Robert was a squirrel. He had a good life. You would’ve liked him. My dog and I found him lying dead in the street while on a walk. He was the victim of a hit and run.
I first noticed the squirrel while my dog was busy doing her business in the neighbor’s yard. I wore a plastic dog-doody-bag on my hand.
One of the neighbor kids saw the squirrel, too. The girl’s name is Erin. Erin started crying. Her brother, Tyler, came to see what was wrong.
“Don’t cry,” I said. “It probably didn’t even feel anything before it died.”
“We HAVE to have a funeral,” Erin told her brother.
“What?” said her brother. “A funeral for a squirrel?”
“He had a name,” the little girl said. “His name was Robert.”
That’s when my dog started licking Robert’s—how do I put this?—remains. Erin shrieked. I tugged my dog’s leash and apologized.
“Will you help us?” said Erin. “With the funeral?”
I had better things to do, of course. A serious writer
doesn’t just sit around eating tuna salad and watching baseball all day. Occasionally, he watches basketball.
I didn’t have time to conduct a homegoing service for a rodent. I explained this.
But the kids didn’t seem to understand. And I cannot say no to kids.
So I went home, and in a few minutes, I returned wearing another doody-baggy over my hand. I used old barbecue tongs to position Robert in a shoebox.
Four children were part of the procession. We all marched from Robert’s skidmark to Erin’s backyard.
Erin’s big sister, Kristen, stood on the porch, texting her friends about what dorks her siblings were. And about what an even bigger schmo the writer down the street was.
I felt ridiculous, but not too bad. Because when I was a boy, I once threw a wedding…