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Vivi, 7/20/04 - 2/1/23 cam

How do you talk about someone you've known for so long? A simple list of qualities seems inadequate, a pithy disservice. I've known cats who were erratic, standoffish, openly hostile, passive, or grouchy pieces of furniture that needed a wide berth at all times. My tuxedo, Vivi, was none of these things.
I half-joke that I got him used at the age of six; my former roommate, Alex, gave me him after it became obvious that her fiancé only wanted one cat and she had two. When he first arrived, I thought of Vivi as part of Alex's bed; he'd hang out on or under there with Kay Kay as Alex played PS2. He was always pleasant, of course, but we didn’t bond until a while later.
On December 30th, 2010, I noticed our awful apartment door had opened by itself. This would happen if it wasn't thoroughly locked; either the door was misshapen or at an angle, but I was always paranoid about it being shut-shut when I left. I closed the door and counted cats. One under Alex's bed and... that was it. I knew I had to save him. I'd feel awful, he'd be confused, alone, hurt, or worse, and Alex would kill me. I searched the complex and the adjoining ones for hours until it began to get dark. I called Alex, leaving a not-too-convincing message about “Any tricks to get Vivi to listen to you”. My panic and sadness grew as the light dimmed. One more walk around our building, I thought. And then, when I called for Vivi, I heard a scared reply. He'd been in the bushes by our corner the whole time, terrified. I approached him and he bolted for the next shrub. This repeated twice. Of course, he's scared. How do I get him out of there? I didn't want to dive into a bush to have him bolt further out and the longer I waited, the harder it would be to see anything. I went back inside, closed, and locked all the windows except one in Alex's room (there was no screen). I told Kay Kay to stay put (she would've anyway) and opened Alex's window a few inches, and grabbed one of Vivi's favorite toys, a small tennis ball. I chased him back to the bush near the window, and held the ball out, telling him it was ok, that I was here, that I'd save him. Slowly, he inched forward and right at the moment he was about to sniff the ball, I grabbed him behind the shoulder blades, thrust him through the open window, pocketed the ball and then did a somersault throw the open window, closing it behind me.
There were now two cats under Alex's bed. I couldn't lure him out for the rest of the day, so I let him be; I was just happy he was safe.
The next morning, I rolled over to see Vivi sitting in my chair like it was his, staring at me. I asked him "Can I help you?"
With a loud meow, he hopped off the chair and onto the bed, curling up right beside my pillow, purring as loudly as I'd ever heard from any cat. Alex still fed, watered, and loved him, but as she said when she left: “He's been yours for a while now.”
I was scared I'd fuck up, that I was too lazy (and looking back, I was lax about the litter box for some time) but I was so happy I finally had a cat, one who didn't just tolerate my company but seek it out.
A former classmate of mine once said that the best compliment you could give a cat was that they were like a dog and therefore, cats were always inferior. She was smug and insufferable, but Vivi was dog-like in some ways. He would follow me around almost always purring, fall asleep on top of me or close by on a blanket. He’d often steal my pillow, gradually pushing my head off or I’d wake up asleep on his belly. He’d hop on my back as I was stretched out reading and start licking the back of my head. I used to joke I was pinned by him. He had his own vocabulary too, not just the usual meows and meows, but “meh”, “mreh”, “mragh”, “murr”, sighs of contentment, little grunts and huffs when he was upset at my cleaning him off or medicating him and once, a rubber-duck squeak when he relaxed off my bed. Play-biting is feline instinct, but he did it so rarely that it was easy to forget he could. Unlike most cats who would never let their paws be handled, he’d gladly accept gentle handshakes and low fives, often falling asleep with his paws on my forearm. A few years ago, when he had to be taken to the emergency vet for litterbox issues (later revealed to be urine crystals, fixed by switching to all wet food). Shortly before the vet tech took him inside, he put his paw in my palm, taking and giving reassurance. He had gone from hiding from new people when in Alex's care to confidently coming up to them and announcing his presence and asking for affection when they entered the apartment. There were only two people he didn't really like; an irresponsible scumbag of a landlord who was in and out of jail with multiple DUIs and a former friend of mine who stole several hundred dollars. Everyone else he greeted as a friend and got the same in kind. He stayed by my side through countless illnesses and more than a few hangovers. Once Ben, an old roommate, had an inexplicable pain in his leg and passed out for hours; Vivi perched on the back of the couch and wouldn’t move until Ben did.
Vivi was opinionated, open, codependent, loud and sometimes overdramatic. He made noises after a particularly bad bout of laxative-induced litter box and wall destruction that you’d think I was trying to pull his legs off rather than clean them. We talk about the danger of anthropomorphizing pets, but I often had conversations with him, his responses usually translatable to a thumbs up, thumbs down or protest. He had habit of stealing twist ties, and once made a pyramid of foam earplugs under my bed, the start of an inscrutable ritual. Vivi learned fetch from another cat and would dart after wadded-up printer paper and crinkle balls. Sometimes he would drop a fabric mouse on my bed or at my feet, wide-eyed and expectant. Once left unsupervised, he darted upstairs, drawn to the forbidden mystery of a housemate’s closed room. I heard a quiet thumping and caught him with one paw under the door, punching it with the other until it swung inward.
