This story was posted 9-21-19 on CafeLit at: https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/09/scratch-scratch-scratch.html or you can read it below.
Jack Anderson whistled as he bounded down the stairs to check another job off the To Do List, this one to change the furnace filter. It was the last day in May, a beautiful Saturday morning, and he wanted to get outside and start on the garden. He and his wife, Darby, had three flats full of zinnias, marigolds and impatiens to plant and time was wasting. He was a product manager at a medium sized software development company and was used to everything running on schedule, even weekends. This Saturday was no exception. Change the filter, plant the flowers and then get the grill going to do some barbeque chicken, everything nicely planned.
Jack Anderson whistled as he bounded down the stairs to check another job off the To Do List, this one to change the furnace filter. It was the last day in May, a beautiful Saturday morning, and he wanted to get outside and start on the garden. He and his wife, Darby, had three flats full of zinnias, marigolds and impatiens to plant and time was wasting. He was a product manager at a medium sized software development company and was used to everything running on schedule, even weekends. This Saturday was no exception. Change the filter, plant the flowers and then get the grill going to do some barbeque chicken, everything nicely planned.
Life was good in Jack's world. Good
that was until he stepped off the last step into the basement, turned into the
furnace room and almost put his face into the tail of a squirrel hanging from
the rafters.
"Jesus Christ," he yelled,
jumping back. The squirrel turned to face him, bared it's teeth, and Jack had a
momentary panic that it was going to attack. He pictured the animal sinking
it's claws into his face and teeth into his nose, rivers of blood running down
his shirt, then undergoing weeks of painful rabies shots. No way. He threw up
his arm to protect himself and yelled, "Get the hell out of here!" or
something to that effect. Truth be told, he was rattled. A rodent in the house?
Unacceptable. This would not do.
Darby heard him yell from all the
way outside by the garden shed. She hurried in through the back door and called
down the stairs, "Jack? Are you okay? What's going on?"
"There's a god damn squirrel
down here, Darby. Almost bit me," he said, embellishing a little. In
truth, the squirrel had panicked and scurried up a cast iron pipe and was now hiding
in the space between the ceiling and floor above him. He could hear it scratching
and clawing so he acted fast. "I'm going to plug around this pipe,"
he said. "Where's that steel wool?"
Five minutes later stood back and
surveyed his work. He'd used an entire bag of steel wool to fill up every hole
he could find in the unfinished ceiling of the furnace room. When he was done he called for Darby come
downstairs. Their house was nearly one-hundred years old, well cared for, but
old. There were potentially lots of spaces for a squirrel to hide, a point
borne out by the noisy squirrel above them in the ceiling scratching and scurrying
around like he owned the place.
"Damn," Jack grimaced, his
face turning red. "God damn it to hell."
Darby took him by the arm to try and
calm her high-strung husband."Let's take a step back and go upstairs,
dear," Darby suggested. "I'll fix us some ice tea and we can try to figure
out what to do."
"I already know what I'm going
to do," Jack stated emphatically, pulling away, face turning redder by the
second. "I'm going to trap that damn thing. And then I'm going to kill
it."
Darby signed and shook her head.
This was not going to end well.
It turned out the squirrel was
smarter than Jack. It had an entryway into the house up in a corner of the
eaves on the second story that was impossible for either he or Darby to get to.
They saw it later that morning when they were surveying the outside, trying to
figure out where it might be entering and exiting their home. The squirrel had
inadvertently played it's hand when it popped it's head out from a loose soffit,
two stories above them, taken a quick look at the two people watching from
below and scurried out of the hole, up onto the roof and over to the other side
of the house where it disappeared from view.
"God damn it," Jack
screamed, blood rushing to his face. "I'm getting my keys."
"Where are you going?"
Darby asked, greatly concerned. Jack had high blood pressure and didn't handle
stress well. On top of his stressful job he now had this pesky squirrel to
contend with. He had to watch himself.
"To the hardware story. Donny
had trouble with squirrels, remember?"
Darby did remember. Jack's younger brother
had used a Havaheart live trap to get rid of some nuisance squirrels around his
property a few years before. "He used those live traps right?"
"Yeah," Jack said grimily.
"I'm going to get one."
He came home with three. He baited
them with peanut butter and dry corn and waited. By the end of the day he'd caught
three squirrels and a chipmunk but couldn't bring himself to kill them.
Instead, he drove them to a park five miles away and released them. He knew it
was against the law, but what the hell. Out of sight, out of mind was his way
of thinking.
That evening Jack was feeling pretty
smug, thinking that at least one of the three squirrels he'd trapped that day was
the one getting into his house. He was just sitting down with Darby to watch
some television when they heard something in the ceiling right above them in the
living room. A noise of some sort. Scratch, scratch, scratch.
"What's that?" Jack asked,
standing up, listening carefully.
"Sounds like something's up in
the ceiling," Darby said. "You don't suppose..."
"No, it couldn't be," Jack
said, just as the thing scampered overhead and chattered loudly as if to
provoke them. "I can't believe it! It's that friggin' squirrel," Jack
yelled. He ran to the kitchen and grabbed a broom and smacked it against the
ceiling trying to scare the animal away, but to no avail. It scampered and
chattered and even chewed on a nut (it sounded like) for the rest of the
evening. In fact, the squirrel kept at it until late at night until finally all
went quiet.
