Wilbur,
19902003
I
didn't even want a pet. At the time, I was living in
a small apartment and was just getting settled with
a new job and a new life after college. But a friend
of my ex-wife told us about this rabbit, the runt of
his litter, who unlike his siblings, never sold. In
a couple of days, he was going to be given to the owner
of a python for a meal.
Now,
I didn't even know people had rabbits as pets. I remember
seeing some rabbits in hutches as a kid, but I think
people raised those for food. And they were those big
white rabbits. When I first saw Wilbur, he was a little
half black/half white guy so small you could hold him
in the palm of your hand and still have some room. Just
a bit bigger than a full-grown gerbil, I suppose.
So
I found myself the owner of a pet bunny. I didn't have
much money at the time, so his first home was a laundry
basket. He was so little, I figured he couldn't climb
out of it. When I came home from work that first day,
I learned that I was wrong.
So
his home became a laundry basket with an oven rack on
top of it. He was too small to possibly push the oven
rack off, I figured. Coming home from work the second
day, I learned that I was wrong.
Next
his home became a laundry basket with an oven rack on
top of it and books piled on top of the oven rack. Still,
I came home to find him running around the living room.
So I watched him in his "cage." I watched
him climb up the side and squeeze out between the bars
of the oven rack. I rolled my eyes. This pet was going
to cost me a lot of money, I figured. I bought him a
cage reluctantly. Thirty bucks or so. I figured I was
going to be stuck with this cage after a short while.
I mean, how long do rabbits live?
Over
the next few weeks and months, though, Wilbur really
became a part of my life. While I was at home, he got
to run around the apartment (except the bedroom-I learned
quickly how hard it was to get him out from under the
bed). We litter trained him like a cat. He followed
me everywhere I went -- quickly earning the name "Underfoot"
(like "Underhill" from Fellowship of the
Ring). When I watched TV, I'd often lay on the floor.
If I did, he climb up on my back and watch too.
I
moved a lot back then, and imagined that every time
I took him to a new apartment or house it was like moving
a person to a new planet. Whatever home I had was his
entire world. (He hated being in the car, and he hated
being outside -- I even had a leash for him and would
try to take him out into the yard, and he looked up
at me from the grass as if to say, "Uh, where's
the carpet? There are no walls here. What kind of crazy
place is this?")
Most
of all, though, Wilbur hated linoleum. He must have
had a bad experience early on, involving him slipping
on the slick surface. He was not the most graceful of
animals. When he was excited, he would run really fast,
leap into the air and fling his body around to do a
mid-air turn. Cool, but about half the time he'd crash
into a chair or the wall while doing this. So linoleum
was just too much to handle. I could put Wilbur on a
small rug and put the rug in the middle of the kitchen
floor, and he would not leave that rug. Linoleum, tile,
any kind of slick surface was shark-infested waters
as far as he was concerned.
Wilbur
was a Dutch dwarf rabbit, probably the smallest breed
of rabbit there is. And, as I said, he was the runt
of his litter. So I liked to think of him as the smallest
rabbit in the world. Even when he was fully grown, he
was about 8 inches long. But what he lacked in size
he made up for in intelligence. One day, Wilbur was
on the couch staring at the coffee table, upon which
sat a bag of chips. He could clearly smell the chips,
and he wanted them. The table was already pushed very
close to the couch -- I suppose he could have jumped
and made it to the table pretty easily, but the table
had a slippery top, and that probably scared him. As
I watched, he pulled a throw pillow from the couch with
his teeth so that it bridged the gap from couch to table.
Then, he walked across the pillow to the table.
I
let him have the chips for that.
At
some point, we tried to get Wilbur some companionship.
The first was a little flop-eared rabbit we named Orville
(get it?). Wilbur would not tolerate Orville and really
abused him. We had to give Orville away (for his own
good). Later, I learned that two male rabbits often
don't get along, but an adult male and adult female
might be okay. (Wilbur was neutured, so there were no
worries about little rabbits filling the house.) Wilbur
and the new female rabbit, Mabel, got along for about
a minute and a half. Then, suddenly, they mutually formed
into a writhing ball of fur and teeth. Until that point,
I'd thought "the fur was flying" was only
an expression. But the fur was, very literally, flying
-- tuffs of hair expoded out of the writhing ball of
rabbits. Like an idiot, without thinking, I reached
into the writhing ball.
When
I pulled my hand out, Wilbur was clutching my wrist
with his teeth, hanging suspended like a circus performer.
I bet you've never heard of anyone with rabbit scars.
Now you have.
So
Wilbur was destined to be a lone rabbit. I theorized
sometimes that he hated other rabbits because he didn't
want any reminders of his own species around. I think
he believed that he was a human living among humans,
and it was easier to deny his rabbit-dom if he didn't
have to stare it in the face. He really liked humans
and was usually very friendly. But if a Bugs Bunny cartoon
came on TV, he got a little uptight.
There
are more Wilbur stories, as you can imagine -- 13 years
is a long time. He fought off cats, crawled inside chairs,
got lost, probably lived in more places around the country
than most people, and made a lot of (human) friends.
All the while, he remained an unwavering companion,
outlasting most of my friends and even my first marriage.
He was, in fact, the only real constant in my life for
those years. He sat next to me while I edited or wrote
dozens of gaming products, two novels, and a number
of short stories. If I've ever worked on something you've
liked, chances are Wilbur was in his cage next to my
desk or running around at my feet while I did at least
part of it. Sue always said that he clearly liked me
better than anyone else (my ex-wife said the same thing).
I suppose I was really the only constant in his life
as well.
As
time wore on, Wilbur slowed way down. While he once
was a little black-and-white blur racing around the
house, he became more of a static fixture. He'd find
a spot, often in the sun, and just sit for hours. He
was still friendly, but now you had to come to him,
rather than the other way around.
How
long do rabbits live? Well, every book I've ever read
says about 10 years, maximum. It was with some pride
that I told people that, and then told them that Wilbur
was 11, 12, and eventually 13. At the end, the vet said
that he'd had a stroke. He'd been losing a lot of weight,
and, well, it was just clearly the end. Animal people
call it being "put down," but that makes it
sound like Wilbur was dangerous. I prefer to think of
it as giving him a well-deserved rest.
'Night,
Wilbur.