Wildcat.
Bledsoe, Lucy Jane
--with gratitude to Flannery O'Connor
Leon could smell the wildcat. The windows lay open at night and
the ripe August air moved inside, carrying a trace of damp feline fur.
He had smelled the cat every night this week. It came because of the
deer, and the deer came because of the roses. They nosed the satin
petals right off the stickery stalks. Leon had heard that roses were
like ice cream to deer. These flowers, and other herbaceous treats,
brought them out of the regional park and into people's yards. The
wildcat followed.
"I smelled the wildcat again last night," Leon told his
daughter while she made breakfast for Justin and lunch for herself.
"I think we should keep the windows closed." He didn't
really think that, he just wanted their reaction.
He was rewarded by a microscopic gasp from his grandson, so tiny
it was audible only to him. His daughter would have missed it
altogether. And even if she had heard it, she wouldn't have known
it held awe as well as fear. In fact, that little expulsion of air
expressed a perfect blending of the two. Meg missed it all.
She spoke too loudly, asserting, "The news said that Fish
& Wildlife would catch it this week. It's too hot to keep the
windows shut. Anyway, cougars don't come in houses. They want the
deer."
Leon considered pointing out the tenderness of five-year-old
boys, but thought that might be going too far. "I smelled
him," Leon said. "He was in the yard."
His daughter made a huffing sound. The bank had been shedding
workers all year, and now she had him to feed, too. She couldn't
afford to think about a wildcat prowling the neighborhood. She had to
close loans and proofread title papers. She had to make sure she was
indispensible in her department. She had to hold onto her job at any
cost. Though to his way of thinking, the cost had been very high.
Who needed the big city? The big bank. The clanging, metallic,
tar-covered stench of it all.
He heard her slide the tuna sandwich into a plastic bag and drop
this into her purse. There was the whiff of a soft peach passing from
the bowl on the kitchen table into her purse as well. It would smash in
there, juice up all her things. She was always in too much of a hurry.
Her feet made soft puffing sounds as she walked across the kitchen floor
in her fleece slippers, not unlike the sound the cat's paws made on
the pavement outside at night, but lacking the grace and intention,
"Be good," she said to both of them. She kicked off the
fleece slippers, and he listened to the clunk of her pumps fade to the
door. Justin ran after her and slid the deadbolt. Meg's old Honda
roared to life. She gave it way too much gas, like the scream she
wouldn't allow herself. Off she went to work.
Justin was back in the kitchen asking, "Did you really smell
the cougar last night?"
"Yes, sir."
"What does it smell like?"
"Trail dust. Wet hay. A slight bit of urine. Cat
breath."
"Cat breath!" Justin squealed. "You didn't
smell its breath! It didn't come that close."
He was right. Leon exaggerated. "Yes, sir. I did. I smelled
that wildcat, from nose to anus."
Justin squealed again.
"I heard it, too."
Another small gasp. Leon didn't wait for the question.
"Picture a regular cat's paw. Now think of one just like that,
only the size of my hand." Leon spread his fingers and held up his
hand, palm out. Then he pushed his open hand through two feet of air.
"Hear that?" Leon was sure that Justin shook his head no. So
he said, "Try again." He punched his open hand forward again.
"The sound of air being displaced."
"Yeah," Justin breathed. "I heard it."
"Okay. That. And also the quietest possible mush sound. That
paw stepping on the garden soil."
Justin was practically hyperventilating, so Leon let it go with,
"Yes, sir. I smelled him good last night."
EVERY DAY THE grandfather and grandson ventured further from the
house, despite Meg's explicit instructions to not set foot out the
door. You can't cage a five-year-old boy any more than you can cage
a 66-year-old man. The more rules she laid out, the stronger Leon's
impulse to break them. You just can't cage a person.
