Big Changes in the Summer of 2006
We finally did it. After nearly 27
years for me and 25 years for Tim, we moved out of New York City. We'd
been thinking about it for a while. I was more interested, at first. I
spent 13 years of my life in western Pennsylvania as a kid, of course,
and until moving to Manhattan, I'd spent a lot of years in small towns
or suburbia. Manhattan was wonderful, heady, exciting, thrilling,
everything you dream. Then I wanted to move away, but we couldn't
afford it. Then we settled in. In recent years, though, I really
started to miss traveling less than a couple of hours to get to real
woods. I wanted a house, with a yard. I wanted bird feeders and
trees. I wanted to be able to put friends up for the night and maybe
have a garden. Worse, I wanted all that for less than a fortune. When
he began to look at prices for things like houses and auto insurance,
Tim began to see what I meant. He took longer to come around, but every
time we returned from trips away, he'd spend a week cursing our New
York-sized kitchen, in which it's impossible for two people to move
around. He looked at our bills and our Manhattan stores, and compare
them with the ones in upstate New York.
We've been recording my books on
audio with Bruce Coville's Full Cast Audio company in Syracuse, New
York, for five years. We've been up here in the dead of winter and in
the summer heat for two and three weeks at a time. We've gotten to know
the area and the people in the company. Of course we came to wonder if
this wouldn't be a good place to move. New York, and our best friend,
and my publishers, are a five hour drive away. And it's GREEN up here.
When we rented a house (for a quarter of what we pay in New York) for
March, we decided to keep it for the summer, to bring our four cats up,
and see how they liked house living. Except we changed our minds when
we learned we could get out of our lease, and decided to stay.
Well, you know it's not that easy.
We could afford movers, thank God, and better still, movers who pack. But I didn't want to trust my stone collection to
strangers. I've been working on an original book for Full Cast Audio
for a year and a half. The main character is Evvy, the young stone mage
who appears in STREET MAGIC. In fact, Evvy narrates the book (Evvy was
my first exercise in writing a book in first person, though TERRIER
with its narrator Beka is my first published book in first person). Living in Evvy's head for eighteen months . . . well, it did something
to me. I noticed it two years ago, when I began to want to pick up
stones from rock formations we passed on the highway. But I really got
the bug at Christine Cowan's Undiscovered Treasures table at Confluence
(the science fiction convention). She had rocks. Kunzite. Vanadinite.
Cinnabar. And something I had never heard of, fire opal in its matrix,
the stone in which it forms. I turned it in the light, and color
glinted back at me.
So I got rock collections like the
ones they sell to schools, illustrating metamorphic, igneous, and
sedimentary rock. I got obsidian, apache's tears, moonstone,
labradorite, ammonite, charoite, sugilite, amethyst, quartz, mica,
lepidolite. And I found opals: fire opals, Andesite or Honduran
opals, Nevada opals, Ethiopian opals, and all the varieties of
Australian opals. There are online opal dealers who know me by
name. I have chunks of flint and Honduran opal and jasper the size
of both of my fists. I couldn't trust these things to movers.
And then there are my painted pony
figures. I only have for, but Medicine Horse and War Pony have a lot of
doodads hanging off them. There are my feathered shoulder puppets, who
nod and spread their wings. There are my stuffies, who do not
like being jammed into boxes. And there are my weapons, some of which
are very long, all of which make people nervous, for some reason. I
ended up carrying the tricky ones up myself.
We had Tim's DVDs and videos, and
his video and computer magazines. More importantly, we had Tim's
computers, VCRs. DVD players, TIVO, hard drives, laptops, and every
other piece of technology required to support them. All of that had to
go up by hand, and first, because I had to work from the moment we moved
half of our stuff for what we thought would simply be the summer. Most
important were the cats and the birds. The trip up, at least, for the
cats was not traumatic at all, because we drugged them. We checked them
several times during the ride: their inner eyelids were at half mast,
and they were purring like mad. The parakeets, who we thought would be
out of their minds in terror because A) they were in a strange cage and
it was moving, B) they were within smell of the cats, and C) they had a
cover on for the first time in their lives (we haven't covered our birds
since Zorak pitched a fit over it in 1997 after Tim got her used to
staying up until midnight), LOVED the car trip. They tweetled, peeted,
and chirruped happily through the six-hour trip, and fluttered in panic
only once. (I crawled in back and opened the cover and talked them calm
again. When I covered them, they went back to peeting and chirping all
the way to their new home.)
Decanting the cats went as
expected. They fled. Scooter was the first to emerge within a day and
a half, the Scrap not long after him. It took us a couple of days to
discover where PeeWee and Gremlin were hiding. True to his nature,
Gremmie had found ways to open the doors on the lower kitchen
cupboards. He taught the other cats how within the first week. We
should have known. It was Gremlin who worked out how to open all of the
closets in our apartment. Now they have things worked out better,
particularly with the arrival of the rest of the furniture in August.
They're getting used to our new housekeeper, Andy, and learning that NO,
they cannot go outside. With us feeding stray cats on the back porch,
that gets a little dicey, but so far, so good.
The birds settled into the cage we
bought for them, known as the "palatial manse," installed in the dining
room, well out of range of all of the cats. The one thing they seem to
mind is that they don't see as much of us as they once did--the
drawbacks of having two floors and not being on the direct route to the
front door. We make sure to stop and talk to them several times a day,
not just to feed them. And they can hear all kinds of birds in the back
yard, and they talk to them. Since Timon learned sparrow from Junior,
who learned it from Zorak (who was living with sparrows when I found
her), and since she taught it to Egg, I'm assuming Timon and Egg are
finding some common language with the sparrows, at least, even if the
upstate New York accent is different from that of Riverside Park.
