Cats!
My wife and I rented three upstairs rooms in a big old house in White Hall, Virginia, right after we married. The house was the original “White Hall,” we were told, where travelers boarded in the old days on their way from Charlottesville across the mountains. We loved that place. It sat on a ridge overlooking a picturesque field where Angus cattle grazed.
My wife was hanging our wash on the clothesline in the side yard one afternoon when a furry black cat with white markings walked up to her and rubbed against her leg. She followed my wife up the outside stairwell to our balcony entrance and came inside. She was so friendly and playful we figured she was someone else’s pet and turned her out that night, but she was waiting for us on the stairs the next day when we came home from work. We played with her and fed her, and she curled up and went to sleep at the foot of our bed.
The old house had a problem with mice. I’d set traps but hadn’t caught anything. I awoke that night to a loud thump followed by crunching sounds. I’ll spare you the description of what I saw when I flicked on the light. Suffice it to say, we named the cat, Mousy; she moved in with us; and our problem with mice went away.
We fell in love with her and the feeling seemed mutual.
Then one night we came home and she wasn’t there. We called her, but she didn’t come. I searched the neighboring yards. No sign of her. “Field cats like to roam,” I told my wife. “She’ll come home soon.”
But she didn’t come home. Five nights into it, I was worried sick and couldn’t sleep. I got up and went looking for her again. I searched all the same places. Still no sign of her. An old barn sat in the cow pasture at the bottom of the hill below our house. It seemed like a good place to hunt mice, and I hadn’t looked there before so I climbed the fence and headed down there.
The cattle stood together in the moonlight by a creek near the barn. As I walked down the slope, they began to bawl. Then a dozen of them broke away from the herd and charged up the hill toward me. I grew up in White Hall, and I’d walked through fields of cattle at night before without a problem. A farmer later told me, “Cattle can get skittish when a stranger passes through their field at night. Sometimes they kick up a big ruckus and charge at him.”
“Wish I’d known that before I started down that hill,” I said.
When the cattle came running at me, I was too far from the fence to make it to safety, so I shimmied up the nearest tree, a locust tree, and watched the cattle run beneath me and on up to the top of the ridge, where they stomped around and continued to bawl.
Another piece of information that would have come in handy that night is that locust trees have big sharp thorns all along their trunks and branches. Scratches and welts striped my arms and hands, and they stung and bled.
Worse yet, the cattle had cut me off from the house. My only way out of the field was to outrun the cattle down to the barn, and from there, try to make it over a fence that bordered the road.
The thorns ripped me again as I climbed down, but I hit the ground running. The cattle drummed down the hill after me. They were almost on me when I dove through the barn door and closed it behind me.
When I’d collected my wits, such as they were, I searched the barn. No Mousy, of course.
The barn had a back door that faced the road. I snuck out the back and jumped the fence before the cattle realized I’d flown the coop.
Worn out and dejected, I walked up the road to Wyant’s Store and on over to our house. It was about midnight when I got home.
“Guess who’s here!” my wife cried out when I opened the door.
Mousy lay on our bed. She’d come home while I was climbing the cursed locust tree. She’d lost weight and she was filthy but she wasn’t hurt. I looked like a walking advertisement for iodine, but Mousy was back with us so I didn’t complain.
Couple months later, we came home on a cold rainy night to find Mousy on our welcome mat, desperately trying to keep two newborn kittens warm. We gathered them up, rushed inside, and held them over the radiator. One had already frozen to death. The other, Geraldine, survived.
Shortly after that, we bought a little house in Crozet and the four of us moved to our new home.
Several months later Mousy disappeared again. Same drill. A frantic search with no success. Days later she came home filthy and bone-thin. Geraldine pulled the same trick the next week. Two months after that, we were awash in kittens.
I was talking to the guy next door one day about the mysterious disappearances when he burst out laughing. He’d grown up with cats. He told me what was going on. I was shocked.
“Mousy’s a slut,” I told my wife.
“What?”
“The times she disappears,” I said. “She’s running around doing it non-stop with every tomcat she can find. Geraldine’s no better.”
We placed the kittens in good homes and the cycle repeated. Our basement teemed with squirming little balls of fur. Having saturated Crozet with black cats with white markings, we ran out of adoption candidates. I finally broke down and emptied our bank account to spay Mousy, Geraldine, and the other three cats we couldn’t pay anyone to take.
They remained part of our family for the next two decades, and we adjusted our lives to accommodate them, sometimes without sensible regard for our future. We took them to Atlanta when I summer-clerked for a corporate law firm there. The night we arrived, a senior partner helped us smuggle our five cats into a no-pets motel, shuffling along carrying a cat under each arm, giggling like a little kid. I figured they’d never offer me a permanent job after that night, but for reasons I still don’t understand, our ardent devotion to our cats seemed to work in my favor.
