cats

tortoise

Trooper

During lockdown, my boy and I side-stepped the cockapoos and labradoodles and other needy creatures, and bought a tortoise. 

Cites certified. No longer common-place: Happily, the days when crate-loads were brought from sunny wild places to our damp gardens to die of our careless misunderstandings, belong in the past of my childhood, not in my son’s. 

We didn’t realise how terrifyingly tiny a nine-month-old tortoise was until, invited to choose him from among tortoise brothers and sisters, my boy picked him up to find he barely filled his hand.

I begged to call him ‘Zoom’ because he didn’t and at the time, everyone else did. 

Sensibly my boy put my joking aside. Observing that his shell looks like a World War soldier’s helmet and from that, understanding something of his nature, my boy named him ‘Trooper’. The naming of a tortoise, is every bit as grave a matter as the naming of cats.

If things turn out well, troop he will, through many years, maybe more than 50. Some tortoises live to 75. It is sobering to know that if we do this right, Trooper will easily outlive me and he could outlive us both. Me in my half-century, my boy in his 10 per cent.

My son didn’t miss the irony that I had said no, to an earlier offer of a baby gecko once I realised they live 15 years. “Oh but, the live crickets”, I said. 

Tortoises are vegetarian. Having clinched the deal and surprised that I had said yes at all let alone so quickly, my boy promised me he was ready for the life-long responsibility. Then he and I promised each other, solemnly, that we would remember to leave tortoise to our children in our wills.

Tortoise-housing being hard to come by in lockdown, we cajoled our handy neighbour to make a big ‘tortoise table’ and one exciting day, the most eventful in a long time, we brought the baby tortoise home. 

Trooper will grow to the size of a small melon, but for now he sits in the palm of my hand. His front legs are heroically spiked. He is a Spur-thighed Iberian. We have claimed him as Greek, though in truth his is a scattered turkish sort of wandering greek from further along. The sort that existed before nation-building Attaturk burned the greekness out of ancient trading cities. 

Moving in such a way with such a wiggle that his wrinkled graceless back legs remind me of the cutest chubby human baby-crawling, pushing onwards, from under the frilly rear of his shell. He walks on his claws as on tippy-toes, scratching and tickling our hands.

Waiting watchful, as time warms our blood like sunshine we are learning to live in tortoise-time.  As he warms his lash-less lids blink over poppy-seed eyes. Dark and shiny as oil. Looking at each other and nodding in tortoise greeting, we know we cannot cross into each other’s particular sort of time and space for long, but we are growing to understand each other well enough. 

Mostly he is slow and sleepy but when charged by solar power,  and motivated by an appetite for dandelion leaves and clover, he stretches out his wrinkly neck, and embarks on surprisingly speedy and resolute manoeuvres. If he can push his way through an obstacle, he will. If he can see the horizon he heads for it, with determination. 

Encased, his tough shell exposes his utter vulnerability. Pale green belly plastron, geometric shell embellished with green, gold and black scoots. Did you know that tortoises can feel through their shells, being both as tough and tender as human finger-nails in nail beds?

Lockdown made our own time race, and stand still. As our horizons widened to places we had never heard of before, we were not allowed more than a walk around the block. Confined together at home when we emerged we were like newborns, taking in big lungfuls of air. Suddenly all too conscious that breath becomes air becomes breath and in becoming breath becomes air all over again. 

When time slowed for me like this before, it came upon me quickly and caught me alone. This time, it came upon us all, and with more warning. On the last day before everything closed, me and my boy went and had our hair cut, and I carried home a disinfecting cleaning spray, a pack of polenta (Waitrose was clean out of pasta), and a four-pack of loo roll, not more so as not to look greedy, but enough. 

We were ready enough, and by now I knew how mundane catastrophe can be. 

The last time something like this happened, when I needed to find stillness in the middle of the storm, I would climb into my son’s bed and floating in the darkened room with a nightlight for the moon, we would cuddle as I read him bed time stories. Sweet two-and-a-half he delighted in reading the same stories over again and again. But later each night, alone in my own time, I stopped my childhood habit of reading the last page first and the thrill of reading ahead a little before placing the bookmark back a bit. I was scared and too agitated to concentrate on anything beyond the present racing moment. I stopped reading for myself, altogether. 

