This little incident involves a friend of mine who would probably prefer to remain nameless as she found the whole thing rather embarrassing….so I’ll call her Sally.
Sally lives a couple of blocks from me…but then the whole town lives a couple of blocks from me….
This particular day she decided she’d take the cat to the vets. The cat wasn’t sick, but needed his yearly booster injections. She could have waited a couple of days till the vets came down for their weekly clinic in our town, but decided for whatever reason, it was more convenient for her to take the cat to Mudgee, and not wait. She didn’t have a cat basket, and didn’t borrow one from the local vet clinic (they would have lent her one), nor did she contact any of her friends who had cat baskets to lend her one. She just put the cat in the car on the passenger seat on a towel….not in a box….and set off. All was well for a few minutes till the cat realised the car was moving. Then it started yowling. Those of you blessed with cats know what a lovely sound it is. Bad enough as that was, then the cat started exploring the car. Fortunately it decided it would sit up on the back ledge, near the back windscreen, still continuing its musical rendition of the Cat’s Concerto, but as you can imagine, it was a difficult drive for her. And of course he didn’t stay there all the time, he moved around the car and returned to the back window ledge each time. Several times she stopped the car to check his whereabouts, and she was thanking all that was holy that he wasn’t sitting on her head, or under her feet near the pedals. This went on for round half an hour, until she was going through a windy bit of road. She was almost through this, but distracted by the cat’s antics, she managed to run off the road, and into a ditch. The car wasn’t badly damaged, but there was no way she could drive it out without assistance, and by this stage, obviously, she wasn’t really in a fit state to be driving anything! Fortunately someone had been driving behind her, and noticed her erratic driving and decided something was amiss, thinking she had possibly suffered a heart attack or a stroke. He stopped at the side of the road where she had landed in the ditch, and helped her out of the car. She wouldn’t leave the car, with the cat in it, so he rang for an ambulance, and a tow truck. Fortunately his mobile phone worked….a lot of places on that road, mobiles don’t work, and once the ambulance and tow truck arrived, he left.
Sally adamantly refused to go anywhere in the ambulance until the tow truck driver said he would take the cat with him to Mudgee, and look after him till her husband arrived. So she allowed herself to be taken to hospital for observation, and once there, the hospital rang her husband, who of course wasn’t home, but they left a message for him to ring them. The tow truck man locked the cat in the car for the short drive into Mudgee, and found a box in his office, and retrieved the cat and confined him to barracks in that till he could be collected. In due course, Sally’s husband rang the hospital, and they put him through to her. His first words were, “How’s the cat?”
He travelled up to Mudgee that night, and collected both Sally and the cat, both of whom were a bit shaken but otherwise unharmed. The car of course had to stay in Mudgee for repairs, so Sally and the cat came home in her husband’s truck. The cat obviously hadn’t made it to the vets, and still needed to go for his injections. Now, Sally had no car as well as no carry basket….. so she rang me to see whether I could give her a lift. I had of course heard about her little adventure, and been round to see her, so naturally I gave her a lift to the vets, and lent her my cat basket. And made her promise that she would ALWAYS ask to borrow it, when in need…..