door glass. It occurred to her that it might
be an animal in need of
help. Having had this thought, she knew what she would
do, though it took her a moment to
stop denying it. If she did not open the
door, guilt would gnaw at her all night. If she
did open it, what precisely
could she lose? At most, a joyless life.
She depressed the latch
and opened the door. Freezing air swept into the room.
Crumblings of snow fell onto the
carpet. She leaned out for a better look. The
thing beneath the caves scuttled toward her
in a silent flurry; Esmeralda's
heart flung itself painfully against her ribs. She saw icy
flakes drifting out
of its path as if each second had lengthened. She saw it spring upward
and
watched, unable to move quickly enough, as bright claws unsheathed. Just before
it
attached itself to her shoulders, she saw marbles of snow frozen in the fur
of its belly.
It was a cat! A scrawny, applesauce-colored tom.
Reflexively, she ripped it from herself
and flung it back into the cold
darkness. Its grip was so desperate that it tore strips of
material from her
nightgown, and left bleeding trails in her skin. She stood stunned as
chill air
hit the scratches and pain scorched everything else from her mind. The cat gave
its pitiful half-human cry again, "Eeee-ooowm!" as it struggled to right itself
in the deep
snow. She realized slowly and with surprise that it had not landed
on its feet, but rather
messily on one side. She wondered if it were sick, or
just half frozen. Behind her, the
saints crowded curiously in the doorway, noses
held forward to catch the scent of the
stranger.
She couldn't decide what to do. She felt indignant and betrayed. She had opened
the door thinking of an injured animal in need of her help, a small, frightened
being to
take in and nurture and make happy, a way to pass the lonely night in
the glow of good
works. Instead, she'd received a terrible shock and scratches
that bled and stung. The
animal didn't behave like a cat, but like some deranged
parody of one, a creature with
something wrong inside that neither warmth nor
food nor perhaps even love could cure.
Snowflakes
collected on her eyelashes and in her hair. She trembled. "No," she
said. The word fell
short, stopped by falling snow. So she said it again, more
loudly. "No!"
She stepped in and
closed the door. Left outside on the step, the tom howled.
She headed toward the bathroom
-- the medicine cabinet filled with friendly
swabs and disinfectants and plasters --
turning on lights as she went. The cats
followed her, mewing with concern and questions.
She lifted the bloody nightgown
carefully over her head, dropped it in a corner. Saints
Joan and Cecilia sniffed
it delicately. Saints Eustace and Sebastian made so bold as to
lick at a
particularly blood-dampened strip.
Esmeralda gazed at her disheveled image in the
mirror.Her hair was wet. Snow
water dripped into raw furrows that ran from her collar bones
to her breasts.
Below the scratches, the snow water continued in pink-tinted runnels over
breasts elongated by years of nursing, the rounded hill of her stomach, down
toward the
whitening thatch of her womanhood, discuses and almost forgotten. She
would have to clean
herself in a hot bath.
She ran steaming water, added oils of peach and cinnamon, smells
that made her
think of summer and kitchens and children. She lay back in the tub and let
the
water lap at her chin. After the first stinging moments, the pain from the cat's
claws
subsided. She closed her eyes. The only sounds were the dripping of the
faucet, and far off
in the snow, "Eeee-ooowm! Eeee-ooowm!" It sounded almost
like her name.
Perhaps it was that
thought that made her go back to the door after she was
clean and warm, her scratches
comfortably dressed, the fire leaping above a
fresh log. The cat still crouched on the
doorstep, half an inch of snow
glimmering on its wet fur. Every cry contained the tremolo
of its shivers. She
wondered how the other cats would react to this foreigner in their
midst if she
brought it inside, and whether it would hurt them as it had her. She couldn't
leave it outdoors to die. It was a bad thing to do, a thing that could ruin any
shred of
peace she might be lucky enough to find on this wretched night. She got
a towel, threw it
over the moaning creature, and lifted it carefully. It stopped
crying immediately. This
time, it seemed too far gone even to move, let alone
strike with its claws.
She carried it
to the hearth, where she toweled it until its fur stood up in
damp tufts. It barely
stirred. At times, she worried that it had died. The other
cats seemed consumed with badly
disguised interest. They stepped in feathery
circles around her and the newcomer, sniffing
the wet fur, rubbing against it
almost affectionately, retreating in disdain to lick
themselves, then returning
to repeat the ritual. She detected no sign of flattened ears or
twitching tails.