Seeing him so small then, chubby legs, walking on the tips of his toes, pushing himself forwards with a wiggle of his nappy, I knew I had to walk with him longer and further than his little footsteps could take him yet. He was far far from ready to walk his own way towards the horizon. I didn’t know if I could go with him but I did, one step at a time, one breath at a time, not planning beyond the next hospital appointment, not booking the next summer’s holiday, not organising teatime playdates beyond the next week of school. Until almost before I knew it, we were here eight years on and it was discombobulating that as the world grew bigger while rapidly contracting, I felt the relief of the familiar. 

I welcomed the simplification because it had become the only way I really know how to live. I was content again with my boy in our night-time boat, because in truth, I had never disembarked, never reached the shore. 

I thought how nice it might be to get a puppy so that all three of us could walk, and enthusiastically share a common purpose, but walking wasn’t that much fun when everything familiar had become strange because you had to swerve away from every other human and their nonsensically enthusiastic dog. Besides, at least one or two of the cats would probably have left home in a huff. 

So this time, when it came to the end of the everyday and the new was far from normal, I didn’t want to walk anywhere with anything.

I wanted to slow down every breath, every moment, and blink my dark eyes in the sun.

I wanted, knowing that the last page is there , not to skip ahead and read it yet, but simply read the story in between. I wanted to grow my own tortoise-shell, being so tender inside and learn to live in tortoise-time.

What I wanted, all along but didn’t know it, until my son pestered me a little during lockdown, was to know mortality and still to dare – to have a tortoise. 

paper birds

Standing at the doorway smiling, M handed me a cardboard box. Nesting inside were stacks of neatly-folded letters: flocks of origami-birds.

Other hands before mine had folded them, and tied them with bands. Each bundle had a bright orange post-it note with a scribbled code. “They’re ordered by ward and walking-route”, M said. “Best not mix them up”. As if I would. A little calm orderliness felt good in these chaotic times. A little calm ordinariness, cheery, earnest. Leaflets, a cup of strong, builders’ tea and digestive biscuits. Such an English response to the rising waters. Sometimes, I am so terribly English, for a Greek. But then, we share the same patron saint, George, and a dragon’s a dragon, whichever cave you find it in.

Later, I sat on my bed gently pushing the first letters into envelopes that swelled and fluttered in readiness for flight. Their destinations ranged from – sacred to ecclesiastical to secular; St George’s, St Paul’s, Bishopston, Easton, Knowle, and sent me on a map tour of the familiar city in my head. Big green leafy parks, arenas filled with the clattering rush of hard skate wheels on concrete as kids flip and jump and trip over their feet and boards. Hills and traffic and tagging, and unremarkable street after street.

The reason for the box of letters goes back nearly three years to the EU referendum result. Like many I did not sleep well that night, nervously listening to the results coming in on the radio. As the night went on nerves turned to shock, though at the point I dozed off, I was still hopeful that London, stately, scuzzy, pick-n-mix, sugar-rush London, might save the day, in an odd-couple alliance with dour salt-and-water-porridge Scotland.

Instead, I woke on the morning of 24 June 2016 to find that half the country had left the rest of us at home while they embarked on a massive resentment-fuelled bender. None of us knew then how long the hangover would last. It has turned out to be a very long morning after the 70-or so years before. Half the country dressing-up as John Bull in drag every Friday night, chanting meaningless anthems, and drinking themselves silly on imported lager, and gin&tonic before spewing-up bile in the streets. Johnny foreigner looks on with pursed lips and a shake of his head, while the disappointed spouses plot and dream of putting a stop to it all with a mass group intervention.

That morning after, at the gates of my boy’s multi-lingual, multi-coloured school, parents – English, Irish, Hungarian, Algerian, Somalian, West Indian, Polish, American, all of them Bristolian one way or another, were dropping off their children, as usual. Regardless of skin tone, their faces were tighter and paler. A few of us hugged each other but we didn’t have much to say. Disbelief, robbed us of our words, as overnight we found ourselves displaced and disorientated in an unfamiliar new England.

Walking to work after drop off, I did what I do in times of profound crisis: I phoned my dad. “It feels bad, I’ve never felt this was a hostile place before, this is frightening”
“Darling, don’t worry” he said. “It has always been here: English people, they smile at you and are polite. They will come and eat food with you, and be your friend. But really, they think thy are better than you. You are not one of them”, he said.

After work, I went online, and did the other thing I do in times of profound crisis, I bought a kitten from the small-ads. This time from a woman staying with friends and two dogs and three cats in an ex-council flat in Weston-super-Mare. She had just split up, she said. Was looking for a place of her own. She advertised the little tabby as “beautiful part Bengal”. I knew from the photo the mixed-heritage was wishful thinking. But I happily handed over 5 £20 notes, fresh from the cash point, and ignored the white-lie that pushed the price up. I thanked her and drove back home with my new kitten mewing then curling to sleep on the fleece blanket I had bought her in my lunch hour. The estates of Weston were draped with flags of St George hanging limply from bedroom and van windows.