That was something Meg would probably never appreciate. She was
afraid. Leon understood that. He also understood that most likely he
himself had created the problem, all those years back, when he left Meg,
her brother Peter and their mother. Meg was only three years old, and
Peter was Justin's age, five. Over the years Meg had kept in touch,
but barely. Peter hadn't spoken to Leon in decades. Refused to.
Leon knew his son lived in Stockton, and lots of times he'd
considered going there and making amends. But how do you do that? Years
were like sand. They slid and dispersed. You couldn't pick them
back up again. Anyway, you can't cage a man, and that's how
it'd felt, back then, like he was caged with two small children and
a wife. Leon had been practically a boy himself.
It took guts for Meg to call him earlier this month. He'd
hand her that. Guts and a big dose of desperation. He'd moved this
spring when Gloria passed and her kids sold the house out from under
him. But he was still in Pinedale, and Meg had found him. She
didn't bother with hello, how are you, just laid out her situation.
Scott had left in April. He had done the kind of leaving that
doesn't include child support payments. Or even a divorce. The man
was missing in action. Gone. She had the rent, groceries, health
insurance and childcare. She needed Leon to come out and take over the
latter. At least until Justin started school in the fall.
"Anyway," she'd said. "I heard you're
alone now."
A fireball under his breastbone. He missed Gloria desperately.
Yes, desperately. Her bellowing laugh. Her self-deprecating humor. The
heavy cushion of her in bed beside him.
"I get by fine," he'd told his daughter, playing
his hand, pleased that she needed something from him.
"I doubt that. I don't have a lot of space. You'd
have to share a room with Justin."
As if she were doing him a favor, rather than the other way
around. He knew the situation had to be acute for her to be asking for
his help. In fact, he knew the word "help" in association with
his name was, in his daughter's mind, pretty much an oxymoron.
But he was curious. He'd never met his grandson. He
hadn't seen Meg in about ten years. And now Scott had left pretty
much the same way Leon had. That had to be tough on the girl. Although,
to be fair, Leon had always sent money when he had it. Not every month.
Some years none at all. But when he could, he had. Now he had his social
security, and though it barely covered the room he was renting, it was
something. He could contribute to his grandson's upkeep.
Anyway, Gloria was gone now, and that hurt more than anything had
ever hurt. He was sick to death of the fireball under his
breastbone.
MEG AND JUSTIN fetched him from Pinedale, and as they drove back
to the city, she observed, "You look like a hobo, Dad. You're
a mess."
Leon wanted to argue. But the ghosts of Gloria's plump
fingers smoothing his hair and brushing food off his shirt snuffed his
anger. He gave in, saying, "True, that."
Meg sighed. He figured she was weighing what it meant to have an
old man--and a blind one at that--on her hands now, too. Maybe
she'd taken on a greater burden rather than lessening the one she
had. That very first evening she lost her temper when she tripped over
his cane, which he'd left propped against the couch, angling out
onto the living room floor. He didn't like using the cane and had a
habit of leaving it places. She told him he was in a new environment and
that he had to use it. After recovering from her irritation, she placed
the handle in his hand and for a brief moment closed her own hands
around his.
Meg gave him a tour of the telephones, the cupboards, the
bathrooms. She spoke with much clarity about her expectations. Regular
and healthy meals. No daytime TV, but she would supply appropriate DVDs.
She made both of them promise they wouldn't leave the house while
she was at work.
"Okay," Justin said.
"Fine," Leon concurred. "Where would we
go?"
So far they had walked down the street to the trailhead leading
into the regional park. They had visited the grounds of the school where
Justin would start kindergarten in the fall. They rode the bus downtown
and got burgers, fries and milkshakes at the Foster Freeze. They caught
the 67, which took them to the antique carousel in the park. That was
the most fun day yet, and they planned to repeat it soon. It was a
strain on the boy keeping secrets from his mom. Leon understood that.
But a necessary strain.
