
Mr. Doofus
In the years before everything changed, Greg knew that someday he would send his last message, speak his last words, and enjoy a sunset. One day, someone would speak his name for the last time. Finality brings focus. When a cup of coffee potentially becomes your last, the sips are dark and delicious, and even a drop wasted brings regret.
It was all theoretical until the doctor uncomfortably leaned forward and adjusted his tie. Even after years of practice, he hadn’t acquired the ability to tell someone that they would soon be defined by a dash between dates. “It’s everywhere. The exploratory surgery confirmed it.”
Greg asked the only question he could think of.
“I’d say two months. I’m so sorry,” the doctor answered.
Greg’s days were truly numbered.
After leaving the doctor’s office, he drove home. Instead of going inside, he walked across the railroad tracks. He meandered through the abandoned industrial district that once fueled the small town. He’d seen it all dozens of times. This time, however, he paid attention to every detail.
Greg stopped near an abandoned building that once held dozens of workers. The sign that once displayed the name of a thriving company was now rusted and faded. It was a relic now, succumbing to time. When Greg was young, the place was buzzing with life. Now, it slowly rusted and constantly sought ways to disintegrate.
“I thought I had more time. I thought I could take back all the ways I insisted I was right. In faith, in action, and words.” He didn’t know why he said it aloud.
The trees above him didn’t acknowledge him like he expected. They rebuffed his excessive self-reflection. For once, he stood under them and let the breeze wash over him.
The abandoned cat chose that moment to make his appearance and introduction. He poked through between bent pieces of galvanized metal, probably after hearing Greg’s voice.
Greg didn’t have time to react as the scruffy grey cat ran over to him, meowed, and then forcefully rubbed against the back of his leg. Bending down, he rubbed the cat’s head as it arched its back to meet his fingers. The cat’s fur was messy and tangled in a few places.
As Greg ran his fingers along the cat’s back, he felt a scar that traversed at least four inches of the cat’s back. Pushing the fur aside, he could see that the jagged scar was long-healed, even though the cat didn’t appear to be very old.
The cat meandered behind him as Greg walked home. Greg walked slowly, appreciating the leaves, the fading sun, and his collection of memories. He stopped at the railroad tracks, staring in each direction as the tracks stretched away from him.
“I’ve got a scar like that too,” Greg told the cat as it peered up at him and rubbed his leg. Greg’s scar was only a few months old. He caught himself touching it lightly through his shirt several times a day. The surgery that could have lasted three hours took only fifteen minutes before the surgeon closed him back up.
“Go home, doofus,” Greg said as he turned to rub the cat’s head one last time.
Greg avoided looking back at the cat as he neared his house. Taking his keys from his pocket, he turned. The cat sat directly behind him, looking up.
Greg opened the door and held it open. The cat meowed and walked inside as Greg shook his head.
“Just for a minute, okay? I can’t give you a permanent home.”
He watched as the cat ran to the couch, jumped up to the edge, and watched him.
When Greg reached for the cat to pet it, it hunkered down slightly and then jumped. Greg caught him as the cat arched up and nuzzled under his chin. Greg laughed as the cat’s whiskers rubbed against his face.
“Let’s see what I can find to give you to eat, Mr. Doofus.” Greg finally bent down to let the cat sit on the floor and look up at him.
Within a couple of minutes, Greg placed a small plate of tuna on the floor. “Your dinner is served,” Greg said.
Mr. Doofus meowed a loud thank-you and began eating the tuna noisily.
Greg placed a bowl of water next to the kitchen table. Mr. Doofus slowly walked over to the bowl and began drinking.
After heating up a microwave meal, Greg picked up his small tray and turned to the living room.
Mr. Doofus jumped up in the middle of the couch, turned, and faced the TV.
Greg sat down on the couch and turned on the TV. News wouldn’t hold his interest. It mattered only when you thought you might be around to see how everything worked out.
Mr. Doofus climbed onto Greg’s lap and curled up, purring loudly. Greg ate a few bites of his meal before pushing it across the coffee table. Instead of paying attention to the TV, Greg rubbed his hands along Mr. Doofus until he was purring like a jet engine.