Their reaction was not what she had expected, yet she understood it. The
tom did
not smell like one. In Esmeralda's experience, tom cats -even dry -- carried
with
them an odor of maleness so pungent and insistent that it was obvious even
to the human
nose. Tom cats, when wet, stank intolerably. She had prepared
herself for this. Instead,
she found the scent that rose up from the stranger's
fur mild and somehow familiar, though
she could not name it. Inexplicably, it
made her feel more kindly toward him.
She wrapped
him in a soft blanket and cuddled him in the crook of one arm while
she heated a little
milk on the stove. Because the cat was too weak to stand and
drink, she dipped the comer of
a cloth into the milk and let him suck it like a
teat, brushing at his paws when he tried
to knead her as if she were his mother.
Before long, he began to purr, and stretched
against her in contentment. For the
first time in months, a few faint beams of cheer found
their way through her
grief. Perhaps the tom had only scratched her out of desperation,
knowing
somehow that if he clung to her, he would be warm and safe.
Weary and thinking of
bed, Esmeralda fixed the new arrival a nest in front of
the hearth. She continued to hold
him as she shuffled through the house
gathering old towels and blankets. The saints
followed, sniffing and prancing
leaping onto shelves and tabletops for a better look at
him.
Esmeralda addressed them somewhat distractedly. "What do you think, my dears?
Shall we
keep him? Does he please you?"
She accepted their mews and purrs as answers. "I agree," she
said. "A period of
probation. But I think we all like him, don't we? What's his name, do
you
suppose?"
Nothing came to mind. She was too tired to think of a name. "There you go,
dear,"
she said as she laid him in the soft nest.
But he wouldn't have it. He stuck to her, claws
prickling through her nightgown,
eyes large. "Eeee-ooowm!" he cried. "Eeee-ooowm!" again
and again, producing a
tickle along her spine. The cry was so uncatlike, and with each
repetition,
seemed more and more like her name, "Em, Era," preposterous though it seemed.
In the end, she wrestled another log onto the fire, wrapped herself and the tom
in the
quilt, and lay down on the couch. The other cats snuggled in warm heaps
around her. She
sighed and closed her eyes, stroking the tom's head, enjoying
his purrs as they mingled
with those of the others.
"Is it better now, dear?" she murmured. "Yes, I thought so. Dear.
Maybe that's
your name."
She fell asleep with his strange, familiar smell in her nose, and a
sense of
well-being which she had not expected to feel again as long as she lived.
The next
morning she fried bacon, not because she had an appetite for it
herself, but because she
wanted drippings to pour over the tom's food. He was
terribly emaciated and wobbly on his
feet. She cooked a pound, far more than she
could eat by herself, so there was plenty of
grease for all five of the cats and
strips of meat as well. She couldn't imagine bacon
without eggs, so she fried a
few, ate two herself, and gave the cats what was left.
"Do you
like eggs, dear?" she asked as she mixed the tom's portion into his
food. "They're over
easy, a favorite in this house."
Watching him eat the bacon-and-egg-drizzled food was an
experience of exquisite
gratification. He crunched and grunted and moaned in pleasure, and
periodically
gazed up at her adoringly. She knew that he would have smiled if it were
possible.
She could not resist sweeping him into her arms when he was finished.
With the tom in the
house, the remainder of the winter passed quickly. He was
lovable and charming, never
sprayed, never sharpened his claws on the furniture.
He kept himself meticulously clean,
and eschewed fighting with either strange
cats or the saints. He adored watching
television, and would perch in a chair
watching the screen for hours at a time. Any program
would do, though it seemed
to Esmeralda that football fascinated him most. At night, he
slept in the place
of honor, on the pillow beside her head. Though she had never seen him
bat or
bare his teeth, the other cats deferred to him in a way she would never have
predicted
and could not explain. Sometimes, they even let him clean them. She
often wondered about
his past. He seemed so civilized. He must have had owners.
What had happened to them?
By
early spring, the tom had gained weight and looked as vigorous as a new
furnace, freshly
stoked and radiant. His short fur grew glossy and gorgeous in
variegated shades of caramel
and orange. She thought about names. She pored over
The Lives of the Saints, but couldn't
find one that fit, he seemed at once so
jovial and unsaintly. So she continued to think of
him as "the tom," and to call
him "dear" when she spoke to him.
One night as she lay in bed
with her cheek against his fur and the saints curled
purring around her, she realized
abruptly why his scent seemed so familiar. It
was a certain leathery tartness, difficult to
describe but unforgettable. He
smelled like Maurice.
She sat up and stabbed blindly at the
lamp switch, knocking magazines and cups
off the bedside table. Startled, Saint Cecilia
yowled and leaped to the floor.
Esmeralda's pulse thrummed in her throat, her wrists, her
ears. She bent and
sniffed the tom's fur. Maurice!
