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  What readers say about

  Second Lives

  “Couldn’t stop reading—this vividly written comedy would translate well to film.” Vana O’Brien, actress

  “Such a light, enjoyable book about cats, dogs, and their humans! Romantic and realistic at once.” Elizabeth Dossa, author and journalist

  “A charming story in a New England town full of flawed but appealing characters—an outsider perspective on the crazy things humans do.” Nora Long, literary agent

  Second Lives

  A novel of humans and other animals

  Beatrice Gormley

  Smashwords Edition

  Copyright 2020 by Beatrice Gormley

  All rights reserved.

  Cover design: SelfPubBookCovers.com/adventure_frame

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  In memory of Cool Paw Luke

  And Brady the Wonder Dog

  [The Cat] went back through the Wet Wild Woods, waving his wild tail and walking by his wild lone.

  Rudyard Kipling, The Just So Stories

  Chapter 1.

  The Cat peered out one round hole in the side of the cardboard carrier, then another. The car jerked out of the driveway. He tried to dig his claws into the slick cardboard to keep his balance. A piercing meow caused his heart to beat faster, even though he was making the sound himself.

  It wasn’t riding in the car that panicked the Cat. He often rode along when the Man drove, for instance to pick up pizza. He liked to stretch out on the shelf behind the back seat, the highest perch in the car, with an ever-changing view. He also rode with the oldest child on her bike, sitting in the basket as she pedaled up and down the cul-de-sac.

  The Girl was the one who’d named him “Batman.” It was on her bed that he slept at night, in between stints of mouse patrol. But last night, when he’d padded up the stairs for his midnight nap, her bedroom door was shut.

  That was not right. The Cat meowed and scratched. Finally he pounded on the door with his front paws, making a racket that even hearing-deficient humans would notice.

  The Cat’s pounding did wake up the Girl, who woke up the Man and the Woman. There was crying and arguing. But the upshot was not the obvious one, to let the Cat into the Girl’s room. Instead, the Man had picked up the Cat and shut him in the laundry room for the night. So the Cat had missed out on not only his nightly naps with the Girl, but also his pre-dawn rounds of the household.

  This morning, after the Man and the children had left the house, the Cat jumped onto the sill of the sunny living room window. Licking his white bib while keeping an eye on the fluttering finches at the bird feeder, he purred praises to the Great Cat. Surely he was one of her favored worshippers, for he had lived since kittenhood in this ideal home.

  Well—ideal until yesterday. Even before the disturbance last night, there had been an upset involving the Girl. He’d been sitting on her lap, purring as she stroked him and bent down to whisper to him, her breath tickling the long hairs on the inside of his ear.

  Then—the Girl’s soft, regular breath halted. She made a strangled noise. He glanced up. She began wheezing and choking, and he jumped off her lap in alarm. The Woman came running. She hustled the Girl out of the house and into the car. They were gone until after dark.

  This morning the Woman had forgotten, as she sometimes did, to feed the Cat right away. After he groomed himself, he was going to have to annoy her until she remembered.

  The Cat heard the Woman’s footsteps behind him, but he thought she was coming to water the geraniums at the window. Instead, she grabbed the Cat and stuffed him into the carrier. “I’m sorry, kitty, but my children come first.”

  The Cat bunched his haunch muscles to leap out, but she shoved the flaps down against the top of his head. As the carrier lifted and swung sickeningly, he lurched from side to side.

  Now, in the car, the Cat strained to see, pressing his face against one hole in the cardboard after the other, but the little round openings showed only patches of car upholstery. He poked at the holes with his paws to enlarge them, but the cardboard was too sturdy. He hated not being able to see out the window.

  Was the Woman taking him to the vet’s? That had been the destination, the other times he’d been crammed into the carrier. The thought of that chemical-smelling place, the cold steel table where he was prodded and stuck, made him yowl again. After the last visit to the vet, the Cat had come home with an unexplained wound in his groin, and it had taken several days to heal.

