"He looks so serious."
I turned to Gayle and exclaimed "Tyler's the one,
obviously." I didn't have much
choice in the matter. He had chosen me
and that was that.
"Yes, I see that." Gayle was happy. I was happy.
He seemed like just the cat I was looking for.
Gayle brought me to a back room to sit down and fill out the
adoption contract. Yes, there was a
contract. Full of clauses like "we
have the right to inspect your house and the animal's living condition at any
time." Sure, come over, my mom
cleans every day and she will probably offer you a bagel with lox. Another was
"if you declaw this animal we reserve the right to prosecute you to the
fullest extent of the law." I called
Gayle over.
"Um....can you write a note on this clause? He's already declawed." She did. Whew.
Tyler hung out in the room I was in, which actually doubled
as the laundry for all the cat beds and towels.
Above the overworked washing machines were several shelves with folded
up towels and stacked cat beds. Despite
this being the "laundry," each clean cat bed and each pile of towels
had....you guess it.......a cat curled up and asleep. They really were
everywhere. Trust me, if you even had a
small semblance of an allergy, you would not have made it out of the cattery
alive.
Of course, Tyler kept me company as I filled out the
application. More than that, in
fact. He waltzed in, jumped on the
highest spot, a cat tree in one corner of the room, and literally shoved the
cat that was asleep in "his" spot down to the floor. I couldn't help but get a big kick out of
that. He wanted that spot and he was
going to GET that spot. Tyler has quite
a pair, I thought. Quite a pair.
I filled out the application, signed it, and paid the
adoption fee, gladly. As I had no cat
supplies at home, I let Gayle know I would be back as soon as they opened the
next morning with a carrier to take Tyler home. I gave Tyler another scratch on
the head and reluctantly left. Tyler
followed me to the door, as if to say "wait aren't I coming home with
you?" I wanted everything to be
prepared, you know? Besides, that was
what Cats for Dummies said.
Prepare their food, their litter, their toys, so they acclimate to their
environment faster. I've tried to be a by the book kind of guy, so that sounded
good to me!
I was SO excited.
More excited than I have ever felt in my life. This was MY PET. MY first ever pet. I loved Casey, and I always wished I had been
more involved, but she really didn't count.
My parents chose her. I chose
Tyler. I mean, I sort of did, he did
walk up to me, but this was my idea. My
own cat! My first REAL REAL pet. I wish
it was Saturday already!
My next stop? The nearest pet
store, where I proceeded to buy
EVERYTHING. A litter box, litter, food,
toys, a brush, bowls, a cat carrier, holy crap I spent a fortune! Caution be damned, I wanted Tyler to want for
NOTHING. MY cat was going to
be spoiled to the hilt!
I finally went home ('where have you been Daniel?') ate a
quick dinner and set all of Tyler's things up. It didn't take long for my parents to start the questioning.
"So, Daniel. Tell us. Do we have a cat?" My mother asked. Picture a Jewish Brooklyn accent, so my name sounded more like Dan-Yul.
"Mom, Dad, we have a cat. His name is Tyler."
"You have a cousin named Tyler you know." My father reminded me, genuinely excited but
his usual sarcastic self.
“Tyler the human” I still refer to him by that name, “is in
California and I barely speak to him. He'll get over it. I'll go get him
tomorrow and bring him home, I wanted to make sure everything was set up."
"Is he cool?" My father asked.
"Yes, he's got style, that's for sure, I think he will
fit in well here."
"He's declawed, right?" My mother worried.
"All four paws."
"What color is he?" My mother, ever the interior
decorator.
"Black and white.
He's actually a tuxedo cat. Black
with a white tie and white tails."
"You had to adopt a black one?" My mother wasn't
racist, she just INVENTED superstition.
Already she was worried that Tyler would cross her path, you know what I
mean?
"I was going for personality, not looks, ma. C'mon, you'll love him, I promise."
“OK, wanna watch a movie with us?” My dad was, and is, the KING of being sedentary. Conversations that didn't interest him merely
kept him from watching TV and flipping the channels. Mind you this was in 2000, before anything
streamed. You actually had to pop a disc
into a player in those days.
“Sure. Star Trek II?” I don't actually remember what movie we
watched, but I frequently requested that one.
I mean, c'mon, that’s a movie I never get tired of. KHAN!!!
As is my habit when I am excited about something, I did not
sleep much. I was just too excited. My last night without a pet. How could anyone sleep? I finally nodded off and woke up on December
9, 2000 at…..6am. Little Shelter does
not open until noon on Saturdays so I had 6 whole hours to wait. SIX FUCKING HOURS. You know when you're excited about something and
the time just……drags…….on……and………on. I
had breakfast, read the paper cover to cover, cleaned, and showered, I may have
even read War and Peace, but finally it came time to head east to the shelter
and….Tyler!
Off I went in my dad’s Lexus SUV, why not take my own
car you may ask? Well, his car had the car phone and I was
to call my parents when I was almost home with Tyler. Remember those? Installed in the car, an actual phone, with a
phone cord and antenna that mounted on the trunk lid? Mind you, those were the days before texting
and driving, actually before texting at all.
With all due respect to Steve Jobs, no iPhone on the planet can hold a
candle to the call quality of an old school car phone. Not to mention nothing ever looked COOLER. Wait, this isn't a blog about technology.
I arrived at the shelter and was quickly escorted back to
the cattery. No politeness this
time. I was a “high roller.” An adopter.
A rescuer. I saved one of their
shelter cats and gave him a forever home! It was an awesome feeling.
“I’m here to pick up Tyler.” I proudly exclaimed.
“Oh, Tyler’s going home?” One of the other shelter employees
asked. “That’s great, he deserves it!”
He sure did.
Just like the night before, Tyler was waiting for me at the
front door. Tail in the air, he was
happy. He just KNEW something was
up. I’m sure it’s the same with your
cats, but especially with Tyler. He
always KNEW. When I was going away, when
I was leaving for work, he had this sixth sense. Gayle was there, all smiles.
“He’s waiting for you!”
That he was. They should have put
a little jacket and suitcase on him.
I knelt down and placed the carrier right in front of him
and opened the door. Tyler walked right
in and curled up. That was that. No struggle, no convincing. He was my boy.
My cat.
Gayle hugged me, a few of the shelter employees said their
goodbyes to Tyler (had this been 2015 he would have been photographed for their
Facebook page, but not in 2000) and we were off.
The whole ride home he meowed and meowed. Happy meows, curious meows. "So, are we living on Long Island? How many cat beds did you get me? You know I only eat Science Diet right?" I talked to him, letting him know how far
from home we were and how happy I was that I found him. He answered with his
little meow, as if he understood me.
When I was a few blocks away I called my parents to let them know we…WE….would
be there in a few.
When I pulled into the driveway both of my parents were
outside waiting for me. My dad ran to
the car. That in and of itself surprised
me. I never expected my dad to be
excited about having a cat in the house, but he was. My mother, who never relaxed about ANYTHING, was a bit more cautious.
“Is that the cat?” My dad asked, already knowing the answer.
“Mom, Dad, meet…..Tyler.”
My mother took a look in the carrier. Tyler, sitting up, eyes curious and alert,
stared right back at her.
“So, what do you think?” I asked. “He’s cute, isn't he?”
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