The annual “Christmas in the Barn”
event is approaching fast and I am in a slight panic, as there is still so much
to do and not a lot of time. There have been plenty of distractions over the
past few weeks meaning that I have been dashing from one thing to another and accomplishing
little.
All of my sewing and soaping is painstakingly
handmade by me, and takes time to create.
There have been no
little elves to help me with wrapping soap, writing labels and making the boxes for the soaps and lavender hearts.
Recently however, I was woken
abruptly during the night by an unnerving sound, which after a few heart-stopping
moments I realised to my consternation was the noise of a mouse!
The sounds of gnawing
and scratching between the ceiling in the downstairs front bedroom and the upstairs
floorboards
indicated that this mouse intruder was not helping with my
stitching like the mice in “The Tailor of Gloucester” but was instead intent
upon eating my house.
With horrifying thoughts of the
house burning down due to nibbled electrical cables, I raced upstairs to where
the noise was coming from. Evie (who is a formidable mouser) lay in her bed, eyes
half closed, sleepily listening to the noise – her nose twitching slightly and
ears pointed, but astute enough to know that the mouse yet so close was in
reality unreachable. The gnawing grew louder undeterred by my footsteps. I rapped
sharply on the floorboards with my knuckles. “Be Gone!” I sternly commanded the
mouse. Amazingly, the noise stopped immediately!
Incredibly, (and thankfully) from
then on there has been no further sound of the mouse, though I lost a lot of
sleep lying awake listening, until finally a couple of days later I found the petrified
corpse of a mouse on the back doorstep, for which Evie was undoubtedly responsible,
despite her innocent demeanour.
Evie’s penchant for mousing was
the cause of the next incident that distracted me from my preparations.
An unusual and marked reluctance
to leave her bed one Saturday morning puzzled me.
At first, I thought it was because the weather was cold and miserable, but as the morning progressed, she still showed no inclination to come downstairs. Concerned that she hadn’t eaten, I coaxed her out of bed. There was a heartrending miaou of pain and Evie limped towards me holding her front left leg stiffly into her body.
A hasty visit to the vet ensued –
Evie wailing and hyperventilating in distress in the cat box and me hyperventilating
and babbling incoherently – thoughts of the cause of Evie’s previous injuries
at the forefront of my mind. The nice vet soon had us both calmed down, Evie
pretending to be brave and act as though there was nothing wrong.
The vets examination produced an
unexpected finding - a deep gash on her left shoulder that I had not noticed
before. The explanation was alarming. Evie had grown overconfident in her
mousing and this time had taken on more than she could handle. She had picked a
fight with a large rat, which had viciously inflicted multiple bites upon her resulting
in rat bite fever. Whilst Evie appeared to have lost this fight, it is
debatable as to the state that the rat was in at the end of fight.
To alleviate the stress, I
indulged myself in stitching a lovely embroidery design from Caroline Zoob that
I had intended to keep until after the Barn event.
A Bird in the Oak on
antique French Linen.
Enjoyable that it was to do,
completing this embroidery has been mere procrastination and although I can now
admire it in my hallway, I still have heaps of preparation to do for “Christmas
in the Barn”.
The stress has
returned.
xxx
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