The cats made big adjustments, too. They moved with us three thousand miles cross-country back and forth three times, once by car, twice in the bellies of airplanes, until we finally settled down in LA, where Mousy, the Virginia country cat, and her brood seemed content to live out their golden years in tinsel town.
Mousy retained some of her down-home country instincts, though. She still stalked mice in our garage, and one Christmas, she got a crazed look on her face, climbed to the top of our fully decorated tree, and brought it crashing down on the living room floor. Trying to suppress a smile as I cleaned up the mess, I was secretly glad that some of the field cat we loved so much had survived all the radical changes.
Mousy and her offspring left us one by one in the late 80’s. Lazy Bones, the last of her line, laid down beside our pool one breezy summer day in 1990, stretched out, yawned, and went to sleep for good, bringing to a close Mousy’s long happy chapter in our lives.
The first of many cats and dogs who lived with my wife and me over our fifty years together, she was the only one who adopted us, instead of the other way around. She gave us the great gifts of love and loyalty, except during those sex-crazed binges, for which we forgave her. She’ll always hold a special place in our hearts.
Post Script: I wrote this piece for Mousy on National Cat’s Day. She was a great cat in all respects.
Gay Bell
February 11, 2018 @ 6:19 am
Truthfully, she has always been a delight. She speaks highly of the joy of working with you, too.
Gay Bell
February 8, 2018 @ 7:55 pm
Ken I loved reading about Mousy. She’s a dead ringer for our cat Jinx, the cat your friend, my daughter, Bobbye Marrs grew up with. She was known for cattin’ around too before we finally caught her between litters.
Ken
February 9, 2018 @ 10:01 am
Thanks, Gay! Sounds like Jinx was another engaging cat. Your daughter Bobbye is smart, witty, and great fun to work with. She and PFH talked me into writing this blog in the first place. Her good humor and great help have powered me through some frustrations with it. I’m very fond of her. You must have raised her right!
Nandita Banerjee
January 30, 2018 @ 6:07 pm
Loved the story. Thanks for sharing it with us.
Ken
January 30, 2018 @ 6:08 pm
Thanks, Nandita.
Barbara
January 29, 2018 @ 6:04 am
Hello Ken.….……just finished printing your story to send to our NC children/grands. Their cat story reads abit like yours and even my cat story too! Such fun to hear others adventures with cats. And since I grew up on a cattle farm .……your adventure with the cows also!
Thank you for sharing! Barbara Mc
Ken
January 29, 2018 @ 9:34 am
Thanks, Barbara. I hope your children and grandchildren enjoy the post. It was fun to write. Brought back a lot of fond memories.
Linda Fast
January 28, 2018 @ 11:28 am
I loved reading this! Thanks!
Ken
January 28, 2018 @ 1:09 pm
Thanks, Linda!
Larry Lamb
January 27, 2018 @ 10:15 am
Ken,I loved the cat story and White Hall house in it.We have a black and white cat that our daughter took in called Wayland.He was a lot like your cat but a male.We adopted him when our daughter moved to Lynchburg Va.He is a house cat now and never wants to go outdoors.Living the good life here in Va. now.Wayland could be a offspring of your Mousy! Larry Lamb
Ken
January 27, 2018 @ 11:59 am
I saw Wayland’s picture on FB. He does look like Mousy. The house in White Hall belonged in those days to Mrs. Parrot. It was next to Adam Wyant’s house which was on the corner across from Wyant’s store and the community center on the other corner of the T intersection. Adam was David’s grandfather. I imagine Mrs. Parrot’s house is still there, but she died ten years ago and her daughter, Ann, lived in Phoenix last I heard, so I don’t know who owns it now. You being a first rate historian, I wonder if you know that house and if the history we were given is accurate. Some day when I’m back there I want to do a title search of the county records and see who originally owned it. It was a beautiful place.
Linda Beasley Graham
January 26, 2018 @ 9:38 pm
Wow! Kenny! Once again you have held my attention which is hard to do! I loved this little cat story. I felt like I was there outrunning the cows with you! You truly have a wonderful gift of storytelling. Thank you so much for sharing your talent and your beautiful stories. Warmest Regards for a very Happy New Year to you and your family, Your ole’ high school classmate, Linda Beasley Graham
Ken
January 27, 2018 @ 9:34 am
Thanks again, Linda!
