Fifty yards ahead of me and I almost had a heart attack. I stopped in my tracks and sank down to my belly and watched them through the little bluestem—which, by the way, was a reddish-brown color, not blue or even close to blue, so why did they call it bluestem?
Not that I cared, you understand, because I had bigger problems on my hands. I watched them through the grass. They trotted across the road some fifty yards ahead of me. I could hear them laughing and belching, which is fairly typical behavior for happy cannibals.
Lucky for me, the wind was coming straight out of the north, so it carried my scent away from them. Otherwise, I might have been a cooked goose, because those guys have noses like you won’t believe.
They crossed the road, just about where we had seen them earlier, and disappeared up a short deep canyon to the north. I waited for a long time, just to be sure they had gone. Then I switched over to Ultra-Crypto Creeping Mode and moved out on silent paws.
I hadn’t gone more than a hundred yards when . . . holy smokes, a branch snapped and I whirled around to face . . .
Okay, the wind had caused a branch to creak in a hackberry tree to my right and that was no big deal, but I had enjoyed about all of that creeping I could stand, and I went to Full Throttle on all engines and zoomed the rest of the way back to the camp house.
It would have been very nice, very satisfying if I had found the truck there waiting for me. That would have closed out the day on a happy note. But the truck was not there.
Instead of being greeted by Slim and all my old friends, I was greeted by this . . . this long-haired yowling thing that came bounding out of the yard.
“A crust of bread? Baloney, cheese?
Spare a morsel, if you please.
Marooned, I am, oh hateful place!
At last I’ve found a friendly face!”
Would you care to guess what she did immediately? She started rubbing on me, of course, and babbling.
“Did you happen to bring some cheese? Just a little bite would be fine. I crave cheese, I dream of cheese, and maybe you could take me away from here. I’ve been marooned these two long years.”
I backed away from her. “No, I don’t have any cheese. And no, I can’t take you away from here.”
She followed me and continued to rub and purr. “You’ll stay a while, won’t you? We have so much to talk about.”
“I’d love to sit and talk, Kitty, but I’m afraid I won’t be here that long. My ride will be arriving any minute now, and we’ll have to say hors d’oeuvre until another day.”
I backed up another three steps. She followed. “Where there’s an hors d’oeuvre, there’s a piece of cheese.”
“Uh, no. I’m afraid you’ve missed the translation. Hors d’oeuvre is French for ‘good-bye.’ I speak many languages, you see, including French, Italian, Thousand Island, and Ranch, so I have many ways of saying good-bye.”
“Don’t say good-bye. You just got here and we haven’t talked.”
“Yes, and I can’t tell you how much I regret that, because I don’t regret it.” I trotted away from her again. “We haven’t talked and we never will talk. In the first place, you’re a cat and I make it a habit not to talk with cats.”
Here she came again. I kept moving.
“Talking with cats is not only a waste of time, but it’s also a violation of the Cowdog Code. We’re not allowed to mingle with cats on the job. Or off the job. Or anywhere else. Nothing personal, but you’re a cat.
“In the second place, my ride will be here any minute now.” I stopped and scanned the horizon in all directions. Nothing. Not a sound except the soft tinkle of snowflakes. “My business associates will be picking me up soon and . . .”
She had caught up with me. I crawled under a barbed wire fence and trotted out into the horse pasture.
“And in the third place . . . I hate to put it this way, Kitty, but you are absolutely driving me nuts with all that rubbing and purring!”
“But I haven’t seen a friendly face in so long!”
“Yes, and it’s made you a lunatic. That’s what you are, a lunatic cat, and nobody could stand to be around you for more than a minute.”
All at once her whole manner changed. Her eyes widened. Her jaw began to tremble. Tears slid down her cheeks. “You called me a lunatic cat!”
“Yes ma’am, I did.”
“You don’t care about me.”
“Yes ma’am, that’s correct. In my deepest heart of hearts, I think you are totally weird.”
She burst out crying. “Nobody loves me, everybody hates me, I’m going to eat some worms!”
And with that, she went flying back into the yard, crawled under the house through a hole in the foundation, and disappeared. In the silence, I could hear her sobbing under the house.
Well, it served her right.
Chapter Seven: Holy Smokes, I’ve Been Abandoned!
I returned to the front of the house and began pacing around near the point where three pasture trails merged with the main road out of the ranch.
Slim would be coming down one of those roads and I wanted to be there when he came through. I was pretty sure that he would stop anyway, and honk his horn and call for me, because . . . well, by then he would have missed me and would be frantic with concern, but I didn’t want to take any chances on getting left.
So I paced around in the middle of the road—waiting, watching, listening. In the course of listening, what I heard was Mary D Cat, crying under the house.
It didn’t bother me at all, even though we Heads of Ranch Security have a warm side to our nature and we are famous for being kind to children. I mean, that’s just bred into us. To become a Head of Ranch Security, a guy must take a Solemn Cowdog Oath to protect and defend and be nice to all children, even the ones who are bratty.
But we also have this other side, which is cold and hard and made of quarter-inch-steel armored plate. It allows us to conduct slashing interrogations and solve murder cases without the slightest quiver of emotion. We’re talking about your basic hard-boiled ranch dog here, and listening to sad stories is just part of the job.