That day of the tuna sandwich and soft peach, they snuck to the
movies. The boy didn't read yet, but he knew what a movie theater
marquee looked like. They got off the bus downtown, and Justin led the
way. Leon felt a measure of integrity when he learned the theater
offered a Disney picture. Never mind that they stayed for a second
feature that included a healthy dose of sex. And healthy it was. The
sooner the boy understood, the better.
"Is that fucking?" Justin asked as they rode the bus
back up the hill that afternoon.
"Not so loud," Leon said. He thought the bus was empty,
but sometimes he missed lurkers. "Yes."
"Can we see it again?"
"No." Leon was a bit nervous. It was already past 5:00.
Meg usually got home around 5:45.
"What'd we do today?" Leon asked his grandson.
It'd become their end-of-the-day drill.
After a long thoughtful silence, Justin said, "We watched
the Shrek DVD. I made peanut butter and banana sandwiches for our lunch.
Then we played catch with the wiffle ball."
"Good man."
"Because you can hear the wiffle ball moving through air.
That's how you catch it."
"True, that."
The boy made a small sound of satisfaction.
LEON SMELLED THE wildcat again that night. Its timing was all
off. The deer had already been through the yard at dusk, checking for
new blossoms, tender greens. They had lifted their dainty hooves--there
were two of them--as they stepped around branches and over large clods
of dirt. Justin had watched them and given Leon the blow-by-blow report,
each descriptive word expressing his hope that the cougar would soon
follow.
"It will," Leon promised. "It definitely
will."
"Don't lead him on," Meg called from the kitchen.
"The cougar won't come into our yard, Justin."
"Actually," Leon whispered to his grandson.
"People who have nice yards fence them off. What you got here is an
overgrown tangle of weeds and leftover perennials. Am I right?"
"What are perennials?" Justin whispered back.
"Plants that live forever and have flowers. But the point is
the tangle and the lack of a fence. Good cover for wildcats."
Meg had told her father that the landlord had given them a
discounted rent on the condition that they take care of the yard. Scott
was supposed to have done that, but he didn't, and now it was a
veritable forest. The landlord had been threatening eviction.
That evening the wildcat came up onto the cement walkway, just
under the open bedroom window, and lingered there, its scent filling
Leon's nostrils. He slept in Justin's bowed twin bed, and the
boy used a camping pad with a sleeping bag on the floor. Leon reached
out a hand and felt for the soft down on Justin's head.
"Grandpa?" he whispered.
"What"
"You can't see the movies."
"True, that."
"You don't know what that man and woman were
doing."
"Oh, yeah I do."
"How do you know?"
"I done it myself."
When the boy spoke again, his voice was high and girlish.
"Fucking? You done that?"
"Of course," Leon said, now annoyed that Justin
wouldn't just drop it. "You will, too, one day."
"But you can't see the movies."
"I don't need to see--" Leon paused and felt good
about the word choice he made. "--intercourse to know what it
is."
"Is the cougar out there tonight?"
"Yes, sir. Not 10 yards away, I guess."
Now silence, as it Justin had quit breathing altogether.
He'd probably gone too far again, entirely terrorized the child.
Nothing for it, though. The boy would have to work things out on his
own, fucking and the wildcat both.
GLORIA LIKED FUCKING. She liked cats, too. Food and sleep. She
liked just about anything that made her body feel good. That fireball
pressed up through his chest again. Gloria, he thought. Gloria. No one
could see him in the dark. So he let the tears fall out the corners of
his eyes, slide down his temples, damp the pillow.
In the morning, after Meg left for work, Justin said,
"Grandpa, let's find it."
Leon thought for a moment, knowing exactly what the boy meant,
and then said, "That had been my plan for the day, too."
"Good man," Justin said.
"What I figure," Leon said, "is that the cat hangs
out in the woods during the day. It doesn't want to get seen in
broad daylight."
"Because Fish & Wildlife is hunting it."
"Exactly."
"So," the boy whispered out of sheer excitement.
"We need to go to the woods."
