Instead, I stayed home, keeping a wary eye on Max, who was limping badly.
Yesterday, he had a tiny limp, as if he had jumped off the bed or sofa and pulled a muscle. It didn't seem to bother him, but I made a mental note, and when he was curled up on my lap I checked between the pads on his feet to make sure there was nothing jammed up in there. He has, a few times, wound up with clumps of dried litter that make him walk funny, and I hoped that was all it was.
It was not.
Today the limp was more pronounced. He ate enthusiastically, though he requested a different morning snack because what I offered was not acceptable. So...perfectly normal.
Still, I felt like I needed to be here. He curled up on his bed under my desk, and stayed there. By the time lunch rolled around and he hadn't gotten back up, I went to check on him. He grunted, sighed like I was annoying, and went back to sleep.
Okay, then.
An hour later I opened a can of cat food because Buddah was howling, and that drew Max out. He ate happily and went right back to bed, but it occurred to me that I hadn't seen him drink and he hadn't gone to the litter box. It also occurred to me that I often didn't see him do that in the afternoon, but...
He ate again after the Spouse Thingy got up. We turned the fireplace on early, which I knew would draw Max into the living room where I could actually see him. He slept just fine, but by then I was obsessing...I wanted him to drink. The Spouse Thingy took water to where he lounged, and he drank some. Quite a bit, actually.
So when late snack time rolled around, I carried him to the kitchen because it seemed mean to make him walk. When he was done I carried him to the fountain, which he refused, and then to the litter box, which he used.
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Cripes, you're annoying, lady... |
Then came night snack (yes, he eats 5-6 times a day) and he wandered into the kitchen on his own, I watched him walk and thought his right front foot looked a little different than his left, but it wasn't swollen. I put the food down, he dug in, and then in one horrible flash, I remembered.
Thursday while I was scooping out his afternoon snack, he got underfoot.
I stepped on him.
He didn't scream, just gave a tiny WTF yelp. I didn't STEP on him, just felt my heel coming down on his foot; I stopped before I really stomped. It didn't bother him enough to run and he inhaled his food, as if nothing had happened.
But I did step on him.
He finished eating and then sat back to look up at me. I apologized, because that has to be why his foot hurts.
He was not impressed.
Before I could pick him up, he turned and started walking away. Still limping, but determined. He went to the back of the house, where there's another desk to nap under, and I got the message.
Leave me alone. I'm not dying; it's just an owie from your giant boat-foot.
Still...I suspect Monday morning we're taking him to the vet to get it looked at. Then he'll really hate me.
Yeah, don't put your big clod hoppers on our little paws!
ReplyDeleteI know the "almost-step-on" deal. I swear, its like Iza is attached to my ankle on a 12" leash! Anytime I need to take a step backwards, I either have to turn and look, or I have to take a moonwalk step and hesitate until I can feel if there is anything underfoot. And guess who doesn't remember to check 100% of the time? Iza gets foot-bumped a lot...
ReplyDeleteAnd I can't win. Couple days ago, I was about to back away from the kitchen counter looking at Iza safely 5' away. So, secure in my vision, I stepped confidently back. Onto Marley's tail...
Best wishes to you about the (impressive) ouchie, and to Max for his general health.