Sunday, December 29, 2013

My little sister has a cat.

Growing up, we had a variety of pets in our family.  When I was very young, barely young enough to remember at all, we had two cats, both then elderly.  My parents never got another cat, because it turns out both my elder sister and my father are allergic to them.  The first real pet I remember us having was my elder sister’s iguana, Spice.  Then my parents announced to me that what I really wanted wasn’t a boa constrictor (to this day, part of me still wants one, whatever they say), but a dog.

I had never had a dog.  I knew nothing about dogs.  None of my friends had dogs.  I’d seen them run around the neighborhood, but that was it.

In any case, they got me Lucia from the pound: part Husky, part Golden Retriever, part Rottweiler.  Then my elder sister’s iguana was unhappy, so my parents gave Spice away and got her a German Shepherd/Australian Cattle-Dog: Holly.  Then my dog was given away and my father told me that what I really wanted was a purebred German Shepherd.

I disagreed strongly, but my parents got me the dog anyway: Jenny. I had her until the first year I went away to college, when she was six years old.  Cancer got her.

Throughout these last few years, my younger sister had a succession of five hamsters and then a guinea pig.  They lived in her room, so I was only vaguely aware of them.

Holly, by the way, lived to be fourteen.  She was an extremely intelligent dog and knew it.

Now, as an adult, I don’t have any pets at all.  I hope to again someday.  Maybe I’ll even get a boa constrictor (although I rather doubt it).

But the fact remains: my little sister has a cat.  He’s a Balinese mix and is currently curled up about five feet away from me.  My little sister and I are both staying at our parents’ house for a few days for Christmas, so I have every opportunity to observe this cat up close (the first cat with whom I’ve had this chance since I was about four).  In this time, I have come to the following conclusion:

He acts a lot like a dog.

Oh, don’t get me wrong, he does give me long superior cat stares . . . but so did Holly.

He curls up the way our dogs did, follows us around the same way, begs to be played with, long-sufferingly puts up with being picked up, loves to have his belly rubbed, sits and guards the door, and plays (gentle) tug-of-war. . . .  

This is not what I expected in a cat!  He hardly ever walks through walls, never sits normally on my lap (he likes to be held belly-up, for some reason), only purrs when he’s getting annoyed, and so on.


I think I’ll go pet him some more.
Holly

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Christmas Mornings of Childhood

Happy Christmas, one and all.

When I was young, my elder sister and I (and sometimes my younger sister as well) would get up ridiculously early on Christmas morning: often three or four a.m.  We were permitted to go through our stockings as soon as we got up, but had to wait for our parents (and possibly until after breakfast was eaten and snow shoveled) before opening the presents under the tree.

This situation suited us just fine.  Our stockings always had something to interest us, yes, but there was a more compelling draw: the gentle colored lights of the Christmas tree against the silence and stillness of a cold winter’s morning far before the sun.

I hardly remember anything I got in my stocking.  A little money usually, I think: a quarter or, in later years, a dollar.  Perhaps some candy and a fun small trinket that would amuse me until the parents arose.  Another thing I do not remember is speaking much with my sisters.  If my memory is to be believed, we spent most of that very early morning sitting on the floor with our stockings and gazing at the Christmas tree or the fireplace—which, in my memory, is lit, improbable though that sounds.  Perhaps some lingering embers from the night before?


That, to me, is what Christmas is: those early hours of dark and peace and contentment.  Everything after that—arguments, discussions, opening presents, and the endless drive to see our relatives (made more endless by my habitual car sickness) were simply the necessary titbits one had to put up with for the good parts.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

It Begins

In honor of The Monsters of Stephen Enchanter coming out in paperback, I have decided to start a blog.

Good heavens, what have I done?

It’s not too late to turn back.

. . .

Like all the children I knew, when I was young, people tended to buy me journals.  These journals were almost never the extremely nice sort of notebook with beautiful thick paper and plenty of space in which to write novels.  They were instead small, stiff, brightly colored contraptions with thin paper and thick lines and occasionally even a pen attached.

I once kept an ordinary diary for a whole week.  It was then that I realized how supremely dull my life was.  Fear not, however—I have no intention of using this blog to regale you the details of my breakfast, lunch, and dinner (although you can freely assume that all of these meals are accompanied by a self-satisfied snug pot of tea).

Possibly the best thing about these little journals was that many of them came with a lock and key set, the key to which I usually lost before I ever got around to opening the journal.  Then, when the time came for me to settle down in an armchair and grind my teeth and try to find something interesting to write about, I discovered that the journal was locked and I had no key.

I did not, to my dubious credit, use this as an excuse not to write.  Oh, no.  I used this as an excuse to learn how to pick locks—as long as the lock was extremely cheap and could be jimmied in one easy step with a paperclip.

I am certain that breaking into those journals gave me far more satisfaction than anything else about them.  I have to wonder if I’m the only child who felt that way.


On reflection, probably not.