Years later, he defeated an automatic feeder within hours. He figured out that even if the spout is high enough and the dividers block future meals loaded on the belt, he could just use the friction of his paw pad to move the belt when the motor is off. I trained him to guess which closed palm held treats and to high-five on command. He had his limits; the Roomba consistently baffled and ambushed him, and he was inexplicably terrified of a dangling tinsel-like rope toy. Once, Vivi stayed in my made bed as I moved it across the room in the new apartment, totally relaxed, looking at a friend & I as if it was natural and correct that we did the heavy lifting while he reclined.
When black mold came out of our HVAC and several rooms were unsafe, I had to sleep on the couch of an apartment I couldn’t afford solo. When I was at my lowest, he hopped up on top of the couch, reached down and patted me on the shoulder with his paw, twice. It wasn't a stretch; it was incredibly human. The gesture didn't banish my depression but took a chunk out of it, letting the light get in. His un-cat-like habits only served to endear him to me. A friend of mine once said that I didn't treat him like a pet; I treated him like a roommate. As far as I'm concerned, I lost a dear friend.
In November 2020 when I was in Virginia, I heard a scared meow come from under a Ford explorer. I looked down there to find a skinny black and brown tabby with one of the longest tails I've ever seen. I beckoned him to follow me, but he stayed put until I ran upstairs and gave him a can of Fancy Feast. After that, I was his favorite person. I called a friend of mine who'd fostered cats but didn't get a response. I asked the neighbors who already had two cats if they could look after this one for the night, but they said, understandably, they had their hands full. There were a gaggle of GMU undergrads in the parking lot who ooh-ed and aaah-ed and exclaimed how precious this cat was but none of them were actually going to do anything to help him. I took him upstairs, put him in the spare bathroom and give him another can of fancy feast along with a temporary litter box and some water. He attacked the food, and upended the bathroom trash can trying to get the last Fancy Feast molecules out of there.
He gladly accepted food, water, and reassurance, but none of that mellowed him. He shredded two rolls of toilet paper (one on the dispenser and one on the floor), yelled incessantly, broke free of the confines of the bathroom repeatedly, despite the door being shut and locked from the inside. It got so bad I had to supplement the lock with towels and several heavy boxes. I decided to call him Charlie after the character from It's Always Sunny. When Charlie was screaming and distressed in the guest bathroom, Vivi walked over to the door and made calming noises until Charlie mellowed out. I didn't have to ask him, I didn't have to coerce, I didn't have to say or do anything. Vivi just knew what needed to be done and did it.
The reinforcements only held for a few hours; At about 3:00 a.m., Charlie broke free of his confines. He could’ve done anything, could’ve fought Vivi, destroyed furniture or appliances or carpet, tried to break into a trashcan, opened up cabinets, anything at all. What he chose to do was dart into my room at full speed, lunge onto my bed and furiously lick my cheek. He was just happy to be there.
The next morning when I got in hold of the animal shelter, I put Charlie in an old duffle bag. He protested, doing his best impression of the fighting cloud from old Warner Brothers cartoons. As the bag’s weatherproof nylon strained and stretched, Vivi, ever the dignified one, gave me a look of “Are you sure you have this under control?” from his perch on my old chair. Charlie destroyed that duffle bag, but I don't blame him, especially since I don't know how long it had been since he had real food. He was adopted within a few days of being examined and chipped and I still think of him often.
I'd had pets before; a box turtle when I was younger who was given to a friend of mine who stole from my family. My dad got a dog, a Westie named Rocky who was around for a few years before his ex-wife took him with her. Later, we adopted another Westie named Toby who made up for his impulsiveness with enthusiasm; Dad often joked that we’d get him another brain cell for Christmas. I only saw him a few times a year since he was on the other side of the country.
I’d been around cats before too. A very sweet all-white cat named Pearl lived with us in Falls Church and cried when she saw me packing to leave 18 months later, and a reclusive, mercurial black cat named Toulouse. I’d never had a pet who I was the sole caretaker of until Vivi.
He was the toughest cat I ever met, hands down. After weeks of being tormented by the aforementioned landlord’s cat, B. Vivi had enough and chased him out of the house. I didn’t see B. for a week. When he finally walked back inside one afternoon and saw Vivi, he growled. Vivi shrugged and lunged, chasing him back out onto the sidewalk. He’d made it through so much, from spitting out a tooth to needing a bump on his forehead removed (benign, though it was causing him enough pain to shun touch near the area and he flinched under sedation), urine crystals, move after move after move, helping me rescue a stray and being co-pilot on my thesis, by my side. When I set the wool cat cave on top of his chair (my old chair, unfit for human spines but perfectly acceptable as a perch) he hopped in and fell asleep for five hours.
He made it to 18 and a half, about 90 in cat years. We carried him into the waiting room like an emperor; his wool cave held by a good friend, followed by me holding his blanket, toys, and pillow. Despite not having eaten anything in five days, he fought the sedation, sitting up, hiccupping, and giving me a final look of weary sadness. With his bunny between his front paws, I closed his eyes and tucked him in one last time.
This wall of words feels so inadequate to describe someone so caring, intelligent, and precious. Often, and especially as he declined, I lamented that I could not tell him exactly how much he meant to me. I realize now that we have said everything worth saying in every look, every hug, every purr, and every touch.
I still miss you buddy. I always will.
~Jesse Kirkpatrick


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