  “It’s okay, kitty,” the Woman called from the driver’s seat. He yowled louder. She turned on the radio, adding a yammer of voices over the Cat’s cries.

  The Cat was tempted to call on the Great Cat to save him from the vet’s. He had learned as a kitten that if a cat was in truly desperate straits, and called upon Her with a pure heart, the Great Cat might come to his rescue. However, the deity should not be bothered for minor problems. As his mother had told him and his litter-mates on the day she weaned them, the Great Cat had more important things to do. Besides, She needed Her sleep.

  The Woman’s phone rang, and she turned down the radio to answer it. “Hi, Mom. . . . Emma’s fine now. She went back to day camp. . . . No, she was fine, as soon as” [yowl] “they gave her the epinephrine, even before we left the emergency room. . . . Yes. I’m on my way to the Mattakiset Animal Shelter right now. . . . I didn’t” [yowl] “ask Scott. If he thinks we can keep a cat in the same house with an allergic child, he’s insane. . . .”

  The Cat was panting between yowls now. Would they drive on forever, turning corner after corner, his paws slipping as the carrier slid from side to side on the backseat? But no—with one more turn, the car slowed and came to a stop.

  From the feeling of the car wheels, this was not the vet’s stone parking lot. It was smooth pavement, like the family’s driveway. The Cat started to calm down. Maybe the Woman had driven around aimlessly and finally come back home? Humans did stranger things than that.

  As the driver’s door opened, an overpowering smell rushed into the Cat’s nostrils: the reek of dozens of lonely, frightened animals. The air rang with compulsive barking, pierced by yowls.

  The back door of the car opened.

  The Cat was too horrified to yowl. This was a place much worse than the vet’s. A place where animals without patrons sank into despair.

  O Great Cat! Save me!

  The Woman lifted the carrier out and set it down on the pavement while she locked the car, still talking on the phone. “Look, I’ll have Emma call you after her gymnastics class, okay? Gotta go.”

  O Great Cat, I beg you, help!

  The Cat seemed to feel a warm breath on the top of his head. Blue sky appeared between the handles at the top of the carrier. He lunged upward. Great Cat, give me strength.

  “Damn!” exclaimed the Woman, grabbing at the loose handles. But the Cat’s head and shoulders were already out. She tried to push him back down. He raked her arm with his claws. “Damn!”

  Cats are small, and humans, even female ones, are large, but the power of the Great Cat was with him. Writhing and scratching, the Cat tumbled onto the pavement. He found his footing and streaked for the trees at the edge of the parking lot.

  A throaty voice, like his memory of his mother’s purr, only more so, spoke in his ear: Thi
s is the end of your first life.

  It was a doggy-dog world.

  Eighth-grade essay on the Dark Ages

  Chapter 2.

  On a hot, moist July morning in a western suburb of Boston, in a neighborhood where modest houses were out of reach for a teacher’s salary, but not for the combined salaries of a teacher and an attorney, Josh Hiller and his friend Carl labored to move most of his worldly goods into a U-Haul truck. The rest of his stuff was already jammed into his Honda Civic, the dusty car waiting at the curb like an overloaded donkey.

  Six months ago, Josh’s life had seemed difficult but manageable: He and Tanya were not getting along—but considering joint counseling; his dog, Molly, was gray-muzzled and arthritic—but as devoted as ever; and the principal of Josh’s middle school was a bitch on wheels—but more important, Josh loved teaching those kids.

  Now Tanya had filed for divorce, Molly was a small round carton of ashes and bone fragments on the floor of his car’s backseat, and Westham Middle School was Josh’s previous employer. Soon his and Tanya’s three-bedroom Cape would be on the market, and then it would become someone else’s house.

  Carl held a wooden-cased clock up to where Josh stood in the back of the U-Haul. “I think this is it, but you’ll probably want to take a last look around.” Leaning with both hands on the truck, he watched Josh wrap the Seth Thomas clock in a bathmat and wedge it into the seat of an armchair. “Uh, shouldn’t you pack that clock in its own box? It looks like an antique.”

