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    Boris

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      We pulled the ottoman up

      as close to the screen

      as we could,

      and now that it’s cold outside

      and you’ve never

      been much of a reader,

      all you do

      is sit in front of that video

      and bat at the birds

      on TV.

      What’s worse—

      besides our slight

      dismay that we

      know you’re being tricked

      and you don’t—

      what’s worse

      is that we’re missing

      all our favorite shows.

      It’s the usual family crisis:

      one TV and everyone

      wants to watch it.

      We tried to get you interested

      in our shows, Boris,

      but you just

      don’t get the jokes.

      And nobody even moves

      on that one game show.

      You like

      TV that moves.

      That’s why you love

      your kitty video.

      Birds fly in,

      birds fly out.

      Just like outside.

      Except now

      we all sit and watch you

      watch the birds.

      What would the pioneers think

      if they could see us?

      They knew what to do

      with their evenings.

      Dip candles,

      make socks,

      sharpen their

      thingamajigs.

      This is why people

      are so pessimistic

      about the world today.

      Because we’ve given up

      making socks

      to watch cats

      sit in front of TVs.

      Of course,

      how many yuks

      did those pioneers get,

      sewing and dipping?

      Not many,

      I’d say.

      Probably none.

      But when we watch you

      rise up on your hind legs, Boris,

      and take a swing

      at that television,

      well,

      all we do is laugh.

      We laugh every time.

      You still don’t get the joke, Boris,

      but it doesn’t matter

      because you’re having fun

      and we’re having fun.

      And years and years

      from now

      we are going to say,

      “Remember when

      Boris watched TV?”

      and we’re going to

      have a really good laugh

      which, I repeat,

      is more than the

      pioneers ever had

      sewing their

      warm and serious socks.

      12

      I know how you love her, Boris,

      your sister,

      and I,

      an only child,

      envy you.

      Animals are lucky.

      They are almost always

      part of a litter.

      And wasn’t it wonderful,

      when you were a baby, Boris,

      to sleep in a pile

      of brothers and sisters,

      all that warm breathing,

      and the knowing

      you were not alone?

      You should see how

      we humans do it.

      We have one baby

      at a time, mostly,

      and as soon as it is born

      we put it in a box

      all by itself

      and though we put

      warm booties on its feet

      and a little hat on its head

      and wrap it up

      snug in a blanket,

      that baby is far from snug.

      That baby is

      going to scream

      for hours

      and everyone is

      going to think

      it’s gas,

      but, really, Boris,

      it’s because God forgot to

      make people

      in litters.

      How many baby kittens

      do you see

      screaming for hours?

      None.

      Who would,

      curled up in

      a big pile of fur

      and feeling somebody

      lick your ears

      now and then.

      Why is it God

      forgot to give

      humans company?

      Even if a human

      is lucky enough

      to have a brother

      or a sister,

      it takes nearly a year

      of waiting

      and even then

      it’s a disappointment

      because all they

      do is scream.

      I have lived

      a good while, Boris,

      and I have never

      gotten used to

      being alone.

      But you, Boris,

      you have always

      had your sister

      and this is why

      you don’t go looking

      for new friends,

      as I do,

      or haunt the coffee shops,

      as I have,

      or worry that

      no one likes you.

      You have always

      had

      someone

      to come home to.

      13

      Boris likes to play spinnies.

      That’s when we put you down

      on the hardwood floor,

      all stretched out,

      and we give you a twirl.

      Around you go.

      Spinnies!

      We get you going like

      a merry-go-round,

      and you lose every ounce

      of feline dignity

      as you whip around

      at our whim,

      and we are delighted

      by your silliness.

      But when you get tired

      of the game

      and try to walk away

      and we say,

      “One more time, Boris,”

      that’s when we

      see the tiger in your eyes.

      That’s when the big cat

      on that little circus stool

      just an inch from eating

      his trainer if there’s one more flaming

      hoop to jump through

      shows up in your eyes, Boris.

      And you take that spinnie

      in stride,

      but we all know,

      we all know,

      you are humoring us

      and we are on very thin ice

      indeed

      and suddenly

      it is we who look so silly,

      big dumb humans

      giggling at spinnies

      when we should be

      building rocket ships

      and making art

      instead of giving Boris a go

      one more time.

