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Rated: E · Short Story · Animal · #1165077
Revised 10/06/06, for my own practice. WIP
         Lamps, chairs, my lumpy bed -- everything I owned was finally arriving, load by load, through my own new front door that day last September.

         “Owning isn’t for everybody,” you told me when I first showed you the little bungalow. “There’s a lot of work involved, a lot to take care of.”

         “I can handle the house,” I replied. “It won’t fall down on my watch.”

         Living alone, however, is a whole other story. You've been there. I'm lucky to have Sam. Have I told you what happened that first night?

         Well, Sam was busy sniffing the perimeter while I pretended to help the movers arrange the furniture. By nine the guys were gone and I collapsed into a chair in the living room. I looked out the front window to see drips and drops. “A toast,” I said to Sam and the couch and the rain, raising my empty hand in the air, “to a new beginning, however soggy.”

         While I was getting ready for bed that night, Sam was making herself comfortable across the room in the bedroom closet, her hind legs stretched flat out behind her, her nose pushed into a pile of shoes next to a stack of packing boxes. She must smell squirrels in the attic, I thought. Or maybe birds? It had been a long time since this old dog could catch anything. I looked up at the attic door in the closet’s ceiling. A hole in the roof big enough for rodents is something I could possibly endure, I told myself, like bindweed in the shrubbery or noisy struts on the car. Life isn’t perfect. Hadn't this house been inspected? I ruffled Sam’s fur, chiding, “If you caught it, what would you do with it, silly girl?” I left her there, went to bed and, lulled by the steady rain tapping the bedside window glass, quickly fell asleep.

         I remember I had one of my recurrent dreams. I was wandering around a Winchester House kind of structure, you know, like that huge mansion in California that the rifle heiress kept building and building? This particular house sported large rope-pulleyed dumb-waiters carrying children with brightly colored umbrellas up and down from floor to floor. I was warmly greeting several people I’m sure I had never met before when suddenly up popped Sam, all alone on the dumb-waiter. She opened her mouth, and instead of her usual sharp little woof, she delivered an unearthly high-pitched cry. I sat up in bed and shook my head. It was three in the morning. The screeching was real, and it was coming from the closet.

         As you can imagine, I was beside myself. My heart began to beat so hard I thought it might bruise my chest. That can’t be Sam making such a racket, can it? I turned on the light, mostly to assure myself that I was really awake, but by then the noise had stopped. Sam was standing at the foot of my bed, panting but otherwise calm.

         I went to the closet door. It was closed. I hadn’t closed it last night; Sam was there, after all. I considered just leaving the house and calling you to come get me, but it was obvious that I was going to have to be the grown-up here. I took a deep breath and slowly opened the closet door.

         There was still no sound. I shifted a few shoes on the floor with my foot and saw an overturned box quiver a little. Sam came to help, barking. I got the broom from the kitchen and gently tapped the top of the box.

         The box shook a little harder, and from underneath emerged a small pink nose, followed by a large, ugly, soaking wet possum. It shrieked and showed me its pointy teeth, as if I were the one trespassing! Another possum then climbed down from the shelf via my good suit and plopped on the floor next to the other. Startled, I leaped back and started screaming myself. Whatever happened to possums playing dead? We were all getting a bit defensive by this point.

         Now this is the good part: while all this screaming (mine and theirs) was going on, Sam, barking all the time, got behind the box in the closet and started pushing it and the possums out into the room. I, of course, continued to scream. Seeing the possums lumbering in the direction of the window, I climbed over the bed, raised the window sash, and pushed up the screen. Out they went. I watched them ford the wet yard, silent now. When lights went on in the house across the street, I realized I was still yelling. Sort of a victory whoop, actually.

         Sam parked herself at the window for the remainder of the night, tossing off an occasional woof for good measure. It occurred to me that after she had cornered the critters and made them squeal, she had indeed caught them by closing the closet door on them. Good dog! I settled down and managed to go back to bed. It could have been leftover adrenalin or my weary, foggy head, but at that moment I truly believed I had everything under control. Living alone would be a snap! I decided that the possums just wanted a dry place to hang out and settle down for the winter. Maybe they just needed to ride the dumb-waiter up and down like everybody else.

         The next morning, however, I called the house inspector and Critter Ridders.
© Copyright 2006 Becky Z (beckyz1 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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