"Maybe it's asleep," Darby
suggested, worn out. Not so much by the squirrel but by dealing with Jack. He
was frazzled and beside himself he was so mad.
"Yeah. Hopefully," Jack
said, suddenly feeling strangely forlorn and depressed. He couldn't stand that
the squirrel was 'winning the battle' as he thought of the situation. He sighed
a resigned sigh, "Maybe we should turn in ourselves and try to get some
sleep."
And one of them did. Darby slept
like a log but Jack barely a wink. The last thing in the world he could do was
to calm down and relax. He kept picturing the squirrel in the house hiding
somewhere doing whatever it wanted to do and the very thought of it drove him
crazy. He was up and the crack of dawn, wandering around the house, listening
to every creak and crack, knowing for certain that, somehow, magically, the one
squirrel from the night before had increased tenfold in number. At eight in the
morning, exhausted and at his wits end, he called West Metro Rodent Control.
They said they'd send someone out that afternoon.
That someone was Bryan who showed up
after lunch. He was a big man with a full beard, a long ponytail and tattoos on
both arms. To Jack it looked like he could take care of himself and any
squirrel for that matter, especially after he'd slipped on some safety glasses
and a pair of leather gloves that went to his elbows. He took fifteen minutes
climbing around on the roof, using his high ladder to inspect the eaves and a
powerful flashlight to probe ever possible entryway into the house.
After a thorough survey of the
outside, Bryan summarized the problem by saying, "It looks like you've got
just the one entryway in the soffit on the second story. I looked in and
there's some insulation in there. I'd say there was a nest and some babies were
born there and one is probably still living there."
Jack was shaking with rage but tried
to keep his voice calm. "Can you do something about it."
Bryan smiled. "Easy. It's what
I do."
Jack breathed a sigh of relief.
Next to him Darby asked, "How
much will it cost?"
Jack held up his hand to intervene,
"It doesn't matter. Just do it."
Bryan did. And in the end he was
true to his word. It took him four days to capture the squirrel. He put three
live traps on the roof to go with Jack's three live traps on the ground. Between
the two of them they caught seven squirrels which Bryan took to land a farmer
friend of his owned and set them free.
Rid of the squirrel, Bryan then sent
in a subcontractor who plugged the hole and sealed the soffits.
A week later, when Bryan came back
for his final inspection, he surveyed the work of the subcontractor and checked
the roof line. All looked well, nice and sealed. He told Jack and Darby, "It's
all done. I guarantee you'll be squirrel free from now on. Just keep an eye on
the roof line. If anything looks suspicious, don't hesitate to call." Then
he gave Jack an invoice for two thousand dollars.
"You bet I will," Jack
said, happily writing out a check, feeling very smug. Problem solved. He was
already looking forward to the first good night's sleep in two weeks.
But that didn't happen. That first
night he awoke to a scratching sound in the wall right next to his bed. He sat
up and woke Darby. "Do you hear that?" he asked her.
But she didn't. "It's all in
your imagination," she told him. "Just go back to sleep."
Easier said than done. In fact, for
the next week Jack heard scratching in the wall next to his head every night.
Scratch, scratch, scratch. It was beginning to drive him nuts.
Darby heard nothing, so finally,
after a week, she made a suggestion, "Maybe you should give Dr. Jensen a
call."
Dr. Jensen was Jack's psychologist,
someone he talked with to help deal with stress at work.
"Good idea," Jack said. He
needed to do something. He wasn't sleeping, he wasn't eating and his work at
the office was suffering . He made an appointment.
A few days later, after listening
intently during their first meeting, Dr. Jenson told Jack the sounds he was
hearing were a manifestation of the stress he'd been under while trying to rid
his house of the squirrel. Jack didn't care what the doctor called it, he just
wanted the scratching to go away. It was as if the squirrel was still there,
not in his home, but right inside his head. Something had to be done.
"Too bad they don't make a trap
for situations like this," Jack said to his shrink that first visit, to
which Dr. Jensen just shook his head and smiled, sympathetic to Jack's plight
but also happy to bill him for his time. No
matter how long it took.
Jack's
immediate plan is to continue to see Dr. Jensen. All he wants is for the
scratching to go away. Some nights he doesn't hear a thing. No scratching. No nothing.
And that's good. He's willing to pay whatever it takes to make that noisy squirrel
inhabiting his brain go away. The cost doesn't matter. It'll be worth it.
Unbeknownst to Jack, however, a
squirrel is in the process of taking up residence in his home. She's a young
mother to be and she's eagerly searching for a place to build her nest. She's
expecting her babies soon so she's cautious as she hops around the back garden
feeling more and more comfortable. There are lots of trees and nuts. Lots of
food. It looks like a good place to raise her family. She scampers up to the
roof where she's found a teeny-tiny opening under a soffit. If she's diligent
she can open up a hole and crawl inside. Then she'll build a nest and start her
new family. Yes, she thinks to herself, this will work out just fine. Happily,
she begins clawing and scratching. Scratch, scratch, scratch.
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