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February 12, 2012
 
 
 
 
 
 
Columnists 30 September 2009, Wednesday 0 0 0 0
PAT YALE
p.yale@todayszaman.com

And then there were nine

I was still in İstanbul when my long-suffering house-sitter in Göreme called with bad news.
He'd just had breakfast in a nearby hotel and came back to find a plastic bag outside the gate. Inside it was the body of one of my cats. “I think it must have eaten poison,” he said. “Probably a neighbor knew it was yours and put it there.”

We were briefly hampered in identifying which of my 10 cats it was by the fact that Nico has abandoned the names I gave them and relabeled them all, regardless of gender, with the names of his old girlfriends. But in the end I get out of him that it was a large black cat with long hair and a triangle of white on her face. That triangle had reminded me of the markings of a capuchin monkey, and so I knew that it was the one that I had named Maymun (Monkey).

Poor Maymun. Two winters ago I came home to find her ensconced in front of the fire in my kitchen. There she sat and there she remained. She was neither a kitten nor wild like most of my interlopers. I concluded that she had probably had a previous owner who had either died, or moved away and left her behind. She was no trouble to me and so I let her stay.

But I'd reckoned without people's reaction to her new name. Whenever they heard me call her neighbors would look at me as if I'd sprouted a second head. But then this is not a community that is strong on naming its animal companions. Pet birds do tend to acquire monikers (Maviş if they're blue, Boncuk if they're green); dogs too, with Ateş and Efe big favorites. A fair few horses seem to be given names (I know of at least one Yıldırım [Thunderbolt]), although rarely their donkey substitutes. Cows and sheep, however, are a relentlessly name-free zone. No Clovers or Daisys placidly chewing the cud here. When I saw my neighbor bringing her cow back from the watering trough one day I asked her what its name was. “İnek” (Cow), she said, and you could see her silently thinking what a dolt I was for asking.

It was no better when İnek gave birth to a calf. It was a pretty little thing that sat beside a pile of cornflowers mingled with hay, a circlet of beads lovingly ringing her neck. So cute; surely she must have a name? “Dana” (Calf), my neighbor retorted scornfully.

Needless to say, my favorite party trick is reeling off the names of my menagerie for the entertainment of my neighbors. Not that I can always remember all of them, of course. It's the same at feeding time when I find myself wondering guiltily whether it's like this in big families -- do frazzled mothers run through a quick headcount before knuckling down to identify who exactly is missing from the breakfast table, which is certainly what I do with my brood? Sadly, I suppose it'll be that bit easier now with only nine to remember, although I can just anticipate the vet's reaction: “You've got a vacancy now, Pat…”

 

Pat Yale lives in a restored cave-house in Göreme in Cappadocia.

Columnists Previous articles of the columnist
30 September 2009
And then there were nine
24 September 2009
Thanks for asking
16 September 2009
Marriage and remarriage
15 September 2009
The burial business
10 September 2009
Passing acquaintance
8 September 2009
Swimming in minestrone
3 September 2009
Far, far away
1 September 2009
The end of the day
27 August 2009
Monumental loss
25 August 2009
Hollywood without the magic
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