Kelli Hastings
January 26, 2018 @ 7:31 pm
Your precious Mousy looks exactly like my Spunky. One difference! Spunky was a male. He ran away one day and never came back. I had him 2 years! Still miss him so much. I subscribe to your newsletter! Would love to read your Old Bull short story! How can I get it?
Ken
January 27, 2018 @ 9:41 am
I’m glad the story brought back fond memories of your Spunky for you. Two of our five cats were males, Lazy Bones and Marigold Eater (when you have so many, you run out of reasonable names!). You should have received The Old Bull when you signed up for the newsletter. We must have missed it somehow. I have it on a word document. I’ll send it to the email address for you listed here later today. Thanks for following my blog, Kelli!
Debbie T.
January 26, 2018 @ 7:00 pm
Made me cry! But I have had cats such as your Mousy! They have all crossed the Rainbow Bridge but they will always be in my heart!
Ken
January 27, 2018 @ 9:43 am
I cried more than a few tears, too, when I wrote this piece. Thanks for following my blog, Debbie!
Rita
January 26, 2018 @ 5:27 pm
Your Mousy looks just like my Little One which I still miss after five years. He was the only cat l ever had that have me kisses.
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 6:07 pm
Hi, Rita. I’m glad this story brought back fond memories of Little One. He sounds special, like Mousy.
Martha Michie Tanner
January 26, 2018 @ 4:30 pm
I love your stories, and kitty cats. My last beloved kitty, Mokie, died a year ago at age 21. Her mother was also our pet. I have quite a few amazing cat stories I could tell!
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 5:03 pm
Thanks, Martha! Cats are special pets. You should tell your cat stories!
Pat Dinhoble
January 26, 2018 @ 2:56 pm
Well, Ken, we are not all able to be cat aficionados, as some of us begin weeping and sneezing at first nuzzle, but you have made my heart ache for Scheherazade, our first and last family cat. At age 9, my brother spirited this fuzzball into his bedroom in a secret adoption ritual, which was not held secret for long…not stop sneezing began for my mother and me. In short order, Mother found the sweet culprit and found a new loving, non-sneezing home for her, where she could be visited by all the non allergic Lees. Thanks for the memories~
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:21 pm
Thanks, Pat, for sharing a special memory! I’m allergic to a lot of things, but I dodged the bullet with cats!
Judy Thomas
January 26, 2018 @ 2:41 pm
I loved your story! I love cats too and I am always getting ‘adopted’ by them. As my teenage daughter would say ‘reading this gave me the feels’ , thank you . 🙂
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:22 pm
Thanks, Judy! Hope this brought back good memories for you.
Susi Moffitt
January 26, 2018 @ 1:23 pm
I’m now 60 and grew up on a farm. I’ve always been around cats and dogs!
I’m now living with 11 cats, only 8 of which are mine, lol.
I love this story!! For Mousy to have claimed you was a huge reward for being good people. Thank you for having proven her right!!
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:25 pm
Thanks, Susi! Our peak population was 18. When we’d finally given 13 of those away, I got out the check book and headed to the vet with the remaining five. What a time we had!
Catherine C Fox
January 26, 2018 @ 12:53 pm
What a pleasure to read this evocative description of the lengths we go to in search of our roaming pets. And what a pleasure to experience such good writing!
This is so relatable, except I have never scurried up a prickly locust tree — what a hoot! I had a cat as a kid in Virginia that must have been identical country cousins with Mousy.
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:28 pm
Thanks, Catherine! Great to hear from you. Mousy was the cat in the first picture, big, beautiful, and good-natured.
Don
January 26, 2018 @ 12:48 pm
Once again, a wonderfully written and totally entertaining piece! Thank you, Brother Oder!
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:28 pm
Thanks, Don!
sue williams
January 26, 2018 @ 12:32 pm
Lovely story. I am a big cat lover and have always had cats, dogs, and at one point, two Chinchillas. Your cats in the pictures remind me of some of mine that have long since gone over the rainbow bridge. I still miss every single animal I have ever had.
Sue
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:31 pm
Thanks, Sue. Me, too. I miss all our pets, who have crossed that bridge. Strangely, writing this piece seemed to bring our cats back into the room for a little while.
Alberta
January 26, 2018 @ 12:20 pm
Enjoyed reading your story of your life with Mousy and her antics, cats are wonderful pets, my husband and I had many until 2 of our grandchildren are allergic.
Thanks for that wonderful story it brought back memories of our cats and the stream of kittens
Ken
January 26, 2018 @ 4:32 pm
Thanks, Alberta. I’m glad this brought back fond memories for you. Writing it did the same for me and my wife.