The trouble with baby gerbils is they can’t take a joke.
And neither can anyone else round here.

Ellie’s father looked up from the pamphlet he was reading called ‘Your Pet and Worms’. (Oh, nice. Very nice.)
‘Turn the cage round the other way, Ellie,’ he said.
Ellie turned my cage round the other way.
Now I was looking at the Fisher’s terrier. (And if there’s any animal in the world who ought to have HANDLE WITH CARE written at the top of his case notes, it’s the Fisher’s terrier.)
Okay, so I hissed at him. It was only a little hiss. You practically had to have bionic ears to hear it.
And I did growl a bit. But you’d think he’d have a head start on growling. He is a dog, after all. I’m only a cat.
And yes, okay, I spat a bit. But only a bit. Nothing you’d even notice unless you were waiting to pick on someone.
Well, how was I to know he wasn’t feeling very well? Not everyone waiting for the vet is ill. I wasn’t ill, was I? Actually, I’ve never been ill in my life. I don’t even know what it feels like. But I reckon, even if I were dying, something furry locked in a cage could make an eensy-weensy noise at me without my ending up whimpering and cowering, and scrabbling to get under the seat, to hide behind the knees of my owner.

More a chicken than a Scotch terrier, if you want my opinion.
‘Could you please keep that vile cat of yours under control?’ Mrs Fisher said nastily.
Ellie stuck up for me.
‘He is in a cage!’


‘He’s still scaring half the animals in here to death. Can’t you cover him up, or something?’
Ellie was going to keep arguing, I could tell. But, without even looking up from his worm pamphlet, her father just dropped his raincoat over my cage as if I were some mangy old parrot or something.
And everything went black.
No wonder by the time the vet came at me with her nasty long needle, I was in a bit of a mood. I didn’t mean to scratch her that badly, though.
Or smash all those little glass bottles.
Or tip the expensive new cat scales off the bench.
Or spill all that cleaning fluid.
It wasn’t me who ripped my record card into tiny pieces, though. That was the vet.
When we left, Ellie was in tears again. She hugged my cage tightly to her chest.
‘Oh, Tuffy! Until we find a new vet who’ll promise to look after you, you must be so careful not to get run over.’
‘Fat chance!’ her father muttered.
I was just glowering at him through the cage wire, when he spotted Ellie’s mother, standing knee-deep in shopping bags outside the supermarket.
‘You’re very late,’ she scolded. ‘Was there a bit of trouble at the vet’s?’
Ellie burst into tears. I mean, talk about wimp. But her father is made of sterner stuff. He’d just taken the most huge breath, ready to snitch on me, when suddenly he let it out again. Out of the corner of his eye, he’d spotted trouble of another sort.

‘Quick!’ he whispered. ‘Next-door is just coming through the check-out.’
He picked up half the shopping bags. Ellie’s mother picked up the rest. But before we could get away, Next-door had come through the glass doors.
So now all four of them were forced to chat.
‘Morning,’ said Ellie’s father.
‘Morning,’ said Next-door.
‘Nice day,’ said Ellie’s father.
‘Lovely,’ agreed Next-door.
‘Nicer than yesterday,’ said Ellie’s mother.
‘Oh, yes,’ Next-door said. ‘Yesterday was horrible. ’
She probably just meant the weather, for heaven’s sake. But Ellie’s eyes filled with tears. (I don’t know why she was so fond of Thumper. I’m the one who’s supposed to be her pet, not him. ) And because she couldn’t see where she was going properly any more, she bumped into her mother, and half the tins of catfood fell out of one of the shopping bags, and rolled off down the street.
Ellie dumped down my cage, and chased off after them. Then she made the mistake of reading the labels.

‘Oh, nooo!’ she wailed. ‘Rabbit chunks!’
(Really, that child is such a drip. She’d never make it in our gang. She wouldn’t last a week. )
‘Talking about rabbit,’ said Next-door. ‘The most extraordinary thing happened at our house.’
‘Really?’ said Ellie’s father, glaring at me.



‘Oh, yes?’ said Ellie’s mother, glaring at me as well.
‘Yes,’ said Next-door. ‘On Monday, poor Thumper looked a little bit poorly, so we brought him inside. And on Tuesday, he was worse. And on Wednesday he died. He was terribly old, and he’d had a happy life, so we didn’t feel too bad about it. In fact we had a little funeral, and buried him in a box at the bottom of the garden.’

I’m staring up at the clouds now.
‘And on Thursday, he’d gone.’
‘Gone?’
‘Gone?’
‘Yes, gone. And all there was left of him was a hole in the ground and an empty box.’
‘Really?’

‘Good heavens!’
Ellie’s father was giving me the most suspicious look.
‘And then, yesterday,’ Next-door went on. ‘Something even more extraordinary happened. Thumper was back again. All fluffed up nicely, and back in his hutch.’
‘Back in his hutch, you say?’
‘Fluffed up nicely? How strange!’
You have to hand it to them, they’re good actors. They kept it up all the way home.
‘What an amazing story!’
‘How on earth could it have happened?’
‘Quite astonishing!’
‘So strange!’
Till we were safely through the front door. And then, of course, the pair of them turned on me.

‘Deceitful creature!’
‘Making us think you killed him!’
‘Just pretending all along!’
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