The mouse must have felt brave. And why wouldn’t he? He could probably sense I have no mouse-catching experience.
He sat there on my friend Kat’s kitchen throw rug, nose twitching, surveying the area to figure out his next heist while Kat and I sat in the living room. I could see clearly into the kitchen from my vantage point. Kat could not.
“Did you know you have a mouse in the house?”
“Yes, but I haven’t seen him,” she said.
“He’s sitting right there on your throw rug in the kitchen.”
“Are you serious?”
We got up and the mouse scurried across the kitchen floor and up the baseboard leading to the cupboards on ground level. Apparently, the baseboard isn’t completely enclosed, giving our new friend access to everything inside the cupboards.
“He’s been in everything,” Kat said. “He even chewed the wrappers off the cough drops in the top drawer.”
The mouse’s little tail hung out of the baseboard. I couldn’t help but think about the mouse story Rush Limbaugh used to tell about the time he captured a mouse in a trash can, and not knowing what to do with it, he reached for cooking spray, thinking he could kill the mouse with it. The mouse loved the buttery spray so much he rolled around in it. So, rather than killing the mouse, Rush made the mouse feel like he was in mouse heaven – a place where buttery spray falls from the sky.
I felt about as helpless as Rush did.
“What do you want me to do?” I asked.
We decided to grab a bowl to see if I could capture him in it. How hard could it be? When Kat shut the cupboard door I took the bowl from, the mouse shot out of the other cupboard, crashed into the nearby wall and dashed into the living room.
Kat screamed and danced a little jig.
I laughed.
The mouse, who has since been named Moe, got away. I looked under and behind Kat’s furniture in the living room, but Moe was long gone. So, I still haven’t caught a mouse.
After I left, Moe reappeared, and Kat found a way to place a large bowl over him. She left him there for two days before her son-in-law finally came over and got rid of Moe, who was dead.
Kat lost her husband just before Thanksgiving 2009. She had also been fighting cancer. On her blog (where she also wrote about our attempt to catch Moe), she said someone asked her if all the excitement caused by the mouse lessened her pain. She said she wasn’t sure, but the diversion did take her mind off the cancer.
If that’s true, then Moe had a purpose. And I’m glad he found it.
If you recognize this story, I confess that I wrote it for one of my blogs many years ago. I came across it recently and thought you might enjoy it.
October Spotlight
Three strangers travel on a lonesome Colorado highway at Christmastime and are forced to take shelter during a snowstorm at Mercy Inn. Will the two innkeepers, who just happen to be angels, be successful in helping Sarah, Brad, and Megan face their respective roadblocks and set them on a new course? Or will fear, guilt, and pride win the day?
Pick up your copy of the Christmas novella today.
Here are some tidbits you might find interesting this week:
Sticking with the rodent theme, did you know that it is illegal to own just one guinea pig in Switzerland because they are prone to loneliness?
"The most important hour is always the present." - Frederick Buechner
I’m offering this link as much for me as I am for you: 7 Edifying Films to Watch This Fall.
Here’s how one writer is benefiting from keeping a quote journal.
I’m a sucker for essays about walking, like this one: The Singular Glory of a Solo Walk.
When Lee isn’t writing essays, devotional books, or Christian fiction, he is a freelance editor, as well as a freelance journalist who has written hundreds of articles for various newspapers and magazines. He’s also a fan of NASCAR, baseball, tennis, books, movies and coffee shops.
How is Kat doing, Lee?