We did have a particular stray cat
incident (read addendum below). I had noticed a Siamese hanging around and called to him.
Much to my surprise, he came over. He was crosseyed, so of course I
called him "Clarence," after the crosseyed lion. He was extremely
friendly, so I petted him. I don't know what possessed me, but I picked
him up, too. When he growled at me, I didn't obey all the rules of
strange cat etiquette: I didn't put him down INSTANTLY. He bit and
scratched me. I put him down, said "Bad cat!" And then I fed him.
A friend of mine had gotten a
really bad infection from a cat bite, so Tim insisted I go to the
emergency room, where the doctor talked me into the beginning of a
series of rabies shots. He also explained, as did Animal Health the
next day, that if we could catch the cat and have him observed for ten
days, I wouldn't need the rest of the series of shots, and if the cat
was healthy, then he would be put up for adoption. I was going to
Toronto and Washington in the next two weeks, which meant I was going to
have trouble meeting the shot schedule, and they did tell me Clarence
(if I could catch him, and I didn't see him the next day) would be put
up for adoption if he was healthy. The day after that, Clarence was
around again. I fed him, and then I put him in a cat carrier (he didn't
even growl, bite or scratch), and took him to the Central New York SPCA.
They told me, AFTER they took
Clarence, that even if he didn't have rabies, he'd be put to sleep,
because he was a stray cat who bit people. In other words, I'd been
lied to.
We waged a campaign to get Clarence
back, saying he was OUR cat, not a stray. Of course, that sounded a
little funny when the SPCA let us know that Clarence was a SHE, but
never mind, SHE was still our cat. She made it through ten days of
observation with no sign of rabies, and came home to us. We had to keep
her in quarantine for nearly a month from the other cats, because she
got a bad case of kennel cough, but finally introduced her to the other
four. That was really interesting. Clarence (the name stuck) isn't
really a cats' cat. She's a people cat. She loves people. She'll
slink around, growl at, and sometimes sniff other cats, and move in and
take over their territory. And she loves Tim. His office, when he
still mainly worked here in this house, was her quarantine space, and
she had him all to herself. When he got a separate office, she moped
when he wasn't around. She likes me fine, but she is Daddy's cat. We
tried her going to Tim's office in the carrier, which she hated--though
she liked being in the office while she was there. We tried taking her
on a leash. She wouldn't walk, and she hated the harness. Finally she
just moved to Tim's office, where she doesn't have to put up with other
cats, and people come to visit her. And she has Daddy all to herself.
So we settle in. I've taken books
to the library. We've bought these colorfully painted metal geckos from
Haiti at the Fair Trade Marketplace and placed them on the walls all
around the house for something bright--they have goggle eyes, spots, and
stripes, and I like the way they brighten up a piece of wall. I also
got a big (2.5 foot tall x 3 foot long) cloth kite in rainbow colors to
hang over my computer for some more brightness. With Tim moved into his
own office, I now have two in this house. This little back one is where
I write, so I have my computer and printers here, my research library,
bulletin boards with my pictures for the books I work on, my opals, my
leg exerciser, and my stuffies. I also have a view of the big maple in
the back yard where we've hung the bird feeder. I can look out and see
squirrels, birds, and the odd cat. Birds often perch right outside. In
the bigger office in the front of the house I keep the business files,
my books, my shelves of children's books, fantasy and historical novels,
my own books, my Civil War library, and my CDs and audio tapes. That
one also doubles as a guest room. It also has the computer on which I
play solitaire and our guests can check e-mail. Tim works there early
in the morning.
We have a living room, a dining
room, a kitchen, and a breakfast nook (which is for unpacked boxes right
now), a cellar, an attic, and a garage (where we also feed strays). We
have a front porch and a bird feeder.
We have a car. He is a Toyota
Hybrid SUV named Bernard the Groundmunk (ground squirrel/chipmunk
hybrid). I am learning to drive partly on Bernard and partly on
whatever compact Branch's Driving School and my instructor Mr. Andy
Branch brings around. Going back to school at 51+ is an exercise in
humility. I used to drive, back in my twenties, but living in Manhattan
for 27 years, with no money for most of them, I forgot how. This is my
reward. I have a whole new list of pet peeves, largely centered around
people who don't do what the driving manual says you have to do. First
among these is coming to a full stop at the stop sign.
The airport is 20 minutes away from
my home. The prices are much less, and the stores much larger. People
walking past when I go out to bring in the paper or the garbage cans
(yes, we subscribe to a newspaper now), or to put out peanuts on the
porch rail for the sparrows, or to get the mail, say hello. The nice
ladies at the Fair Trade Marketplace know we have a comic book coming
out in November. I raked up five bags (they're so long that I have to
stand inside them to open them out all the way) of leaves from the back
yard to set out for collection the weekend I write this. Last night
Syracuse University had fireworks for the Homecoming Game, and the
highlight of my summer was seeing "Menopause: the Musical."
No, it's not the same as
Manhattan. It's different. And I like it. I think Tim does, too. He
says so, anyway, especially when he goes to the store for "just a few
things" and comes back with crates, saying "But it was on sale."
ADDENDUM
10-13-06 by Tim: We found out today that Clarence the
Applehead was not abandoned, as we originally suspected. It
turned out that her owners lived around the corner, and have been
looking for her since June when we adopted her.
So Clarence, whose real name is
"Beauty", has been returned to her real family - who informed me I've
been overfeeding her, because she's about five pounds heavier than she
was in June.
Now one of the other cats
who hangs around the yard but belongs to our neighbors, who Tammy calls
"Pink Nose" and the neighbors call "Lilly", glares at me every time I
come out back - that is, when she's not trying to get into our house!
Sorry, girl - I'd have kept the Applehead if I could, but she's your
sister...like it or not....
- Tim, Your Admin
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