A truly wicked mouse trap. (probably good for removing small fingers too.) |
My roommate died yesterday. When I first met him three weeks ago I
thought he might be lizard. He skittered
out of a cardboard box that I use to keep my suitcases so
fast I couldn’t really know. Lizards I don’t mind because they eat
insects, but mice are another story. But I would hear him at night and I could see clearly this was the mouse. I don’t know why this mouse stayed, because I don't keep food in my room. I asked Esther, my neighbor, about mouse
traps and she suggested poison bait. I’m
not fond of poison because often the first sign that it worked is the smell. (If I were poisoned I would definitely hide under my bed because I would be
impossible to find. My revenge would be
sweet.) New Years Eve I went to every
hardware stall in taxi market and finally found one. It's probably the cruelest mousetrap that I’ve ever seen-all sheet metal with
jagged edges where the trap springs closed.
New Years Eve I set that trap
with a small bit of porridge on the spring.
In the morning the porridge was gone, and the trap was still set. I reserved a crust of my egg sandwich and
adjusted the trap so that it barely held in place. My roommate actually climbed on my desk to
watch me assemble this work of darkness, seeming to ask for a sample of the
crust in advance. It was almost like he
wanted to make a deal and become a partner.
But fearful that he might want to include his extended family (extended families tend
to be huge here in Ghana), I carefully slid the trap behind a box where my
neighbor’s two year old would not discover it. I scattered a few crumbs around
it and rode my bicycle to Bogware. When I returned the crumbs were gone and so
was the mouse–for good.
Such is life during the term
break. I did travel for the first time
since I started teaching in the Ashanti district, by riding to Cape Coast in
the Central district on the day after
Christmas where I petted a crocodile and took the canopy walk in Kakum Park.
2013 seems to have arrived as has the Harmattan. The sky is cloudless and the
haze from a 1000 smoking taxis, 1000 trash fire accumulates and stings the
eyes. The nights are cold enough to
require a cover and a jacket if you happen to go out in it. I’m looking at the start of Term 2 with that
kind of nervous excitement and a hundred ideas how I might improve things and a
hope that at least some of them work.