
Today I rescued a small animal from my pool. I suppose itโs a stretch to say, โrescuedโ since the animal was already dead, but nevertheless, he was stranded on the bottom, and I brought him up. It was so big, I’d spotted him through my kitchen window and almost cried because I thought it might be a bunny. I scooped him out gently with the net, an act that was pretty easy because once I nudged him, he floated up like a weightless thing. Really, he was bloated, and his arms and legs stretched out as if maybe heโd tried to gallop in a valiant yet hopeless attempt to outrun death.
I should have taken a photograph so I could show you proof of my humaneness, but Iโm not sure what the rules are for posting death online. Whatever the legal way to dispose of a dead creature is, I did that. Iโm sure it was a rat, but the last time I saved a rat was when it had gotten its neck snapped in our pool vacuum and I said to my husband, โItโs a rat!โ and he was like, โYouโre ridiculous. Itโs a mouse.โ His opinion didnโt prevent my having to dislodge his water-logged bodyโthe ratโs, not my husbandโsโfrom inside the vacuum where heโd been duly clamped between two rollers.
Since weโve been living in the city-country of good olโ Escondido, Iโve become accustomed to the small things scaring the shit out of me when they scurry from behind the trash bin to the bush. Iโm also now familiar with the terrifying sounds of coyotes, and Iโve learned that nobody, probably, is being murdered but that a pack of these feral dogs is closing in on a kill and showing excitement in the form of soul-shaking high-pitched squeals and screeches. I also now know to expect that when I open my windows at night, I voluntarily let in the pungent aroma of feral urine.
Iโve almost been killed by snakes, and when I say โalmost,โ I mean it was probably a garden snake and I didnโt get stupid enough or close enough to discern its venomous potential.

Also, I once scooped up a bloodied rat with a shovel. It had given birth in my garage before proceeding to die,
which became obvious to me when the accompanying clot revealed itself to be a rat fetus.
When I said to my husband, โOh, itโs a dead rat and baby,โ he was like, โCome on, itโs only a mouse,โ as if those minor details made any difference whatsoever in this situation. Heโs never above stating the obvious especially when such comments are to distinguish between my hysteria and his rational truth. Heโs smart, for sure, but Iโm the one doing the saving and scooping and legal disposing, so if I say it’s a rat, a rat it is.
Be thankful I spared you a picture of that. And of this one today, with his wet, glistening fur, soul gone to rat heaven or wherever it may beโwho knows whether this rodent lived a well-examined, charitable life.
And on this day, as I write to you from my place of work (which is my homeโon a lop-sided couch, blanket over my legs because I get cold) and braless, which Iโm not sure makes me more free. Iโm pretty sure it just makes me more vulnerable, so let that be a lesson. It doesnโt matter what the truth is sometimes–it’s your perspective that carries the most weight. And if youโve got one, youโre ahead of the game.
Happy Thursday. May it be ratless, cozy, and safe, and may you always know which side of the argument youโre on.
I definitely had to chuckle a few times at this.
Tom Taylor
DO the right thing even when no one is looking
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Aww thank you! And thanks for reading!
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