So here we were almost three years later, Minnie, my stout tabby helping me by lounging at the end of the bed and casting a critical eye over my efforts. I tickled her chin and carried on putting euro-election leaflets in envelopes a little more quickly.

Realising half way through that I had not yet read he letter, I unfolded one and the word “Sorry” leapt out. I started to notice the names. In some streets, there was an overabundance of consonants: Grzegorz, Bartlomiej, Agnieszka; In others, an abundance of gods and goddesses: Athena, living on a grey street 10 minutes away. Aphrodite, 20 minutes away. And the spark of recognition, of reaching out, was as bright and warming as a camp fire. And so we carried on, my very own goddess Minnie-Minerva, and I stuffing envelopes. My big high bed, became our arc in the rising waters from where we would send out our fragile little birds.

Minnie chased a few around, hoping to crunch on white-paper bones, then seriously considered sleeping in the box they had come in.

When the waters subside, a bird will come back with a twig in its beak.

e.antoniou 7.6.2019.

red breast

red breast

Home, and at the front door the cats scattered before us. Mr Pickles, still kittenish, quivering hello before running into the hallway tumbling into Minerva, my fat mackerel tabby, and Ginger, skittish nervous ginger. The two girl cats growl and swipe then catching his excitement, follow. 

“Too many cats”, I say. 

“You can’t have too many cats”, my boy says “unless they’re piled to the sky”.

“Ha, that would be too many”.

My November poppy is still splashed red on the breast of my coat. All day at work, fragments of the weekend’s Remembrance Sunday singing, half tunes and phrases babble back into my head  – not faded to silence yet: not even after a hundred years. 

Ev-er-y-one suddenly burst out singing: 

And I was filled with such delight 

As prisoned birds must find in freedom,’

Remembrance Sunday – 100 years after the end of the first World War. My boy, L sat smiling at me from the audience as I sang. His flame-haired friend A, sat with him and they swung their legs.

He sat and watched and listened in the chapel. So serious and happy aged 8 nearly 9 and I glimpsed the man in him, sharpening features, his soft soft pale cheeks. I wince to think he will shave one day. And him fresh from his own on-line battle games where the dead re-spawn. ‘bang, bang, bang…’ “Please turn it down a bit”, the noise the constant noise of skirmishes and bravado. It is wonderful and terrifying to be the mother of a boy.

He had sat still and patiently, as well-spoken women read Siegfried Sassoon, of “the choirs. The shrill demented choirs of wailing shells”. I wondered what he made of it all.

After school the next day, as I took off my coat, the air picked up a layer something dark and rolled it along the hallway until it settled in the gap behind a mirror which I had propped up for the time being against the wall. 

The tune flurried and whirled still.

Drifted away…O, but Everyone’…

Bending to unlace my boots, I realised it was not dust, but a drift of downy feathers, curling dark and light as smoke on breath. More feathers further along. The song caught in my throat. “O, but”,

…“wait here a minute”, I said, walking quickly ahead of my boy and following the cats to the kitchen. “How about you watch Cartoon Network”.

But my boy was still following right behind me. My three cats were circling around dark-eyed with excitement. Mr Pickles’ tail all fluffy and his ears pricked up. Always something comical to me about black and white cats. They walk about our ordinary lives fussily overdressed in ill-fitting evening-wear: black coats, white bibs, un-buttoned spats. Suburban Felix-the-cats dancing to Jazz between the wars and into my childhood. 

My very own jazz-time cat was now growling and worrying something in the corner. 

“No, No, get off, Pickles, go’way”. I banged on the table but the thing he had was too exciting for me to scare him off. I pushed his thin strong body away, until I could see what the fuss was about.

The tune still loud in my head, I looked down at rust orange breast feathers. Poppies in the mud. Finely carved beak, and legs and clawed feet curved and as fine as the twining stems of clematis in the garden where he sang this summer.

Little dead star eyes. No breath left. He looked immaculate untouched. 

I thanked Death for being so clean and tidy in my kitchen. 

“Oh Pickles, you horrid cat”, I said putting myself between him and poor dead Robin. The girl cats looked on , sitting back and letting Mr Pickles take the blame. “Away, away”, and I scattered them out, my boy helping me shut them out.