For the first night in weeks, Greg slept soundly, despite sprawling out on the uncomfortable couch. He didn’t remember falling asleep, nor that Mr. Doofus had curled up next to him.
The next morning, Greg sat up, certain that he would be stiff and sore from sleeping on the couch. Instead, he felt like his old self.
Mr. Doofus rubbed his head along Greg’s leg until he jumped down and walked over to the door to paw at it.
“Gotta go to the bathroom?”
Greg opened the door as the cat meandered out. It didn’t even occur to Greg that his new friend might not return. He left the door open.
By the time Greg had finished his coffee, brushed his teeth, and decided he needed to go to the store to get Mr. Doofus some supplies, Mr. Doofus popped back inside, meowing loudly to announce his presence.
The cat ran across to jump up on the couch as Greg’s fingers rubbed along his fur.
“Keep an eye on things for me. I’ll be back in thirty, okay?”
Mr. Doofus jumped down and walked over to the window. He jumped up and sat on the sill, licking his paw before running it smoothly across the top of his head.
Greg made it back home in forty-five minutes. He set up the litter box and put out the special decorated bowls for his new friend. Opening the bag of special cat food, he poured it into the bowl.
“I picked this out because the cat on the bag looks like you,” Greg told Mr. Doofus, who was already eating from the new bowl.
Greg turned on the TV and pulled out his phone. Mr. Doofus jumped up onto his lap and spread across him as Greg petted him.
“I’ll be back Monday,” Greg said, after his manager answered.
“That’s great news! So you’re doing okay? We were worried.” Greg’s manager sounded relieved.
“Yes, everything’s okay now.”
Mr. Doofus peered up at Greg as he finished the call.
“What? I’m fine. I’m just not going to be around as long as I thought. None of us is.”
Mr. Doofus seemed unconvinced, but settled back down when Greg ran his hand all the way down his back to the end of his tail.
When Greg got up to make another coffee and then went outside, the cat followed him and sat next to his left leg, rubbing and purring.
Over the next eleven months, Greg fell into a routine, including this new friend in everything he did. He wasted a lot of money buying the cat toys until one day he accidentally dropped an empty toilet paper roll on the bathroom floor. Mr. Doofus growled and attacked it. He spent the next ten minutes fighting it to the death. Soon after, Greg came home from work with multiple empty rolls that people had saved for him. He didn’t mind cleaning up the shredded cardboard because it was the only thing that reminded Mr. Doofus that he had once been wild.
…
The day finally came when he knew he had to put aside the veneer of privacy and talk to his neighbor Jane. She lived across the street and two houses down. They had greeted each other more than once, but never had a real conversation. Greg knew that she was a single mom and had struggled financially for a long time. Just looking at her car, it was obvious that crossed fingers probably kept it intact.
Jane took a bit to answer the door. She left the storm door closed as she smiled. Greg didn’t blame her for being cautious.
“Jane, I’m sorry to bother you, but if you have a few minutes, I would like to talk to you.”
Jane pushed the store door open and almost stepped out. She looked at Greg strangely and then pushed it out and held it open.
“Come on in. I’m making supper, if you don’t mind me doing that while we talk.”
As Greg stepped inside, the aroma of whatever she was making assaulted him. Hunger had mostly become a thing of the past, but the smell made his stomach growl.
Jane walked into the kitchen as Greg followed her. He stopped by the kitchen table as Jane stirred marinara on the stove top.
When Greg hesitated, Jane smiled. “Don’t be nervous. Unless you’re asking me for money.”
“I don’t know how to tell you all this. I apologize in advance for hitting you with it.”
Jane’s face changed as she listened. The smile became flat.
“No, it’s not anything bad or about you,” Greg said. “You know I don’t have any family left, right?”
Jane nodded. “I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay. Sixty years taught me it’s the way life is. And the last year definitely reminded me. Anyway, I’m not going to be around much longer.”
Jane grimaced. Greg could see her recoil instinctively.
“I’ve lived longer than the doctor said I would. But now it’s time to face facts. I don’t know you at all, really, but if you agree, I’d like to make you an offer.”
“Oh?” It was easy to see that Jane was confused and probably a little worried because she had no context.
“Because I have no family, I want to give you my house, my car, and everything else left over.”