Justin made peanut butter and grape jelly sandwiches. He poured
milk into small screw-top jugs. He packed these into the new book bag
Meg had bought him for school. Then he handed Leon his cane and said,
"Maybe you better take this."
Leon smiled, knowing the request came on account of their taking
on a more ambitious adventure today. But he said, "Nah. It's
just one more thing to keep track of. I got you to show me the way,
don't I?"
"Um," in the high, girlish voice. "But--"
Good man," Leon said and headed for the door.
Holding Justin's pencil arm with its walnut-sized bicep was
not easy. Leon had to stoop a bit. He imagined his grandson's face
extra solemn with responsibility and concentration. All on his own
accord, the boy started calling out changes in the terrain.
"We're going off the curb here," and after a couple of
blocks, "Off the street and onto the trail now. It's
narrow."
"Good man."
"We're heading uphill now," he said, his thin
little voice bulking up with authority. "There's trees on both
sides. Big ones. We're in the woods now."
"I know that." The shade of the evergreen branches felt
good, and so did the soles of his sneakers on the dirt path. He could
smell the dusty blue sky. It was the happiest he'd felt since
Gloria passed. He wished he could introduce his grandson to her.
"It's thick woods now," Justin said, and then Leon
understood that the boy was describing for his own sake, not for his
grandfather's. "It's cougar country, all right."
"True, that."
"Do you think he might be nearby?"
"Don't smell nothing yet."
"We should go farther in, then."
"Yep."
A rustling in the underbrush sent the boy nearly out of his skin.
His thin arm flew out of Leon's grasp. Then the boy grabbed
Leon's shirt with both fists.
"Look around," Leon whispered. "I don't smell
nothing. What do you see?"
"Ha!" Justin squealed. "A bunny, Grandpa.
It's just a bunny."
"Little white tail, I reckon."
"Yeah," Justin breathed hard with relief.
"It's just a rabbit. I saw it run right across the
trail."
"Keep going."
There were more rustlings. Other rabbits. The flapping of wings.
The scratching of tunneling mammals. Justin reported a snake. They sat
on a big trailside stone to eat their sandwiches and drink the milk.
They walked on through mostly eucalyptus now, with an underbrush of
blackberry. It was hot and purple. A slight breeze kicked up.
"Okay," Leon said in a very quiet and deep voice.
"I smell it."
Justin said nothing, but Leon felt the pulse of blood through the
boy's arm, as if his heart was pumping overtime.
"You know the term 'scaredy cat'? That comes from
wildcats. They don't like to be seen. They're extremely
private. Loners. They do what they want and don't do what they
don't want. Most times they don't want people." "How
close is he?" Justin whispered.
Leon sniffed audibly and then felt silly for the
over-dramatization. "I'd say close. Otherwise I wouldn't
be smelling him. I'd bet he's watching us. Deciding what to
do."
"What are his choices?" the boy asked.
"You ever hear the expression, 'Curiosity killed the
cat'? They like to look at things. So there's this conflict in
every cat, this desire to see things, look at them, and that rubs
against their desire for privacy, to stay hidden. He's got to
choose which he wants right now."
Leon let go of the boy's arm and rested a hand on his little
ball bearing shoulder. He felt a tensing there, a gathering of courage.
They stood for several minutes in silence, waiting and listening. Then
Justin said, "There it is. I see it."
The blue sky and dusty trail converged at a place in the center
of Leon's chest. He felt suffocated by Gloria's absence, the
confusion of his grief.
Justin said, "He's walking toward us. His tail is
swishing. His eyes are bright and flashing. Can you smell his
breath?"
"Yes," Leon said. "He had rabbit for
lunch."
"He's not afraid of us," Justin whispered.
"He's stopped and he's just looking. Curiosity won. He
knows we won't hurt him. He knows we're not Fish &
Wildlife."
Leon nodded.
"He's the best thing I've ever seen. He's tan
with white and black tips, He's as big as you, Grandpa."
