Before
I start, I better say this...the Irish are great for giving nicknames, and Mick
the Buddhist is just that...a Buddhist. Before he was a Buddhist he was a
handyman, I guess he still is...of sorts. We all thought the Buddhism thing was
a midlife crisis, and it didn't take long for the chanting, vegetarianism and
avoidance of alcohol to be dropped, but Mick's natural good nature made the
nickname stick.
Anyway,
on with the story.
About
a week ago, Mick landed into the bar and said he had a mouse in his house. As
you are probably aware, Buddhists don't harm anything. This left Mick in a
quandary. As a good Buddhist, he should welcome the mouse into his life but as
Mick said himself..."The fecker is eating me out of house and home!"
The
next day, I was down the hardware shop and came across a Live-Capture Trap. It
was only a few euro so I bought it. On the way home I stopped at Mick's cottage.
I knew he was home because his bike was lying against the outside wall. When
Mick answered the door, he was covered in wood chippings. On Mick's kitchen
table stood a towering maze of timber. It turned out he was making a bookshelf.
My eye might be off but I could swear the yoke leaned left...and right...at the
same time. It was making me queasy just looking at the thing. When I produced
the trap, Mick was delighted.
Christmas
Eve arrived and Mick turned up for a pint.
"How
did yea get on with the trap?" I asked.
"Grand,
I nabbed the little guy a couple of days ago."
"And?
What did you do with him?" I inquired, as I filled his drink.
"That's
the problem...I've still got him," he said looking a bit ashamed.
"Ah
Jesus! I thought you were going to put him outside?"
"I
was reading up on mice...on the Internet, you know. Apparently, they can find
their way back even if you drop them a mile from the house," he said,
proud of his knowledge. "Anyway, he's a house-mouse, not a wild
mouse," Mick mused.
"Ah...for
God sake, Mick, it's a mouse, and Kerry is hardly wild," I teased,
dropping his pint on a beer mat.
"I
suppose you're right," he said, taking a swig and wiping beer-foam from
his whiskers.
"I
bet you've been feeding him," I said.
Mick
looked like a kid caught with his hand in a cookie-jar. "I couldn't let
him starve," he mumbled.
"You’re
such a softie," I laughed. By closing time, Mick had heard at least a
hundred Micky Mouse jokes.
***
On
Christmas morning, Mick set out on his bike with the little mouse dangling from
the handlebars, waving a cheery hello to all he passed. He'd decided to release
his little friend in a wooded area close to town. Mick picked a nice spot and
opened up the trap. The little mouse scampered out, vanishing into the
undergrowth.
Half-past-eight
that night, I got a call from a distressed Mick the Buddhist. The day had
started out lovely but as night fell a storm had rolled in.
"Hello?"
I said into the phone, wondering why Mick would be calling so late on Christmas
night.
"Squid,
I know it's crazy, but I need a favour. Can you drive me somewhere?" Mick
said.
"No
bother, where do you need to go," I asked, thinking he'd say, to the
doctor or hospital.
"Not
far, Barry's Glen, and bring a torch," he said, before hanging up on me.
I
picked him up five minutes later and we raced through empty streets and out
into the country. After a mile or so we reached the woods.
"What's
all this about?" I asked, as I put on the handbrake and glared out into
the driving rain.
"I
let the mouse go today...out there. Jesus lad, look at the weather, how can I
leave him out in this?"
I
nearly threw Mick out of the car...but the look on his face stopped me. He was
pure miserable. I just didn't have the heart. "Come on so, yea
lunatic," I said, clicking on my torch and throwing myself into the
maelstrom.
Two
hours we search the woods...two bloody hours. No sign of the mouse...of
course...because the mouse wasn't half as daft as the two of us.
"That's
it! I'm going home!" I declared a dozen times before Mick would admit the
futility of what we were at. In the end he got into the car and let me drive
him home. He looked like a man who lost a tenner and found a penny. When we got
to his house I said, "Don't worry, that little fella is curled up as snug
as you like, probably laughing his arse off at the two of us."
"I
hope so," said a maudlin Mick, as he gently closed the car door and
mooched up toward his front door.
***
Today,
Mick burst into the pub a changed man. He was beaming from ear to ear.
"What's
got you grinning?" I asked.
"You
won't believe it! It's a Christmas miracle!" he said, throwing his arms to
the heavens.
"I
didn't know Buddhists believed in Christmas, or Miracles," I said, loud
enough to draw a chuckle from the lads along the bar.
"Shut
up and let me tell the story, you messer," he said, sitting at the bar.
"I was fair upset last night...when we couldn't find yerman. I was so bad,
I even tried a bit of meditation. Now, I don't know if it was the meditation…or
the hot whisky's…but I was soon snoring on the rug in front of the fire. Jesus,
it was the middle of the night when I woke up. I was stiff as a plank, hell, I
was half crippled. I was trying to crawl up the stairs when I heard rustling
coming from the kitchen. I thought I'd imagined it, so I held my breath and
listened. Then it came again. Rustle, rustle, crackle, crunch.
Quite as you like, I got myself up and snuck into the kitchen."
Mick
paused for dramatic affect.
"Well?"
I demanded...he had me hooked.
"Low
and behold, when I turned on the light...wasn't the mouse sitting, as bold as
you like, in the middle of the table. He'd chewed through the corner of the
cornflakes box and was stuffing himself. He must have been starved after his
adventure. He didn't even run when I turned on the light. Can you believe it,
he found his way back! A Christmas miracle!" Mick said, and the crowd was
awestruck. We'll they were...until one wise-ass piped up.
"It
must have been a homing mouse!"
Everyone
started laughing and Mick went very red. The others didn't hear Mick say
this...but I did.
"Still
a miracle," he whispered.
"Here,"
I said, putting a pint in front of Mick. "A Christmas drink to toast your
good fortune." Mick took a sup of his pint and I didn't have the heart to
tell him, that when you have one mouse in your house, you most likely have
dozens.
Perhaps
It’s the child in me, but I think the story of the homing mouse miracle of
Christmas is much better than a mouse too stuffed with cornflakes to run away.