“She
hardly sits,” Pewter noted, herself a sharp critic of human mystical
leanings. But in the case of Miranda, the good woman practiced what she
preached.
“Uh-oh.
I don’t think biblical references are going to help now.” Murphy stared
upward.
Herb
cast into a tree.
“Christ
on a crutch!” he bellowed, then glanced over his shoulder to see if anyone was
within earshot.
“Cats
to the rescue.” Murphy leapt off the window ledge, quickly followed by
Pewter and Lucy Fur.
Elocution,
watching from inside the house, laughed so hard she had to lie down.
The
tiger was halfway up the tree before Lucy Fur even reached the trunk. Pewter,
not a girl to rush about, sashayed with dignity toward the puce-faced
clergyman.
“Now
how am I going to get my hook out of the tree? That’s one of my best flies.” He
threw his lad’s cap on the grass.
“Thank
you.” Pewter immediately sat on the herringbone cap.
Herb
stepped to the right, giving the line a tug. No release. He walked to the left.
Pewter watched.
“What
pretty feathers.” Murphy inspected the tied fly.
“He
sits up for hours tying these things. He won’t let Elocution or me help. He
sputters if we even touch one of these precious feathers. I personally can’t
understand why fish would grab a feather if a bird isn’t attached.”
“Life’s
too short to try and understand cold-blooded creatures.” Mrs. Murphy unleashed
one white claw, wedging it underneath the hook. “Stop pulling,” she
ordered Herb.
He
stopped. “That’s my best fly. Don’t you eat it!”
“Get
a grip.” Murphy laughed.
“Let
me help.” Lucy Fur put her weight on the line so that if Herb did jerk it
there’d be a little slack so Murphy could pry up the hook.
“Here
it comes.” Murphy popped it straight up.
Herb
stared up at the cats. He glanced around again. “His wonders never cease.” Then
he laughed. The cats joined in.
Slowly
he reeled in his line, picking up his favorite fly to inspect the damage. None.
He
spoke to Pewter, who was all rapt attention. “Best fly in the world for
rockfish bass.”
“Good
eating,” Pewter replied; she liked freshwater fish, especially if fried,
but more than any other seafood she liked crabmeat.
“You’re
on my cap.”
“You
threw it on the ground, you big baby.” Nonetheless, Pewter removed herself
from the cap, which he promptly slapped back on his head.
“Why
is he wearing that now? Herringbone is for fall.” Mrs. Murphy paid
attention to fashions.
“He
has to get in the mood. You should see him rehearse his sermons. Once when he
used cowboy as a metaphor he put on cowboy boots and a big hat.”
“He’s
funny.” Murphy shimmied back down.
“They
all are.” Lucy Fur backed down.
“Watch
out!” Pewter warned. “He’s going to cast again.”
“Jesus,
preserve us,” Lucy Fur blurted out.
He
popped out the line. It sailed over the cats’ upturned heads and nicked the bed
of the truck, just above the taillight.
Ding.
“Pretty
good, if I do say so myself.” He grinned ear to ear. “Amen.” He smiled
outright, following his line in to the truck.
The
cats scampered along. The shiny sinker tumbled into the truck bed.
Mrs.
Murphy leapt into the bed with Pewter and Lucy Fur on her heels.
“Practice
makes perfect,” he sang out to himself, reaching into the bed and lifting out
his sinker and fly as if they were gold-plated.
“Well
done,” Lucy Fur congratulated him.
He
patted her on her magnificent head.
Pewter
noticed that the door was slightly ajar to the passenger side of the truck. “That
broke, too?”
“Hey.”
Mrs. Murphy peered into the cab.
Lucy
Fur got on her hind legs and looked inside. Pewter stood next to her.
“What?”
Pewter said.
“That
bomber jacket.” Lucy Fur’s tail flipped left, then right.
“Herb
doesn’t own a bomber jacket.” Murphy jumped out of the bed. She tried to
pry open the heavy truck door, but, although ajar, it was too much for her.
“Whoever
used the truck last forgot their jacket.” Pewter shrugged.
“Open
the door!” Murphy hollered at the top of her not-inconsiderable lungs.