... to the sound of an animal crying.
I seize my dressing gown ready to do battle with (I assume) an amorous feral ginger tom on the terrace, switch on the lights and fling open the French windows and hiss loudly. No cat, but the sound continues and I realise it's Bertie. Afraid he's been badly hurt in a fight, I grab a torch and in the light see a desperate face with wide frightened eyes in the far corner of the swimming pool. He's scrabbling unsuccessfully to get a purchase with his front paws on the tile surround, his back legs flailing in the water to try and keep afloat.
I grab him under his armpits, hoik him out and cuddle him in my arms as I race back to the house. He's soaked to the skin, freezing cold and trembling violently. Swimming pool water pours off him over the kitchen floor and he runs to the lounge to try and dry himself against the sofa covers. I fling on heaters, hunt for large bath towels - mine, clean - throw them over him and rub him and rub him to try and get some heat back into his body. He has the wisdom not to resist. I fear for a seizure or heart attack.
He sits upright in front of the gas fire in the kitchen as I continue to towel him. He's so close I swear I can smell singed fur. Gradually, gradually his fur dries and the trembling abates. He tucks himself down in "his" corner and sleeps, while I make a hot chocolate drink and read a Lidl's catalogue cover to cover. I don't want to leave him and it's the only reading matter to hand at this hour of the morning.
He recovers enough to accept breakfast, which I take as a good sign but still feel I need to keep an eye on him - no working in the cottage today. So I do something I've been meaning to do for years - make the cover for the foam seat for the Lloyd loom chair in one of the bedrooms. It's always on the list below more important stuff and I always finish up just plumping up a square pink cushion, which looks less than ideal wedged in a half-moon seat. I get my sewing machine and the material I'd already planned to use and plonk them on the kitchen table and, while he snores gently in the corner, I work and reflect on the fact that it takes me all morning. In that time the contestants make a full-length evening dress on the Great British Sewing Bee!
He awakes, drinks, goes back to sleep, wakes again, goes out for a widdle, but nowhere near the lawn that leads to the pool. After lunch I decide to take him into town for a gentle stroll round the park behind the Town Hall. It's where we walked all those evenings when he was convalescing with his knee and I know that we will move at a snail's pace as every clump of grass and tree trunk has to be investigated and marked. He does well, so I decide a detour in the merc to the artisanal patisserie for comfort food is called for. By the time I return he has squeezed himself past the netting that is supposed to keep him in the back and is waiting, front paws up on the glove box, grin on his face, ready for "a treat".
He tells me he thinks he will live.
What a shocker, thank goodness you heard him for rescue. Lesley
ReplyDeleteHello Lesley, I'll be eternally grateful I woke. Bertie, fortunately, lives in the present and happily trotted round a different park with me this morning and then "guarded the car" while I shopped. The world and his wife are out today as we have TWO bank holidays tomorrow and Thursday - everyone is taking a "pont". Thanks for posting, as always.
DeletePoor Bertie, such a frightening experience for both of you.
ReplyDeleteHello Sue, thanks for passing by. It was! Though at the time I was just focusing on getting a poor, shivering sodden mutt warm and dry. I slept until 9am this morning and I've lost a kilo in weight! I think I was more stressed than I realised at the time.
DeleteI'm so glad you were able to rescue Bertie and he appears to have survived unscathed. Friends of ours lost their bulldog as she got trapped under a flexible swimming pool cover and drowned. So horrid!
ReplyDeleteHello FD, yes, we were so lucky. Dreadful to think of the "what if..." There's a lot to be said for having the dog view of the world and living in the present. He is fine and even seems unconcerned about wandering round the pool! We do now lock the door at night so if he needs to go out he has to wake us.
DeletePoor Bertie! Thank goodness you heard him...though don't you think we are always somehow on the alert for our animals, even when fast asleep...
ReplyDeleteWhatever possessed him? Was he chasing something, do you think? You have clearly suffered more than him, once he was rescued.
You must have been beside yourself warming and drying him.
We have had heavy rains here....Podge, the French bulldog, likes her morning dip in the duck pond...taking off from a distance and sending the ducks flying. She did that this morning and disappeared under the surface. She resurfaced, snarling with fury, and went to dry herself on Leo who was still in bed.
Hello Helen, yes, I reckon it was one of the feral cats. He's now an elderly gentleman and needs his night-time wee and he probably disturbed one when he went out. He can open the kitchen door himself, but not any more! We now lock him in and Tod lets him out when he asks. He also doesn't see so well these days, so that won't have helped. I love the image of Podge, duck pond and Leo.
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