It was this cold, hard side of my nature that greeted the sobs of Mary D Cat. Yes, I heard them but they bounced off my steel-plated eardrums like . . . I don’t know what, but they bounced off.
I continued to pace in the snow.
Don’t get me wrong. Making ladies cry had never been high on my list of Fun Things to Do, even lady cats. Maybe some dogs get a kick out of it but I don’t. I do it when I have to. It just goes with the job.
Every once in a while you make a lady cry. It can’t be helped, and I wished she would stop crying.
Hey, I’d told the truth, is all. If she couldn’t handle the truth, that was her problem.
I had problems of my own.
What was keeping Slim so long? I cocked my ear and listened. Crying. Weeping. Sobbing.
The only thing more annoying than a cat that rubs is one that crawls under a house and cries. I have absolutely no use for . . .
I changed the direction of my pacing, ever so slightly, and eased over to a point in front of the house. “Kitty, you can’t help it that you’re weird. You do the best you can with what you have, which isn’t much.”
More blubbering.
“Look, everyone in this world has to be something, and you happen to be a little crazy. It’s no big deal.”
More blubbering.
I slipped under the fence and stood in front of the hole in the foundation.
“I wish you wouldn’t do that. I mean, you can’t just fall apart when somebody tells you the truth. I gave you my honest opinion, what more can I say?” No change. “Look, will you say something? I’ll be leaving soon and . . .”
I stuck my head into the hole. I couldn’t see her in the darkness but I could hear her, loud
and clear.
“Look, my car and driver will be here any minute now. I’m a very busy dog and I don’t have time to waste on crybabies and bawl-bags.”
At last she spoke—through tears, of course. “I’m not a crybaby or a bawl-bag! I’m just a poor lonely cat who’s been marooned for two long years and wants a bite of cheese and a friend. But nobody cares.”
“Yes, that’s sort of the bottom line, isn’t it? Well, I’m going to be leaving here in a minute, so let’s try to wrap this deal up. I’ll be coming back to feed the cows another day. You work on your problems and get all the tears out of your system and maybe we can sit down and talk about it. What do you say to that?”
She said . . . more tears.
“Look, cat, do you want to resolve this thing or not? I don’t have all day. My ride will . . .” Just then I heard the hum of a motor. “Well, there’s my ride. I have to go. Have a great day.” She bawled louder at that. “Well, what do you want me to say? Have an awful day? Okay, have an awful day. Adios, good-bye, and hors d’oeuvre.”
Too bad for her I had done my best. I wiggled my way out of the hole—I had gotten myself a little farther under the house than I had planned—I wiggled my way out of the hole, put Miss Mary D Cat and her problems behind me, and . . .
. . . saw the Cammo-Stealth army truck go down the road and disappear behind a curtain of snow.
Hey, wait a minute! Why didn’t he stop or blow his horn? How was I supposed to . . . I’d been waiting out there in the middle of the road!
I went dashing away from the house and down the road. I barked. I yelled. I went to Turbo-Lightning Speed and chased the truck half a mile, until my Turbo-Lightning turned to Turbo-Mush. Exhausted, I stopped.
And there, standing in the middle of the road, in the silence, with snowflakes falling on my nose, I had to face the awful truth. Slim hadn’t even noticed that I was missing. He had left me and I was now marooned and abandoned, a dog without a home or a country.
And for some reason, I found myself thinking about . . . cheese.
CHEESE?
That was ridiculous, totally absurd. I didn’t even like cheese. It was too hard to chew and it gummed up my teeth, hence, it followed from simple logic that I would not allow myself to think about it.
Hey, I not only didn’t like cheese but I knew that craving cheese was one of the first symptoms of . . . it was worse than fleas or ringworm and I didn’t want it and I would NOT allow myself to become a victim of Cheesarosis.
No way. That was all right for weirdo crybaby cats, but not for dogs.
Furthermore, just because I was now marooned and abandoned didn’t mean that I was going to rush back to the house and establish diplomatic relations with Mary D Cat. No thanks.
In the first place, there was a very high probability that Slim would discover his error and come streaking back to the canyon country to rescue me. Hence, my period of exile would probably not last long.
A couple of hours at the most. Nothing to be alarmed about. In fact, at that very moment I turned and looked down the road . . . and didn’t see him coming.
But then again, I really hadn’t, uh, expected him back so soon anyways, so no big deal there.
In the second place, I had always considered myself a very self-sufficient dog, the kind of dog who enjoyed his own company and could always find ways of passing the time.
Now, your ordinary dogs—your poodles, your house dogs, your little yip-yips—they couldn’t spend a minute alone without going into a panic. Why? Because they are such boring little mutts that to spend time alone with them is to die a slow, boring death.
Not me, fellers. When I’m alone, I’m in the company of the most interesting and resourceful dog I know, so the thought of being marooned with ME for an hour or two, or half a day, or a whole day or even several days or a week . . .
Gulp.
Okay, maybe it wouldn’t be all that great, but I knew that I could handle it.
