Before we get into the number of Cadavers afflicting me, I must confess, that after only 2 words in this blog, I had to use Spell Check. That’s how smart my brain is today but, let’s be honest, ‘Cadaver’ is a tricky word – is it ‘ver’ or ‘vre’? In American English it’s ‘ver’ in British and Canadian English it’s ‘vre’, so it’s no surprise that I find it difficult, along with ‘theatre’, ‘neighbourhood’ and ‘centre’. And Spell Check is losing its damn mind right now, underlining most of the words in this paragraph in blood red.
But that’s not important right now. Cadavers are important. Namely, the cadaver/s that are in my car. And I’m absolutely certain it’s cadavers because I was blessed with a cadaver in my bedroom a few years ago because a cat brought a mouse in the house, chased it around and then lost it behind a mirror in my bedroom. It didn’t take long for maggots and then massive flies to create a fucking nightmare in my bedroom 6 weeks later. I get faint just thinking about it, too.
Junior’s first car had a mouse die behind the fan and the smell was disgusting. I was still married to Stanley and he had to take the fan out of the car to retrieve the holy stinker. I’m sure he feels faint just thinking about it.
And then we had a mouse in our Fifth Wheel trailer. We dragged the damn mouse all the way from Calgary to Arizona where it died. What little sympathy I might have had for the little thing to die so far from home was quickly lost. I thought it was smelly garbage. We cleaned the entire trailer from top to bottom but still the smell smelled. Then we found it under the sink and behind the water filter. The Viking used a flipper to poke more smell out of it before he managed scoop it up and discard it…..and the flipper, too, because there is no way that flipper can be used for anything other than removing cadavers now.
So, knowing what I know about the smell of cadavers, my car has become a torture chamber. We can’t find the cadaver to exhume it from the car and thus make my car safe for human habitation again. We’ve look everywhere, sniffing like bloodhounds, under seats and behind door panels. It’s not in the heating/cooling system either. We put two cats in the car hoping they would point where the cadaver is but, being cats, they were more interested in being anywhere else than there. So. What. The. Fuck?!!
And then yesterday……..
……
……
……the smell was gone. What does that mean?!! Does it mean that maggots are preparing themselves to become an infestation of bloated black flies that will likely drive me completely and permanently insane? Will they wait until I go for food and then hatch all at the same time while I’m driving which will make me exit the car immediately and without stopping, probably vomiting as I hit the pavement? Would insurance even cover that? Or maybe it fell out when I was whistling along Stoney Trail? I did hit a couple of good bumps that might dislodge a cadaver from the engine compartment. Ideally, that would be the best outcome – leaving the cadaver to ferment in the middle lane of the freeway.
Unfortunately, I can’t be 100% certain that the cadaver is no longer my problem. How long does it take for a mouse to turn into the minions of hell? I’m sure Google can come up with something:
Eggs hatch within 24 hours, and house fly larvae emerge. House fly larvae, or maggots, appear similar to pale worms. Their sole purpose is to eat and store energy for their upcoming pupation. Larvae feed for approximately five days, after which they find dry, dark locations for pupal development.
Gawd! I have to wait 3 more days for Hell? Today is Friday, then Saturday and Sunday……..so sometime late Monday or Tuesday. I won’t take any chances and will refuse to drive the car between now and then. Sure, The Viking will snort at my sissy-ness but he’s not the one that will be engulfed in huge, disgusting, bloated flies in a confined space. Just the thought makes me nauseous.
I’ll just have to steal The Viking’s truck – a one-ton dually. He’s pretty good at protecting himself and his things because he was quite the wrestler back in the day, but I have been practicing Tai Chi. It will be a face-off in the driveway, an aging wrestler and a sloppy Tai Chi-er. And it would be prudent to stand about 10 paces apart, so no one gets hurt. I’m not expecting this to be a lengthy undertaking. Three moves each, with rests in between, so about a half hour. There will be energy drinks on hand, so we stay hydrated and Cliff Bars to keep up our carbs. Maybe an ambulance on standby or is that just a little over the top?
As for my car, if there is an infestation in the car, I’ll just have to burn it down to the axles. Because if I’m honest, I’ll never feel the same about my car ever again.
Ken once accidentally ran over a raccoon without realizing it and it got caught up in the exhaust pipes. It wasn’t until the next week when he went for an oil change that we found out where the smell was coming from. Our mechanic was pretty disgusted!
A raccoon? That’s a lot of flesh to go bad. You have my sympathies. :o)
Wowza! And I’m willing to bet that the raccoon in question didn’t have its famed freshly-washed paws!
Darn it, I had to go check the spelling of ‘raccoon’! Yeah, only the spelling, not the smelling!
Oh man, Lori…
The things you go through! And I’m with you on WP and every other blog or writing thing underlining the Canadian spelling of words. I probably would have stuck with cadavre just to piss off the said spell-check. I’ll send out good vibes that whatever that was, just popped out somehow!
If not, I shall be expecting a blog post on Tuesday, latest…
Haha! I know, right? Last summer, my one cat caught a bird and snuck it into the house to play with it. At first, I didn’t realize what he was doing, but once I did, I rescued the poor thing and let it outside. It flew away right from my hand.
I downloaded Grammarly in the hopes it would catch the little things but it turns out to be a Comma Nazi. It wants commas everywhere! I thought Spell Check was bad but Grammarly is like my 3rd Grade teacher, smacking my knuckles with a ruler.
…ending with a very disappointed cat, I’m sure!
This makes me think of presents to give a cat on its birthday, like a little budgie / parakeet released from its temporary cage in the confines of the bathroom, where the cat is impatiently waiting.
(The only flaw I can find in this ‘plan’ is the need for me — oh, not me me, but the attending human! — to slip out the door, leaving the birthday cat in confines with its feathery friend in the easily washed room. Affixing some sort of timer to release the bird into the impatient claws of the cat after I’ve slipped out… Cats may be fast, but birds can be faster, and I don’t feel a need to turn this whole place into a set from ‘Dexter’!)
Because my cats love the hunt so much, it’s tempting to provide them with ‘live’ entertainment, but I’m afraid they will just have to hunt outside. I have enough trouble cleaning our bathroom without rodent/bird body parts. :o)
I love your spelling antics! They made me laugh. :o)
“British and Canadian English it’s ‘vre’”
Yes, but nevre evre — um, bugger, lost track of other words in British English that have different endings in British than American English… oh, hell! — buggre!
Okay, I’m not at all serious, as wordplay can be fun, so long as the words don’t bite! 😀
Yeah, I think you may have been sold a pup on the cadavre in civilised countries – and ew on the cadaver hunting!!
I hunted a darned mouse in my house for nearly a month a few years ago – I heard it, I sicked the cat on it, I put out traps for it – I even smelled the darned thing – in the couch SOMEWHERE…
Finally, went away for a weekend to my Mother’s – and I hear the bloddy mouse THERE too!!! Turns out, my then 6yo had downloaded some pet game app on my phone and the electronic critter wanted attention…
LOL! So glad you’re mouse wasn’t a mouse! As for my mouse…..well, it’s just gone. No black flies in the car, no more bad smell. It’s a mystery. A mystery that I don’t have much ambition to solve.
Thanks for commenting, Jeanie. :o)