The Cat Lady—I’ll call her “Nancy”--came out and we talked. She’d been
working at the Humane Society, but she'd quit because she couldn’t bear the
euthanasia of hundreds of animals that was, in those days, part of the weekly routine. She was
as thin and tired-looking as her animals. I could see runny noses
indicative of the highly contagious Calci virus in almost every cat. My heart sank.
Even more sadly, most of the cats were wild. They depended
upon her for food and sheltered in the tumbledown barn, but they were
untouchable. As she could afford it on a
waitressing job, she'd neuter them and get them shots. She’d found a charitable
vet who cut prices for her, but her burden appeared insurmountable.
She and I sat down on the ground and waited. Eventually
three scrawny half-grown orange boys drew close. You could actually count their
ribs.
“I call them the Orange Brothers,” Nancy said. “They were almost starved to
death when I rescued them.” A veritable herd came in their wake as she opened the 10 lb. bag of kitty food I’d brought as an offering and dumped some on the ground.
The cats backed off as soon as I tried to touch, so I sat and waited. One of the Orange
Brothers took a few bites of kibble, then came to me. As soon as I began to pet him,
gently and carefully, he gave a roaring purr and threw himself into my lap. All
was well for about two minutes, and then he bit my arm hard, twisting the skin
almost to the breaking point. I didn’t resist. He let go and jumped away,
clearly expecting a slap or a shout of protest.
“He didn’t mean it,” Nancy
said. “He wants to be loved, but he gets too excited.”
I nodded and continued watching.
A moment later, the bony little tom climbed into my lap
again, purring his roaring purr. His fur was dry as straw as a result of malnutrition; his eyes were
golden. Long story short, I brought him home, to a house that already had
several cats. It took time to get him over the habit of reacting to petting with a bite, but with a lot
of affection and enough food, he toned these love bites down to a recognizable
level.
As he was lean and bright orange and I was working on a
Revolutionary War novel, I named him Hamilton. That heroic founding father had red
hair and a poverty-stricken childhood.
Rivington’s (Tory) Gazette printed this snide comment in
1775, when Hamilton
was a favorite aide de camp to General Washington:
“Mrs. Washington
has a mottled orange tomcat of whom she is so particularly fond, she has named
him ‘Hamilton.’ By the flaunting of his tail with the 13 rings around it the
Rebels have taken the idea for their flag.”
The name proved to fit this cat to a "T". Kitty Hamilton was a sensitive
soul, and did that tomcat peeing thing whenever he felt anxious or threatened.
He was also allergic to that kitty drug of choice, catnip. Until he
fattened up, a process which took more than a year, he could not hold his 'nip. If he managed to find some, I soon knew, because he lost control of his limbs,
fell down and peed all over himself like an old drunk. I’d have to cradle him
and soothe him until he came down, because he cried in fear the whole
time.
I never did manage to get him to stop marking. Any cat or person passing the house--even an argument with my husband--was
liable to set him off. I hadn’t wanted to let him outside, but he made
that motherly attempt to protect him impossible. He’d been a free kitty boy for
far too long. Like his glorious namesake, he came with a severe case of PTSD
which never went away—as well as a determination to be seen as a tomcat’s
tomcat, even after neutering.
My Hamilton
did not die in a duel, like our First Secretary of the Treasury, but he did
fight with all challengers at every opportunity, even if he was completely out-matched.
He was sometimes beaten up, but he usually attacked outsiders with such
berserker rage that they avoided our house like the plague.
He wanted to seem fearless, but his anxieties continually
undermined him. He expressed this by peeing on the refrigerator door, in
out-of-the-way corners, and on the backs of upholstered furniture, which I
swiftly learned to keep covered with washable throws. Climactically, he slew my
original CPU by peeing into the A Drive. A friend of mine said, “If that wasn’t
such a nice orange cat--and if his name wasn’t Hamilton--he’d be dead.” My husband heartily agreed, but Hamilton's lover-boy self and
willingness to lap sit, his smiling affability and charm aided his
survival.
Hamilton
always came when his name was called. He
greeted my husband when he returned from work, with a raised head
for a kiss, a motoring purr, waving that proud, banner-like tail. He slept in
our bed, curled around my head in winter, a living, purring hat. He helped me write any
number of books, lying beside--and, when he was fed up with "that damned typing" by standing in front
of--my monitor. He lived to be fourteen,
and is buried with other cats of blessed memory in the feline necropolis
beneath our Chinkopin tree.
~~Juliet Waldron
See all my historical novels at:
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