Self-discipline, that’s the secret, and I had gobs of self-discipline. And I sure as thunder didn’t crave the company of a sniveling piece of cheese.
The company of a cat, I should say. A sniveling cat.
And I didn’t go streaking back to the house. I walked back to the house. And did I go straight to the hole in the foundation and tell my sad story to Mary D Cat? No sir, I did not. I established a temporary camp in the middle of the road and didn’t even get close to the cheese.
Close to the house, I should say, didn’t even get close to the house. No, I dug myself a little bed in the snow, right in the middle of the road where Slim could find me when he came roaring back . . .
He would be so embarrassed and angry with himself. And apologetic. Imagine, him leaving his Head of Ranch Security at the Hodges’ Place! He would beg for understanding and forgiveness. I would grant it, but not right away
These wounds take time to heal.
And I wanted him to learn his lesson from it.
I curled up in the snow and watched the snowflakes fall and kept my eyes locked on the point where the road disappeared into the soft curtain of cheese.
Of snow, I should say.
The point is that I was self-sufficient and perfectly content to spend a couple of hours by myself, thinking deep thoughts and laughing at my own wit, and the hours dragged by and I thought I would go nuts.
Where were they! Why hadn’t they come streaking back to save me from this horrible silence and isolation? Hey, darkness was falling across the canyon and the coyotes were howling, and there I was, marooned and exiled and abandoned, and I wanted . . .
I wanted some cheese!
And suddenly it occurred to me that Mary D Cat, uh, needed a friend.
Someone to listen to her sad tale of woe.
A shoulder to cry on.
And, what the heck, I had a few minutes to burn, so I, uh, hiked over to the house and looked her up.
Chapter Eight: The Cat Insists on Being My Friend and Ally
I wandered over to the hole in the foundation and glanced over both shoulders to make sure that no one was watching. No one was, of course, I knew that. But still, this was embarrassing.
I pointed my nose toward the hole. “Uhhhhh, Miss Mary D? Hello? Are you still there? I’ve experienced a slight change in plans. Maybe you should come out so we can talk about it.”
I could hear her sniffling under there, but for a long time she didn’t answer. Then I heard her voice. “No, I won’t come out. You said I was weird.”
“Perhaps you have me confused with someone else, ma’am. I’m almost sure I wouldn’t have said such a thing, and if you’ll just come out, we can . . .”
“You said it. I heard you. You said I was a weird cat and nobody cared about me.”
“No, no, I think what we have here is a simple case of mistaken identity. You’re probably thinking of my companion, my friend, Drover—small sawed-off, stub-tailed little mutt. I often get blamed for his, uh, careless remarks, don’t you see.”
“It was you, and I’m not coming out.”
I took a deep breath and glanced around. It was getting dark. “Okay, maybe it was me. I admit it. Did you hear that?”
“Keep going.”
“I, well, there isn’t much more to say, really. I admit that I was misquoted and I accept full and total responsibility for everything that happened . . . although I still say you shouldn’t have taken it so hard.”
“Are you sorry for making me cry?”
“I, uh . . . am I sorry for . . . ? Okay, okay, let’s get it over with. I made a few careless remarks and I’m sorry they hurt your feelings and made you cry . . . although I must add . . .”
“You’d better stop while you’re ahead, doggie.”
I glared at the dark hole from whence her voice came. “Yes ma’am, I guess you’re right. Now, will you pleas
e come out?”
She came out and looked at me with a pair of sad, red-rimmed eyes. “What are you doing here? I thought you were leaving.”
“Yes, exactly. I, too, thought I was leaving, but instead of leaving, I got left.”
Her eyes brightened on that. “Ohhhhh, how exciting! You mean we’re marooned together?”
“That seems to be the case, and let’s get right to the . . . you, uh, don’t happen to have some cheese, do you? All at once I have this powerful craving for cheese, and I don’t even like the stuff.”
She began purring and rubbing on my leg. “I know. It must have something to do with being marooned. With me, it started the first day, and I’ve been hungry for cheese for two years. Weird, isn’t it?”
“Yes, it’s weird and it’s not like me at all, and let’s go straight to the bottom line, ma’am. Circumstances have placed us on the same team, so to speak.”
“Oh? You want my help, is that what you’re saying?”
“I, uh . . . I’m not one who needs help very often or who enjoys asking for it, but yes, I seem to be . . .” I coughed. “I seem to find myself . . .” This was very painful. “We appear to have reached the point where I need your help, yes.”
“Otherwise, you might not survive the night?”
“That’s, uh . . . that thought had occurred to me, yes. And a guy doesn’t need to worry about the second night until he’s survived the first one, is sort of how it looks from here.”
“Yes, the coyotes are bad in these canyons, and the bobcats are even worse. Do you want my advice?”
“No, actually I thought . . .” I swallowed hard. “Yes, I want your advice. After all, you’re the one who’s stayed alive down here for two years.”
“That’s right.” She kept on rubbing on my leg. “I’d advise you to spend the night under the house. It’s the only safe place on the ranch.”
I moved several steps away from her. “Yes, right. I had already reached that same conclusion myself.”
The Case of the Vampire Cat Page 4