Our heads nearly touched and my boy’s eyes were wide, and serious, as we looked down at the poor dead bird, “Isn’t he beautiful,”, I said, looking at the coloured feathers, his vibrant yellow beak.  “I’m sorry, Mr Robin, I am sorry”.

“Poor bird. But it’s not Pickles’ fault is it. You can’t stop instinct, said my son, who builds homes for insects in the garden. 

“Can you keep the cats away, and I’ll take him outside?”.

“Mum, can we dig a grave for him?”

But I remembering the time I tried to dig a grave in the garden for a fox who had inconsiderately curled up in my flower-bed to die, and even though, robin would take a lot less digging, said, maybe, let me see. I carried the quieted bird outside, wrapped him in a brown paper bag from the recycling box and put him gently and guiltily in the bin, from where the cats could not drag him back out to play again.

Back in the warm, I asked, “Do you know the story of the Robin? How he got his red feathers?”, L shook his head. “He felt sorry for Christ. Tried to pull off his crown of thorns. One pricked his breast and made him bleed.”  

Soon poppies will turn to holly berries. Red splashes.

I had vacuumed the feathers, they were everywhere.

And still the song in my head, on a high cadence rising, throbbing into the air …

Was a bird: and the song was wordless; The singing will never be done.

(c) e.antoniou 2018

poem – everyone sang – siegfried sassoon musical setting by raymond warren.

chicken and rice

CAT by L.A.U. 2018

The day the vet came to our house, I held my old cat, and hugged her on the floor, while we killed her as kindly as we could. 

I could feel the bones of her spine and her chest under softest black fur. Charcoal black – her name in Japanese. The tiniest scattering of salt, a whisker, a hair here and there. 

21 years of my life, were hers too. 

My husband, played with her in her kittenhood. His big feet and her tiny paws thundering around our two-up-two-down with bits of string, ribbon, feathers. He would poke string through boxes, trail it provocatively around the bannisters, coax her from under the bed with it- cat-fishing until she would collapse and sleep as only kittens can sleep. Deeply and snuggled between us, her stomach puffing in and out with her breath.

My long-legged lover, 6”2 or 3’ whose feet stuck out the end of the duvet. The first time he tangled in bed with me, she bit down hard on his toes. He yelped, then laughed, and I knew he was a good ‘un. 

My boy’s father, who sneezed as his eyes closed-up red but promised me he did like cats as I offered him antihistamine? Not a good sign, thinking back. 

She was constant. Always close. Familiar. 

In her old age she sabotaged my boy’s first efforts at walking. He talked before he walked. When he finally got round to making the effort, my elderly cat stretched herself from zen-like-communion with the sofa, and transformed into NINJA CAT, darting lightening-quick between his legs.

“Ohhhhh CAT!”, he would say with an upward lilt in his voice as he pointed his finger and wobbled off balance. Then “OWWW” his face crumpling as he landed hard on his bottom. Ninja-Cat darting out of reach. 

The day before, when I had phoned the vet and made arrangements, I tried to tempt her with a little boiled chicken and rice. I held out scraps in the flat of my hand and she took a few, scraping my palm with her sandpaper tongue. Our last communion.

We had a long history of chicken and rice. Plain boiled chicken and rice kept her alive when ten years earlier the vet said in all seriousness, your cat cannot tolerate cereal. Cats are not designed to eat wheat.  She was way ahead of the whole Paleo-food-thing. 

There were plenty of other things she could not tolerate as well as cheap wheat-bulked cat food:  My toddler-nephew’s attentions included. His poor podgy arm punctured with her claws when he poked it through the back of the chair where she sat, looking sleepy and furry- Ohhh CAT! Then bang bang bang three times with her claws and HOOOOOWL.

“Nasty Cat” it said on a subsequent, vet’s notes. I had taken her because she was chewing the fur off her stomach. The Vet left the room to get something, leaving his computer on,  so I read his notes. We changed to a different vet. Thinking back, perhaps it wasn’t accidental. Another few weeks of boiled chicken and rice improved her stomach and her temper.

The next vet wore a leather gauntlet. I had warned her apologetically, before cat changed from scared little hissy thing cowering in her basket, to satanic spidery clawed-thing, running up louvred blinds then upside-down across the ceiling. 

So when Cat, needed a vet the last time, I spared us all the whole scene from The Exorcist and the vet came to our house. My boy played in the kitchen and I could hear him chatting, while I held my cat a last time and then put her sleeping her last sleep, the sleep only cats can sleep, back into her basket for a little while.  She was stilll soft and warm, and it gave me time to say goodbye. 