  “No, it’ll be fine.” Josh wiped his dripping forehead with the sleeve of his T-shirt, briefly disrupting the cloud of gnats around his head. Carl, he noticed, looked like he was going to pass out. “Let’s get out of here. Follow me to Liberty Self-Storage? Unit 2B.”

  That afternoon Josh drove cautiously south on Route 24, having to depend on his side mirrors because the back window was blocked with cartons and bags. Also, the bicycle on the back jiggled whenever he hit a bump. It was generous of Vicky, his sister, to give him the bicycle. Although he didn’t like feeling that she was managing him, as if he couldn’t manage his own life.

  It was Vicky’s idea for Josh to spend the summer on the South Coast, healing in the sun and salt air while he looked for a new job. “Not Cape Cod,” she told him. “The South Coast is just as nice as the Cape, but closer and less expensive.” She set him up with a real estate friend in Mattakiset, a town of farms and summer cottages tucked into the inlets and points around Buzzards Bay.

  Josh took the exit for I-195 East, and then the exit for Mattakiset. Suddenly, there was almost no traffic, and the highway was walled in by woods on both sides. Josh followed the directions past stone walls draped with brambles, past a chicken farm, over a creek flowing into a salt marsh, past a field where cows clustered in the shade. “We’re in the country, old girl,” remarked Josh to the backseat.

  Turning off Old Farm Road at a red mailbox, Josh drove between rough-cut stone posts and parked under an ancient mulberry tree. The picture Melissa the real estate agent sent him hadn’t lied—in fact, the white-clapboard farmhouse looked even more picturesque in its wider setting, with a barn and the neighboring pasture.

  A large, shaggy gray dog bounded out the front door, barking, followed by a tall, sturdy woman. “You must be Josh Hiller. I’m Barbara Schaeffer, and this is Lola.”

  They shook hands, and Josh held out his fingers for the dog to sniff. English sheep dog mix, he guessed. Barbara and her dog both had straight-cut gray bangs and pale blue eyes.

  “Well!” said Barbara. “Let me show you around a bit, and then I’ll let you get settled. Here’s your key.” She watched Josh drop the key into the front pocket of his shorts. “Wouldn’t it be a good idea to put that right on your key chain?” Quickly she smiled, as if to soften any impression of bossiness.

  Josh smiled, too, to soften any impression of willful disobedience. “Sure, good idea.”

  Barbara’s smile disappeared, but she let the subject drop and beckoned him toward a screened porch on one side of the house. “Now, you’re welcome to use this space for relaxing.” Opening the screen door, she gestured at the wicker chairs and coffee table. “And to use the washer, of course.”

  Josh looked from the porch furniture, with the wicker unspooling from its legs, to the top-loading Kenmore washing machine. He gazed all around the porch. “And the dryer . . .?”

  Barbara pointed to an umbrella-style clothesline on the lawn. “I’ve always preferred to hang laundry out in the sunshine. And now we know how bad dryers are for the environment. And of course terrible fires can start in the lint screen.” Josh’s dismay must have showed on his face, because she added, “It is stated in our rental agreement: washer, no dryer.”

  Then Barbara cleared her throat, as if to indicate starting over on the right foot. Stepping down from the porch, she explained, “I’m new to this renting business. You see, I’ve lived in this house for thirty years, but I’ve never rented the apartment before. We added it on eight years ago, for my mother-in-law.” She halted and gestured to the outdoor stairway leading to an apartment over the porch. “Well. I think everything is self-explanatory—I put up some notes around the apartment—but if you have questions, just knock on my door and ask.”

  Josh smiled wryly. “Or, I could actually read the rental agreement, right?”

  Barbara smiled back. “It’s really very simple. The important clauses are No smoking and No pets.” She headed back to the house, with her dog ambling after.

