The Dead Cat Incident

I was making soup one morning when Alex came screaming into the house, in the nerve-shattering way that only Alex can do, “Tiny’s dead! Tiny’s dead!

Tiny was the barn cat (kitten, actually) that my kids had found a few weeks earlier. It was way too young to be left alone, so they’d been feeding it and falling madly in love with it. And I’d been reminding them, daily, that we were not letting another cat into the house.

So there was Alex, standing in the middle of the kitchen, holding Tiny. He was dangling over her hand like overcooked spaghetti, eyes glazed, mouth open, no pulse, no breathing, no reflexes. And cold cold cold. Yep, dead.

So Alex and Jordy started blubbering, trying to figure out how to bury it (with or without a towel appeared to be the biggest concern). I pointed out that animals, like people, are not pronounced dead until they are warm and dead. So I wrapped Tiny in a tea towel and set him near the soup pot.

About 20 minutes later, I noticed that his face was twitching. He was alive!

No, he was not alive. Turns out I’d set him too close to the gas stove. His whiskers were on fire—burning like tiny candles. I quickly blew him out.

I had to get to work, so I took him down the hall to my office and set him on a heating pad in a basket. He lay there, totally dead, for another three hours. When I turned to the bookshelf for a minute, I heard a loud clatter. Tiny had somehow flipped out of the basket and was now sprawled across my keyboard (completely limp, no heart beat, no breathing, no reflexes…I kid you not!).

I put him back in the basket and kept working. One hour later, Tiny suddenly sat up, leaned over the edge of the basket and started purring. Yep, as if he’d never been dead.

Tiny was quickly renamed Pom Pom by the kids, in honor of the pom pom-like clumps of burned hair where his whiskers used to be. Pom Pom spent the rest of the day turning on the charm. He ate cat food, ballooned out like a pregnant walrus, showed off his considerable pooping skills and purred loudly. He also tried to convince our other cats that he would make a wonderful addition to our home. They were not happy—dead cats should bloody well stay dead, in their opinion.

Pom Pom was too small to go back in the barn—and we’d already reached our Crazy Cat Lady quota for indoor cats. So I called the Humane Society to see if they could find him a good home. They showed up in less than an hour, raving about how quickly Pom Pom would be adopted since he (a) was adorable (b) purred nonstop (c) loved to cuddle and (d) was no longer dead. My kids were traumatized. I’m hoping there are no more kittens in the barn.

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4 thoughts on “The Dead Cat Incident

  1. Derek Bryant

    Ha reminds me of the Princess Bride with Miracle Max – “It just so happens that your friend here is only MOSTLY dead. There’s a big difference between mostly dead and all dead. Mostly dead is slightly alive.”
    It is pretty cool that you thought to make sure he was warm and dead. lf l had a choice l would want to be pronounced dead by you … but there is a surprisingly long line up ahead of you .

    Reply
    1. Brenda Post author

      That’s too funny – I’d forgotten about that scene in the Princess Bride (loved the movie). I’m glad you’re enjoying the blog – thank you! And, yes, I wouldn’t pronounce you dead unless you were warm and dead (not sure about your relatives’ point of view on these things, so stay upright when they’re around…

      Reply
    1. Brenda Post author

      It was such a cute little kitten, I kept hoping and hoping that what the paramedics say (“They aren’t dead unless they’re warm and dead”) would turn out to be true. I would have kept trying the rest of the day, if necessary 🙂

      Reply

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