DSH – Black, it said in her vet-book. Domestic Short-Haired black cat. 

Oh CAT! You were so much more to me than that.

 

dsh

e. leonaris 2018

the knot

For as long as I can remember, I have woken every morning with a tight knot in my stomach.

I can feel it now.  Sitting in bed with a  light warding off the dark, and tap tap tapping out words. Nervous energy. My body buzzes with constant anxiety – static – fear. 

I once worked with a woman who was sick every morning on the tube on her way to work. The first time it took her unexpected and she vomited in her handbag. Next time she was ready with a carrier bag. It was a question of when and where, not whether. “How far today?”, we would ask, smiling in anticipation of the latest episode of how she got to work. We weren’t lacking in sympathy but we delighted to hear of her puking in tight public spaces as surely as the Alien bursts out in every replay. She was our space-travelling Ripley.

Swapping to buses helped her a bit. Reaching her next trimester helped much more. Our morning talks became less about comical recounting of disgust and horror, and all about old-fashioned-names v celebrity made-up-ones, whether-to-avoid-gender-stereotyping when buying baby-gros, and how-long-does it take one husband to decorate a box-room nursery.

I had got this job through a morning sickness of my own. A dream starter job in publishing was a happy accident.  Driven by my own unhappiness to action, one lunchtime I bought a pad of A5 blue writing paper from the newsagent-come-off licence . In the greasy-spoon, me in my suit surrounded by men on breaks from building sites demolishing big plates of eggs bacon beans and chips, I wrote my first resignation letter. Steaming mugs of tea, conversations, and cigarette smoke condensed on the windows so that the water ran down as much on the inside as it did on the outside. A grey London day, when the only flashes of colour came from red buses that splashed wind-braced pedestrians with oily road puddles.  

Finally it was the knot in my stomach, purging my insides every morning, that pushed me to stop tolerating an intolerable situation. I could not carry on shaking and crying my way to the station and back. Once there, smile in place, brain in overdrive, no-one would ever have guessed the super-woman effort it took me to get there and stay.

The resignation letter led me to a publishing job, and my morning-sick work colleague, who fell away from my life after she had her baby, only remembered years later, when I found myself pregnant and queasy at work. As my baby grew and pressed up into my chest and down onto my bladder, the fear that had never gone away, took on a physical presence.

In the tiny grey loo cubicles at my place of work, I found momentary peace. My very own confessional, stinking of drains with a thin layer of cheap commercial air-freshener I could walk away from the ringing phones and constant noise in my head and I could speak to it, little prayers, match-flickers, quickly muttered in the work loo. 

Now, my fear had a focus and a growing form. I could speak to her. “Hang on in there”, I would say. Grow strong little one”. And he (as it turned out) did grow strong. Strong enough, anyway, the little vulnerable scrap of a baby who made me both superwoman, and shaking at the thought of walking out of my own front door, along such hard pavements (so much harder than I remembered from before) and crossing any of the city roads I had crossed countless times before. So I crossed myself, a stealthy little prayer of superstition, then crossed the road. Cupped his tiny head in my hand, him and me, each so so fragile but strong enough. 

He is eight now. And hearing his laughter, watching his wild somersaults on the trampoline, I begin to understand what heart in my mouth means as I actually want to vomit with fear that he could hurt himself. So I practise and practise at quietly holding in the fear. Watching with a big encouraging smile, Letting him be. 

His laughter in my ears, sometimes drives out the self-defeating internal noises – but more often they are there nagging at me still. 

As a girl, I was always good at untangling fine silver chains of necklaces. I used to do that for my mother. Long slim fingers gently loosening, teasing apart until I proudly handed over small gold crosses, and impressions of the virgin Mary. Somewhere in my life, I forgot this ability to untangle.. 

My mother promised me pretty treasures. Instead I find myself frayed, unravelling. 

Divorced, dissatisfied, disappointed. One day when the cats come to play, they will pounce on a trailing thread and drag what’s left of me along the floor. 

But not interested in eating me yet, the cats are busy, busy examining and washing their paws. Flashes of pink tongue. Home for the night in their favourite places. 

My boy has crawled in to bed with me too. Snuggling as close as he can in the curve of my bosom. 

Him, me and too many cats. This is enough, for now. The knot will still be there in the morning: Maybe one day I’ll figure out whether it’s choking the life out of me, or holding me together.

(c) e.antoniou 2018