IMG_8653A couple of days ago, Oscar the dog’s mamma told me that she had seen a large brown rat in their garden. Ever-hopeful, I asked her if she were sure that it wasn’t a very big mouse, or an unusually skinny-tailed squirrel.

She was sure.

I suggested to her that, if she ever saw it again, provided Oscar weren’t in the vicinity, I would happily flick Louis Catorze over Le Mur and let him have a bash at catching it. However, I hadn’t quite expected him to catch it of his own accord, so soon after our conversation. Nor had I expected him to bring the damp, stinky carcass up to our bedroom.

Worse yet, it was our easily-startled cleaning lady who found it. I came home to find her so traumatised that she could barely speak, and eventually I managed to get it out of her that there was a rat in our bedroom. (Once again I said, “Are you sure it’s not a mouse?” although, deep in my heart, I knew.)

As she and I stood staring at it and wondering what the heck to do, Louis Catorze picked that very moment to switch into psycho play mode and attack her feet. Because he ambushed her from behind, she felt him before she saw him and, thinking he was another rat, she screamed as if she had been shot.

I went to look for a bin bag and, naturellement, we didn’t have any, so I had to take the sturdiest plastic bag I could find, which was a Selfridges one. Once Ratty was safely entombed I dropped a 2p coin in with him, hoping it would land squarely on his body and give a sense of scale when I provided people with photographic proof of how big he was. But, unfortunately, it sort of wedged in at his side and, because it was the same colour as his body, it ended up looking more like some sort of cystic growth than a 2p coin, adding to the horror of the whole situation.

Whilst our cleaning lady sat in a corner and cried quietly, I headed for the park bin where so many of Catorze’s victims have been laid to rest, praying that nobody would see me. Although, if you don’t want to be seen, you should carry an unobtrusive, plain bag and leave the house whistling nonchalantly. Leaving the house holding a bright yellow Selfridges bag with your fingertips and at arm’s length, all the while shuddering and retching, probably isn’t the way. And, of course, I bumped into Bert the dog’s daddy, who was working on his car in the street right outside Le Château, and I was forced to explain the bag and the shuddering and retching.

So now I am confined to Le Château on account of being too ashamed to leave it, and Louis Catorze is banned from the bedrooms on account of being too disgusting. And our poor cleaning lady will probably never lead a normal life ever again.

Cat Daddy, however, can’t help but admire his boy’s pest control efficiency, and this has been echoed by Dog Mamma, who is delighted that Catorze has done his civic duty. Another friend said, “Isn’t it reassuring to know that he’s such a good rat-catcher?”

I don’t know what makes a “good” rat-catcher. But I’m pretty certain that depositing smelly rat corpses in spotlessly-clean places where there were no rat corpses before, isn’t it.

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11 responses to “Il y a un rat dans ma chambre: qu’est-ce que je vais faire?”

  1. ich bin schwerhörig, na und? avatar

    I’m quite sure it was the Sunkings way to say “I love you” … but in the meantime I feel your disgust!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. cathysrealcountrygardencom avatar

    Now I admire your cat! That is what they are supposed to do and it a love gift. My tom cat brings me slow worms.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. […] That said, we didn’t want our cleaning lady to think we’d let things slide in her absence, so naturellement we had to have one Final Clean a couple of days before she came. Yes, we have become THOSE people. But we are glad we did it, because it also reassured us that Louis Catorze hadn’t hidden any rats anywhere. After all, we didn’t want a repeat of THIS incident: https://louiscatorze.com/2017/06/16/il-y-a-un-rat-dans-ma-chambre-quest-ce-que-je-vais-faire/ […]

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  4. Sidney F avatar

    I enjoyed reading thiis

    Liked by 1 person

    1. iamthesunking avatar
      iamthesunking

      Thank you! 😊

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  5. […] Did Catorze eat it (unlikely, but then he’s all about the element of surprise, especially if it’s a surprise that nobody wants)? Is it living it up in the box containing Cat Daddy’s cycling gear? Has it managed to squeeze underneath the floorboards? Is it decaying acridly in the June heat, ready to be discovered by our easily-scared cleaning lady, like that other time when she found a rat that Catorze had saved for later? […]

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  6. […] Il y a un rat dans ma chambre: qu’est-ce que je vais faire? […]

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  7. Kate Crimmins avatar

    That’s normal behavior in this house but with mice, not rats. Also they deposit in the walkway to the bedroom so that an unsuspecting person, still asleep with step on it and wake up the entire house (that would be me). I can see why Cat Daddy was so proud of his offspring.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. iamthesunking avatar

      Eurgh, stepping on it! 🤢

      Liked by 1 person

  8. […] The Curious Case of the Rat and the Cleaning Lady.   […]

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