Strange time for a cat to go. The news
came on 23 December in the form of a phone call from The Farmer. The
information had to be embargoed so as not to darken the festivities.
Eleven years ago, Tiger was located online in a search for a
Bengal kitten. She was a half-Bengal; our contact with her seller was early
enough for the new-born kitten to be named Tiger, our name of choice, from day
one. When she was ready, we drove down to Lincolnshire to collect her. At her
birthplace, the children of the house seemed sad to part from her; the
children’s mother had seemed caring throughout the preliminary contact. “She is
a cat that doesn’t purr” she warned us as we left her house. In the car, during
the long drive back, we cuddled the kitten, stroked her and talked to her soothingly. Tiger purred.
Back in Northumberland – we lived in the Coquet valley at
the time – Tiger’s arrival caused a commotion. Douglas, the slightly older
black kitten, was delighted to see us after what had been our
longest absence from him – about twelve hours. Douglas ran from K to me and
back to K, as if to make sure we were really there. At a suitable time we
introduced him to the newcomer. The look on Douglas’s face was something to remember.
Thunderstruck first, then incredulous, then hypnotically entranced. His first
attempted action was, of course, to come up to her, but his advance was not
welcome: Tiger hissed and recoiled. This was the beginning of a difficult acquaintance.
Things had not been going badly for Tiger on her journey north; she might have enjoyed
her new house by the Coquet, but a needy black cat was more than she was ready
for.
For her first night we put Tiger in the kitchen, the warmest
room in the house. The following morning she was nowhere to be seen. It took a
long search by two people to locate her: she was crouching in the narrow space
under the cooker. She had to be forcibly pulled out. As days went by, she
showed herself to be a needy cat, quite affectionate if on the demanding side.
She did not have the best digestive system. And she remained wary of Douglas.
She grew up to be a lovely cat, with attractive tabby shades
and a most elegant white glove on one of her front paws. She seemed inordinately
proud of this, judging by her habit of stretching the gloved paw in front of
her. She liked to be the centre of attention, and she often demanded this with an
imperious miaow that was almost a scream. This was immortalised in a tune K
titled after her, Tiger’s First Bird.
Tiger had an unfailing attention-seeker’s instinct, always present
when there were visitors, often assuming what she uncannily knew to be her most
fetching poses, such as the one with the outstretched white paw. She also
ensured she never missed a photo opportunity. I had a goodly collection of
images from this time, but it was lost when, ironically, Tiger herself pulled
my Powerbook’s cable when the computer was charging, sending it crashing down
on the stone floor. This was before the days cloud-based storage became widespread;
the loss of this and many other valuable documents marked a turning point in my
storage habits.
When, in her second year, we moved to Redesdale, Tiger found
herself surrounded by vast fields in which to explore, play and hunt, and more
prey than she could catch. She slowly
came to an entente cordiale with Douglas and with Fluffy the dog, and her digestive problems seemed to vanish. Tiger thrived in her new
environment.
She particularly enjoyed walking the dog, almost invariably joining in when I or K took Fluffy across the fields or along the river. If the excursion had not started with her, she would demand to join in halfway, announcing herself from a distance with her unmistakable call. Although normal to us, this often caused the hilarity of visitors and passers-by.
She particularly enjoyed walking the dog, almost invariably joining in when I or K took Fluffy across the fields or along the river. If the excursion had not started with her, she would demand to join in halfway, announcing herself from a distance with her unmistakable call. Although normal to us, this often caused the hilarity of visitors and passers-by.
Little by little, though, we became aware of a change: Tiger
did not always come home. She disappeared for days, then for weeks, and then
for months. More than once we gave her up for lost, but every time she would
return. Sometimes she would answer my call around the neighbouring fields;
other times she would come back of her own accord. Each time we noticed that
her features had become rougher, her voice had grown gruffer and her frame more
sinewy. She was no longer a pretty princess: she had become a feral cat.
It would be only too easy to blame the arrival of a younger
contingent - Rumble and then Rumble’s kittens - for this change in Tiger’s
behaviour. But the fact is that her wandering habit began earlier than that, not dictated by any external circumstances we could see. What kind of inner dictate guided her actions is anybody's guess.
She certainly was far from welcoming to Rumble when he turned up, hissing at him viciously. Unluckily for her, Rumble grew up to be a plucky fighter, and soon it was Tiger who was in retreat. Rumble acquired a vicious streak of his own, attacking Tiger in and out of the house, sometimes cornering her in such a way that Tiger would start wailing in an uncharacteristically defenceless tone. We found that heart-breaking, and punished Rumble with exclusion whenever we witnessed that behaviour. The tide turned further against Tiger when Rumble had kittens and they grew up, the hostility becoming tribal, and entrenched. Tiger was now a pariah.
She certainly was far from welcoming to Rumble when he turned up, hissing at him viciously. Unluckily for her, Rumble grew up to be a plucky fighter, and soon it was Tiger who was in retreat. Rumble acquired a vicious streak of his own, attacking Tiger in and out of the house, sometimes cornering her in such a way that Tiger would start wailing in an uncharacteristically defenceless tone. We found that heart-breaking, and punished Rumble with exclusion whenever we witnessed that behaviour. The tide turned further against Tiger when Rumble had kittens and they grew up, the hostility becoming tribal, and entrenched. Tiger was now a pariah.
We got used to Tiger’s long absences. There were enough cats
in the house to look after – four without Tiger, and this only after three of
Rumble’s kittens had found new homes. Every now and then, at irregular
intervals, when out in the fields, I would hear that imperious call demanding
my attention from afar. It was an unexpected joy when that happened, even
though the call was getting hoarser every time, and could by now be described as the growl of a wild animal.
Sometimes I would pick her up, all wet and sinewy, and would carry her back to
the house to ensure she had a good meal and some warmth before resuming her
wanderings.
This December, Tiger’s visits became more frequent. She was
not an inch friendlier towards the other cats, but she avoided confrontation,
and she did not disdain opportunities for human affection or even a nap in a
warm place. In the couple of weeks before Christmas, K reported that Tiger had come
home almost every day. Was she again a regular member of the family? That would
have been a pleasing thought.
On 23 December in the evening, The Farmer phoned to say that
he had seen Tiger lying dead on the side of the road. He thought that a
speeding car must have run her over. He offered to send a farm hand the
following day to give her decent burial. He was insistent that I should not
tell K until after Christmas, but K had been in front of me throughout that call and it would have been futile to deny that something was amiss.
Later that night, I decided that Tiger’s funeral should not
be The Farmer’s responsibility. When the time came for Fluffy’s night walk,
although it was raining I took a shovel with me. I walked in the rain to the
spot described by The Farmer, but found no dead body. I walked a long stretch
of the road in both directions, but there was no sign of Tiger. The following
morning I drove up and down, still to no avail. In the evening, The Farmer dropped by
for a Christmas Eve chat. As he was leaving I asked him to clarify where the
spot was, but he was evasive; he said he had dealt with it.
So Tiger, the coquettish kitten princess who became a wild
animal of the forest, braving foxes, badgers, hostile cats and countless winter
nights in the woods – Tiger ended her life not succumbing to any of those
extreme dangers, but a victim of a more mundane threat: the stupidity of a
human driving too fast.
It is a tribute to this unusual, courageous cat that
what overcame her in the end was not any of the dangers she had chosen
to face, but the fiercer power of human destructiveness. In the contest between
a cat and the forces of nature, Tiger won.
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1 comment:
Never better tribute. It feels, not like a farewell, rather like the Prologue to our future relationship with who will be part of our lives ...
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