Jane’s face went through a series of contortions as she tried to catch up to what Greg had said.
“Give me your house? But you don’t know me!”
“I know. But I know you’re renting this house. And I know it’s a struggle as a mom with a 10-year-old boy.”
“So you want to just give me your house? What’s the catch? I’m sorry for being cynical. There has to be one.”
Greg shook his head. “There is. I want you to let my cat, Mr. Doofus, live in the house with you once I’m gone. That’s it. I think I’m only still alive because he adopted me a while back, at the exact moment I needed him.”
Jane’s eyes widened as she studied Greg’s face. In the thirty-eight years she had lived, she had learned to trust her instincts. Her gut told her Greg was telling the truth.
Her eyes welled up with tears as she continued to stare at Greg.
“I will need some more details from you, but I’m going to take care of everything so that I can make sure you don’t have to do anything or pay any legal bills.”
Jane turned awkwardly, turned off the stove burner, and moved the pan. She moved to the table, pulled the chair away from it, and sat down. As Greg watched, she put her face between her hands and sobbed.
Because he didn’t know her well, he waited silently. It took Jane a bit before she raised her head and wiped her eyes with her hands.
“Are you sure? There’s no one else?”
Greg shook his head. “Don’t be sad for me. Think of it as karma from the universe. I didn’t do anything to deserve the tumor that grew inside of me for a year before I knew it was there. But you deserve a chance, and I can give it to you. A place for your son to finish growing up and a place that’s yours. I’m going to get a new car and put the title in both of our names. It will be yours too, along with any money I have left over.”
“I’m so sorry, Greg. Jesus, I don’t know what to say. Last week I almost couldn’t make rent, and now you’re telling me you’re just giving me your house.”
Greg smiled. He instinctively knew that she was coming around to the idea.
“And yes, I will adopt Mr. Doofus and keep him for as long as he lives.” Jane wiped her eyes again. “I would have a pet, but I’d have to pay another deposit.”
Greg pulled a folded piece of paper from his pocket and flattened it. He put it on the table near Jane.
“Fill in these details tonight, if you don’t mind. You can put it on my door if you’d like. I have the day off tomorrow, and I’m going to meet my lawyer.”
Jane pushed back from the table, stood up, and took three steps before throwing her hands around Greg and hugging him.
“I am so sorry, Greg. Please don’t fault me for maybe looking happy. I’m sad for you.”
Greg tentatively put his arms around Jane and squeezed her.
When she stepped back, he smiled.
“I promise you I’m okay. I’ll let you finish dinner. I know your son’s coming home soon. Enjoy your evening, okay?”
Jane nodded, but didn’t reply. Greg knew that she was about to burst into tears. Had he told her she would probably end up with $200,000, she might have completely lost control.
…
When Greg went inside his house, Mr. Doofus meowed loudly until he sat on the floor and playfully wrestled with him. He ignored the pain running across his sides.
“You’re going to get a new friend to take care of you,” Gred said. Mr. Doofus stopped playfully biting at Greg’s fingers as he looked up. “Thank you for finding me, you little doofus.”
Mr. Doofus grabbed Greg’s right hand with his paws and resumed nipping at him with his teeth. Greg laughed and forgot about everything for a while.
…
A few weeks later, Maple Street became lined with colorful red, yellow, and orange leaves. The blue house with the blue door filled the air with competing colors. Inside, Jane sat on the couch. Her son Jefferson playfully tossed a cardboard roll to Mr. Doofus as he sat on the windowsill. Catching it in his paws, he attacked it. Little pieces of cardboard floated to the floor below. Jane shook her head, knowing that she would dutifully sweep it up later, once Mr. Doofus had vanquished the cardboard invader.
She thought of Greg almost every time she looked at Mr. Doofus. He wasn’t a cat at all. He was a timely angel, furry and loving. Had it not been for him, Greg wouldn’t have had enough time to come to terms with his death or his ability to help someone like her.
“Mom, is this really our house forever?” Her son Jefferson had asked her the same question a hundred times.
“No, it’s our home,” Jane said, smiling. “With our very own guardian angel.”
Mr. Doofus turned in a circle as he sat on the windowsill. He stared out the window as the leaves drifted to the ground.
…