I Swear That Next Door's Cat Wants Me Dead
Next door's cat wants me dead. This bandy-legged contraption goes by the name of Harvey and has a habit of wiping its arse on the lawn. When its owners aren't busily banging one bit of wall into another bit of wall using tinfoil for nails and string for glue outside my bedroom window at the crack of dawn, this cat will be waiting outside to stare me in the eye before waddling off like it's got a gun or a flick-knife or at least a nugget of murderous intent hidden in there somewhere.
The other night I opened the back door to put out the milk bottles (Domesticity Alert: milk is delivered to the house daily) when the cat popped out of its flap for the sole purpose of delivering me a hate-filled yellow-eyed glare. I took this as a warning; an I see you, human! type warning.
Okay, now let me enthuse about the book Darkmans by Nicola Barker that I read a month or two ago. It's an 800-page comic novel set in Ashford in Kent, about various people, some of whom are being haunted or maybe possessed by a mediaeval court jester. Forget all that. It's just very clever and very funny. Here's a bit that made me bellow with laughter on the train. Gaffar, who is Kurdish and speaks half in turkish and half in english (the typeface changes accordingly), is describing an acquaintance to Beede:
'She's trapped in a suffocating marriage,' Gaffar sighed, gazing poignantly after her. 'Separate bedrooms. Her son died last year. She blames herself for the whole thing because she was having an affair. Her husband's an insensitive pig who has no understanding of her needs. He's obsessed by this African macaw which he got from an Exotic Bird Rescue Centre in Canterbury. He's taught it all the phrases from Top Gear. Sleeps with it. Takes it to work. Rings it - whenever he goes out - and leaves these idiotic messages on the answerphone ...'
A couple of pages later, Gaffar has collapsed in the cheese aisle at the supermarket because he has a morbid fear of salad. A woman who works at the supermarket is checking he's okay:
      'And where do you live now, Gaffar?'
'Now?'
'Yes.'
'Here.'
Gaffar pointed down the cheese aisle.
  'He lives on the cheese aisle,' Beede said, 'apparently.'
'I am love of cheese,' Gaffar confirmed.
      Susan Pope nodded, slowly.
(And since you ask, the paragraph indenting above is as it appears in the book. That's another amusing or annoying thing about it.)
6 Comments:
Hahaha the cat might just think the milk was his and ONLY HIS hahaha
Greetings from Stefán junior
I don't believe that this cat exists until I see a photo of it. You never know, maybe he is afraid of the camera or better, the flash will turn him into stone.
Luv E
Maybe that is evil Harvey's motive. I wouldn't put it past him. I will strive to get a photo of him looking evil, even though that's a little bit stalkerish.
Moreover, for those of you who didn't believe me about the book, it's just been put on the longlist for the Man Booker Prize.
I don't know about the cat, but I want you dead
Why not stuff and mount it and send it to York. We casn add it to the City's existing collection of moggie statues.
See www.catsinyork.org.uk/ for more exciting details.
miaow?
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