Johnny America

Mouse Died Today

by

Illustration of a block of cheese and a mouse-sized coffin.

Mouse died today.

Who could have known.

But some­times, many times, it hap­pens this way. You get a call out of the blue. Hel­lo? Hel­lo? Palmer’s dead. Palmer who? Palmer Fish. Someone’s alive in the morn­ing, some­one you may have even for­got­ten ex­ist­ed, and then they’re dead.

I didn’t know what to do. Who to call. What to re­port. How to dis­pose of the body.

I thought maybe I should call Siob­han. Siob­han bought mouse. When she left the apart­ment, she left mouse. We nev­er even named mouse. Af­ter a time, it just felt nat­ur­al. Did you feed mouse to­day? Is there enough wa­ter in mouse’s bowl? Where is mouse hid­ing now? 

Siob­han left last Thanksgiving. 

With Thanks­giv­ing din­ner still hot on the table.

No one we called had come to din­ner. No one had RSVP’d.

It was a dis­as­ter, Siob­han said. How could I be so unmoved? 

The turkey had fi­nal­ly come out just right. The zuc­chi­ni and sour cream casse­role wasn’t sog­gy like usu­al. We had each oth­er. Why couldn’t we just be thank­ful for that? I said.

Siob­han left with just her purse and a David Bowie album. 

She nev­er came back for her oth­er things.

Not even mouse.

And now mouse was dead.

I called Palmer Fish. 

It was odd, and maybe not very nice, that I had used Palmer Fish as an ex­am­ple of a dead man you might have for­got­ten ex­ist­ed. But what comes to mind comes to mind.

Palmer Fish an­swered on the fifth ring. He said, “I’m in the mid­dle of some­thing. Can you make it quick?”

“Oh,” I said. “I don’t want to keep you.”

“But you just called.”

Palmer Fish, a big man, was breath­ing heav­i­ly. He may have just come in from a jog. Or maybe just pick­ing up the phone was an ef­fort these days.

“Mouse is dead,” I said.

“What’s that?” Palmer Fish said. “Mouse?”

“Siobhan’s mouse,” I said.

“She had a mouse?”

It was ob­vi­ous­ly news to him. 

“I think maybe it was a heart at­tack,” I said.

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

“It wasn’t old age.” 

“You nev­er know.”

It was true, I guess. With trees you could count rings, but with mice? 

Palmer Fish said, “What can I help you with, Dono­van?” Palmer Fish was a chemist by train­ing, though these days I heard he’d been DJing in clubs where every­thing was pitch black ex­cept for the glow-in-the-dark blue paint the dancers wore. Palmer Fish stood on a daïs of sorts, spin­ning vinyl maniacally. 

“I don’t know what to do with the body,” I said.

“You don’t know what to do with a mouse?” Palmer Fish said. It sound­ed like a trav­es­ty. Like every­one buried mice every day and knew just what to do. Every­one but me.

As we spoke, mouse was ly­ing on his side on a bed of fresh Ro­maine let­tuce I’d put there as an af­ter­noon snack. To a passer­by, he could have been nap­ping. His hind paws were stretched just so, as if in rever­ie. His eyes were closed.

“Do you even bury mice?” I said.

“How much does it weigh?” Palmer Fish said.

“An ounce?” I said.

“That mouse does not weigh an ounce,” Palmer Fish said. “Don’t you have an in­gre­di­ents scale you could use?”

It was true, maybe Siob­han had left one be­hind. But I wasn’t putting a dead mouse on a kitchen ap­pli­ance, not even mouse.

“She must have tak­en it,” I lied.

I wait­ed for Palmer Fish to sug­gest oth­er­wise, be­cause maybe he knew some­thing I didn’t. But Palmer Fish wasn’t go­ing to fall in­to that trap. He said he need­ed to check something. 

“Right,” he said a mo­ment lat­er. “Was your mouse obese?”

What an odd ques­tion, I thought. The kind of post-mortem chem­i­cal analy­sis you would ex­pect from a man who’d nev­er cried in a movie the­ater in his life. “Mouse was av­er­age,” I said.

“Ok,” Palmer Fish said. “We’re talk­ing be­tween four and six ounces then. That’s what it says. If that’s the case, I’d just flush him.”

I thought I must have not heard right, that Palmer Fish had said “fold him” or “feel him.” But he was adamant. “Flush him,” he said. “You don’t have a yard. You’re not pay­ing for a casket.”

“Where would I find a cas­ket?” I said.

“That’s what I mean. Flush him, Dono­van, he’ll fit down the pipes. I googled it.”

I stayed in the apart­ment for the rest of the af­ter­noon, ques­tion­ing my di­ag­no­sis of death. Had I jumped to con­clu­sions? Palmer Fish nev­er sug­gest­ed I take mouse’s pulse. For ob­vi­ous rea­sons. I wouldn’t know how, etc. But there were oth­er ways to de­tect the breath of life. 

Twice I thought I saw the white hairs on mouse’s chin stir, but both times I’d just walked by his cage. It was prob­a­bly on­ly the wind of my passing. 

In ret­ro­spect, Thanks­giv­ing din­ner was prob­a­bly on­ly the tip of the ice­berg of Siobhan’s leav­ing. Palmer Fish had al­ways been a good down­stairs neigh­bor. He was big but he moved with grace, even del­i­ca­cy for a man his size. He wasn’t on a ca­reer path but he had a sta­ble in­come. He wore a beard well.

Palmer Fish was handy, too. Those evenings I was late com­ing home from drinks with the boys and Palmer Fish was still there fix­ing a bad fil­ter on the dish­wash­er I knew noth­ing about, they added up now. 

Al­so, Siob­han be­gan to dress different. 

Al­so, she be­gan to kiss dif­fer­ent. She start­ed us­ing the dread­ed phrase “ca­reer path” at about this time, which is prob­a­bly why I use it now. I should have seen it com­ing frankly.

The first thing they did as a cou­ple was in­stall a plant out­side their apart­ment down­stairs, pos­si­bly to dif­fer­en­ti­ate their union from ours. I had nev­er liked or seen the need for apart­ment plants. It was se­mi-trop­i­cal, not a Fi­cus or a snake plant. A dif­fi­cult plant to grow in an apart­ment hall­way, I’d say. 

Still, it bloomed ef­fort­less­ly. The yel­low spots on its leaves widened. 

Soon they bought a big­ger pot. A tub really. 

In a month, it near­ly reached the door lintel.

I googled “flush dead mouse toilet.”

I googled “bury dead mouse pot­ted plant.”

I googled “ex’s de­ceased mouse disposal.”

I googled “what is ca­reer path.”

I googled “how to be handy video.”

I googled “fi­ancée liv­ing down­stairs with neighbor.”

I googled “fi­ancée liv­ing down­stairs with neigh­bor video.”

I googled and googled and googled and googled and googled and googled. 

Filed under Fiction on April 25th, 2025

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