The day after I moved out my father walked outside to find a small
starving kitten on the wall leading up to our building. He had just
been preparing sushi and when he stretched out his hand to the
kitten, he started licking it. Needless to say, my parents now have a
kitten. When my dad picked him up, he fit in the palm of his hand. He
brought the kitten inside, and the kitten immediately scarfed down
about 3 times his weight in cat food.
The kitten, formally known as Lucky, informally known as “the black
devil,” reminds us all of me as a child. After watching him run and
jump and play for half an hour without pause, I finally understood
what they meant when they said that having me was like having 3 kids.
He can go on like this for hours until he finally passes out for his
afternoon nap. Then he wakes up and continues running, jumping, and
attacking. All night. He gets banished to my room at about 6 in the
morning, when he gets rowdy with Pooms. Pooms does not appreciate
being jumped on and attacked by a young upstart so when the hissing
starts, they have to be separated. This is all well and good, unless
I’m sleeping in my room at the time. I was warned one shabbat when
I came home for a quiet, relaxing weekend that my room was the new
“time out” zone. The door opened promptly at 6 o’clock in the
morning, and one small, hyperactive black ball of fur was deposited
into detention. He then initiated a cycle of whining at the door,
playing in the litter box my parents had so nicely provided for him
(in my room. Where I sleep), and attacking my feet. This lasted about
15 minutes until he was ejected into the hallway.
Pooms has not being taking the appearance of a new kitten very well.
Lucky attacks anything that moves, especially if it’s small and
four-legged. She hisses, swats at him, and then runs away. He is not
deterred by this reaction and considers it a game to chase her around
the house. Poor Pooms was rescued from one bully, only to get stuck
with another, albeit smaller one. So if anyone wants a cat, we’ve
got a few available.
In other news, I’ve settled into my new place. I was alone in the
apartment the first few days until my roommates came back from
wherever it was that they’d been. Which made it difficult to eat
since I didn’t know where anything was in the kitchen. I may not
have seen my roommates, but I did meet the neighbors the first night.
They knocked on my door at 21:30 to request that I stop moving
furniture around (as if it was 2 in the morning or something). Which
was unnecessary since the only furniture that came with the room was
a bed. I assured them that I had no more furniture left to move and
they went away.
The next day I assembled the desk I had brought with me from Ma’ale
Adumim and lugged up 3 flights of stairs in pieces. The next task was
to order a clothes cupboard which I did from Home Center. It arrived
“promptly” two weeks late after numerous calls from the delivery
guy who kept making appointments to deliver it and then not showing
up. I finally had to email the company (they don’t even have a call
center) threatening to cancel the whole order unless it showed up by
the end of the week. Which it miraculously did.
I decided that the guys had been living in the apartment too long and
needed a bit of a shake up. Which I generously provided by gradually
rearranging the entire kitchen. Everyday I would move or rearrange
something else. My OCD required that I go over the entire kitchen,
organizing and making everything more efficient. It was kind of like
a game to see how much I could change without anyone’s brain
exploding from the shock.
Johnny too settled in, and quite quickly. In fact he may have gotten
a bit too comfortable. One of my roommates found him sitting on his
bed, staring at him in the middle of the night. Johnny did not appear
to be embarrassed by his creepy nightly behavior. In typical cat
fashion he refused to sleep in his own bed, the one I had
optimistically brought with me. It took him about a month or so to
decide that it actually wasn’t so bad after all.
In
addition, he seems to have come up with a game where he sees how many
toys he can toss into his food or water dish. Of course then there
was the morning when I woke up and there was nothing in his
food bowl because he had knocked it over during the night.
He
has not endeared himself to my roommates by hissing at anyone who
approaches him. Even if the only reason they’re approaching is
because he’s sitting in the middle of the hallway, blocking access
to the bathroom. He doesn’t care. He still wishes plague and
pestilence upon them. After finding his freshly made challah nibbled
on (it had been wrapped in two plastic bags which did not survive the
ordeal), my roommate asked me if I could train him not to jump on the
table. I just laughed. Incidentally, I forgot to warn the other
roommate about Johnny’s penchant for challah, with similar results
for the poor, helpless challah, which was found the next morning on
the floor. Clawed open and nibbled on.
Johnny’s crowning moment is what I have designated
“the shower curtain incident.” I was awoken in the middle of the
night by a loud crash and then a slam. Any pet owner will tell you
that the first thing one does in such a situation is try to locate
the pet. He wasn’t in my room which told me that there was a very
good chance he needed rescuing. Most likely from himself. The
bathroom door was closed, which it isn’t usually since his litter
box is in the laundry room attached to the bathroom. I tried to open
the door, but it was wedged shut. I managed to slip a foot in and
kick away what turned out to be the shower curtain rod blocking the
door. Johnny was standing frozen in the laundry room. I tried to call
him out but he refused to move. Finally after enough persuasion, he
hightailed it outta there as fast as his oversized legs could carry
him. As he ran by, I noticed he was wet. At this point one of my
roommates lumbered out of his room rubbing his eyes and asked me what
was going on. My response was “the shower curtain fell down.”
This was met by a moment of silence, and then “it just fell?” I
shrugged and answered “yep.”
So I’m standing there pretending I have no idea how this happened,
meanwhile my cat is wet and there’s a small puddle of water in the
bathtub. But the next morning he asked me again, “so the shower
curtain fell, huh?”
“Yep.”
“All by itself?”
At this point I felt he was a bit too alert for me to play dumb, so I
hesitantly answered, “well it may have had help. Johnny may
have had something to do with it. But he’s not talking.”
Later I asked the other roommate (who sleeps like the dead) if he had
by any chance heard anything in the middle of the night. Indeed he
had. He’d been just about to fall asleep when he heard a crash
outside his room...
This was unfortunately not his last bathtub adventure. We find him in
there every once in a while, just chilling. As if this is a totally
normal place for a cat to hang out. I guess that’s what happens
when your cat is waterproof.