The clarity of the boy's imagination rang like a bell in his
heart. The blue sky floated above him. The dusty trail held his weight.
Leon took a quiet, long breath, and the fireball cooled. He smelled the
wildcat all right. It was a few feet away, just standing there with its
rabbit breath and feline sweat. A big musky grace. A presence so
beautifully intense it made him feel almost whole.
"We should get going," Justin said in a regular voice
and took Leon's hand, placing it through the crook of his elbow.
"The path is wide enough here."
THAT NIGHT MEG slammed the door when she came in from work. She
shouted, "I asked you. I specifically asked you. Why did I ever
think you could be trusted? How stupid of me. How plain stupid of
me."
Leon and Justin were in the kitchen making a salad. They thought
they'd surprise Meg by making the dinner themselves. She dropped
her purse on the kitchen table and kicked her pumps across the linoleum.
"Regina next door is home with her sick baby, and two days in a
row--two days in a row--she says she saw Justin marching off down the
street with an old blind man. Today she said you were gone for over two
hours. Where?"
Leon sat down in a kitchen chair. "Well, now, Meg. You just
can't keep a boy caged. Especially not in the summer."
"True, that," Justin said.
"He's a little, little boy. And you're a blind old
man. This isn't Pinedale, Dad. This is a big city. No one's
looking out for you."
"Apparently Regina is."
"Where'd you go?"
"Just walking," Justin piped up. "We just
walked."
"Go sit down in the front room," Leon said.
"We're making dinner tonight. Everyone is safe. Food
soon."
"You haven't changed one iota, "she said as she
left the kitchen. Meg clicked on the TV news. A few minutes later, Leon
and Justin brought in a dinner of spaghetti and salad on big plates. Meg
turned up the volume.
When the anchor and reporters finished with the wars and economy,
she hit the mute button and turned to her son. "You have to eat
more than that." Justin had stirred the spaghetti and salad into
one heap and set the plate on the coffee table. The little boy got up
and sat next to his grandpa, taking the old man's hand.
"Great," Meg said, "This is just great."
"Turn it on!" Justin shrieked and grabbed the remote.
He clicked up the volume in time to hear, "... just before dawn
this morning. They treed the cougar here on Middlefield Road, where they
attempted to tranquilize him with a dart. However, the cat was too fast
for Fish & Wildlife. It crouched, poised for a leap from the tree,
and an officer was forced to kill the cougar. No longer will this
predator terrorize the residents in the homes adjacent to our
city's regional park."
Leon heard Justin catch his breath. The boy snuggled close, his
knees bumping into Leon's thigh, his fists against his ribs. The
reporter went on to interview a neighbor who expressed his outrage at
this encroachment of the wild.
Meg burst into tears. Her plate and fork clanked as she dropped
them on the coffee table. She ran to her room.
Leon put an arm around the boy and pulled him closer. Gloria
liked to explain any rush of feeling by saying that it was her hormones
acting up. Leon wasn't sure men had hormones, but if they did, his
were acting up. He thought, I'll protect this child. He thought,
I'm sorry it took me sixty-six years to get here. He thought, I
want to alleviate my daughter's stress. He felt the bright
awareness of love in his chest.
That night the boy slipped into bed next to Leon. Bird bones
under satiny skin. He heard a muffled chirp-like sob.
"Yep," Leon said. "I can smell that cat again
tonight."
The little boy stilled. Tensed. Sat up and said, "But they
shot him this morning at dawn!"
"Nah. They just had to pretend they caught him to calm the
public. Didn't we see him ourselves, at midday, alive and
thriving?"
A long pause of discomfort. Justin didn't want to correct
his grandfather. "But Grandpa, they showed the dead cougar on
TV."
The sky, the trail, the fireball. This bowed bed and the night
air. The pressure on his chest. The goddamn welling behind his eyes.
"On the other hand," Justin said cautiously, somberly.
"You can't believe everything you see."
"True, that," Leon said as everything eased once again.
"Good man."