  Wearily Josh pulled his backpack out of the car and trudged up the outside stairs. It was a little cooler here than in Westham, but just as humid. He was breathing through his mouth, which he’d been doing a lot lately. As if it was hard to get enough oxygen.

  There was a hand-lettered notice on the apartment door: PLEASE! LEAVE THE SAND AT THE BEACH! Josh turned the key in the lock, pushed the door open, and headed past the bed for the bathroom. Over the toilet, as he peed, another notice: HOLD HANDLE DOWN THROUGH FLUSH.

  Glancing into the kitchenette, he found further instruction over the toaster: TOASTER DOES NOT POP UP—USE TOAST TONGS. Beside the toaster was an implement fashioned from two wooden tongue depressors, a chunk of packing foam, and a rubber band. Barbara must have made this herself. Or maybe the craftsperson was her presumably deceased mother-in-law.

  Josh turned to stare at the nubby brown bedspread, struggling against gloom. What had he let his sister do to him? This was a miserable place to spend his summer. Josh had dropped out of middle-class life, down to the level of an aging graduate student.

  No. No, that was the wrong way to look at it. Come on, Hiller, pull yourself together. This might be a crappy rental, but he wasn’t going to spend much time here, anyway. He was going to spend the summer on the beach. And nothing was stopping him from heading for the surf right now.

  “And here come the dogs!” The voice of a woman provoked beyond endurance. “Kids. We are leaving.”

  Josh must have crashed on the beach, sedated by body-surfing. His towel was damp where he’d drooled a bit in his sleep. Pushing himself to his knees, Josh watched dogs and owners trotting down the path through the dunes. He felt ambushed. Soon enough, he wanted to tell them, you’ll be holding an empty leash. Then you’ll know how it feels.

  Josh rolled to a sitting position and settled his Red Sox cap on his head. He glanced westward, down the long sweep of beach to the mouth of the Mattakiset River. Sunlight reflected blindingly from wet sand, and Josh blinked and turned toward the east end of the beach. There, Mattakiset Neck, with its concrete watch tower from World War II, poked into Buzzards Bay.

  At the juncture of the causeway and the beach, something was moving: a brown dot, oscillating. Standing up to get a better look, Josh watched the dot grow to a blur of legs and then turn into a dog. A butterscotch brown, medium-large male, galloping like a greyhound along the edge of the surf. Josh wondered for an instant if the dog might be running from fear, but as the dog wheeled to charge a flock
of gulls, he caught his expression: pure canine joy.

  Josh shook out his towel, still watching. An older man in shorts and a polo shirt stepped forward. “Come here, Tucker!”

  Josh could have told him that shouting angrily at a dog wasn’t likely to bring him back. Sure enough, the dog, some kind of retriever mix, swerved out of the man’s reach. But the dog paused for a split second to poke his black nose into Josh’s hand. Then off he galloped toward the west end of the beach. In no time he was a blur with legs again.

  Josh laughed before he noticed the older man’s reddened face. “Sorry,” he said. “Is that dog giving you a bad time?”

  “Yes. You might call it a bad time,” said the other man. “And it gets worse. The last time we let him run on the beach, he went back and forth for an hour and a half.” He checked the L.L. Bean watch on his wrist. “If the son of a bitch takes more than half an hour now, that’s the end of his free runs.”

  Josh smirked at “son of a bitch,” but the older man didn’t seem to notice the joke. A woman in a wide-brimmed hat and a cover-up tunic appeared at his shoulder, glancing from the direction the dog had taken to the man’s face. “Oh, Gardner. Not again.” The man snorted.

  “The trouble is,” the older woman said to Josh, “Tucker’s supposed to get free runs to work off his energy, but when we let him off the leash—” She gestured at the dog, shrunk to a brown dot where the waves dwindled into the river.

  Pulling down the bill of his baseball hat, Josh watched Tucker disappear around the curve of the shore. “I thought I saw a sign in the parking lot: ‘No dogs on beach’?”