Tears rolled down her cheeks. How could
she be sure? She threw off the covers
and stumbled to the closet, slid hangers across the
bar ferociously looking for
some unwashed item of her dead husband's clothing. But the
children had been
thorough, and she too much in shock to stop them. It was bad for her to
have his
wardrobe there beside her own, they said, a constant painful reminder of his
absence.
They had given his things to Goodwill. Nothing remained. Not so much as
a sock or a
handkerchief.
She couldn't go to sleep, so she donned a robe and slippers and wandered to
the
kitchen to heat a glass of milk. It was March, and outside the wind snarled
through the
trees and tugged at the caves. Every few minutes, a gust shook the
house. She disliked it
far more than the listless peace of falling snow.
"I wish I were one of your cats," Maurice
had said on the morning of his death.
Silly. She had said it then, and she thought it now.
Had her troubles finally
driven her off the deep end? Fresh tears came, and she dabbed them
away with the
tissue she kept in her sleeve. She didn't want the milk, but she tried to
drink
it anyway. Perhaps attracted by the sound of her sipping and sobbing, the tom
appeared.
He sat in the middle of the rug, gazing at her with his head tipped
and his tail twitching
ever so slightly.
She noticed then, for the first time really, how much he'd filled out
since his
arrival. He had developed the build of a scrapper -- square and compact, with a
large neck and wide shoulders. His legs were short, and had become thick, so
that he
embodied a kind of amiable stability. Everything about him suddenly
reminded her of
Maurice.
She covered her face with her hands and wept. Gathered around her ankles, the
saints
rubbed and cried at her distress, while the tom licked through the gaps
in her fingers with
his rough, tickly tongue.
She began to attend the village book group again, and to clean
the house once a
week. She called an old friend and went to lunch with her. And on Sundays,
she
cooked chicken.
She and the cats thrived. She became rosy cheeked; the phone rang often;
she
took up watercolors again. In April, she cultivated the perennials in the
cottage garden
and planted fresh annuals -- zinnias, petunias, marigolds. She
called the children and
invited them to spend weekends. Sometimes they came,
often they did not, and she would
spend a day or two in melancholic longing for
their company. But the cats, and especially
the tom, were good company, too.
Saints Eustace and Cecilia, the younger cats, grew chunky
around the middle.
Sebastian, Joan, and the tom grew fat. It was such a joy to watch them
eat, to
please them with tasty portions of their favorite dishes w meats, gravies,
drippings.
In the middle of June, the tom became ill. Walking across the room, he suddenly
wobbled and
fell on his side. He could not get up. Esmeralda rushed him to the
veterinarian's office,
panic lodged in her throat.
The doctor kept him for several days, and sent her home with an
admonishment.
"He has a bad heart. You feed him too much. He needs to lose weight."
"Yes,
doctor," she said, feeling hollow as a drum. She stopped on the way home
to buy special
food.
The tom hated it. He howled for an hour before resorting to his low-calorie
kibbles.
"Eeee-ooowm! Eeee-ooowm!" he cried. Esmeralda thought her heart would
shatter.
She couldn't
bear to watch him, to listen as he yowled at the door while, on
Sundays, the saints
devoured their usual portions of roast chicken and gravy.
What could it hurt, she thought,
to give him a bite or two of white meat? He
took it from her fingertips, with the look of
adoration that made her feel
bright and holy somehow. A part of her recoiled at this, and
she tried
frantically to replace her satisfaction with guilt.
It was August when she yielded
to his cries of indignation and allowed him to
join the other cats for Sunday dinner. She
wouldn't give him anything else, she
promised herself, no breakfast drippings, no scraps.
It was just once a week,
and if she were stern, it shouldn't make much difference.
One
evening in October as the days grew short and chilly, she found him lapping
at her bourbon
and 7-Up as she bustled around the kitchen.
She pushed him away firmly, but he came back
again with a pleading mew, and this
time she let him drink, smiling and shaking her head at
the sight.
When she picked up the drink to sip it herself, she was surprised to hear his
plaintive, "Eeee-ooowm!"
"What?" she said, disapproving. "It's mine, dear, and you have no
business
drinking it anyway. It's not good for you."
"Eeee-hm! Eeee-hm!" said the tom, so
clearly that she stood as if turned to
salt.
Just this once, some part of her thought. He
was like the cottage garden, like
the children, like the saints. She knew how to please
him, and it gave her great
joy. She observed herself with horror as she set the glass down
and let him lap
from it again.
"What could it hurt?" she whispered, tears brimming over to
cool her cheeks and
blur the sight, while somewhere in her heart wine-yellow flowers of joy
unfolded
into bloom.