— I now have a certified pre-owned cat without a tail; maybe he wasn’t pre-owned at all, but was simply cast out or born in the wild. It’s not that I needed another cat; I already had three, all of which were abandoned or rescued animals. I’m also supplying food for another cat taken in by an elderly woman, so I really didn’t need another cat! However, this cat needed me…
It showed up on my doorstep, one of a number of strays abandoned in my neighborhood but more pathetic than the rest. He had suffered a tail amputation, you see, from unknown causes. Possibly it was a less than favorable encounter with a dog or other animal, perhaps he had gotten trapped somewhere, or possibly the mutilation had occurred from a sadistic human; I’ll never know for sure. The wretched remnant of a tail leaked blood wherever the cat rested, and this battle-scarred little guy also had a piece out of one ear. I say little guy because this was more of a kitten still than a cat, perhaps nine months old. But it was the tail that really bothered me; I’m no vet, but can usually recognize the signs of infection when I see them. The blood-oozing stump of a tail lacked hair, with the tissue raw and angry-looking, resembling a rare hot dog fragment.
The clock was running on this little guy, and I knew that if I couldn’t get him to a vet, his chances for survival weren’t good. Like most strays, he appeared when he wanted to, and not on any schedule. In a few days, I was able to get him to accept my touch and later some food; he ate ravenously, and I could feel every bone under his hide. Disturbingly, the tail continued to ooze blood, and medical attention appeared imperative. I also had to live with the disturbing possibility that the cat might meet his end on roadways that he crossed whenever he left my property; I wasn’t sure how I’d handle it if that happened.
In time, the stray came to accept being held, and with that step I was able to get him into a carrier, which he liked not one bit. An emergency vet appointment followed, carrying a diagnosis of a smoldering infection requiring amputation of the remaining part of the feline’s tail plus antibiotics thereafter. — No, I wasn’t going to let him be put down, not while I had it in my power to save him, not on my watch! Fortunately, he came through the operation like a trooper, which is more than I can say for my wallet…
Summer months bring an abundance of unwanted cats and kittens at animal shelters, where felines outnumber canines in many states by a margin of three to one. Many are healthy animals that only need a home and someone to care…
As for the one I saved, he now lives in my home quite happily without a tail, and is the best $400 that I’ve ever spent; he seems to like residing with this fox in a man’s body. Sometimes we choose our animal companions, and at other times they choose us. A very sweet and loving cat, I call him “Lucky…”
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