My father used to be a stevedore and he
came home one night in May of 1940 during WW2 with a beautiful blue
persian kitten that he had found abandoned in the hold of the ship............
My mother had an instant
bond with that kitten and Blue as we named him was my mothers
shadow. He grew into a beautiful blue persian and was extremely proud
of his tail and thick coat.
He spent many hours cleaning himself. When the blitz
started and well before the siren wailed out its warning he used to
stand clawing at the side of the door. It was his way of warning us
that he could hear enemy war planes in the distance. Uncanny but perfectly
true. It gave us time to get our belongings together and get down
the Anderson shelter.
Blue had been hit by shrapnel about three
times but my mother nursed him back to life each time and she always
shared her food with him although we were rationed. As time went on
we were evacuated to a town in the Midlands.
Blue had to stay behind with my father and
sister until we got a place of our own in this new town that we had
gone to live in for safety. When we did finally get a house my dad
and sister brought Blue to live with us. It was then that
my father told us that Blue had saved his and my sister's
life because a direct hit bombed what was left of the house and it
buried my father and sister alive. They were trapped for 48 hours
but Blue wriggled away from them and somehow found a way
through all the bricks and mortar that lay on top of the Anderson
shelter and his continuous meowing and clawing at the debris finally
brought the firemen to the spot where dad and my sister were still
trapped.
We never knew anything about this until Blue
was in my mothers arms. We we SO proud of him and he was over the
moon to be back with his beloved mistress, my mother. His purring
was so loud it sounded as though he was singing to himself.
Our joy at Blue being with us once again lasted
for two weeks because the neighbour that we lived against was anti
cat and he put poison down which tempted Blue. My mother
tried everything to help save him but he died in agony in my mother's
arms. It was just two weeks after surviving all the horrors of the
blitz and saving two lives. I can still see the devastation on my
mothers face as she had her rosary in her hand saying a prayer for
Blue. The tears that were shed over our beloved Blue
could have filled a lake.
Unfortunately my mother could not prove who had done
this awful thing. I still weep about it now. To think he
had gone all through that to die the way he did.
I must add here that many animals were put to sleep
when the war started. My mother would not let Blue be put to sleep.
Copyright---Maisie Walker---
all rights reserved.