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Village Squire, 1979-04, Page 8BY THELMA COLEMAN I wasn't asleep. I was lying with my eyes closed when 1 heard the little scurrying sounds of tiny feet coming from the far side of the room. Turning my head slowly on the pillow I peered through the misty grey of early dawn. There was a small blurred shadow moving by the baseboard and then it was gone. "It's Easter morning," I said to the empty room. "I'm alone. Now this -a mouse!" There was no point in trying to go to sleep again so I might as well get up and make a cup of tea. The first cup of tea was an eye opener. The second brought wakefulness and a rememberance of other Easters, other years. I closed any eyes as I sipped and could hear within the echoes of my mind the gleeful shouts of Kevin as he searched for hidden Easter eggs about the house. The treasured pictures brought back again images of a little boy, a growing boy, and a young man. His graduation, his marriage, and his acceptance of a research position in New Brunswick. Roy and I had waved goodbye; then suddenly, too soon, Roy was gone. "Come and live with us," Kevin and Sara had said; but no, I 6 Village Squire, April 1969 fr]aster a friendly mouse must learn to live alone, how to cope with holiday weekends. such as this first Easter alone. I must not be maudlin and bask in self-pity. I put a slice of bread in the toaster and was buttering it when a chip of toast broke off and tumbled to the floor. 1 was bending to retreive it when a furry blur sped beneath my fingers and I saw a tiny brown rump disappearing between the stove and the bottom of the cupboard. The chip of toast was gone. "That settles it." I know 1 shouldn't talk out loud when I'm by myself but sometimes it's a relief. Toast in hand, 1 padded down to the basement. I've seen the mousetrap somewhere. but where? It was in a most unexpected place and I remember Roy showing it to me and laughing. remembering the old house we'd rented in the country when we were first married. There had been mice running between the walls at night and we'd bought the trap. We hadn't had to use it. That day, while returning from town along the rural road we saw someone toss a half-grown black kitten out of a car. We stopped and picked up the kitten. Little Pud was with us long into Kevin's growing up years. 1 know the mousetrap is in something that was very much Roy's. But where? Going upstairs again. and draining the pot of its final half -cup of tea, 1 try practicing recall. Continued on page 22