      It must be then

      such a thin thread

      between love and hate

      for you, Boris.

      And only because you

      are better than we are

      and more noble

      and patient

      and with a real ability

      to weigh things in the balance

      that you forgive us

      and take one last ride

      before you get up and walk away

      like it was no big deal,

      just going with the flow,

      no problem.

      Saving face, Boris, as you

      leave us in that

      big empty space on

      the floor

      with our

      dull imaginations

      and embarrassing

      lack of control.

      But can we do spinnies

      tomorrow?

      14

      Boris, you weren’t supposed to

      beat up an old cat.
    >
      Yes, he was new to the neighborhood.

      Yes, he was on your walking path.

      But, Boris, he was

      seventeen years old

      for godsakes.

      Arched and hobbling like

      a bent-up coat hanger.

      And didn’t you admire him,

      just a little,

      the way he insisted on

      following his owner to

      the end of the path,

      though it must have

      seemed a day’s journey to him,

      that path you streaked across

      in seconds?

      And, Boris, even worse,

      you hid in the tall grass

      and pounced.

      Didn’t even face him

      like a man.

      There is a word for

      you today, Boris,

      and it is thug.

      But how can we not

      love you anyway.

      And not sympathize,

      at least a little,

      with your desire to

      knock that decrepit

      old cat to kingdom come,

      because in him

      there is your future,

      and mine.

      There we are, Boris,

      in a blink of time,

      and don’t you hate

      being reminded of it?

      I do.

      Checking the mirror

      every day

      to see how nearer

      I’ve come to that.

      To that pathetic old cat

      trying to stay on the path

      until it ends

      where the bright water is,

      and the seabirds,

      and the sun.

      Not giving all that up just yet.

      Even when some young

      whippersnapper

      says it’s time.

      15

      The accountant’s wife

      came and knocked

      on my door one night

      and told me you’d

      come in through her

      pet flap

      and sprayed

      her couch, Boris.

      Plus scratched her cat.

      Plus she came home

      one day and found you

      sleeping upstairs

      in the middle of her bed.

      She is one of those

      taut little women

      who wears jogging clothes.

      I knew those girls in college,

      those girls you’d avoid

      in the dorm bathroom

      because you knew

      they were going to sure see to it

      that you didn’t have

      too much fun, missy,

      you and your happy friends.

      Girls like that

      become accountant’s wives

      in jogging clothes

      who tell people

      to get rid of their cats

      for acting like cats

      and who think

      if they cut holes

      in the walls of their houses

      they have a right to complain

      if someone uninvited steps in.

      And sprays and scratches

      then takes a nap.

      At first I said sorry, sorry.

      I’m so sorry.

      I’ll find him a new home.

      Then I came to my senses.

      Accountant’s wife: Screw you.

      I know your kind.

      I’m keeping my cat,

      so just plug up your hole.

      And while you’re at it,

      cover that

      stupid pet flap.

      16

      Where do you go at night, Boris?

      Where do you go that I can’t,

      being a girl who knows better

      than to

      roam alleyways

      in the dark,

      the one lesson from my

      adolescence that stuck.

      But let me tell you a

      secret, Boris.

      I used to know the

      night, too.

      When I was ten and

      the world wasn’t

      what it is,

      I used to creep

      out over the dark wet grass

      to the shed out back

      whose roof I could climb on

      and, catlike,

      sit and watch and listen.

      It is exquisite

      to be alone in the dark,

      a feeling of danger

      at the edges,

      but there’s your

      house right there,

      there’s the door,

      don’t worry.

      Is this what it is for you, Boris,

      sitting on the neighbor’s roof

      in the black night

      and seeing my window there?

      Can you hear my breathing,

      the dogs’ deep sighs,

      your sister’s purr

      carrying over the

      rippling night air?

      And do you think, Boris,

      how terribly beautiful

      it all is,

      this world that

      lives in a frenzy all day,

      then drops

      limp

      like a new baby

      into the deep sleep of night?

      When I was ten

      and on a roof,

      I may have thought

      such things.

      In the silent black of night,

      only deep reassurances

     

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