Many years ago, I was a country woman who was milking goats, feeding out bucket calves, and raising kids. 

My husband had constructed a nifty room in our barn with a door that closed tightly, allowing me to heat the room and keep out all the barn cats. Barn cats get addicted to freshly squeezed milk and make themselves a leaping, milk-seeking nuisance. I kept them out, or they were all over the room, even trying to dip their paws in the milk bucket. 

Photo by Remmington Wanner on Unsplash

This particular morning, I entered the milking room with my four-year-old daughter and brought in the first milking doe. My daughter perched herself on a large feed box. 

I had just started squeezing out milk when my daughter said, “Mom, there’s a cat back there.”

Ugh. There were not supposed to be any cats in that room. If a cat got trapped in the room, it couldn’t get out. How long had it been there?

I was afraid to ask. “Is it dead or alive?”

She studied the gap between the box and the wall. “Dead. Can I pick it up?”

No!” Good grief. 

My husband always seemed to be working 40 miles away from home when these ugly situations came up. It sure would have been nice to turn that dead cat over to him. But, no, I was home alone.

Well, me and a curious preschooler.

“Leave it alone,” I said before she got any more ideas. You need to understand that this girl had once gone with me when I had a baby goat autopsied. She begged the veterinarian to let her watch the procedure and nearly got her nose cut off because she peered so closely into the body. 

He was willing to show her the location of the lungs, the stomach, the liver after she asked a tumble of questions.

My point? This girl wasn’t traumatized by a dead cat.

I toyed with the idea of leaving the project for my husband, but I really didn’t want that dread hanging all day long. Besides, my daughter would probably want to sit with the dead cat until her dad got home.

Better get it over with. I finished milking the goat, took the milk into the house, and gathered my supplies. Trash bag. Check. Hand sanitizer? Face mask? Gloves? 

I marched back to the barn with my little girl hot on my heels. She wasn’t about to miss this next step in her veterinarian experience. What a kid.

I leaned slowly over the feed box, my breath wheezing through the face mask. I had put a mask on my daughter, but she had slid it on top of her head. Sigh. Next, she’d be snapping the rubber band between her fingers. Not too concerned about this mess.

I was more concerned. I did not want to see roadkill in my milking room, but I finally focused my view into the gap.

There, tattered and soiled, munched and bent, was a purple and white stuffed cat toy. 

She was right: it wasn’t alive.

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