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her husband was not named Schrödinger   though many days they did not know if the cat was dead or alive   now and then   an offering, usually a small sparrow, was found on the porch, and she complained not once of mischievous mice   from her kitchen window, hunched over a *** or mixing lemonade, she would spot the black and white creature, (who never was given a name, not even by three farm sons)   stalking imagined prey across the yard,   under the swing set, or in the corner   by the white picket fence     she could remember the day   the neighbor brought two kittens, asking her to choose--it was snowing lightly she chose the smaller of the two   the civil thing to do she rarely saw when it lapped up the milk she left, or licked clean the plate with sardines   but she knew it was he, taking a light repast, a sabbatical from great mysterious hunts in the green barn, or by the cellar door   the boys were all in school then, full of pink color, noise, and often covered with rich dirt   one by one they left… pneumonia took the youngest a day when the cat sat, statuesque, by their black 1940 Ford     the eldest disappeared on a Saturday, into a lake where large mouth bass were plentiful and the waters clean, until his friends saw him dive into the depths, not to be seen again before Tuesday,   when his bloated body decided to come up for air and light   the same day she saw the cat skitter up the lone oak in the front yard   the middle, her most quiet   said goodbye from the bus depot, saluting them as he turned to the bus door   a year to the day before he was shot through the throat on some horrid hunk of rock named “Iwo Jima”   the cat was nowhere to be found that day   but she swore she heard him meowing all the night after they put her baby in the silent soil   her husband got the cancer and drifted off on a Christmas eve to some pasture she saw in the snowy sky when they put him in the ground, the cat   made no sound, though she saw him faintly, moving in some faraway   fallow field, following his own soundless dreams
0
Jan 4, 2015
Jan 4, 2015 at 2:30 PM UTC
the cat, on the farm, in Iowa, I believe
her husband was not named Schrödinger   though many days they did not know if the cat was dead or alive   now and then   an offering, usually a small sparrow, was found on the porch, and she complained not once of mischievous mice   from her kitchen window, hunched over a *** or mixing lemonade, she would spot the black and white creature, (who never was given a name, not even by three farm sons)   stalking imagined prey across the yard,   under the swing set, or in the corner   by the white picket fence     she could remember the day   the neighbor brought two kittens, asking her to choose--it was snowing lightly she chose the smaller of the two   the civil thing to do she rarely saw when it lapped up the milk she left, or licked clean the plate with sardines   but she knew it was he, taking a light repast, a sabbatical from great mysterious hunts in the green barn, or by the cellar door   the boys were all in school then, full of pink color, noise, and often covered with rich dirt   one by one they left… pneumonia took the youngest a day when the cat sat, statuesque, by their black 1940 Ford     the eldest disappeared on a Saturday, into a lake where large mouth bass were plentiful and the waters clean, until his friends saw him dive into the depths, not to be seen again before Tuesday,   when his bloated body decided to come up for air and light   the same day she saw the cat skitter up the lone oak in the front yard   the middle, her most quiet   said goodbye from the bus depot, saluting them as he turned to the bus door   a year to the day before he was shot through the throat on some horrid hunk of rock named “Iwo Jima”   the cat was nowhere to be found that day   but she swore she heard him meowing all the night after they put her baby in the silent soil   her husband got the cancer and drifted off on a Christmas eve to some pasture she saw in the snowy sky when they put him in the ground, the cat   made no sound, though she saw him faintly, moving in some faraway   fallow field, following his own soundless dreams
spysgrandson
Written by
American
Jan 4, 2015
Jan 4, 2015 at 2:30 PM UTC
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