"Take him miles away and dump him" says the ever pragmatic ould lad
This however would only foist the problem onto someone else. He had to go.
A stray latched on to me when we first moved to Knocknagree. I carried him to the vet for all his shots, took him in and fed him like a king. Walked him - rain or shine (mostly rain) - 4 times a day. Within the month Max was feeling better and he was lovely with our kids. Keeper for sure.
That"s when the fun started. The fecker would take off out the door every time anyone called. We have a pretty busy house with a good few callers. His destination? The field packed with cows right behind our house. He"d run around nipping at their heels and driving the lot into a mad frenzy.
After a few phone calls, wellingtons thrown on in a hurry. I had a mini "troop" including myself, Benny and a young lad named Michael John. After a few rounds of falling in muck and being out run/smarted and classed by the wee feckin dog...we eventually had it down to a system. Mostly. Still took at least 30 minutes to catch Max, but we were getting good at it.
One day I got a call from a neighbour. He"d heard the farmer talking about Max in the pub. He was planning to shoot him next time he caught him in his field...and he wasn"t joking. In fairness, Max had never killed any of his cows. But they weren"t well pleased to see him at the same time. As painful as it was, I had to find Max a new home for his own safety.
Nobody would take him. There"s a shocker. As soon as they heard what he was at the conversation was over. The worst was yet to come though.
The Worst - One night we had a caller we weren"t expecting. Max made the mad dash as usual. But this time he didn"t bother running for the field. He ran out to our front yard and attacked a cat belonging to our 90 year old neighbour, "Baby". We managed to wrangle him from the cat eventually, but it was too late.
My husband Timothy locked Max in the back shed while I went over to Baby to give her the news. The minute she opened the door I was bawling. I knew what was coming. Gave her the news and she invited me in. "My husband, God rest his soul, gave me that cat 10 years ago. It was a good cat and always reminded me of my dear husband." Her husband was dead with a good few years at this stage. I was only crying before...now I"m really bawling. "Ah well. It could have been worse" says she. "At least it wasn"t one of the kids he got." I just about managed "I"m soooo sorry" through the tears when she decided we needed to have a drink to calm me and to honour the deceased cat.
5 large whiskeys later...she was giving me the burial instructions. I was to carry him 1/2 mile down the road to Johnny O"Keeffe"s farm as that"s where he was born. Bury him in the middle of the second field as the third was too close to the road and we we likely to be caught by Johnny in the first. Great.
The funeral - Myself and my friends, Siobhan and Claire carried the cat (as well as 5 daughters between us) to the field. We were in my car. How we all fit, I"ll never know. I was tearing road initially to get the job over with until Siobhan piped up with, "DAWN! This IS a funeral procession fer feck sake! Slow it down!" 5 MPH...that"s as fast as she"d let me go. We got there eventually, buried the poor cat, said a few prayers...and high tailed it out of there as fast as we could because Johnny had just fired up his tractor.
The Aftermath - Max had to go. No doubt about it now. But I couldn"t bring myself to put him down. Dogs don"t like cats anyway. It"s in all the movies so it has to be true. He was great with the kids. I know what I"ll do. Carry him far into the mountains and look for a house with signs of children to drop him near. And that"s what I did. Wasn"t until I got home and explained to Benny where I"d left him, that I discovered I hadn"t planned very well. It was a mountain full to the brim with sheep and the first farmer who saw him was likely to shoot first and ask questions later. Sighhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. RIP Max