Posted by Jeff on 12/01/2007 12:29:00 AM
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We have a term in our household, "Marshmallowed," which is defined as such:

Marshmallowed (marsh-mel-ode) adjective: The state of having been tricked, duped, fooled, bilked, bamboozled, flimflammed or otherwise suckered into bringing a seemingly cute and harmless animal into one's house, only to have it turn into the devil.

I'll use it in a sentence: "Honey, the new cat just ripped off my leg and ran off with it into the woods. I'm afraid that once again we've been Marshmallowed."

My wife, you should understand, has a bit of a bad habit of bringing every injured, homeless or lost animal she comes across into our home in order to "nurse it back to health," which is wife-talk for "keep it and love it forever and ever." Dogs, cats, bunnies, horses, goats, warthogs – if she spots an animal wandering around by itself after dusk, that creature doesn't stand a chance. One minute, it's walking though a field, enjoying the cool evening air, maybe snacking on some nuts and berries; the next, it's trying to wriggle its way out of a box in our house, trapped on all sides by blankets and stuffed animals, most likely with a pink bow tied around its head, while my wife tries to feed it warm milk from a bottle.

Mr. Puddy, Maggie, Bonkers, Henry, Buffy, Teeny, Three-legger, Daisy, Marshmallow Kitty, Patterson, Miss Tiger: That, in chronological order, is a list of the many, many animals that my wife and I, by which I mean my wife, have brought into our house since getting married eight years ago.

A quick mathematic calculation reveals that we take in an average of 1.375 animals per year, a number that makes us, scientifically speaking, idiots. And of those 1.375 animals we take in, approximately 1.375 of them end up totally Marshmallowing us.

The term originated from one particularly cute and pathetic stray cat who, about a year ago, decided to start hanging around in our backyard. It was riddled with fleas, covered in mud, inexplicably shaved on the side of its head and looked overall like it had just very unsuccessfully tried to mate with a rhinoceros.

Considering that our house is the size of a walk-in closet, I was quick to declare to my wife, the cats, the dog and the other dog that there was absolutely no way we were going to be bringing another pet into the house.

"Oh, no way. There is no room for another animal here!" my wife agreed. "By the way, his name is Marshmallow Kitty."

Later that day, while Marshmallow Kitty sifted through his new litterbox in the middle of my office, I couldn't help but wonder exactly how much looting and pillaging I had done in my previous life to deserve this.

At the same time, Marshmallow Kitty did seem to be an especially sweet and timid cat. I sort of felt like we had done the right thing by taking him in. Of course, that was before he turned into the kind of beastly, bloodthirsty hellcat that, given the opportunity, wouldn't hesitate for a second to push your grandma in front of a bus.

The horror began the next evening when Marshmallow came trotting up to my wife, gave her a charming little meow and, for no apparent reason, hurtled himself through the air, latched onto my wife's shin and start shredding it like George Bush's military service records.

My wife grabbed the cat and chucked him across the room. Rather than running away like a normal cat, Marshmallow crouched close to the ground, growling like an idling tractor, his eyes glazing over with a diabolical sheen. Then, hissing ferociously, came charging back at my wife and sunk his teeth into her calf.

I quickly blasted the cat with our Waterbottle of Terror, and it scrambled out of the room, shrieking. The trouble was over. It had been a disturbing incident, but ultimately no harm had been done, with the exception of a little doggie unrest.

The next morning, as my wife was reaching into the refrigerator for some milk, Marshmallow lunged in front of her, sank his teeth into a loaf of bread and dragged it across the kitchen, finishing off two or three slices in the process. This soon became a regular habit, only sometimes the cat would forego the bread in favor of your leg. We would later turn this into a party game called "Truth or Open the Fridge."

The day after that, Marshmallow attacked my face during dinner, snatched an entire chicken leg from my plate and managed to devour the whole thing, bones and all, as he ran. Like, seriously.

The day after that, he sent a houseguest fleeing from the room after apparently mistaking her feet for a pair of plump, juicy rodents. It became clear to us at that point that Marshmallow Kitty had to go. For whatever reason, he had transformed from a sweet, homeless kitten into a little spitting, hissing gargoyle with a serious case of bloodlust, kind of like a shorter, skinnier version of Dick Cheney. And I'll be damned if I'm about to have some hairy little republican running around my house and stealing my chicken leg. Plus, he gave our nervous little dogs the runs.

So off to the Humane Society he went. It wasn't an easy decision, especially considering how much we love animals; on the other hand, it wasn't a difficult decision either, considering how much I love not having a cat lurch onto my bed in the middle of the night and try to remove my face with its hind claws.

Did we learn our lesson from the Marshmallow incident? Of course not, which is why, a few weeks ago, we welcomed yet another cat, Miss Tiger, into the fray. That makes five animals currently living in our house, which averages out to approximately .83 animals per room, 1.6 animals per floor and 2.5 animals per human.

Here's how I first learned about our new housemate:

Scene: My workplace, Monday, around 10 a.m.

The phone rings.

"Hello?"

" … um, hi."

"Oh god, you found another one."

Miss Tiger had apparently made the mistake of wandering around behind our house, all dirty and flea-bitten, with a rabies tag from 2001. So into our house she went, quarantined to – you guessed it – my office.

So, like … anybody need a cat?